Xfire, one of the most popular PC gaming messaging mediums with over 23 million subscribers and over 250,000 active users per day, has decided to bring something new and game-changing to the industry.
GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. Electronic Arts' futuristic first-person shooter Battlefield 2142 seems to be an unfortunate magnet of controversy that centers around other companies ...
If chat/server platform Xfire has played a part in the last ten years of PC gaming, it's as a dependable adhesive, bringing players together and allowing them to fuse. While we've been preoccupied ...
For many PC gamers, getting a group of friends together to engage in online battles in such multiplayer games as "Unreal Tournament 2004" or "Battlefield 1942" has always been a major problem. The ...
MTV Networks has sold off its Xfire gamer chat business, according to an announcement on the Xfire site. That’s an interesting twist, considering Viacom, the parent of MTV, bought Xfire in 2006 for ...
This article was originally published on GameSpot's sister site onGamers.com, which was dedicated to esports coverage. Xfire’s new platform aims to create a better tournament experience for tournament ...
Xfire is launching the open beta test for its e-Sports platform, which will enable any player to create tournaments with friends in games such as Riot Games’ League of Legends. This means that amateur ...
New Monthly Stats Program Shows Analysts, Journalists and Gamers the Online Gameplay Data Collected from Over 6.5 Million Gamers MENLO PARK, CA (March 1, 2007) - Xfire, one of the fastest growing ...
DALLAS -- For many PC gamers, getting a group of friends together to engage in online battles in such multiplayer games as Unreal Tournament 2004 or Battlefield 1942 has always been a major problem.
Sony shot down last month's scuttlebutt that they'd be using Xfire as the middleware for their still secret -- and still horribly named -- PlayStation Network Platform. Instead, we've learned that ...
Gamedaily has the report that Xfire, the online service for gamers (that we have coordinated a few events with in the past), has broken a whopping ten million users. That, you'll probably realize, is ...