Kadokawa releases a trailer featuring Metal Max Xeno Reborn in ‘New Generation’ teaser
Take a look at this re-release in a new light.
source /news/9102-kadokawa-releases-a-trailer-featuring-metal-max-xeno-reborn-in-new-generation-teaser
Take a look at this re-release in a new light.
source /news/9102-kadokawa-releases-a-trailer-featuring-metal-max-xeno-reborn-in-new-generation-teaser
A thorough outline of the gameplay systems in this strange RPG.
source /news/9101-conception-plus-maidens-of-the-twelve-stars-game-overview-trailer
The action RPG is set to release in Summer 2020.
source /news/9100-werewolf-the-apocalypse-earthblood-revealed-at-pdxcon-with-reveal-trailer
To celebrate that the arcade hit Killer Queen Black has arrived to Nintendo Switch, we joined forces with developer Liquid Bit to give away one grand prize and four first prizes to our readers. Here is what the packages look like:
One grand prize winner will take home: a Nintendo Switch console, a Killer Queen Black themed t-shirt, a Switch US key to download the game and also the physical edition of Killer Queen Black packaged with the custom Joy-Con skins
Four first runner up winners will get one Killer Queen Black themed t-shirt, one Switch US key to download the game and the physical edition of Killer Queen Black packaged with the custom Joy-Con skins.
To enter this giveaway, just read our official rules tab, accept our terms and conditions, and fill out the form you see below. If you are having trouble seeing the form on your mobile device please use this link.
Remember to check your email on Oct. 28 after 9 a.m. PT because we will be emailing the potential winners. Good luck!
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/win-a-killer-queen-black-bundle-with-nintendo-swit/1100-6470706/
A number of big additions and changes have been detailed for patch 5.1 in Final Fantasy XIV via the latest Letter from the Producer Live. This includes the Nier Automata alliance raid, the Grand Cosmos dungeon, and a bunch of class/job tweaks. These will all be implemented on October 29. While you can get our breakdown of a number of those new features in the upcoming 5.1 update, we’ll explain one in particular here: New Game+ for FFXIV.
It has been talked about for a while, and New Game+ will get its first iteration in the next patch. You’ll be able to replay story quests from all three expansions: Heavensward, Stormblood, and Shadowbringers. Don’t worry about overwriting or resetting the work you’ve done; you’ll maintain your character’s overall story and job progress. Rather, it’s the system for which you can experience the story again. It can work as another way to level up other classes/jobs, but you will not receive the quest’s item rewards.
Both Heavensward and Stormblood quests will be divided into four parts–we’re not entirely clear which exact quest or story beat each part starts. However, we know that Parts 1 and 2 cover the main expansion story while Parts 3 and 4 cover the post-release quests. Shadowbringers, on the other hand, is divided into two parts, which makes sense since it’s the latest expansion with post-release quests rolling out at the moment. You won’t be able to freely jump between quests as each chapter must be played from their beginning, and you’ll have one auto-save slot for your New Game+ journey.
It’s an ambitious system for the MMORPG and there’s still more for New Game+ in the future. It is not yet incorporating anything from the base game, A Realm Reborn, though that is in the works. Considering that the team is currently tweaking A Realm Reborn to condense its questline, cut out some filler, and make it a better experience for new players, we may have to wait for the revamp before it gets incorporated to the New Game+ system.
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/final-fantasy-xiv-will-have-new-game-heres-how-it-/1100-6470694/
On this week’s episode of the GameSpot After Dark podcast Jake, Lucy, and Tamoor are joined by Mary Kish, former GameSpot staff member, current Twitch employee, and all-around amazing streamer. The gang talks about the latest happenings in the world of video games, which includes the great Fortnite downtime of 2019. They also talk about their impression of Overwatch and The Witcher 3 Switch, as well as Disco Elysium, and Outer Wilds. Also, butt cheeks.
Tamoor: For people who don’t know, it was Fortnite; season 10 finished. They ended the world of Fortnite as we know it by sucking everything into a black hole, and then for around a day it was just that black hole.
Mary: The servers went down. If you started the game up, it allowed you to uninstall or quit, which was really shocking for a bunch of 12-year-olds, without a doubt.
Lucy: I’m trying to think what the equivalent of that was when I was a kid. Oh, Sims expansion packs would get to like 75% install, and then just break. Or, you could install a Sims expansion pack and you would load up the game, and the Sims would all just be completely still and not move. That’s the only frame of reference I have for wanting to play a game so badly and the game not cooperating, that I freaked out.
Tamoor: Losing internet connection when your mp3 download is at 97%.
