Latest Articles (Page 1264)
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Feature | Jelly Deals roundup: Attack on Titan, Virginia, Shadow of Mordor, and more
Hungry hungry humans.
A note from the editor: Jelly Deals is a new deals site launched by our parent company, Gamer Network, with a mission to find the best bargains out there. (It also has the best name.) We've invited the Jelly Deals team to share a weekly roundup of (mostly) gaming-related bargains with us, so we can pass their tips on to you. Full disclosure: if you make a purchase from one of these links, we will receive a small commission from the retailer. Hopefully you'll find it useful!
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Feature | When is a layer not a layer? Dishonored 2's intricate approach to level design
Plus 20 minutes of gameplay.
Last week, Aoife and I paid a visit to Bethesda's offices in London to get hands on with Dishonored 2; we had a couple of hours to fully explore the clockwork mansion level as we learned how to use Emily's powers and got reacquainted with Corvo now he's learned to talk.
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Colin Jones, creator of Rockstar Ate My Hamster, has released a remastered version of his much loved adventure game Slightly Magic.
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Feature | Nioh director Fumihiko Yasuda on difficulty, player feedback and what's changing
"We're not servants, we're game creators!"
Team Ninja and Koei Tecmo's samurai action game Nioh has had quite the development history. Announced at E3 in 2005 and finally coming to PS4 early in February, the historical fantasy title has changed hands several times with multiple developers re-jigging it into all sort of different beasts.
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Last year I wrote about Butt Sniffin Pugs, a game about being a dog smelling canine bottoms. Now that game has just launched a Kickstarter campaign.
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Sage Solitaire and SpellTower dev is making a game called Really Bad Chess
It's chess, but with random pieces.
SpellTower, Sage Solitaire and Halcyon developer Zach Gage has announced his next game, Really Bad Chess.
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Developer suing Steam users drops case following financial difficulties
"I believe the case was very solid," Digital Homicide insists.
Last month developer Digital Homicide Studios' games were removed from Steam after the company decided to sue 100 Steam customers for around $18m after leaving negative reviews. At the time Valve diplomatically called the developer's action "being hostile to Steam customers."
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GAME apologises for unfulfilled £150 PS4 bundle orders
"Due to unprecedented demand, this product sold out online extremely quickly."
GAME has apologised for unfulfilled £150 PlayStation 4 bundle orders.
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Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare disc required to play Modern Warfare Remastered
If you go physical.
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered requires the Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare disc be inserted in order to play.
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The Escapists 2 announced, introduces multiplayer
Breakout success?
Prison breakout simulator The Escapists is getting a sequel.
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Amazon Prime now includes Twitch Prime subscription
Offers Hearthstone items, rotating free games, free channel sub.
Amazon Prime members now get a free Twitch Prime subscription as part of their existing package.
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FIFA 17 breaks series' launch week sales record
Forza Horizon 3 beats Horizon 2.
A small game named FIFA 17 released in the UK last week and earned the highest UK launch sales of any FIFA title, ever.
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Feature | How Japan's best-loved RPG is bringing structure to those paralysed by choice
The Dragon Questification of Minecraft.
If Minecraft's greatest trick is the way in which it leaves players to do as they please within its verdant, destructible playpen, then it's one hasn't travelled the world with equal success. "In Japan, people like to be told how to play their games," explains Noriyoshi Fujimoto, one of the creators of Dragon Quest Builders, a game that attempts to splice §Minecraft's giddying freedom with the kind of quest-based adventuring for which Japan's beloved RPG series is known. For Fujimoto, Minecraft's guidance-free approach, which leaves players free to build a tower to the stars, dig a tunnel to the Earth's core, or chase sheep all day, goes some way to explain why its gargantuan and enduring success hasn't been replicated in Japan. "Minecraft is just finally starting to become popular with primary schoolchildren here," he says, sitting in a stretched sofa at Square Enix's Tokyo office, a plushie Slime (Dragon Quest's googly-eyed merengue blob mascot) perched on his lap. "But it's clear that it just isn't going to have the same breakout appeal that it's enjoyed overseas."
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Video | Watch: The least responsible uses of Watch Dogs 2's godlike hacking powers
Plus more videos from Outside Xbox.
Welcome to your weekly round-up of the video happenings over at Outside Xbox, where this week we have been playing Ubisoft's memetastic hack-'em-up Watch Dogs 2.
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Digital Foundry | Digital Foundry: Hands-on with Mantis Burn Racing on PS4 Pro
The full story behind the new PlayStation's first native 4K 60fps release.
When we were first invited to go hands-on with Mantis Burn Racing - PlayStation 4 Pro's first native 4K title running at 60fps - it's fair to say that we didn't have to think twice about taking up the offer. It was a chance to see a title running at the new hardware's optimal video output, and to talk directly with VooFoo Studios, the Birmingham-based UK developer behind the game.
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Feature | Gameboy wonder - the miniature epics of Daniel Linssen
Meet the Australian indie whose game jam creations are keeping the 8-bit generation alive.
