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How many times have we heard from our less than co-operative girlfriends and wives that “No means no”! Yet, some people just don’t seem to get the idea. Even as Blizzard constantly keeps putting down rumors about their games expanding onto next-generation consoles mercilessly, they never seem to stay dead. After squelching console owners’ hopes of seeing StarCraft II on the Xbox 360 or the PS3, Blizzard descended without mercy on a hapless poster who had the nerve to ask about World of Warcraft on the PS3, responding with:
“We’re madly in love with the PC and Mac platforms, and there are no plans at this time to bring World of Warcraft to any other platforms.”
Sorry, folks, that means no WoW for you on the consoles for at least a couple of more years. And we wonder what happened to that other Blizzard console project called StarCraft: Ghost.

There’s a rather disturbing trend going around these days, where a lot of RTS titles somehow seem to end up on the next-generation consoles anyway, aggravating a lot of PC owners who were more than miffed that consoles were stealing away not only regular RTS games like Command and Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars, but denying them any chance of playing games like Tom Clancy’s EndWar or Ensemble’s Halo: Wars.
So when StarCraft 2 was announced yesterday, a lot of people suddenly started wondering, even as the PC-less next-generation console owners hoped that the game would also be announced for their playing pleasure on high-definition TVs. Dashing all their hopes to the ground, Blizzard has posted an FAQ on their site today that clearly answers the question once and for all.
Will there be a console version of StarCraft II?
StarCraft II is being developed for the PC. We have no current plans to bring the game to any console platform.
So long, next-generation owners. Yes, I know I own a next-generation console as well, but its a matter of convenience rather than one of preference and I, for one, am really happy that Blizzard is sticking to their guns and going the way of the original StarCraft - a release of the game for the PC and the Mac. Yes, I also know an N64 version was released, but this time, console owners now know what it is to be left behind. Maybe when StarCraft: Ghost finally comes around, yes?
Ahh, payback, ain’t it sweet!
(Click the image for a higher-res 1600×1200 version)
If there’s just one game that has shaped the face of RTSes over the years, it would undoubtedly have to be Blizzard Entertainment’s wunderkind - StarCraft. Today, in Seoul, South Korea, the next in line to the most famous RTS of all time has been officially unveiled, sending the RTS loving world into a major frenzy.
With the trailer showing how an incarcerated, cigar-smoking, steroid-pumping Terran “jailed-for-multiple-murders” inmate becomes a Marine, and extended gameplay footage showing the various units of the Terrans, the Zerg and the Protoss in battle, the demo showed off a lot of the returning and the new units that will be available in the game, as well as new structures like the new Protoss phase prisms and the deadly, time-warping, planet-cracking, black-hole pumping orbital death machine that is the Protoss mothership.
Read the preview at GameSpot
Visit the official website
Download the videos at GameTrailers
View screenshots and gameplay movies at IGN

As if the news of Blizzard’s online MMORPG WoW and its expansion The Burning Crusade comprising 54 percent of the nearly $1 billion revenue that online gaming in the United States has generated in the past year wasn’t enough, it seems the masters of finger-crack are ready to stun the world once more with a new title. Lingering rumour mills suggested this could be a sequel to the ubquitously popular Starcraft, which was fuelled even further when analysts pointed out the game being unveiled at the Worldwide Invitational on May 19 in Korea (here, learning how to play Starcraft usually comes second to learning how to walk apparently). Realists called the news to be bogus and instead predicted this to be the ground for the announcement of the console version of its best-selling online game.
The truth? Both are wrong. First came the the news that Blizzard Entertainment was looking for a lead tools programmer, lead technical artist and lead engine programmer, the purpose for recruitment being work on a new MMO game that would utilize new technologies and techniques (which fuelled the Starcraft 2 rumour fire). However, just a few days ago, Blizzard announced that it would be working on a brand-new title and that too for the PC. The Starcraft sequel hopes remained simply that; to quote a rep:
“We have a very strong connection with the characters and settings of StarCraft, and we do plan to revisit that universe at some point in the future, but we don’t have anything new to announce in that regard at present.”
As for what exactly is in store for Blizzard fans on May 19 is any addict’s (very wild and excessively hopeful) guess.

