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Saturday 5 January 2013

WINDOWS 8 FULL VERSION 32BIT AND 64BIT WITH PRODUCT KEY FREE DOWNLOAD FULL VERSION FOR PC.


WINDOWS 8 FULL VERSION 32BIT AND 64BIT WITH PRODUCT KEY FREE DOWNLOAD FULL VERSION FOR PC.


                       
WINDOWS 8 RELEASE PREVIEW:  HAS ARRIVED. A PRERELEASE VERSION OF WINDOWS 8, IT'SWINDOWS REIMAGINED AND REINVENTED. WINDOWS 8 RELEASE PREVIEW IT'S WINDOWS REIMAGINED AND REINVENTED FROM A SOLID CORE OF WINDOWS 7 SPEED AND RELIABILITY. IT'S AN ALL NEW TOUCH INTERFACE. IT'S A NEW WINDOWS FOR NEW DEVICES. AND IT'S EASY TO TRY NOW WHETHER YOU'RE INSTALLING IT FOR THE FIRST TIME, OR MOVING FROMWINDOWS 8 CONSUMER PREVIEW.
GET THE TOOLS YOU NEED TO BUILD METRO STYLE APPS FOR WINDOWS 8. OUR FREE DOWNLOADINCLUDES MICROSOFT VISUAL STUDIO EXPRESS 2012 FOR WINDOWS 8 AND BLEND FOR VISUAL STUDIO TO HELP JUMPSTART YOUR APP DEVELOPMENT PROJECT.
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WINDOWS 8 HAS MANY POWERFUL FEATURES FOR DEVELOPERS. DISCOVER THE NEW FEATURES FOR DESKTOP, WEB, AND METRO STYLE APP DEVELOPERS.
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NOW'S THE TIME TO BUILD APPS THAT'LL LAUNCH YOUR BUSINESS WORLDWIDE. DOWNLOAD FREE TOOLS AND SAMPLES, FIND DESIGN AND CODE RESOURCES, AND GET EXPERT HELP FROMWINDOWS DEV CENTER.


SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS = 

PROCESSOR= 1.4GHZ (32BIT FOR 64BIT )1.8GHZ 
RAM= 1GB (32BIT)
FOR 2GB (64BIT)


CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD 32 BIT.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD 64 BIT.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD WINDOWS 8,32 BIT PRODUCT KEY.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD WINDOWS 8,64BIT PRODUCT KEY.


NOTE = NO ONE FEED,S YOU MORE.....!!!
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Saturday 6 October 2012



TRANSFORMERS THE GAME PC GAME FULL VERSION FREE DOWNLOAD.




Transformers the Game is Based on live Action Film.
The game (in all its versions) is mainly a third-person action-shooter. All the robots have at least four attack types: a light weapon, a heavy weapon, a melee attack, and the ability to throw objects such as cars, lamp posts, trees, etc. As its title and characters imply, a robot can transform into a vehicle and viceversa, this gives the game some racing elements, as the player must, in some missions, race to certain point within a time limit or before a character of the opposing faction does.

TRAILER”


System Requirements:
Pentium 4 2 GHz,
RAM:- 1 GB,
Graphic card 64 MB
4 GB HDD,
Windows XP/Vista/win7/win8
Note”
This is Torrent Download file. You 
must be Install µTorrent in your 
System.
Download this Game From Here.


DRACULA PART 3 THE DESTRUCTION OF EVIL V1.2 PC GAME FULL VERSION FREE DOWNLOAD.

Dracula finally makes an appearance in the third and final chapter of Dracula Series.
f you’ve stuck around this long, this is the moment you’ve been waiting for: the first and final confrontation between Father Arno Moriani and Dracula himself. As the concluding chapter in the Dracula Series trilogy, The Destruction of Evil wraps up the storyline with the much anticipated appearance of Dracula, though the final sequence of the game is somewhat disappointing and the ultimate conclusion is a little confusing. Still, the third chapter is easily the best, so if you already played through the previous two games, The Destruction of Evil ends the trilogy on a relatively high note. Even if the ending isn’t all that satisfying.

