Saturday, May 23, 2015

All the latest from GameSpot On 05/24/2015

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In the 05/24/2015 edition:

Watch Room-Scale SteamVR Zombie Apocalypse Game Arizona Sunshine

By Anonymous on May 24, 2015 12:10 am

One of the few games announced for the HTC Vive headset, which uses Steam's virtual reality technology, is the zombie apocalypse-themed Arizona Sunshine, developer Vertigo Games has announced.

"Arizona Sunshine is a VR shooter built and optimized for room-scale VR from the ground up," Vertigo Games said. "Step into the midst of a zombie apocalypse as if you were really there, and defend yourself against enemies close enough to touch. A custom-built physical animation system makes striking your undead enemies more thrilling and satisfying than ever before."

Arizona Sunshine will use HTC Vive's motion controllers to let you handle, fire, and reload your weapon, and Vertigo Games said the game is built in "bite-sized chunks," allowing you to jump in for just a few minutes or for longer sessions.

Vertigo Games previously developed World of Diving, a multiplayer underwater adventure that supports the Oculus Rifts. It's also currently developing another game for the HTC Vive, Skyworld, a turn-based strategy game.


Carmageddon: Reincarnation Is Finally Out of Early Access

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 11:25 pm

Carmageddon: Reincarnation, which revives the "points for pedestrians" destruction derby-style car game series, is finally out of Steam Early Access. The game was released earlier this week after being delayed from its original April 22 launch date.

"In 1997, a videogame was released that caused establishment scandal and media hysteria around the world," developer Stainless Games said. "Banned in some countries, censored in others, and even condemned by a Pope [not the actual Pope, but a British minister of parliament named Pope], overnight it became the poster child for everything that's wrong in society… and therefore right in a videogame...And now, Stainless Games is proud to announce the FULL RELEASE of the latest ground-breaking game in the series."

The final game's Career Mode spans 16 chapters, each including 3-4 events, with 50 events to compete in overall. The multiplayer mode will allow up to eight players online or over LAN, and includes six event types: Classic Carmageddon, Car Crusher, Fox 'n' Hounds, Ped Chase, Death Race, and Checkpoint Stampede.

There are also nine maps, 36 race routes, and 24 vehicles to choose from, unless you were a Kickstarter backer, which will get you a special edition bonus car.

The game was funded on Kickstarter in 2012 with over $625,000, and in 2013 Stainless Games raised an additional $3.5 million from Bullfrog Productions founder Les Edgar, which the developer said would allow it to bring Carmageddon: Reincarnation to Xbox One and PlayStation 4 as well as PC.


Free Gauntlet Update Will Make It What Devs Originally Envisioned

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 10:48 pm

Arrowhead Game Studios is working on a big, free update to its Gauntlet reboot which will significantly improve the original release, the developer has said.

"In truth, we were never fully satisfied with how Gauntlet turned out," Arrowhead's game director Emil Englund said in a post to Arrowhead's official site. "So, rather than just fixing little things here and there, we have been working on the core of the game to turn it into what we originally envisioned."

Englund didn't get into specifics, but said that the update will include improvements to the Campaign, Colosseum, as well as an entirely new game mode.

Gauntlet was originally released in September 2014. The game, which is a reboot of the 1985 original, got a fair score of 6/10 in GameSpot's review. Earlier this year, Arrowhead released another top-down four-player cooperative game called Helldivers, which got a great score of 8/10 in GameSpot's review.


Battlefield 4 Patch With New Guns and Mode Coming This Tuesday

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 08:37 pm

Battlefield 4's spring update, which adds new guns and a new mode to the multiplayer first-person shooter, will release this Tuesday May 26, developer DICE has announced.

The update will hit all platforms according the following schedule:

  • PC: Multiplayer will be offline for 1h starting 08.00 UTC / 1.00 AM PDT.
  • Xbox One: Multiplayer will be offline for 1h starting 09.00 UTC / 2.00 AM PDT.
  • Xbox 360: Multiplayer will be offline for 1h starting 10.00 UTC / 3.00 AM PDT.
  • PS4: Multiplayer will be offline for 1h starting 11.00 UTC / 4.00 AM PDT.
  • PS3: Multiplayer will be offline for 1h starting 12.00 UTC / 5.00 AM PDT.

