Freefall Tournament

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Luciana

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:31:02 PM8/3/24
to avargeshe

Intense, fast-paced, team combat. Animation and camera control that make you feel like a space marine...super human. Have it all: jetpacks, armor, hammers, swords, guns, bombs, in melee, ranged, and aerial combat. Tanks smashing with hammers, deadly Scouts slashing their enemies down the middle with their katana, different jetpacks for every class create dynamic aerial combat, Gunners sniping from across the map, and Tech healing and dueling while laying down turrets. Even throw f-bombs! All class specific jetpacks allow you to hop and bound across the map gaining momentum and speed.

Your team's combined skill and coordination determine the winner of this tournament. Choose to fight as one of a growing cast of classes battling in 10-20 minute matches. Please try it out, it is not like other shooters.

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The game is an intense, high velocity, team-based, battlesuit combat game. Skill with jetpacks, guns, armor, hammers, swords, and bombs determine the winner of this PvP tournament. Choose to fight as one of a growing cast of classes battling in 10-20 minute matches. Rank up and win Cash to purchase more weapons, armor, and boosts in order to dominate the arena.

Feefall Tournament is the prequel offshoot of Freefall Arcade (a top-down survival shooter game which went through earlier beta testing on Facebook). Freefall Tournament was created in response to demand for extreme player versus player shoot-outs, and has earned high ratings and a dedicated following since its launch on Kongregate. New maps, battlesuit classes, and weapons are scheduled to be released periodically so the game will grow with (and in response) to its community.

Free Range Games is a 20-man team that has worked together for the better part of a decade. Together, they have launched several big video games, including Spider-Man, Tony Hawk, Lord of the Rings, and Shrek.

FreeFall Tournament is an intense, team-based, space combat game: a space marines third person shooter. Skill with jetpacks, armor, hammers, swords, guns, and bombs determine the winner of this tournament. Choose to fight as one of a growing cast of classes battling in 10-20 minute matches. Rank up and win Cash to purchase more weapons, armor, and boosts in order to dominate the arena. It is a browser game in open beta.

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UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. -- Maybe there was a time you figured the artist formerly known as Tiger Woods had earned his own demise, that he had this coming to him all along. Maybe you thought he deserved to suffer on the golf course after the scandal, and after he spent his dynastic years wearing that invisible Do Not Disturb sign while keeping you, the sports fan, as far away as possible on the less fortunate side of the ropes.

But even the most passionate haters can't find satisfaction in this anymore. Like him or not, Tiger Woods stands among the greatest athletes this country has ever produced. Who really wants to see him keep getting humiliated like he was Thursday at Chambers Bay, where the tattered remains of his indomitable aura were pancaked by the freight trains rumbling across the banks of Puget Sound?

Woods shot 10-over 80 in his opening round of the U.S. Open, his first tournament since posting his worst score as a pro, 85, at Jack Nicklaus' Memorial Tournament, a score right out of the B-flight semifinals at your local club. Woods has been trying and failing to nail down his 15th major title for seven years, and no, he's no longer worried about catching Nicklaus at 18.

Rickie Fowler came in with an 81, and the third member of their group, Louis Oosthuizen, matched the 77 shot earlier by Hammer, who cites Woods' last major title -- his 2008 playoff win over Rocco Mediate at Torrey Pines -- as his very first golf memory. (Hey, at least someone around here remembers Tiger winning a major.)

But neither Fowler nor Oosthuizen is one of the two greatest golfers of all time. That distinction belongs to Woods, who turned the 15th anniversary of his historic 15-shot romp at Pebble Beach into one of the most embarrassing days of his career.

Woods spent his Thursday doing a zombie-like stagger, wincing over missed putts and muttering to himself over bounces gone bad. A club flew out of his hands and over his shoulder on the eighth hole, appearing to travel the same distance as his ball in the opposite direction. Upon retrieving his iron, Woods studied it as if it were an artifact unearthed from the beneath the gravel and sand that were swallowing him whole. And since everyone is describing the linksy dunes of Chambers Bay as something of a moonscape, it's worth noting that Woods looked less comfortable hitting the ball than Apollo 14 astronaut Alan Shepard did while hitting his 6-irons on the real moon.

