NCIS gets the video game treatment

CBS’ hit procedural drama NCIS is making the leap to the video game world.

Ubisoft and CBS Consumer Products today announced plans to create a title based on the show for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Nintendo Wii due this fall. The game will feature four cases that were written and developed with the show’s writers.

Read more at Variety’s Technotainment blog

Game Review: F1 2011

If you’re a F1 enthusiast, you will be squarely in your element with F1 2011. If you’re not overly familiar with genre (or with any sort of hard core racing sim), you will be downright baffled about what’s going on. The game is a fantastic simulation of the popular racing sport, but it throws players immediately into the deep end and lets them sink or swim. The amount of information presented to you at the beginning is nearly overwhelming, but it gets even harder once you’re out on the track, where the Artificial Intellegence used for controlling the other racers is ruthless, speeding past you whenever it spots an opening. All of this said, the game is beautiful and handles as precisely as you would expect. Fans will be incredibly happy with what developer Codemasters has put together.

Read more at Common Sense Media

The Best Selling Video Games of 2011

September typically marks the beginning of the holiday shopping season for the videogame industry. From this point through late November, publishers will release at least one potential blockbuster each week.

Holiday sales make up roughly 40 percent of the overall industry revenue—and the year’s biggest hits are born then. But as publishers prepare for the fourth-quarter battle, what better time to see what has been driving sales this year?

Read more at CNBC.com

The Top Selling Video Games of 2011 — So Far

Perhaps more than any other entertainment field, video games are seasonal. While an occasional blockbuster is released in the first or second quarter, the Sept.-Dec. timeframe is when publishers really make their bank.

The last four months of the year not only make up more than half of the industry’s annual sales, but the titles released in that period can pay dividends well into the following year, as illustrated by the best-selling games of 2011 (through the end of August).

Read more at CNBC.com

Assassin’s Creed: Revelations on PS3 includes first game for free

Heard the incessant praise about the Assassin’s Creed franchise, but still haven’t gotten around to playing the original game? For shame!

The good news is you’ll soon be able to overcome this gaming faux pas — and no one has to be the wiser.

Read more at Yahoo! Games

As if Netflix didn’t have enough troubles…

The continuing customer backlash at Netflix is taking on staggering proportions. The company (whose stock, by the way, is down another 7 percent in trading this morning) has lost a quarter of its value in the past month.

Things don’t look to be slowing down, either – and competitors are viewing that as a golden opportunity to swoop in and steal some of those disgruntled customers.

Read more at Variety’s Technotainment blog

Simmons seduces by mobile

As a musician, Gene Simmons was responsible for some of the most iconic music of the 1970s. But if he hadn’t been even savvier in the business arena, the world might never have known.

“Creativity is fine, but it’s like having a car without the fuel,” he says. “We have an inferred fiduciary duty as creators of content to make sure that the distribution model is as big as it can be, and reaches as many people as possible in as many ways as possible.”

Read more at Daily Variety

The Money Making Game #12: The Social Network

We certainly have no problem getting caught up in the fun of playing games, but the people who create them have their pocketbooks to worry about, too. In this column, finance expert and GameSpy contributor Chris Morris guides you through the tricky corridors the gaming industry’s financial side, touching on big-time business decisions and how they matter to the common gamer.

Not too long ago, publishers tended to turn their noses up at social games. Mafia Wars? Poker? Sure, they were mild distractions to entertain people in-between status updates… but a viable economic force? No way! Then FarmVille took off — and the bubble began growing. Big-name developers and executives began defecting. And publishers began investing. Flash-forward to today: No one’s foolish enough to say social (or mobile) games are going to replace console releases anytime in the foreseeable future, but at the same time, no one’s foolish enough to consider the field an afterthought anymore, either.

Electronic Arts, of course, is the biggest publisher to immerse itself in the social network gaming waters. Between its 2009 acquisition of Playfish (which consisted of a $300 million offer with an additional $100 million earnout) and its buyout of PopCap earlier this year (for $750 million and additional earnouts that could ultimately push the price over $1 billion), EA’s not taking the new casual gaming movement lightly.

Read more at Gamespy

App review: NCAA Football by EA SPORTS

Given that NCAA Football BY EA Sports is a year old, we’re willing to give it a few breaks, but the number of problems with this game are so overwhelming that it’s impossible to write them off. The frame rate is so choppy that players seem to be staggering on screen. The controls are frustrating and imprecise. The graphics are sub-par for what the iPhone and iPod Touch are capable of. And because of that, the game ultimately just isn’t much fun. The playbook is fine, though, and if you’re a die-hard NCAA fan, you may find something to like here. Just don’t get your hopes too high.

Read more at Common Sense Media

Netflix adding video games to its rental options

For years, customers and analysts have pestered Netflix to add video games to its rental operation. In a few weeks, they’ll finally get their wish.

Netflix has announced plans to add titles for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii to its catalog in the coming weeks. The new options will come as part of the company’s plan to split off its DVD-by-mail service into a separate brand and website called Qwikster.

Read more at Yahoo! Games