In addition to the old Gun Master mode from Battlefield 3. The patch will add five new weapons, and while DICE didn't share their exact names and look, it gave us a general idea for what to expect:

  • New fan favorite Assault Rifle - Picked based on its unique burst gameplay and massive fan desirability
  • New Carbine - A unique bullpup carbine with built-in vertical grip
  • New PDW - A unique PDW with built-in silencer
  • New Sidearm - Unique long range "sniper" sidearm using magnum rounds
  • New LMG - Magazine fed LMG, which with the new weapons balance, plays in between a belt-fed LMG and an AR – your "run and gun" LMG

Gun Master, which gained its popularity in the Battlefield 3: Close Quarters DLC, is like Team Deathmatch, but you only get new weapons every time you get two consecutive kills, and the first player to get a kill with the final weapon wins.

The patch will also "significantly improve client stability on all platforms," fix a number of issues that cause crashes, and rebalance all weapons, which you can read about in greater detail here.

DICE said that it will release full patch notes once the update is released.


Crossy Road Developer Is Making a New Pac-Man

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 07:59 pm

Bandai Namco Studios Vancouver and Crossy Road developer Hipster Whale are working on a new Pac-Man mobile game called Pac-Man 256, the companies have announced.

The game is named after the infamous 256 glitch. When players reached that level in the original Pac-Man arcade machine, half the screen turned into a garbled mess of random characters. Hipster Whale and Bandai Namco say that in Pac-Man 256, the player will be chased by the glitch through an endless maze.

In short, the game sounds and looks like a mix between Crossy Road and Pac-Man.

"Playing PAC-MAN in a seaside arcade in 1980 is one of my earliest memories," Hipster Whale Director Matthew Hall said. "It is an incredible honor to be able to contribute to one of the most iconic video game franchises in history. Our game, PAC-MAN 256, takes the infamous 'glitch' level of PAC-MAN and builds upon this to become a unique game that retains the retro spirit of the original."

Crossy Road, in case you haven't played it, is an incredibly successful "endless hopper" mobile game inspired by Frogger. For more on the game, check out GameSpot's interview with Hipster Whale's Andy Sum and Matthew Hall.


Check Out Madden NFL 16's First Screenshots

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 07:41 pm

Publisher Electronic Arts has released the first set of screenshots from the latest entry in its football franchise Madden NFL 16.

EA says that the new game will have improved time of day lighting that will help highlight Madden NFL 16's updated player likenesses.

EA also said the game will feature all-new wide receiver-defensive back interactions, body relative throws, and the most authentic exchanges to date between receivers and defenders.

Madden NFL 16, which features Odell Beckham Jr. on the cover, launches August 25 on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, as well as last-generation consoles like the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. If you're an EA Access member on Xbox One, you'll be able to play it a little sooner.


4K Gaming - How cool is it?

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 06:30 pm
We put 4K gaming to the test in this video looking at what lies beyond 1080p60. How does The Wticher 3, GTA V, Far Cry4, and more all look running at 3840x2160.

Weekly Recap: Witcher 3 Graphics Downgrade, New Need for Speed Announced, GTA 5 Sells 52 Million

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 05:30 pm

THE BIG STUFF:

Witcher 3 Dev Responds to Graphics Downgrade Concerns: In a interview with Eurogamer, key developers from the Polish studio frankly acknowledge that the visuals for the final game--released this week to high praise--don't exactly match a video shown during the VGX awards show two years ago. They also explain why.

Need for Speed Open-World "Full Reboot" Hitting PS4, Xbox One, and PC This Fall: After a week of teases, Electronic Arts formally announced a new Need for Speed game this week. The game, called Need for Speed, launches this fall for new-gen consoles and PC. We spoke with Marcus Nilsson, GM of developer Ghost Games, about the project. Click through the link above to get the full story.

GTA 5 Ships Nearly 52 Million Copies: Rockstar's open-world action game reached yet another sales milestone this week. The new number comes after the release of the PC version in April.

THE OTHER STUFF:

President Obama, who seems to enjoy The Witcher, has joined Twitter. This comes after six years in office. By comparison, Michelle Obama has had a Twitter account since 2013. What's on Obama's mind? Follow him here to find out:

Chicago-based developer Above and Beyond Technologies has announced that its Kickstarter-funded MMO, The Repopulation, will officially launch for PC in Q4 this year. The game promises a level of player freedom "unparalled in MMORPGs." An in-development version of the game is currently available through Steam Early Access for $15.

Here's a juicy, but pretty sketchy, rumor. Japanese website Gamestalk has obtained what appears to be a promotional image for Shenmue 3. Logos for Sega and Square Enix (??) appear in the image, along with...well, check it out for yourself.

