“NARUTO SHIPPUDEN: Ultimate Ninja Heroes 3 - gamesindustry.biz” plus 1 more |
NARUTO SHIPPUDEN: Ultimate Ninja Heroes 3 - gamesindustry.biz Posted: 12 Apr 2010 12:26 PM PDT 17:22 (BST), 12/04/2010 Press Release PROVIDED BY GAMES PRESS CERGY-PONTOISE, FRANCE – 12 April 2010 – Leading video games publisher and developer NAMCO BANDAI Games Europe S.A.S. announced today that NARUTO™ SHIPPUDEN: Ultimate Ninja® Heroes 3 has gone gold for the PSP system. Based on the popular animated NARUTO SHIPPUDEN series, NARUTO SHIPPUDEN: Ultimate Ninja Heroes 3 refines the series' trademark fighting mechanics by offering an all-new adventure mode, a new roster of fierce ninja, and robust multiplayer battles. NARUTO SHIPPUDEN: Ultimate Ninja Heroes 3 is developed by CyberConnect2 and will be available throughout EMEA and Asia Pacific Regions on May 14, 2010. This is an excerpt from the full story. Log in or register for free to read the whole article. Games Press is the leading online resource for games journalists. Used daily by magazines, newspapers, TV, radio, online media and retailers worldwide, it offers a vast, constantly updated archive of press releases and assets, and is the simplest and most cost-effective way for PR professionals to reach the widest possible audience. Registration for the site and the Games Press email digest is available, to the trade only, at www.gamespress.com. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
You can vote for heroes - The Sun Posted: 14 Apr 2010 08:01 PM PDT PICK your all-time great Scotland team, SunSport asked me.What a challenge that was and I relished it. It didn't take me long - the names came to me instantly. Starting with the goalkeeper, there were three outstanding candidates for me to consider - Jim Leighton, Andy Goram and Alan Rough. But it had to be LEIGHTON because to get 91 caps is a magnificent achievement in anybody's terms. Our most capped goalkeeper. That speaks for itself. He also shone for Scotland in three World Cup finals. Unorthodox to look at with his bandy legs and the fact he wore glasses, you wondered how Jim could stop strikers from scoring. He did on so many occasions. He had tremendous reflexes, he was very brave and Jim was simply top class. At right-back I'd no hesitation in picking DANNY McGRAIN. It had to be him, although he often featured on the other side for Celtic and Scotland. Danny was able to defend and attack with equal effectiveness. He played on for Celtic well into his 30s and that said much about how good he was. Great on the ball and could read a game brilliantly. RICHARD GOUGH had everything you could wish for in a centre-half - leadership quality, strength, took no prisoners. He was superb in the air and physical when he had to be and had virtually no weaknesses. What I also liked about him was the fact that while he dished it out he was happy to take it. WILLIE MILLER really was one of the hardest and most physical defenders I ever faced. Granite hard. He would do anything within the laws of the game, sometimes outwith, to dominate. He wasn't the quickest, but his speed of thought was fantastic and he was better on the ball than he's given credit for. SANDY JARDINE is a former Hearts team-mate and, like Danny, was a world class defender. It was a privilege to play alongside him and I learned plenty from watching Sandy and listening to him. He was able to play across the back four and was just as comfortable going forward as he was at the back. GORDON STRACHAN had huge enthusiasm and could look after himself for a small guy. His ability was second to none wide midfield or in the centre. He spurred you on in the dressing room but also wasn't slow to give you a verbal kicking if he felt you needed it. Gordon did great things for Scotland and is worthy of great respect. PAUL McSTAY was a quiet man on the pitch and quiet off it but he was a phenomenal midfielder and let his skill do the talking. I played with him for Scotland Under-15 schoolboys and I knew then he was destined for the top. Paul wasn't the quickest, but he had fantastic vision and he consistently made passes that opponents couldn't read. He'd glide away from markers. Paul wanted the ball all the time and you were always happy to give him it because you knew he very rarely wasted possession. GRAEME SOUNESS had incredible mental toughness and was an out-and-out winner. He inspired everyone around him and was a brilliant captain. Despite Graeme's playboy good looks, he was hard and a complete and utter assassin when it was required. Graeme walked away from no one. DAVIE COOPER was a genius, as simple as that. He was a wizard and a guy no one would grumble about paying to watch. With great deliveries and dazzling dribbling skills, Davie was one of our original tanner ba' players. He scored the best goal I've ever seen, against Celtic in the Drybrough Cup final. It was tragic that he was taken from us so young. KENNY DALGLISH was a big hero of mine. A world class player. His touch, his goalscoring ability, his desire. Magnificent. I felt a lot of the time the Tartan Army never gave him the credit he deserved. Kenny was one or two steps ahead of his opponents with his thinking. He scored phenomenal, unforgettable goals. Spain at Hampden, England at Wembley and Hampden. Just to be involved in a squad with him, as I was for a game when we faced Holland, was an unbelievable experience. ALLY McCOIST was a wonderful goalscorer. I could've gone with Joe Jordan, Frank McAvennie or Maurice Johnston but I just couldn't overlook Ally. I remember Ally doing his best to help me overcome nerves ahead of my Scotland debut against Romania. We were on the bus heading from Troon to Hampden and he said to me: 'Don't worry wee man, I'll be there for you. 'If I feel you're struggling I'll have a chat and pass on advice'.
We toiled for half an hour against a team that boasted the likes of Hagi and Popescu - and I hardly got a touch. Ally came over to me and said: 'Robbo, I'm going to give you a bit of advice. Now remember who told you it and when you were told it.' I replied: 'What is it Ally?' And in true deadpan style, he quipped: 'I think we're going to get f*****!' The two of us just burst out laughing. We both ended up scoring - and Scotland won 2-1. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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