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Games Chart Top 10 Xbox 360

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  • FIFA 16

    FIFA 16

    FIFA 16 innovates across the entire pitch to deliver a balanced, authentic, and exciting football experience that lets you play your way, in your favorite modes.

    £19.99
    Buy Now
    FIFA 16
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops III

    Call of Duty: Black Ops III

    Call of Duty is going back to the future with Black Ops III.

    The PS3 and Xbox 360 versions showcase the two key features of Treyarch's Call of Duty games, multiplayer and Zombies mode, though they don't feature the single player campaign.

    And, of course, there is an all-new Zombies mode. Treyarch says it's the most ambitious Zombies mode to date, and now it comes with its own XP progression system, meaning there's more depth on display than ever before. One Zombies story, Shadows of Evil, focuses on a new group of characters (with a very distinguished voice cast), Nero (Jeff Goldblum), Jessica (Heather Graham), Jack Vincent (Neal McDonough) and Floyd Campbell (Ron Perlman), a twisted bunch thrown into the zombie-ridden city of Morg in a tale that ties in to past Zombies stories. The second, The Giant, features alternate versions of the original characters, Tank Dempsey (Steven Blum), Nikolai Belinski (Fred Tatasciore), Takeo Masaki (Tom Kane) and Edward Richtofen (Nolan North), picking up where 'Origins' left off.

    And, of course, there is an all-new Zombies mode. Treyarch says it's the most ambitious Zombies mode to date, and now it comes with its own XP progression system, meaning there's more depth on display than ever before.

    The future is calling!
    £19.99
    Buy Now
    Call of Duty: Black Ops III
  • Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare

    Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare

    Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare takes the stellar blockbuster franchise and shifts it in a new direction. The biggest change for fans of the Call of Duty series will be the fact that for the first time, development isn't led by series veterans Infinity Ward or Treyarch, but by relative newcomer Sledgehammer Games. With a new team comes a somewhat new direction. While Call of Duty: Black Ops II pushed things into the near future of 2025, Advanced Warfare takes things further. The game puts players in the futuristic gear of Jack Mitchell. It's a future where the world has been devastated by a global attack and Atlas, a Private Military Corporation, is effectively a superpower for hire. Activision has gone to pains to state that this is a carefully researched future, so don't expect black hole guns or laser blasters. The most immediate impact of this premise, then, is the exoskeleton players wear. This piece of kit enhances the player's movement with bigger leaps, dashes and dodges. The exoskeleton, along with the futuristic weaponry on offer, changes the way gamers will play Call of Duty, and of course that extends to the game's multiplayer. All of this is polished off with a revamped Create-a-Class feature, offering the deepest customisation options in a Call of Duty game yet.
    £14.99
    Buy Now
    Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare
  • Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition

    Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition

    After setting a phenomenal trend on PC and selling tremendously well on Xbox Live Arcade, MojangÆs incredibly addictive world-creation game Minecraft has made the jump to physical media!

    The charm of Minecraft is in its crude, blocky graphics. As you wander about a seemingly empty map, you soon learn to use your trusty pickaxe to chisel away the environment around you. Doing so not only allows you to rebuild the entire map as you see fit, but can also throw up a number of interesting surprises.

    Create buildings, caverns, landmarks... youÆre only limited by your imagination. If you like, you can invite a bunch of friends along to help you build a masterpiece worthy of showing the entire world. But be quick about it, because at night monsters come out to play, so you need to make sure that you have made preparations for you (and your friends) to stay safe until dawn.

    The Xbox 360 DVD release of Minecraft includes all of the console-specific features and benefits that the Xbox Live Arcade edition had, including a tutorial mode and various tweaks to make your block-busting activities that much more efficient. If youÆve not had the chance to buy into the Minecraft experience yet, now is a great time to get involved.
    £19.99
    Buy Now
    Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition
  • WWE 2K16

    WWE 2K16

    The authority in WWE video games returns with WWE 2K16!
    The newest addition to the flagship WWE franchise will deliver authentic, high-powered and hard-hitting action, including fan-favourite features and new WWE Superstars, Divas and Legends, gameplay innovations, presentation updates and more.

    £19.99
    Buy Now
    WWE 2K16
  • LEGO Dimensions

    LEGO Dimensions

    Characters from a mix of brands join forces and battle in worlds outside of their own

    Bring up to seven minifigures, vehicles, and/or gadgets into the game all at once

    Players can let imagination guide their solo journey or have a friend join for co-op play

    The LEGO Toy Pad and game will offer continued compatibility with future expansions

    Includes: game, Toy Pad, bricks to build Gateway, three minifigures, and Batmobile

    £69.99
    Buy Now
    LEGO Dimensions
  • Battlefield: Hardline

    Battlefield: Hardline

    Battlefield: Hardline takes the shoot-'em-up action the series is known for and moves it away from the front lines and onto city streets. Hardline adopts a cops and robbers format, pitting criminals against the police against a backdrop of fast and furious heists. It's quite a shift for a series known for hardcore military action. Visceral Games (they're new to the series, but you might know them from the Dead Space series) is aiming to shift the focus of the series, moving away from the po-faced tone many shooters have adopted in recent years and injecting a bit of vitality into the formula. The aim is to make shoot-outs more of a close quarters affair in which you'll see the whites of your opponents' eyes. As ever, multiplayer is the real focus of the game. Heist mode tasks criminals to steal and secure a briefcase from the police in a manner not dissimilar to capture the flag. In Blood Money players vie for three stashes of cash hidden about the city, transporting it back to their vault when they do. The catch is that vaults can be captured, too, and fallen players leave their cash where they die. The result is chaotic. In Hotwire mode drivable cars effectively become the flags of a conquest mode. Captured cars drain away opponents' reinforcement tickets, and the winner is the team that reduces the other lot's ticket count to zero (or whoever has the most at the end of a round). 'Rescue' is a five versus five hostage situation in which cops must rescue civilians, while 'Crosshair' is another five vs five mode in which criminals must eliminate a player-controlled VIP. While Hardline is a shift away from the usual Battlefield formula, fans can still expect widescreen action and lots of explosions. It's just time to step into a different kind of fantasy...
    £14.99
    Buy Now
    Battlefield: Hardline
  • Dragon Age: Inquisition

