PC GAMES FOR $30 OR LESS

PC GAMES FOR $30 OR LESS
     

The Walking Dead


When the dead attack the living,

there are no easy choices
Publisher: Telltale Games
Developer: Telltale Games

Surviving is one thing, but living with yourself is another in Telltale Game’s The Walking Dead. Its survivors skirt around the comic and television series, telling a new story of the zombie apocalypse come to Georgia. A smattering of adventure game puzzles and action segments bow to its adaptive narrative—this game is all about making choices. Characters live and die by your words and actions; who appears and what happens in each episode depends on who you help and who you forsake. It’s up to you to decide what’s most important, but remember, a little girl is watching and learning about how to live in the new world.

Payday 2


Pull off the perfect heist

Publisher: 505 Games
Developer: Overkill Software

A good heist needs a bit of planning, plenty of communication, and a touch of intimidation to end with duffel bags full of cash. A bad heist just needs ample ammunition and body bags to clean up the mess. Robbing a well-secured institution involves many moving parts—not just squirming hostages. Keep in mind that Payday 2’s extended scenarios track your performance over multi-mission arcs, rewarding your team for precision strikes with less police interference, friendlier criminal cohorts, and more cash.

Kerbal Space


Program Build, fly, and watch the fiery demise of custom rockets

Publisher: Squad
Developer: Squad

Ever looked at a space shuttle and thought, “I could do better?” Well, it’s time to put your rocket science where your mouth is, buddy, because Kerbal Space Program is all about putting adorable little green dudes on the moon. Or at least in orbit. Or at least somewhere above the... oh, nope, they just crashed into a plume of fire and broken dreams again. KSP is goofy and challenging; chances are, you’ll fail dozens of times before finally building a space-worthy rocket. But that doesn’t mean you won’t feel like Neil Armstrong and Elon Musk rolled into one when your Kerbal crew leaves its first boot prints on an alien world.

GAMES FOR $20 OR LESS

Amnesia:  The Dark Descent


Hide for your life and sanity

Publisher: Frictional Games
Developr: Frictional Games

There are jump scares, and then there are dark, quiet horrors that tie stomachs in knots and submerge their sufferers in nauseating suspense. Amnesia: The Dark Descent generally
goes for the latter. Despite inspiring a renaissance of firstperson horror, Amnesia’s penchant for producing boundless dread remains unmatched. Players must balance physical health, mental fortitude, and all-important lantern oil as they explore a dingy castle full of unsettling sights and freakish monsters. Fighting its native horrors is out of the question, so you’d better keep an eye on the nearest closet or dark corner to hide in... and hope you’re alone in there.

Counter-Strike:Global Offensive


An old dog learned some new tricks

Publisher: Valve
Developer: Valve

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive doesn’t fix what isn’t broken. The original CS helped propel competitive PC gaming to its industry-defining state today, so a graphical overhaul, a few
equipment tweaks, and some new modes are more than enough to modernize the lethal classic. Veterans of de_dust and bomb-defusing neophytes alike can find a lot to love in this
update. Classic modes like hostage rescue and bomb defusal remain intact, but an official Gun Game mode (called Arms Race here) should be enough to get anybody on board. Don’t let the terrorists win. Unless you spawn as a terrorist.

Mark of the Ninja


Stylish sidescrolling stealth honed to a shuriken’s edge

Publisher: Microsoft Studios
Developer: Klei Entertainment

When a guard sees his partner strung up from a chandelier just in time for the lights to go out and 180 pounds of ninja to land on his chest, you begin to wonder why stealth sucks so much in every other game. Mark of the Ninja takes the simple act of sneaking around in a 2D environment and builds, polishes, and simplifies until it’s more or less a lifestyle choice.
You don’t have to stay quiet in Mark of the Ninja if its gratuitous combat beckons, but you seldom need to bloody your blade if you prefer wearing the shadows. Whichever path you decide to take, a generous checkpoint system and ample replayability means each scenario can (and should) play out a dozen ways. This is easily one of the best ninja games ever made.

Rogue Legacy


Each ancestor’s grave is just a stepping stone to success

Publisher: Cellar Door Games
Developer: Cellar Door Games

In this brilliant fusion of lethal Castlevania-inspired exploration and persistent RPG advancement, you can get rich and die trying. Every hero that delves into Rogue Legacy’s sidescrolling dungeons will find a treacherous new layout to map and plunder. But death is just an intermission: you can begin again as one of your character’s descendants, who benefits from all the cash, equipment, and abilities his or her forebears found and
purchased. Each descendant has a distinct class and genetic quirks like color blindness or gigantism, so getting to know your new character is almost as fun as exploring the ever-changing environment.

Metro 2033


Post-apocalyptic Moscow’s horrors mostly don’t go in the subway

Publisher: THQ / Deep Silver
Developer: 4A Games

You need to do a few things to survive in the tunnels under Moscow: scavenge everywhere and everything, always keep a few gas mask filters on hand, and try to save the good bullets for special occasions. Metro 2033’s wrecked tunnels and brief, terrifying surface interludes make a unique setting for a grim first-person shooter. Its story of tenuous survival in a nuclear winter (which destroyed the surface world and produced scads of
deadly mutants) is based on a Russian novel, but this ain’t no Tolstoy.