Lucy: Oh, it’s when your friend used to send you songs that they downloaded from iTunes, and then you open it on your computer and it says, “You need the iTunes password of the person who bought it,” and then they wouldn’t give it to you.
Mary: It’s like being fairly through a game and then losing your save file.
Tamoor: But that happened and people freaked out-understandably, in some regard.
Lucy: What a PR move, though. I mean, that’s nuts.
Tamoor: It was, considering… I won’t quote it, but that game, some people have broken down how much that game makes on a day-by-day basis, and it is more money than we could ever earn in three lifetimes combined. People have obviously invested a lot of time into that game, a lot of money into that game, and they freaked out when it happened.
Mary: They asked for their money back.
Tamoor: Yeah. I think the thing that I struggle with is, it’s very obviously not going away. Kids aren’t going to be like, “Oh.”
Lucy: Kids don’t understand that, no.
Tamoor: Kids won’t understand that, but my hope would have been a parent would have gone, “It’s not going away. Relax. It’ll be back. It’ll be all right.”
Mary: I thought it was funny to watch them freak out.
Tamoor: I was like, “Oh, it’s a brief respite from Fortnite.”
Lucy: Not having to write new stories about Fortnite.
Tamoor: Yeah, because honestly, perhaps I shouldn’t say this, but I wrote through half of a story, which was basically about: this season has given me something I’ve wanted for so long, and that is an undeniable opportunity to not think about Fortnite for a while.
Because the reality of the situation is, wherever you are, there’s a whole group of people out there that has to think about Fortnite [constantly]. On our side, we write about it and make videos about it, and it’s… You can be like, “Oh, you don’t have to write about it.” Well, yeah you’re right, we don’t have to write about it. But then also, we’re giving up a lot of-
Mary: SEO juice.
Tamoor: … SEO juice, traffic. That sounds really cynical, but the way I see it is: Yeah, I will happily write about Fortnite until the cows come home because that traffic is what gives everyone else the opportunity to follow a passion project, and to make a video that probably won’t do as good numbers as a Fortnite video would, but it’s something they care about.
Mary: Jumping on that Fortnite grenade for your peers?
Tamoor: Yeah, exactly. It’s like some of the freedom to do that is afforded by what covering Fortnite does. That’s one side of it, but then if you’re a streamer… I was watching a streamer go through the transition process from one season to Chapter 2, which is what it is now, and those streamers have to be on all the time. If they have to play Fortnite all the time, their lives are consumed by Fortnite. I guarantee-
Mary: They get burnt out.
Tamoor: Yeah, I guarantee you there’s probably a few that are like, “Man, I don’t have to think about Fortnite. Nothing’s going to happen for at least 48 hours or 24 hours.” I imagine there’s some brief respite there, and even for people who work in marketing and various other ancillary industries that feed into Fortnite, it’s something like… It was a break, right?
Mary: Yeah. Fortnite is a machine, and you’re 100% [right] that streamers go through burnout just like writers or any other trade where they genuinely want to do something else. But you have to understand that especially a full-time streamer, someone who’s made a living out of it, they’re not just really good at video games, they’re gamifying their lives; they know that playing Fortnite min/maxes their chances at getting more subs, more donations, and more viewers. If you want to take that seriously and grow your channel, you play what is hot; you play the number one game, and the number one game for so long has been Fortnite and you cannot stop this. If you’re trying to grow, you have to play Fortnite, and that is exhausting for a streamer who is craving something new.
Tamoor: The interesting discussion is whether Epic is aware of that. They’re aware of the fact that they have an industry, or they have this massive group of people who are either relying on the economy that Fortnite has created within the game and within streaming as a whole. They know that there are established people, there are people who are halfway there, there are people who are a quarter-way there, and there are people who are just starting there.
What are the realities of taking that game offline? It might serve them a purpose, but how much responsibility do they have to think about those people? I don’t have the answer to that. As well as saying that, I bet you there are loads of Fortnite player-streamers that are probably like, “Oh, thank God I don’t have to think about Fortnite.”
Mary: You just play the next biggest thing. You just, now you’re Apex Man.
Tamoor: Exactly, but also it’s… You have to do your due diligence and say there’s also… there are Fortnite streamers there that were like, “Oh, God, it’s gone for a day. What do I do?”
Mary: Right. It’s probably both. I think it’s probably more relief than it is stress. I also think that, at the end of the day, we all know that the money machine, the million-dollar whale isn’t going to go away forever. There was no one who probably looked at that black hole, besides maybe a couple of youths, that were like, “It’s never coming back.” We all knew that it would come back, it was just a matter of time. But it is interesting to think about what a streamer would do if their cash cow, or the game that they play that everyone expects them to play is no longer around.