Even today, in the age of 4K screens wider than living room walls and (theoretically) mainstream VR headsets, Nintendo's Gameboy exerts a peculiar fascination. The hardware itself may have long since ceased production, but it continues to bewitch developers - take a tour of the indie storefront Itch.io and you'll soon be up to your nose in tributes, from first-person horror games coated in LCD fuzz to borderline copyright-unfriendly riffs on The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening. How to explain this enduring appeal, the draw of nostalgia and Nintendo's peerless first-party licenses aside? For Daniel Linssen, an independent based in Sydney whose games are among the wittiest and most elegant I've played, it's a question of limitation.
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Digital Foundry | Quantum Break PC is better on DirectX 11
New Steam release gives Nvidia GPU owners a huge performance boost over the existing DX12 code.
Quantum Break on Steam brings a much-needed performance boost to the game thanks to the use of DirectX 11 - an API the developer has stated it is much more comfortable using. This comes six months after the Windows Store version, a controversial DirectX 12 release that sadly shipped with a slew of bugs, optimisation quirks and stability issues. For the best experience at the time, Xbox One offered a better-optimised package with fewer grievances, while Windows Store customers were forced to wait some time for patches to rectify certain issues - but to this day, issues still remain.
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Feature | Behind the Scenes on Dara O Briain's Go 8 Bit
Ellie Gibson tells all. Well, some.
Hello there. As regular readers may know, I'm currently appearing in video games TV show Dara O'Briain's Go 8 Bit, Monday nights on Dave. It's the brainchild of comedians Steve McNeil and Sam Pamphilon, who are the team captains, while I play Richard Osman.
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There's a Skyrim concert coming to London, but...
Composer Jeremy Soule disapproves, urges folks to "be wary".
Bethesda Softworks is putting on an orchestral concert dedicated to the tunes of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.
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Sunless Sea director announces digital board game Cultist Simulator
A cult classic in the making?
Sunless Sea creative director and lead writer Alexis Kennedy has announced an upcoming single-player digital board game called Cultist Simulator.
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Feature | XCOM 2: Yes, it's harder, but you also care more
I'm not stuck, I'm just staying put.
XCOM 2 has just landed on consoles with a decent port of the PC version - a bit stuttery when loading missions, but otherwise fine, as far as I can tell. Meanwhile, how bad am I at XCOM 2? By way of an answer, here are a few of my recent save file names: Everyone Dead. Big Error. Oops. These sound like cocktails served at the world's worst theme party, but they also, to their credit, sound like the sort of thing an inexperienced soldier might radio back to base when things go horribly wrong. Okay, maybe not Oops, but when I'm the soldier in question nothing is ever entirely off the table.
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Video | Watch: Hands on with Battlezone's co-operative campaign
World of tanks.
Back in the early 90s when I was blowing on cartridges and recording episodes of Captain N: The Game Master on VHS, the thought of being able to play video games with my friends in virtual reality was the sole preserve of science fiction. Twenty-five years later however, those childhood dreams look set to become a reality.
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Battleborn will be free to play soon - report
But not "free-to-play", Randy Pitchford insists.
First-person hero shooter flop Battleborn will be free to play in the near future, a new report suggests. But there's some confusion about what this will mean.
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Bungie shuts down Destiny's long-running Omnigul exploit
Without a quick fix for Rise of Iron's loot grind.
Bungie has moved to swiftly lock down an ancient Destiny exploit, after players used it to dramatically speed up Rise of Iron's glacial loot grind.
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Japan is getting its own Nintendo Classic Mini
Mini Famicom comes with exclusive line-up of games (and looks super cute).
Japan is getting its own Nintendo Classic Mini, with a palm-sized take on the Famicom coming out this November.
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Feature | What do you actually do in games?
AFK.
Here's a question: What do you do in Mario?
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Digital Foundry | Face-Off: Forza Horizon 3
A preview of the Xbox One vs Scorpio comparisons to come?
Could this be our first look at how Xbox One titles will look on next year's Project Scorpio? Forza Horizon 3 represents a fascinating balance between looking good and running well on current generation console hardware while at the same time scaling up to provide an improved experience on high-end kit. Combined with the cross-platform nature of the new Play Anywhere system, what's clear is that Microsoft is laying the foundations for Scorpio's arrival right now - and it looks great.
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Feature | Introducing Breakaway: Amazon's esports game by the Killer Instinct devs
If you build it, they will come.
Killer Instinct developer Double Helix was acquired by Amazon Game Studios shortly after the release of its free-to-play fighting game and now the developer is courting the esports market with Breakaway, a four-vs-four competitive action arena title. Revealed today at TwitchCon, Breakaway uses the dev's penchant for deep fighting systems, only this time re-appropriates towards complex team-based action.
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Make Sail looks like a physics-based Wind Waker
Sea of dreams.
Make Sail, the latest crowdfunding endeavor on Fig, looks like an endearing alternative to Rare's upcoming Sea of Thieves. Both titles are first and foremost about sailing, naval combat, and treasure-hunting, but where Rare is gunning for the co-op audience, Make Sail is tapping those with an appreciation for physics-based pirating.
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Video | Watch: Is Firaxis done with XCOM 2?
Plus the alien unit they had to cut.
XCOM 2 is out on consoles this week and it seems to be a fairly decent port. We used this latest release date as an excuse to go and have another chat with Garth DeAngelis, the game's Senior Producer.
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