NOVA's Evolution Lab has released a new video game that aims to teach children (or really, anyone else) about the theory of Evolution. It features an interactive digital tree of life and more. Play it here.

Did You Know Gaming's next video has arrived, this one focusing on Sony's Ratchet & Clank series. Watch the video below to learn a lot about the PlayStation franchise.

PC gaming company Razer this week announced that it worked with Chinese authorities to nab two people for illegally selling counterfeit Razer products in China. Per a press release: "Haikui Lin and Ping Gong were each committed to a year in prison and fined 140,000RMB, in addition to a 150,000RMB fine paid to Razer."

Are toys-to-life games like Skylanders and Amiibo a passing fad or here to stay? The Wall Street Journal dug into the issue this week as part of an excellent feature. Read it here.

EliteGamerLive, which aims to be the NCAA of esports, has launched an Indiegogo campaign to raise funds for its development and expansion. Head to the Indiegogo page to get all the details and to support the campaign.

Here is a video of 49 floppy disks playing various theme songs, including the Tetris theme song Not much else to say here.

If Naughty Dog's post-apocalyptic action game The Last of Us were set in Tokyo, it might look this this. Check out this incredible concept art from a current Ubisoft Osaka artist.

A Minecraft player who chose the name "MojangSucksDick" faced justice as Mojang changed his name to "NoWeDont." Good stuff, Mojang. Get the full story here.

Whether or not anyone asked for it, it's happening. It was announced this week that the Adventure Time and Puzzle Quest franchises are coming together for a new crossover game. Stay with me…The game is called Adventure Time Puzzle Quest. It's a match-three puzzle game that features the characters (and accordingly, the humor) of the popular Cartoon Network animated TV show. The free-to-play game launches this summer worldwide for iOS and Android devices.

Image credit: TouchArcade

At the request of competitive players, Riot has introduced a new "Hide Eye Candy" option to popular MOBA League of Legends. As its name suggests, this disables elements like butterflies, dragonflies, and water wakes. Get the full scoop over at Riot's website.

Nintendo was victorious in a patent suit involving the Wii Balance Board, the Japanese game giant announced this week. Two years ago, two companies, Ithaca Ventures and Ithaca Development sued Nintendo. They claimed the Wii Balance Board infringed on their patent. However, Nintendo said the suit was meritless, and Ithaca eventually withdrew its case. Get the full story here.

This is some of the best Pac-Man themed trolling I've ever seen. Such dedication!

Have a lovely Memorial Day weekend!


Puzzle & Dragons Z + Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition Review

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 08:45 am

Having played Puzzle & Dragons Z and Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition for quite some time now, I get the feeling that these games really weren't made for me.

Let me elaborate on that statement a bit: I adore the mobile version of Puzzle & Dragons, and have made it a part of my daily gaming routine for a very long time. The prospect of a version devoid of free-to-play trappings such as limited stamina for adventuring, or the premium-monster Rare Egg Machine is naturally exciting. Developers often make substantial changes in game design when making a free-to-play version of a popular game, often to the game's detriment; features once seen as a given are now treated as pricey premiums. On the 3DS, P&D Z and P&D Mario represent quite the opposite: they remove some of the features of the free-to-play game, leaving experiences that, while still quite fun, don't quite live up to the ever-changing and growing mobile version.

Puzzle & Dragons, for the unfamiliar, is an exceptionally clever mix of match-three puzzling, a collectible card game, and role-playing. You assemble a team of five monsters, complete with a "leader," from the horde of dragons, demons, gods, and superhumans you've collected, and then venture into dungeons consisting of sets of enemy encounters. You engage in combat on a 6X5 puzzle board: match three orbs of a particular color, and your monsters of that color attack foes. Unlike in a lot of similar games, you can move a single orb around the whole board for a short time, using it to shift many other orbs and create multiple matches, and thus yield more attacks and attack boosts for your team. Enemies, naturally, hit back when their turns arrive, which is when you focus on matching the healing orbs on the board. With practice, you're launching multiple combos and healing each turn with ease.

