LOS ANGELES -- The holiday rush of new video game and console launches can leave gamers more than a bit baffled.
Even the best online guides or walkthroughs -- at sites that post user-generated text like GameFaqs (www.gamefaqs.com) -- don't reveal all the Easter Eggs, hidden levels or time-saving tricks that can be found in new games.
So we went straight to the source -- the designers and producers -- to hear their favorite tricks or tips on three of the season's biggest titles. The venue: Spike TV's annual Video Game Awards.
Tony Hawk's Project 8 and Downhill Jam
Tony Hawk says he's been more busy sneaking into his 7-year-old son's room to play the fitness challenge on Wii Sports than thinking about his own video game. "My fitness age right now is 28. I'm feeling pretty good about myself. My first try, I think I was 64," says the 38-year-old skateboarding icon.
But he will say this about "Project 8," his eighth video game out now for the Xbox 360 and PS3: "If you finish it but you haven't completed every challenge at the Pro level, there is an entirely new game out there for you to play. ... Until you've reached the top four, you haven't played the game."
Also, the game's new bailing feature allows gamers to turn falling off your board -- typically a failure -- into an accomplishment.
Gears of War
The massively successful third-person action game for the Xbox 360 -- perhaps the first truly must-have titles for the year-old console -- is primarily about shooting up aliens and moving on.
But lead designer Cliff Bleszinski advises gamers to watch for the 50-some cog tags scattered throughout.
"If you look around for this red symbol -- the symbol of the game, it's called the Crimson Omen -- you can find these cog tags throughout the game. If you look under furniture, if you scour the battlefield, look near dead bodies, you'll find that."
Your reward: An 'achievement' to add to your profile, coveted by Xbox Live users. Another trick from Bleszinski: Active reloading.
"If you press the right bumper again after you reload, you can reload again faster," he says. "If you do that with the bow weapon, your shot will actually straighten out quicker, and stick in enemies quicker. It's kind of a cool secret."
The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
The open-ended "Oblivion," out now for PC and Xbox 360 and available soon on PS3, is ripe for modding and mini-games, says executive producer Todd Howard. His favorites include poison apples and fanboy killings. Huh?
He explains: "If you join the assassin's guild, you can make your own poison apples and hand them out to everybody in the world and they eat them and die."
Um, so if you kill everybody, what do you do then? "You feel the glee of being a horrible assassin," Howard says.
If you finish the arena section and become a champion gladiator, you "win" fanboys modeled after the geeky blond character in "The Incredibles."
"He follows you around and offers you backrubs," Howard says. But when it comes time to fight, the fanboy runs away, so gamers sought out ways to, ahem, eliminate their admirer.
"People have modded the game to be able to take him to the top of the Imperial City Tower -- the tallest point in the game -- and they built these long planks for him to walk. They use the Havok physics (engine), and they cause boulders to fall on him and these extraneous ways for him to die and fall miles to his death." For some examples on YouTube, start here -- http://tinyurl.com/y827kq.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.