    Dragon Age: Inquisition

    While Dragon Age Origins was hailed by many as a new tour-de-force from famed roleplaying game developer BioWare, many felt that the sequel didn't live up to its predecessor's strong start. Inquisition, though, has been widely hailed as a return to form. An apocalyptic event has thrown Thedas into chaos, opening rifts that are raining down terror. Dragons ravage the sky, casting dark shadows across the land. Mages are in a state of all-out war against the Templars. Nations are warring. Into this chaos you must step, using your strange ability to close rifts and banish demons. The world is bigger and more open than ever before, so players looking to explore are in for a treat. This is a huge game, packed with epic hubs and tons of side content. BioWare says that it will take over 100 hours to complete everything. It's appropriate, as this is the biggest Dragon Age story yet. For players new to the series, or those jumping to a new platform (or even those who don't feel happy with decisions they made in the last two games) EA has an online tool that can be used to select details from earlier games in the series and apply them to your save file. On the combat front, BioWare has drawn on both the previous games in the series, pulling together the more strategic feel or Origins with the action focus of the sequel. The result is combat that has weight, but won't enable players to thrash around like they're beating up angels in Bayonetta. Adding to that is a multiplayer option. It's a co-op mode that works a lot like Gears of War's Horde, forcing players to work together against wave after wave of enemies. In other words, if you're looking for something epic in scope, Dragon Age Inquisition has you covered.
    £14.99
    Buy Now
    Dragon Age: Inquisition
  • Forza Horizon 2

    Forza Horizon 2

    Racing  >  Car
    Forza Horizon 2 bursts out of the screen with buckets of arrogance. Opening with an ASMR-inducing cutscene that puts your back up, it presents you with a lead character that'll make you grind your teeth out. It then continues to show off for the next hour or so, with its stunning visuals, vast array of cars and its constant reminders of its 'Drivatar's. For all of Horizon 2's arrogance, it's backed up with an impressive game and what seemed like needless swagger soon turns into endearing charm. The game looks good. The cars themselves reflect their real-life counterparts with seamless ease and when you notice beads of water on your bonnet after a race in the rain, their place sits within the world perfectly. The environments you drive around are impressive, and create a sense of place that's rarely seen outside of a Rockstar game. It may not be the most realistic racer you've ever played, but Horizon 2 shows no attempt to even try and replicate that side of the driving genre. Heading off-road in an Audi R8 wont leave you spinning around as you'd expect. Developer Playground understands that you just want to get back on the road and rejoin the race. Drivatars make a return to the Forza series, with the AI mimicking the play style of your friends so that even when you're driving solo, you get the sense of your mates being around you and the rush of the multiplayer mode. The racing is great - with the focus being on championships made up of a string of conventional races where you build up points by finishing higher - but there's so much more to do in Forza Horizon 2. Speed cameras, rival races and crashing through bill-boards are all here, but this game has a few tricks up it sleeves to offer you more than just deja vu. Discovering classic cars also offers more than simply buying cars from specialist dealers. In Horizon 2 you're given a tip off as to where they might be and you have to go hunting for them. These are the moments that find you exploring. Forza Horizon 2 delivers a looser, faster style than its Forza Motorsports counterparts, and it's a bucket of fun.
    £24.99
    Buy Now
    Forza Horizon 2
  • The LEGO Movie Videogame

    The LEGO Movie Videogame

    Warner Bros. has been getting more adventurous with the LEGO games of late. Developer Traveller's Tales has stamped the brick-based titles on the gaming world's collective memory with interpretations of blockbuster franchises such as Star Wars, Batman, Indiana Jones, Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings. With release first of LEGO City Undercover and now The LEGO Movie game, the series is moving into more self-built territory. Well, nearly... Roughly following the plot of the movie (so you might want to hold off hitting start if you don't want spoilers) the game stars Emmet on a quest to save the world from Lord Business (played by no less than Will Ferrell). Along for the ride are other heroes from the film such as bodyguard/love interest Wyldstyle, blind wizard Vitruvius (voiced by Morgan Freeman) and less central characters including Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, the Green Ninja, Gandalf, Shakespeare, Cleopatra and more. The established hallmarks of the LEGO series are all here. Players roam through different environments, platforming, puzzling and doing a spot of brawling. There are certain things that can only be done by certain characters (only Batman can swing on grappling points, for example) and oodles of collectibles scattered around, so plenty of reasons to make the most of those abilities. There are a couple of new tweaks, too, such as a shape-matching minigame whenever Emmet assembles a large LEGO model that's important to the plot. Of course, the game features co-op and the LEGO series' trademark wry sense of humour. If you liked the movie or any of the previous games, The LEGO Movie Videogame is a pretty safe bet.
    £19.99
    Buy Now
    The LEGO Movie Videogame