The game begins, just like the previous one, with Father Moriani on a train, returning to the Transylvanian town of Vladoviste. Only this time around, he’s convinced that he must continue to follow the “path of the dragon,” and find Dracula once and for all. As his investigation continues, the Father will learn that several characters are not quite who they originally appeared to be. He’ll also have to undergo a series of trials, namely making his way through a winding maze, before finally reaching Dracula’s castle.
This final confrontation starts off scary enough–Dracula looks terrifying and his ability to magically disappear and reappear constantly will put you on edge–but, instead of an exciting final battle, it ends up being a war of words. Dracula will ask you a series of questions and you simply need to answer correctly to please him. The final few scenes up the excitement level somewhat, but overall the ending of the series isn’t very satisfying and somewhat confusing. It’s worth watching if you’ve already played through the rest of the series but, if not, you’re not missing much.
In addition to the interview with the vampire, you’ll also have to make your way through a maze and solve a number of other puzzles. But really, the gameplay remains unchanged from the previous games. It’s still the same blend of traditional point-and-click gameplay and casual sensibilities, that makes it very easy to get into but also eliminates virtually any challenge. Likewise, the voice acting and visuals are the same, aside from the addition of Dracula himself. The infamous vampire actually features a pretty unique design, and his look and way of speaking are unlike most of the draculas you’ve seen before. He’s dirty, angry, and looks like he’ll bite at any moment.
Chances are, if you’re reading this, you’ve already played through chapters one and two. If that’s the case, The Destruction of Evil is definitely worth a play, if only to finally get a look at Dracula. But if you’ve been on the fence about the series, the final chapter will do little to change your opinion for the better.
System Requirement:
Processor= 500MHz
RAM= 128MB
Graphics= 32MB
Note:
1. Download All Parta and Extract Part 1
2. Install “Dracula 3 PC Part 3″
3. Go to Crack folder and Copy “Dracula 3 PC Part 
3″ and Paste into Install Game Directroy
4. Run Game and Enjoy.


                                                                      Enjoy!!!                                                                                