It's not just puzzle prowess that makes P&D appealing, however: every monster type in the game is unique, with its own statistics, color attributes, and perhaps most importantly, special skills. Leader monsters can employ a passive, always-on leader skill, like increasing the health points of your monsters of the same color, or giving an attack multiplier after a certain number of combos. Active skills are single-use abilities each monster has that you must choose to trigger, with effects like changing one orb type into another, or healing a bit of team health. Awakened skills--seen here only with Mario P&D--are extra, passive skills that can be applied to certain monsters by special means. Weighing considerations like monster types, stats, and skills is crucial to success when building teams. With the right materials earned from dungeon romps, monsters can also evolve and transform. It's this feeling of building and growing a killer squad, along with flaunting your puzzle skills, that makes P&D so tremendously fun and satisfying.

While both Puzzle & Dragons Z and Puzzle & Dragons Mario are built on this formula, the two games take very different approaches to presentation. P&D Mario is a full reskin with the Super Mario theme, replacing the fierce gods and towering dragons of mobile P&D with Mario, Luigi, Toad, and a bunch of familiar baddies. P&D Z is also quite different from the mobile game, but in its own way: while it features some of the familiar mobile P&D monsters, it's a more kid-friendly, story-driven adventure in which you fight an evil organization that controls the legendary Skydragons and is trying to reshape the world. From a strictly cosmetic standpoint, P&D Z is considerably more appealing: P&D Mario reuses New Super Mario Bros. music and visual assets frequently. Evolving a tiny dragon baby into a huge, hulking god-lizard is leagues more appealing than changing a Blooper into "a Blooper, but now with a baby Blooper!"

But there are more than just cosmetic differences between the two. Let's start with P&D Z: it's a fairly old game, having first released in Japan in late 2013, and simplifies the mobile game as it existed at that time, with all single-color-attribute monsters and no awakened skills. It also implements a significant change to the active skill system; instead of monsters each waiting a set number of turns before their skills can be triggered, there's a pool of skill points that can be utilized at any time by any monster, as long as you've got enough points to use a particular skill. P&D Mario feels a lot closer to modern mobile P&D, with things like multi-attribute monsters, skill-up boosts, and awakened skills, along with a more traditional turn-based active skill system.

The key difference between both of these games and mobile P&D, however, is the removal of anything associated with the in-app purchases that fuel the mobile version's money machine. Mobile P&D employs a free-to-play standard stamina meter than limits your play time (unless you either wait or pay), but you won't find that here. Your squad gains experience with dungeons in P&D Z and P&D Mario, unlike the mobile game, in which experience is strictly sacrifice-based. (This is an adjustment I really wish would be implemented in the mobile version.) Wiping out in a dungeon doesn't mean you lose everything you've earned: whereas you need to continue (and possible pay) in the mobile game to keep the loot you've earned to that point, the drops you acquire in P&D Z and P&D Mario stick with you whether you decide to bail, or use your one-up stash to keep pressing on.

This all sounds pretty great so far, so why don't these games click in the way the mobile version does? For starters, there's the odd difficulty curve. I understand that these games must be sold to people who may not have played P&D on mobile before, but being an experienced orb-slinger, I was terribly bored during the first few worlds of each game, wiping out enemy teams with relative ease. There's no option to skip all the tutorials and introductory dialogue, either, meaning that no matter which game you choose to play first, you'll be hearing a lot of the same advice to get you started. It isn't until about the halfway point in each game that things start to get considerably more challenging, and sometimes in weirdly unfair ways. For instance, you may encounter a no-healing-orbs dungeon at a point where you're not likely to have team members who have a "change an orb type to healing" active skill.

Another major issue is the grind. In mobile P&D, you have sets of dungeons that are centered around earning materials needed to upgrade your monsters, and they rotate on a consistent schedule. If there's something you know you need, you set time and stamina aside on a specific day of the week to do a few dungeon runs for the drops you require (which you're very likely to get). Both P&D Z and P&D Mario lack these, meaning that items (chips in P&D Z; coins and medals in P&D Mario) to upgrade monsters all must be be earned from regular dungeon runs, many of which don't have great drop rates. This leads to a lot of repetition, forcing you to run dungeons where you know a certain monster could appear, usually with disappointment as an end result. A "pay in-game currency for random items" option appears about halfway through both games, but getting what you want from those is even more of a crapshoot.

But perhaps the biggest issue, an unavoidable part of being a prepackaged product, is that the games are woefully static. There are no fun little surprises when you boot the game up, like daily giveaways, new monster and dungeon additions, and limited-time bonuses and areas like in the mobile game. While it's easy to cynically see these mobile P&D features as a means to get more money from players as they spend it on extra stamina and Rare Egg Machine rolls, the fact of the matter is that they make the game more interesting and exciting from one day to the next. When you're done with P&D Z and Mario, when you've cleared all the current levels and collected every last type of Paragoomba and Cheep-Cheep, that's all there is to it. But perhaps that's intentional--have no doubt that developer GungHo hopes some players move on to the ever-evolving mobile game when they feel they've seen everything these two games have to offer.

