
Duke Nukem Manhattan Project Xbox 360
About Genre Shooter Rating Rated 'M' for Blood and Gore, Violence Summary Gaming's king of action returns in an all new adventure, this time in New York City. When we last saw our hero, he was dishing out smoking barrel justice to some well deserving alien bastards. Meanwhile, Duke Nukem's archrival Proton has been working with elementary particles to develop a new radioactive power source. There's one unfortunate side effect of this substance - it mutates living creatures that it comes into contact with, often with hideous results. After an entire subway car of rush-hour commuters is mutated into a pen of half-human, half-pigeon victims, the government decides to call in Duke Nukem to 'take out the trash', and stop Proton once and for all. Mutants of every kind are thrown at Duke as he chases down Morphix through eight huge environments and avoids the green slime called GLOPP that is causing all the chaos. Help Duke Nukem blast his way through New York City to stop Proton and his evil henchmen.

A new week, and three more games have become Backwards Compatible on the Xbox One. 3D Realms action title Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project comes in at.
We’d actually argue that it was one of the top 10 Xbox Live/PSN/Steam titles of last year, and arguably the best puzzler.According to a recent – which has since been taken down but a picture of which can be viewed below – Quantum Conundrum 2 reportedly on the way.Swift and her crew haven’t provided any indication since the first game’s release that they were working on a sequel. So take this with a grain of salt for now. Last year’s Quantum Conundrum, developed by Airtight Games and directed by Portal lead designer, the lovely Kim Swift, was quite the entertaining little puzzler. Quantum conundrum trailer. But considering the great critical reception, it should be a no-brainer.Released for Steam, Xbox Live and Playstation Network, Quantum Conundrum had players exploring a mysterious mansion with a dimensional device for shifting between dimensions to correct an experiment gone awry.