Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Note: This category is for video games that feature murder as an element of their canonical plot and/or enforced actions required to progress in gameplay. A game allowing players to optionally commit incidental murders during gameplay does not qualify a game for this category.
"The Antagonist" (center-right on screenshot) engaging a massacre. The game's interiors can be explored and destroyed. Hatred is a shooter game presented in an isometric perspective [1] in which the player character and protagonist is a mass-murdering villain who "hates this world, and the human worms feasting on its carcass" and embarks on a "genocide crusade" [1] against the entire human ...
Re-rated to "Mature" by the ESRB after a third-party mod revealed a naked topless corpse hidden in the game's data files. While the corpse did not warrant a re-rating of the game in and of itself, upon review, the ESRB noted that the game contained much more explicit violence than had been submitted to them in the original rating submission. [121]
Discover the best free online games at AOL.com - Play board, card, casino, puzzle and many more online games while chatting with others in real-time.
The player fighting a swarm of specimens. Killing Floor is a first-person shooter with two game modes: Killing Floor and Objective.In Killing Floor mode, the player fights waves of zombie-like specimens - or ZEDs - with each wave becoming successively more difficult, until it concludes with a battle against a "boss" specimen called the Patriarch. [7]
Players can hide dead bodies in a limited number of dumpsters and other specific containers to avoid detection. Players can set traps (poisoning drinks, exploding speakers, destroying dance floors, cutting down trees, starting fires and short-circuiting electricity boards) to kill and influence partygoer movement and actions.
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
The party game wink murder dates back to the early 20th century and involves one player secretly selected as a murderer, who can "kill" other players by winking at them. A killed player must count to five before "dying", and the murderer tries to avoid detection. Jury Box, released in 1937