Time to say goodbye from all of us at bit-tech.net
Welcome challenger. Why not sit down, and play a little game?
Budget in price, mainstream in aspiration.
A team of ex-World of Warcraft developers has set up a new studio to develop a next-generation MMO. They've now licensed one of the hottest graphics engines on the scene.
World of Warcraft is soon to work with Core Duo; crazy Japanese types disassemble the new iMac; the MacBook has only four hours battery life; Apple bigger than Dell.
After some brief downtime, there are now some festive modifications to World of Warcraft. Snowball fights and reindeer quests are just a couple of the tasty treats!
Oils ain't Oils, especially at minus 61 celcuis. See this case, WMD and meet G-gnome tomorrow at Atomic Live 2005.
Is World of Warcraft as addictive as crack? Does Blizzard command a 4.5 million-strong army of Red Bull-fuelled nutballs? We doubt it. Naturally, that won't stop a Chinese couple suing Blizzard over their son's death. Someone call Jack Thompson!
They say cheaters never prosper, but we all know that's complete bunk. In fact, if it wasn't for cheating I'd probably have stopped playing games a long time ago.
Wil gets burgled, gets a new laptop and consequently discovers the joys of World of Warcraft. All your naked mages are belong to bit-tech.
Net rumours persist that Diablo 3 will be an massively multiplayer online game. We have the alleged details...
The first details of the World of Warcraft expansion, The Burning Crusade, are on the net.
A disease from an in-game instance has escaped, and is now running riot over the World of Warcraft servers. Is this the first example of an in-game disease spreading out of control?
The Chinese government is reportedly trying to curb the number of hours it's citizens are racking up in online games.
Tom's Hardware has gone all Not Safe For Work with an expose, as it were, of nudity in games.
The World of Warcraft developer talks about the upcoming PvP expansion and 'no-comments' some Diablo 3 rumours in a new interview.
This week's UK games sales charts show NCSoft's Guild Wars comes out on top.
Driver support looks promising, but some games will require patches to get them working under the new Operating System.
October 14 2021 | 15:04