That's what I mean when I say that this game wasn't made for me. It's a watered-down stepping stone, intended to introduce players to Puzzle & Dragons with a familiar face and none of those intimidating in-app purchases. It's clear, however, that P&D's design was built on a free-to-play base, and taking those elements out actually makes the game feel less substantial as a result. (Yes, much as we loathe to admit it, it's exciting to spend some premium-currency magic stones for a random rare monster from time to time, just as it's fun to open a pack of trading cards or a blind-boxed figure.) While you can still have a good deal of fun with this two-in-one package, the mobile game is the better option. P&D Z and P&D Mario make nice little appetizers, but ultimately, it's up to you whether you want to feast on the main course afterwards.


Oculus Facing Another Lawsuit

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 06:36 am

Oculus VR, the Facebook-owned company behind the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset, is facing another lawsuit. As reported by Reuters, a new lawsuit filed this week makes serious accusations against Oculus VR and the Rift creator Palmer Luckey.

Per the report, the lawsuit accuses Luckey of "taking confidential information he learned while working with another company and passing it off as his own."

The company in question is Total Recall Technologies. The Hawaii-based company says in its filing that it hired Luckey in 2011 to create a prototype virtual reality headset; he even signed a confidentiality agreement, the lawsuit says.

"Throughout the latter half of 2011 and into 2012, Luckey received feedback and information to improve the design of the display," Reuters explains. "However, Luckey used information he learned from his partnership when he launched a Kickstarter campaign for his own head mounted display called the Oculus Rift, according to the lawsuit."

Total Recall Technologies is seeking compensatory and punitive damages. However, a specific dollar amount was not mentioned in the suit. The lawsuit claims Luckey committed breach of contract and fraud.

When approached by Reuters, a representative for Facebook declined to comment on the lawsuit. We also reached out to Oculus, but the company declined to comment. Get the full story over at Reuters.

This isn't the only lawsuit Oculus is currently facing. A year ago this week, Fallout parent publisher ZeniMax accused Oculus VR of stealing virtual reality technology that would later become the Rift.

Oculus recently announced that the Rift consumer model will be released in the first part of 2016, while the device's PC system requirements have also been revealed. Pricing, however, is still under wraps.


What Game Would You Want To Vacation In? - GameSpot Q&A

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 05:16 am

Welcome back to GameSpot Q&A, a weekly section where we ask our staff and readers an interesting discussion question about video games. Look at this as a forum where you and others can discuss and compare your opinions of this beloved hobby of ours. Let us know what your answer is to this week's question in the comments below!

This week's question is:

What game world would you want to spend a week-long vacation in?

2870846-wind-waker-hd-1.jpg

With a three-day weekend coming up for a lot of our readers, there is finally time to relax and maybe go off on mental vacations to the worlds of some of our favorite video games. But what if you could real-life week-long vacation to a video game world? Which world would you choose? Below is what some of our editors had to say.

The Longest Journey

The Longest Journey | Kevin VanOrd

Arcadia, from The Longest Journey. This was tough for me--I almost cited Ni No Kuni or The Secret World here--but Arcadia is overflowing with character and style, and home to countless cultures and myths. I wouldn't want just a week there, but an entire lifetime.

Broken Age | Alexa Ray Corriea

All game worlds are inherently perilous, so I'm not entirely sure I would want to spend a week in any of them. Given I'm into relaxing vacations these days, I'd probably want to spend a week on a beach somewhere... But if I had to pick I'd want to stay in Sugar Bunting from Double Fine's Broken Age, because I have a cake problem. I have a massive sweet tooth. I never pass up dessert, I love sugar, and a whole town basically kind of made out of cake and filled with bakers always making cake? Please. Put me on the first flight.

Yakuza | Peter Brown

There are so many fantastical worlds that are interesting, but I would love to spend a week-long vacation in the world of Yakuza, a.k.a., Tokyo. Arcades? Unlimited ramen? Gangsters fighting in the streets with perfectly formed pompadours swaying but never fraying? Sign me up! I'll take neon lights and Japanese video game shops over orcs and strongholds any day.

