Dead Rising 2
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Citizens for Undead Rights & Equality, also known as C.U.R.E., is a zombie rights organization, the largest in the world. It believes that zombies are infected people and should be treated as such. They believe that the living dead should not be used for entertainment or experimentation. It advocates offering ready and widely available access to the controversial anti-zombification drug Zombrex. It also opposes the reality game show Terror is Reality, among other organizations. CURE believes in the use of non-violent civil disobedience and does not condone the use of force during protest. However, several members of CURE have been known to be falsely accused as terrorists and initiators of various zombie outbreaks.
Dead Rising 2 starts several years after the original Dead Rising finished: the experimental virus that turns living beings into the undead has spread beyond Willamette and infested most of the United States. When the crisis became serious, a synthetic drug called \"Zombrex\" which delays the zombification was released by the pharmaceutical company Phenotrans and sold out quickly.
The player takes control over Chuck Greene, a former national motocross champion fleeing to Fortune City, rebuilt from the remains of old Las Vegas and yet untouched by the zombie disease, along with his daughter Katey. Katey was bitten by her zombified mother and thus needs a shot of Zombrex every 24 hours to avoid zombification. In order to get his hands on more Zombrex - or at least the money to buy some - Chuck is desperate enough to enter a game show called \"Terror Is Reality\" where he has to slay the undead for entertainment. Right after the show some of his \"victims\" break loose into the city, causing a wide-scale infection. Chuck learns from a news report that he is accused of causing the outbreak and that the military will come to capture him and to purge the city in three days.
Gameplay takes place in a sandbox-like environment. The player can freely move around in zombie-infested Fortune City and choose how they want the game to progress by either taking on missions (plot-related and side missions, the latter mostly include saving survivors from zombies) or ignoring them. The player can ignore the main story altogether, letting all survivors die, and just fight the undead roaming the streets or go exploring. This will not result in a \"game over\" screen, but in a different ending. If the player fails to get Katey a shot of Zombrex every 24 hours, the game won't end either (unlike Dead Rising 2: Case 0). If the Story Mode is cleared with the true ending (which requires to complete all plot-related missions, the so-called \"case files\"), Overtime Mode will be unlocked, extending the main plot.
The game is set 5 years after the events of the original Dead Rising. The zombie parasite that originated in Santa Cabeza and caused the Willamette outbreak has spread all over the United States. This is due to the 50 orphans scattered throughout the United States who had been injected with the parasite; subjecting them to zombification and infecting the rest of the US (This can be told through Overtime Mode upon achieving the A-Rank ending in Dead Rising 1). The game will take place in the fictional setting of Fortune City, which is modeled after the real-life city of Las Vegas, Nevada. Chuck Greene, a former national motocross champion, is somehow caught in the middle of the zombie apocalypse in Fortune City. Just like Frank West (the player-character from the original Dead Rising), Chuck will face a number of zombie hordes as well as surviving psychopaths, and surviving civilians whom he may choose to save. Among the survivors in Fortune City is Chuck's own daughter, Katey Greene, who was infected by her mother in the Vegas outbreak. Katey serves as Chuck's primary motivation for battling the undead. He tries to earn money to keep his daughter on the infection supressant \"Zombrex\" introduced in the original Dead Rising as the synthetic Frank West was using. Inafune mentioned in an interview that part of Chuck's quest will force him to participate in the violent game show, \"Terror is Reality\".[5]
There will also be a greater variety of missions for the player to undertake, and the sequel will retain the original's time management mechanic.[11] However, the original game's photography mechanic will not be present in Dead Rising 2.[12] Instead, Dead rising 2 will feature a brand new mechanic that allows players to manufacture their own custom weapons at various points in the game. The player will also be able to purchase 'cards', that will reveal item combinations that could prove deadly after being built. Such combinations include:
During the 2009 Tokyo Game Show, Capcom revealed that the multiplayer of Dead Rising 2 will take the form of a reality TV show called \"Terror is Reality\" in which players will act as contestants in a fictitious gameshow. Up to four players are available in multiplayer, where they compete against each other for the most kills inside an arena full of undead. Players will be able to use weapons and vehicles including human-sized hamster balls and chainsaw-equipped motorcycles. They also will be able to prevent other players from scoring by using various forms of \"dirty\" tactics.[Verification needed] The multiplayer mode has been compared to the television show American Gladiators.
Capcom is set to sponsor a gathering of zombies at the London House of Parliament on August 30 - and the best dressed will win a games console. Attendees will also receive a limited edition, one-of-a-kind t-shirt. The inaugural General Election campaign will be attended by Citizens for Undead Rights and Equality (CURE), an equal rights group campaigning for the rights of zombies.[20]
Black Ops' popularity will come as no surprise, given its record-breaking first week, and Case Zero's success is fairly well documented, but Baby Maker Extreme is perhaps a slightly more surprising game for Microsoft to champion, despite it being far less seedy than it might sound. 59ce067264
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