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Tetris logo








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Tetris Effect is designed to maximize the magical, scientifically-proven aspect of Tetris that it’s named after So what’s it like? Well a big hint is in the name itself if you Google “Tetris Effect research” you’ll discover it’s not just our game title but also a well-known phenomenon proven by many academic studies, which leads to my next point: Over 30 completely different stages are included, each with their own Tetrimino blocks, clear effects, music, sounds, etc 2. Hopefully you at least caught this much! Tetris Effect is a brand new take on the legendary puzzle game coming to PS4 this fall (with optional support for PSVR as well), developed by a lot of the same folks that worked with me to make Rez Infinite and Lumines. Tetris Effect is coming to PS4 with optional PS VR support this autumn Okay? OKAY! Hopefully you liked what you saw, but there are a few things you might have missed: 1. Google also took heat from WorldNetDaily writer Drew Zahn, who said that Google has “a history of ignoring major American patriotic and religious holidays.” He further noted that while company representative Sunny Gettinger said in 2007 that the special logos “tend to be lighthearted and often scientific in nature,” Google has in the past used poppies to mark Remembrance Day and honor the war dead of Canada, Australia, Ireland and the U.K.You did watch our Tetris Effect announce trailer as part of the PlayStation Pre-E3 Countdown, right? Well, just in case, or if you want to see it again, check it out above. “So, what we have here is just one more example of Google’s essentially anti-American policies.” “I have to say, though, that this is no departure for Google, a firm that finds it nearly impossible to post images celebrating any American holidays or important milestones in American history,” he continued. “Yes, it’s far more important to Google to celebrate the anniversary of the invention of the video game Tetris than to memorialize D-Day.

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“Here we are on Jand, in its inimitable way, Google has decided to memorialize the important occasion by adding an image on its homepage depicting… the computer game Tetris,” conservative columnist Warner Todd Huston wrote on. Google, however, chose to commemorate a somewhat more nerdy birthday that just happened to fall around the same date: The 25th anniversary of the creation of Tetris, one of the most popular and enduring videogames ever made.īut Google’s whimsical choice has left some observers unhappy. Political leaders gathered in France this weekend to mark the 65th anniversary of D-Day, the largest amphibious invasion in history that set the stage for the eventual end of the Second World War. Google has been criticized as “anti-American” for using a Tetris-style logo to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the famed videogame rather than marking the 65th anniversary of the Allied invasion of Normandy.










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