Teleglitch


Build guns and set traps in this top-down shooter roguelike

Publisher: Paradox Interactive
Developer: T3P

Teleglitch looks like Doom fan fiction. Instead of a first-person romp through a moon base, it’s a tense top-down shooter with scarce ammunition and plentiful enemies. Fortunately, your lone survivor is clever, and junk like tin cans and nails can be crafted into deadly weapons. Teleglitch’s randomly generated environments are pixelated, but subtle
perspective shifts and distortion create a surreal sense of motion. Mind your woeful line of sight and you just might make it to the exit.

The Witcher 2:Enhanced Edition
 
Enter a dark and memorable fantasy world

Publisher: Warner Bros. Interactive
Developer: CD Projekt Red

The Witcher series has a complex story with many significant characters and compounding player choices. But main character Geralt of Rivia is an amnesiac, anyway, so it’s not like
anybody can expect you to remember them if you didn’t play the first game. You, on the other hand, will remember The Witcher 2’s intricate towns, deep plotlines, and intense,
fight-for-your-life battles. You’ll also remember how good it is to be a PC gamer when you get all this for just shy of $20.


TECHNO ITEM LIST


Smart Cooler for Super PC Gamer

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B005O65JXI/anyatrading-20
See Detail Before Buy ----> Click 

Smart Cooler for Super PC Gamer
Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo

What it does:
Thanks to the physical laws of the universe, even the smallest PC processors generate a lot of heat—so much so that they’d burn up if we just let them baste in their own warmth. Hence, CPU coolers. Intel and AMD supply lowest-common-denominator coolers with every CPU, designed only to keep the chip from destroying itself. If you want better cooling, and as overclocking enthusiasts who appreciate quiet PCs we always do, you’ll need to invest in an aftermarket CPU-cooling solution. The difference in temperature will be night and day.

What to look for:
The killer cooling formula is typically 1) a huge heat sink with 2) lots of narrow fins. Today’s plethora of massive aluminum-block “tower” designs testify to this: they just work. Copper “heat pipes,” which connect the cooler’s base to the tower, also help move heat up and out. Add a large but quiet fan (usually included) to blow away the hot air and you’re all set. We love the Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO. It’s been around forever, is cheap, and does a great job of dissipating heat. A true classic.
Fins
The best way to dissipate heat is to spread it out over the maximum possible surface area, which is why today’s heat sinks tend to have hundreds of wafer-thin metal fins.

Filling in the gaps:
Your CPU’s integrated heat spreader is not a 100% flat, flawless surface, and your heat sink’s base plate is considerably less so. Air is a terrible conductor of heat, so you’ll need a heat-conducting compound called thermal paste to bridge the miniscule air pockets formed by these imperfections, enabling the efficient transfer of heat from CPU to heat sink. Most coolers come with their own thermal compound, or you can buy it separately. Check for an application guide online, because it’s no fun to clean up the mess left by an overzealous application

The specs
Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo

Compatibility: Just like CPUs, coolers are built to be compatible with certain mobo socket designs. The Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO supports a huge range: Intel LGA 1150/1155/2011/1366 and AMD Socket FM1/FM2/AM3+.

Base Material: Different metals have different heat conductivity properties, making them better or worse as heat sinks. Today’s enthusiast designs use aluminum towers and copper bases.

Dimensions: Enthusiast heat sinks are big, no lie, so make sure they’ll actually fit in your intended case. This is particularly important given today’s trend toward smaller cases. (Thermalright’s excellent TRUE Spirit 120M is a more recent cooler that is actually designed to be a little smaller.) Overly large heat sinks can also block the closest RAM slots, which is the opposite of good.

Fan Specs: The best computer fans move a lot of air while being as quiet as possible, and the Hyper 212 EVO’s 120mm fan moves a lot of air while producing only modest noise. We are fans of this fan.

Alternatives Cooler for Super PC Gamer

Stock Cooler
Want to Buy ---->  Click 

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Well, your CPU’s stock cooler is a little broke, but it will get you by just fine if you don’t overclock and if you’re not too concerned about noise. It’s not glamorous or elegant, but keeping your CPU from baking itself is definitely a plus.
mainstReam

Enermax ETS-T40-TB
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0074OVYVE/anyatrading-20 

Want to Buy ---->  Click 

Even cooler and quieter than the Hyper 212 EVO? Indeed, and for just a small price premium. What isn’t small is the heat sink, which is more likely to clash with your case and cover RAM slots. But if you can make it fit, go for it

Thermaltake CLW0217 Water 2.0

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B007UIX1RE/anyatrading-20
Want to Buy ---->  Click  

Extreme
Liquid cooling used to be the sole domain of total rockstar rebel nerds, but now you can enjoy its amazing cooling efficiency with ready-made devices like the Water 2.0 Extreme. Imagine the OC potential…



TECHNO ITEM LIST