25 TO LIFE PC GAME FULL VERSION FREE DOWNLOAD



25 to Life is a lifelessly generic shooter that, at times, feels like Max Payne without the fun.
In 25 to Life, you can play as either a cop or a gangster. Set in the heart of today's cities, the game lets you experience the gritty lifestyles of police task forces or, as a gangster, survive the local neighborhood thugs while fighting your way up the ranks.
Throughout the early and mid '90s, there was a boom in movies that took place in "the hood." This urban-themed movie trend really kicked off due to the success of John Singleton's Boyz n the Hood. After that, the "me too" phenomenon kicked in, and there was suddenly a glut of gangsta movies--the quality of each steadily declining the further in you got. The same phenomenon is happening with games. While games like Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas stand out as Boyz n the Hood or Juice equivalents, we're also getting our video game equivalents of junk like Tales From the Hood or (shudder) Phat Beach. 25 to Life is the latest in line, and this third-person shooter is, in a word, dumb.
25 to Life is an overly simple third-person shooter that has a story-driven single-player mode and a team-based multiplayer mode. The single-player starts you out in the role of Freeze, a gangster who's trying to get out of the game and escape with his wife and son. You're asked to do "one last job," which, of course, goes spectacularly wrong and messes everything up. You'll also play as a cop surrounded by dirty cops and as a gang leader who gets banished to Mexico only to end up taking over the organized-crime scene there by force. The story is all over the place, and since the playable characters are to a certain extent connected, you're never really sure if you're playing as a good guy or a bad guy. But the narrative is so lame that you probably won't care.
The single-player action boils down to hiding around corners, popping out, and mowing down as many enemies as you can. You'll come across a bunch of different weapons--including pistols, dual pistols, submachine pistols, assault rifles, and even a LAW rocket launcher or two. In case you're silly enough to get up close, you'll also be packing a melee weapon, such as a knife or a hammer or something. There's almost always enough ammo around to prevent you from having to turn to your melee weapons, and there's usually enough health around--at least on the default difficulty setting--to prevent the game from ever being too difficult, assuming you're careful and don't stand out in the open. An onscreen radar displays enemy positions, which is good for letting you know when you're safe and when you've got trouble coming around the corner.
The environments vary, giving you outdoor and indoor levels to play in. You'll run through some Los Angeles-like streets, rob a bank and a casino, run through the streets of Tijuana, and break out of a prison during a riot. There's a good amount of variety, though none of the environments are particularly noteworthy. Most simply contain singular paths that take you from start to finish as you blast your way through the game's short story mode.
As you play through single-player, you'll be unlocking new custom items for use in the multiplayer. The team-based multiplayer is cops versus criminals for up to 16 players in four modes. War is your basic team deathmatch. Raid puts the criminals on the defensive as they protect their stash from the cops. Robbery puts a series of loot items on the map, which criminals must steal and return to their base while the cops try to prevent them from doing so. Tag pits criminals against criminals in a graffiti war. The taggable walls act as control points, and it's up to your team to hold down as much of the map as possible to earn points. If you like, you can disable or limit respawns to adjust the finality of death.
While the multiplayer setup's focus on team games makes it resemble Sony's popular SOCOM series at a glance, you won't find any of that game's tactical elements here. Death comes quickly if you expose yourself to enemy fire for too long. Overall, it's a simple mode that doesn't beat out its competition on any of the three platforms.
25 to Life is available on the PC, the Xbox, and the PlayStation 2, and the experience is roughly the same across all three platforms. The PC offers slightly better control, with its standard mouse-and-keyboard setup, but the Xbox and the PS2 versions control just fine. However, a bug in the PC version caused all of the music to constantly skip, forcing us to disable it. The Xbox and the PS2 versions come with a soundtrack CD, though it is conveniently missing all of the game's best music, while the PC version comes with a Freeze playing card for use with the collectible card game Street Warriors.
Graphically, the game isn't much to look at. The bland environments and generic character animation stick out, and the rag doll-like physics of falling bodies look cheap, especially when dead bodies clip right through solid objects. The sound effects are similarly standard--you've heard gunfire in a video game before, right? The voice acting is passable, though the script's low quality negates any of the game's better voice actors. The soundtrack is a quality mix of hip-hop, both old and new. It's good, which makes the PC version's music bug all the more disappointing. Containing classics from Boogie Down Productions and Public Enemy ("Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos" plays during the prison riot scene, which is a perfect fit, even if your in-game motive doesn't match the song's), it's the high point of the entire package.
While 25 to Life works as intended, the third-person shooting doesn't differentiate itself in any way, making it feel like a sad Max Payne clone--lacking that game's style and acrobatic shot-dodge maneuvers. The multiplayer is functional, yet thoroughly unexciting. Even if you're a fan of the subject matter, you could certainly do better than 25 to Life.


Processor= 1.4GHz
RAM= 256MB
Graphics= 64MB


     Rise Of Nations PC Game Full Version Free Download                       ( Game Of The Year )



