I have solved this block pushing puzzle before.
I have spent hours looking for a stupid key before.
(I have a cannon capable of shooting nuclear missles strapped to my back, but I still can't open a door without a key).
I have jumped around a fancy 3d environment shooting other jumping people before.
I have driven around many racetracks just so I could earn fake money so I could get a faster car to race around the same tracks against other people that have purchased a faster car before.
I have died 40 times trying to jump from a big platform to a small one before.
Yes. The gaming industry is stagnant.
I purchased a track as well. It ONLY plays in Windows Media Player 9 under Windows. WMP9 downloads a license the first time you play the file. The license is saved locally for future use.
The file would not play on my Mac with either Mplayer or Windows Media Player. The DRM also made it impossible to play it on my Creative MuVo (which can play wma files).
I would also like to point out that the 128kbps wma file sounds horrible. It has all of the high frequency "swishing" thing that you normally get with 128kbps mp3 files. The iTunes AAC files sound much better.
So by using WalMart instead of iTunes you get inferior sound quality and you can only play the file under Windows. But you do save 11 cents...:p
I have solved this block pushing puzzle before. I have spent hours looking for a stupid key before. (I have a cannon capable of shooting nuclear missles strapped to my back, but I still can't open a door without a key). I have jumped around a fancy 3d environment shooting other jumping people before. I have driven around many racetracks just so I could earn fake money so I could get a faster car to race around the same tracks against other people that have purchased a faster car before. I have died 40 times trying to jump from a big platform to a small one before. Yes. The gaming industry is stagnant.
I purchased a track as well.
It ONLY plays in Windows Media Player 9 under Windows.
WMP9 downloads a license the first time you play the file. The license is saved locally for future use.
The file would not play on my Mac with either Mplayer or Windows Media Player.
The DRM also made it impossible to play it on my Creative MuVo (which can play wma files).
I would also like to point out that the 128kbps wma file sounds horrible.
It has all of the high frequency "swishing" thing that you normally get with 128kbps mp3 files.
The iTunes AAC files sound much better.
So by using WalMart instead of iTunes you get inferior sound quality and you can only play the file under Windows.
But you do save 11 cents...:p