<p> Castlevania | Star Wars Galaxies | Armed & Dangerous</p>
<p><strong>Rhianna Pratchett</strong> finds University courses are replacing that traditional school for the games programmer - the bedroom.</p>
<p> Sonic Heroes PS2 | Mario & Luigi Superstar Saga | Dungeon Siege: Legend of Aranna</p>
<p>With players impersonating crack addicts and thieves, Ghettopoly has caused outrage in the US - and now it's here. The makers of Monopoly aren't too happy about it either. <strong>Tim Dowling</strong> gives it a go.</p>
<p>Last week Camelot launched Lotto on the internet. So will the long-awaited move reverse waning interest in the lottery's main game, asks <strong>Meg Carter</strong>. </p>
<p>2003 sees it bulging with Bratz, Cranium and video games, says <strong>Nick Mathiason</strong>.</p>
<p>A legal battle throws light on the fact many games appear to look much the same. <strong>Rhianna Pratchett</strong> investigates.</p>
<p>It has been a golden year for the games industry, with record sales predicted. <strong>Steve Boxer</strong> looks at the gaming highlights for 2004.</p>
<p>A modest, Cambridge-based company has taken on the giants and developed a popular online role-playing game, writes <strong>Sean Dodson</strong>.</p>
<p>The quality of titles for mobile phone games has evolved at a staggering pace in recent months, writes <strong>Keith Stewart</strong>.</p>