we've always run a tight ship

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sandywang5230
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we've always run a tight ship

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The Final Fantasy developers have taken to Twitter this week to confirm that a PC release of Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII is still enroute, following concerns that Square Enix may not port the Runescape game to the system. A lot of people have been asking about Lightning Returns on PC, the studio tweeted. The developers added that a port was still forthcoming, although they were not able to confirm a release date just yet. Lightning Returns is the direct sequel to Final Fantasy XIII-2 and was originally released in Western territories last February. the Runescape game takes place 500 years after the end of FF13-2 and concentrates on Lightning, who is tasked with saving the world.the Runescape game wraps up the storyline from the original FF13 and as of September last year had sold over 1.4 million copies around the world.Call of Duty's Robert Bowling expects to launch Human Element game in 2015. By Tim Colwill on March 25, 2014 at 7:34 am Former high-profile Call of Duty developer Robert Bowling's new indie company Robotoki is working on an open-world, first-person survival game called Human Element. It's set 35 years after a zombie apocalypse, and as such focuses on the dangers posed by other survivors. Sounds a bit flavour-of-the-month, but they've just announced a release date of November 2015 (on PC at least), so they've got quite a bit of time to figure out how to make it special.Robotoki also revealed that the Runescape game would use CryENGINE 3, a RS 07 Gold fact heralded by Crytek on their own site here. Bowling says of CryENGINE that it is the perfect fit for us because it delivers so many powerful features straight out of the box such as the physical based shading system and the infinite terrain from segmented worlds.There's precious little about the Runescape game revealed so far, so stay tuned.Source: via Strategy InformerAnnouncement regarding our editorial policies. By Tim Colwill on September 23, 2014 at 3:13 pm Here at Runescape games.on.net we've always run a tight ship. Nobody has ever accused us of corruption or undue influence or anything of the sort, and as the editor for the last three years or so, I'm quite proud of that.We don't do review scores. We rarely get to go on press trips or to events. We give stuff away constantly. We don't do clickbait articles or ruthlessly regurgitate other people's hard work. We always disclose where our copies of Runescape games come from. I'm proud of these things.But in the wake of this article here, which outlined our firm stance on equality in gaming, we decided that we could probably go one better and actually codify this stuff. So here you go here's a link to our editorial policy in full.This document also outlines the operational nature of Runescape games.on.net, which may be of interest to some people, as well as our commenting policy.If you've got any questions, let me know!League of Legends Runescape players in the UK blocked by new anti-pornography filters.
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