Rogue Legacy

Rogue Legacy | Danny O'Dwyer

Rogue Legacy seems cool. I mean, it's not like I have a thing for haunted castles. It's more the person-swapping element that appeals to me. I've always wanted to live a day in the life of somebody else; an old guy, a woman, somebody who's blind. Rogue Legacy allows you to live, and die, as dozens of weird and wonderful people. Like some fantastical version of Quantum Leap where you die as a color-blind shinobi and wake up as a gay, narcoleptic dwarf. How cool is that?!

Super Mario 64 | Rob Crossley

I'm tempted to say Katamari Damacy, because it's bonkers, but if it's a week long I'd have to go for Super Mario 64. It's the paintings dotted around the castle that seal the deal--you can literally jump into them and emerge on the other side in a completely different world. I really want to know how that feels.

Pokemon Fire Red/Leaf Green | Zorine Te

I would love to chill out in the world of Pokemon Fire Red/Leaf Green and command an army of creatures to take over the world and end all conflict as we know it have fun visiting each town, riding my bike, exploring caves, surfing, and cutting down bushes. There is much to see and do in the Kanto region, and I can imagine coming out of it relaxed and enriched. By the way, Australians call them holidays.

2870826-dish.jpg

Dishonored | Daniel Hindes

Dunwall, so I can catch the plague and really live #belowtheline. I would also like to be mercilessly beaten by the City Watch, vomited on by infested Weepers, and very likely assassinated by a teleporting man wearing a freaky mask.

Castlevania | Matt Espineli

I'd love to spend a week in Dracula's castle from Castlevania. Even though that place is filled with countless dangers that could very well threaten my life, I can't deny how cool it would be to explore. What other place has an awesome ice cavern, a haunted Victorian ballroom, and a clock tower inhabited by the Grim Reaper all in the same building? Nowhere.

Super Mario Sunshine | Eddie Makuch

I'd love to spend a week inside the world of Super Mario Sunshine. It seems like such a lovely place to either go on an adventure or just sit back and relax. The sun is always shining and the world feels so alive. Plus, you can do good deeds for the city's inhabitants by washing clear the mud from their world. Everyone wins!

2870827-bokuue.png

Boku no Natsuyasumi | Justin Haywald

Boku no Natsuyasumi. For anyone who knows the series, that may seem like a pretty boring response. After all, the PlayStation games are simply about being a kid and enjoying summer vacation. You collect bugs and bottle caps, go swimming, and run errands; no explosions or guns or doomsday scenarios. But the idyllic countryside setting combines the measured pace of Animal Crossing and the with the intimate slice-of-life details from a Miyazaki film. Besides, if I'm only there for a week, I want a place I'll enjoy, not a place where I'll get blown up.

World of Warcraft? | Chris Watters

Only a week? Well, I'm gonna want to see some sweeping vistas and meet some colorful locals. I'd also like to ride on some strange creatures, and maybe fly if that's not too much trouble? And it'd be great to visit a place with some history. I was thinking about Dinotopia or maybe Avatar when I wrote this description, but I think I ended up describing World of Warcraft. I'm alright with that, I hear they like dancing!


GS News Top 5 - Warcraft Movie CG Renders; GTA 5 Story DLC Plans

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 04:30 am
Get caught up on teasers from Doom and Need for Speed, the very first look at CG renders from the Warcraft movie, and is GTA 5's story DLC coming?

Watch Mario Kart: Fury Road Make Mad Max Even Better

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 04:11 am

If you haven't caught up with Mad Max: Fury Road yet, you probably should, since it's emerging as one of the best action movies of the year. The only thing that could make it better is a touch of Nintendo, and that's just what this fan-made trailer below does.

Created by aspiring filmmaker Kris Sundberg , the trailer subtly sets Mad Max in a Nintendo's universe, with only a few added CGI and sound effect you'll recognize from Mario Kart.

If Fury Road got you in the mood for more Mad Max you should keep an eye out for Just Cause developer Avalanche's new Mad Max game. It arrives in September for Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC. Avalanche released a brand new gameplay trailer showing off its car combat, hand-to-hand melee, and lots more.


The Beginner's Guide to Potions in The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 03:30 am
Potions are essential for getting the upper hand in combat. Get a quick rundown of the early game potions, as well as some essential tips that will save you time and effort.

The Point - The Witcher 3: A New Benchmark in Player Choice

By Anonymous on May 23, 2015 02:57 am
Storytelling and choice in video games has always been a complex problem to solve. Danny explores how games have evolved over the years, and how The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt makes player choice more enjoyable than ever.

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