FIFA 98 ROAD TO WORLD CUP 98 PC GAME FULL VERSION FREE DOWNLOAD


FIFA: Road to World Cup 98 (commonly abbreviated to FIFA 98) is a football video game developed by EA Canada and published by Electronic Arts. It was the fifth game in the FIFA series and the second to be in 3D on the 32-bit machines. A number of different players were featured on the cover, including David Beckham in the UK, Roy Lassiter in the USA and Mexico, David Ginola on the French cover, Raúl on the Spanish cover and Andreas Möller on the German cover. FIFA 98 was the last FIFA game released for the Mega Drive in Europe.We're all familiar with the EA formula by now: a stunning opening credits sequence (which in this game reaches no less than music video level); an unbelievable variety of fully licensed international, professional, and club teams; beautifully rendered stadiums complete with roaring, chanting crowds; and John Motson's dry, humorous commentary. But with the official license to World Cup Paris 98 on this year's resume (as EA makes abundantly clear with the numerous references to "the beautiful city of Paris"), I think we've all been expecting a little something special from FIFA 98. Happily, mes cheries, this tour de force does not disappoint.
As beautiful as a walk along the Seine, the first things that hit you in FIFA 98 are the expansive stadiums, ever-changing skies, and perfectly rendered 3D characters. Complete with facial features and hairdos, your players are able to perform more feats of aerial derring-do (or is that Depar-dieu?) than the legendary Cirque du Soleil performers. Bicycle kicks, slide tackles, diving headers... all of these are actually possible in the game, and advanced moves such as jumping over a slide tackle or flipping the ball over your opponents' heads can be mastered with a slight bit of practice.
While EA is famous for its wealth of options, FIFA 98 offers more options than there are types of Brie at the lovely cheese shops along the historic Champs Elysees. There are hundreds of teams, three difficulty levels, and five different play options, including friendly, league, penalty shots, and the road to the World Cup. Most impressive, though, are the actual team management options in the game, allowing you to choose from multiple formations, player positions, and strategies. More amazingly, you can also adjust each individual player's attack bias and aggression level, choose who takes free and corner kicks, and create or purchase new players to add to your club.
All of this is good, but what sticks out in FIFA 98 like a baguette from a shopping bag is the gameplay. Fast, challenging (at least for a while), and as smooth as a neatly rolled Galoise, one game immediately erases all memory of what must now be seen as the transitional FIFA '97. While this fast pace may be at the expense of true realism, it is certainly more entertaining to play; slide tacklers get back to their feet in time to rejoin the action, shots occasionally find the corner of the net, and it is actually possible to win a fifty-fifty ball from a computer opponent. Additionally, the computer AI is much improved, allowing you to play the ball into open space and let your teammate run on to it, creating a fast-break opportunity. This does work against you when you are trying to play the ball back to the goalie (and you end up rolling it into open space in front of the net), but, for the most part, it creates a faster, more exciting style of play than any soccer game ever made.
Smooth, entertaining, and relatively high-scoring, FIFA 98 may eventually prove a little easy for hard-core footballers, but the multiplayer options (and EA's matchmaking site) will let you find one another like long-lost lovers at the Eiffel Tower. They say Paris is the city of love, and you'll most certainly love this game.

 

System Requirements = 

Processor= 400MHz
RAM= 128MB
Graphics= 32MB

                                                               

Download This Game From Here.