"I stuck that 6- iron in the ground on the first hole," Woods said of his first of eight bogeys, not including his triple-bogey on No. 14, of course. "And then just couldn't quite get it turned around today."

If you watched Thursday, you couldn't help but feel that Woods will never get it turned around. Until recently, I remained among a dwindling group of invested observers believing he would still find a way to catch Nicklaus. But if you're one of those people waiting for Tiger to catch the Bear, you might also be one of those people who keep waiting for the world to end. In other words, don't hold your breath.

"When's he going to come back?" Jason Day asked earlier this week. "We're just waiting for him to come back and win those tournaments like it was nothing, hunt people down like he was playing a Wednesday tournament at the country club. But will we see it? I'm not sure ... You're climbing Mount Everest and he's fallen off a couple of times and climbed back up there again."

On cue, Woods embraces the narrative of one more climb. He's gone through more swing changes than even he can count, big changes with a parade of coaches and advisers. "They're all not easy to do," he said. "I've gone through tough phases in each one of these things and I've come out OK on the other side."

The odds and the visuals say he's not going to escape this time. From 1996 through 2014, Woods played 1,241 rounds as a pro and had only one round in the 80s, his 81 in wretched conditions at the 2002 Open Championship at Muirfield.

Woods credited himself for fighting the good fight, but come on, Chambers Bay pounded him the way Larry Holmes once pounded a washed-up Muhammad Ali. Woods couldn't even hit the fairway at No. 13, the widest in U.S. Open history, and he couldn't even hit a clean fairway wood at No. 18; he topped a hard ground ball into a pot bunker instead.

On the previous hole, he'd put his hand on Oosthuizen's shoulder and laughed over a round that left him with one lousy birdie. Only the scene was sad, not funny. If this keeps up, a sportswriter's go-to clich for every aging megastar in serious decline -- Willie Mays stumbling in the Shea Stadium grass -- will be replaced by these scenes of Woods bumbling about in the Chambers Bay sand.

Right now, mentally and physically, Tiger Woods is a broken athlete. Forget his fame and fortune and all-too-human failures of the past. If you really love sports, you don't want to see greatness reduced to this.

Hold serve at home and pull out at least one road victory and those numbers could jump with a chance to improve even more at the Big Ten tournament, an event Michigan State won last year for the sixth time.

Michigan State could still finish as the top seed. However, lose all four of their remaining games and have the rest of the conference fall in a certain way, and the Spartans could end up as the No. 11 seed playing on Wednesday night in the Big Ten tournament.

"I was really pulling for Iowa," said redshirt freshman Ethan Happ, who recorded his ninth double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds. "But what's done is done. We have to win at Purdue and see where the Big Ten (tournament) takes us."

Guard Bronson Koenig entered the night averaging 13.1 points in Big Ten play. He scored 12 points in the first half, didn't attempt a field goal in the second half and finished with 14 points and six assists. He hit 2 of 3 three-pointers and has scored at least 11 points in the last nine games.

The first came with 17 minutes left in the game when he went up for a windmill dunk but lost the ball out of bounds. He came out of the game immediately but returned with 15:47 left and wowed the UW fans in attendance with a baseline slam off a feed from Happ.

Despite the obvious miscarriage of cosmic justice that resulted in a Badger-less tournament, it is still the best time of the year. Play-in games begin Tuesday, March 13. The National Championship falls on Monday, April 2. Between those two magical dates is a time like no other. Couches mold to fit suspiciously well to your rear-end. Your eyeballs become painfully aware you were not meant to watch that television eight hours a day. Kick back, ignore homework, loved ones and responsibilities and break out your lucky highlighter.

The Wildcats feature two of the top players in the country in juniors Jalen Brunson and Mikal Bridges. The deadly duo is devastatingly accurate from three: Brunson shoots .413 and Bridges nails .433 of their shots from beyond the arc. Both are more than 52 percent in overall field goal percentage and averaging 19.4 and 18 points per game respectively.

Coach Jay Wright will be looking to bring his perennial talented Villanova squad past either LIU (18-6, 10-8 Northeast Conference) or Radford (22-12, 12-6 Big South Conference), two teams that have not as much sniffed the kind of competition Villanova will be providing in the inaugural tournament weekend.

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