THE SIMS 3 GENERATIONS EXPANSION PACK PC GAME FULL VERSION FREE DOWNLOAD




The Sims 3: Generations is the fourth expansion pack for the hit single-player simulation game The Sims 3.
The Sims 3: Generations offers fun new features and objects to play with, but on the whole, it doesn't make much of an impression.
The Sims games have traditionally received two types of add-ons: "stuff" packs that give fans new items like decor and apparel, and full expansions that add brand new gameplay elements. The Sims 3: Generations is an awkward middle child, granting you more than just hairstyles and new chairs but none of the inventiveness found in previous expansions like World Adventures and Ambitions. This addition is a pleasant extension of what The Sims 3 already does--not a game changer--and series addicts will undoubtedly enjoy how well Generations captures the essence of life's individual milestones. Children get tree houses and playground equipment; teens learn to drive and go to prom; adults have midlife crises; and grumpy oldsters shoo away annoying kids with their canes. These enhancements are subtly integrated into the main game, but they don't have the overall impact of previous expansions. And that's this expansion's real problem: lack of impact. It's nice to have new playthings, but at almost the cost of a whole new game, even the most dedicated devotees can probably do without these toys.
As you can guess from its title, Generations deepens and broadens your sims' various stages of life by adding mechanics suited to their age. It begins in childhood, with one of the expansion's most charming and surreal additions: the imaginary friend. This semicreepy stuffed wonder morphs from plush toy into a combination of best friend and personal assistant. Watching your child's purple Martian mutant saunter about with an exaggerated bounce is as charming and silly a sight as any in the series, and you only see him when you are directly controlling your child. Want a snack? Send your pal to grab you one. Want help with making the beds and cleaning the toilet? Ask your invisible friend to help with your chores. Heck, you can even turn him into a controllable sim if you mess around at the chemistry table often enough. You make potions here, one of which will make your virtual Pinocchio a real boy. Well, almost, anyway. You can craft other potions at the table too, such as mood enhancers and the like, though potions aren't exactly new; the Makin' Magic expansion for the original game included a similar mechanic.
As you move through the years, you also unlock new features. Children don't just get living plushies: They can play on seesaws and in tree houses or use any of the other playground equipment added to the Buy mode. They can also pull pranks, at home or elsewhere. Your cackling kid may sneak up to his parents' laptop and set it up to scare the next sim that uses it or plant a whoopee cushion on the sofa. The sim that falls victim to the prank is disgusted by the sound, and temporarily suffers from a negative moodlet. If your kid prefers milder forms of fun, you can always dress him or her up as a dinosaur using the new costume chest. Here, as in other ways, Generations encapsulates an important truth of youth: Children dressed as fairy princesses and astronauts are adorable. Teens are more known for angst than adorableness, so perhaps you'd like to prank the school and release frogs from the science lab; it's a pity you only read of the results in in-game text rather than witness the hysterical results. Your teens can also go to prom, but this is an option sadly underutilized. Perhaps your prom was a slow-dancing delight, or perhaps it was a public display of romantic awkwardness. Either way, you can't relive those moments in The Sims 3: Generations. Your teen and his or her date simply disappear into the building, and you get periodic updates in the corner of your screen.
Luckily, other elements are more interactive. You can throw bachelor parties now for engaged sims, and if things get wild and crazy, why not pull out a video camera? You activate cameras from your personal inventory and "tape" events from a first-person view. It's actually pretty amusing to step into the shoes of an individual sim in this manner because you suddenly feel like you are actually eavesdropping on your neighbors' conversations rather than having your virtual doppelganger do your dirty work for you. Later, you can watch your home videos on television, though reliving these moments isn't nearly as fun as capturing them in the first place. Perhaps you aren't so much into the partying aspect of The Sims 3. Luckily, there's at least a little something new to mess with for most types of players. Builders and buyers will appreciate spiral staircases and the new wedding arch; family-oriented folks will like how you can reprimand your kids when they're particular naughty; and if you're into woohoo, beware: You now have to worry about your romantic reputation.
These changes are all fine in and of themselves, but they don't bring anything significant to the table; they simply broaden existing features. Previous expansions added game-changing mechanics like celebrity fame, puzzle-solving adventures, and interactive careers. Granted, Generations adds a new profession--Day Care--but attending to a roomful of toddlers that need constant changing and socializing isn't as fun as busting ghosts or fighting fires. (Though to be fair, Day Care is not a career, but a profession, which is an important distinction to Sims 3 players.) But Generations mostly stretches out what already existed and offers nothing exciting enough to lure you back to the game if you've moved on from it. Its final impact is that of a "stuff pack" with added social features rather than a true expansion. Generations is in part aimed at the "Sims 3 as sharing experience" crowd, as evidenced by the new social networking integration, which allows you to upload key moments to the Sims 3 website and share them on your Facebook wall. Now, the virtual life you live in The Sims 3 has more bearing on your actual life than ever before. But even voracious Sims lovers might wonder whether $39.99 is too much to ask for a product that feels less like an expansion and more like a collection of gameplay odds and ends.
Those odds and ends are agreeable at least, though they aren't all that's new in The Sims 3: Generations. You could run into bugs you've never seen before. You might receive notice that your teen has made a new friend at school: himself. Or your normally endearing child might temporarily morph into a hideous long-armed freak, with her head in the middle of her abdomen. Glitches aside, Generations adds entertaining moments to a franchise that turns routine duties, like taking showers and tossing salads, into compelling delights, but these new moments are too infrequent and unexceptional to justify the high price tag.

Note = 

This is Torrent Download file. You must be Install µTorrent in your System.


Instructions = 

  1. Extract Files OR Burn OR Mount
  2. Install the game. Use the keygen in the /Crack directory on the Data when prompted for a key.
  3. Copy over the cracked content from the /Crack  directory on the Data to your install  directory of the main game.
  4. Play the game using the launcher
  5. Enjoy

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS = 


Minimum System Requirements
Processor= 2.40MHz
RAM= 1GB
Graphics= 128MB

Recommended System Requirements
Processor= Intel Core 2 DUO  2.5 GHz
RAM= 2GB
Graphics= 512MB 

Download This Game From Here.

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