Jake: I might be getting the streamer wrong, but didn’t… I think summit1g, he was playing a lot of Fortnite because that’s what was big. Then finally, he had a breaking one day and he’s like, “I can’t play this game anymore.” Then he switched to Sea of Thieves, and that was part of the reason why Sea of Thieves had that up-trend for a while there. Because he was just so tired of it, and he’s like, “I don’t care. I don’t care if I don’t get any viewers. I don’t care if I lose most of my viewers. I cannot play more of this game, I am so burnt out.”
I don’t know if things have changed since then; maybe he’s back on Fortnite, maybe not, I don’t really keep up with that kind of stuff. But I found that story super fascinating, and also just kind of inspiring because you hear about that a lot, streamers burning out on the games they’re known for. It was kind of cool to hear someone who was just like, “You know, I’m just going to play what I want.”
Mary: I’m going to play something I want.
Jake: Maybe it won’t work out. He’s probably in the minority in the fact that, first of all, he was already pretty big so even that-
Mary: He can afford to. That’s the story you don’t hear, is that he can afford to do it. We also have really large streamers that for whatever reason, like xQc today was like, “I’m going to play Poly Bridge.” And you know what? He had 20,000 people watching him play Poly Bridge, and that probably really helped the devs of Poly Bridge and that’s rad, but he can afford to.
What you don’t see are all the people who are trying to get at that level that have to play the main games, and I think that’s that, as a company, we even are trying to encourage people to take a break from. It’s just very difficult to tell someone who’s trying to make it to also play what they want, and the statistics don’t lie.
Tamoor: Because I wasn’t playing the game but I was writing about the game and covering it, I wanted to find someone who would focus on what was happening but also had a decent community around there. Watching this person was like, this person clearly at some point cared about this game and enjoyed this game; but it was this weird situation where it seemed like he was an auto-pilot, where the basic function of his existence was to entertain. But that meant he was playing the game, and any time someone said a word he would take it, process it and try to make it somehow entertaining.
There was a lady on the other side talking just normal things like, “I’m going to get breakfast,” and then he’d be playing and sing, “Breakfaaaaaaaaast.” It’s like, this person’s just taking external stimuli and [automatically trying to turn] it into something even remotely engaging. I was watching it and I was like, “I feel so bad for this person.” it was simple things like someone would ask him a question and he’d be singing the question back and then going, “Oh, I need to answer this question.” And external stimuli like, “Oh, man, can see the shaking?” And like, “My phone’s ringing. Oh, isn’t that cool? The alarm is going off on my phone, isn’t that weird?” And you’re like, “No, dude. You don’t have to turn every moment of your existence into entertainment.”
Mary: Content, yeah.
Tamoor: That’s the scary part of it. But then this person reached 200k viewers and I was like, “I guess that’s what it’s all there for.”
Lucy: But at what cost?
Tamoor: Yeah, but at what cost? It was just like, oh, man. Fortnite is just a weird, sticky subject that-
Mary: It is.
Tamoor: For as much good as it does, it does a lot of things are questionable.
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/fortnite-finally-gave-everyone-a-break-and-it-was-/1100-6470704/
Pokemon Go‘s Halloween 2019 event is now underway, and it’s introduced a new Mythical Pokemon to the game: Darkrai. The nightmare-inducing Dark-type has started to appear in five-star Raid Battles, making this your first chance to catch it in Pokemon Go.
Darkrai will only be available in Raids until November 1, when Pokemon Go’s Halloween event ends, so you’ll want to make the most of this time if you’re hoping to add a few to your collection. To help you out, we’ve rounded up some tips on how to battle and catch Darkrai below.
Like many other Legendary and Mythical Pokemon, Darkrai can be found as a tier-five Raid Boss, so to encounter one in the game, you’ll need to head to a Gym where a Darkrai Raid is taking place. The Mythical Pokemon will periodically appear at Gyms, but your best bet for finding one will be during the Legendary Raid Hour events.
For one hour every Wednesday evening, more five-star Raids featuring Pokemon Go’s current Legendary will take place, effectively guaranteeing you’ll find a Raid. There will be two Darkrai Raid Hours before the Mythical Pokemon slinks back into the shadows. The first takes place on October 23, with the second following on October 30. Both events will run from 6-7 PM local time.
To participate in a Raid Battle, you’ll need to have a Raid Pass. You can either purchase these from Pokemon Go’s in-game store or receive one for free when you spin the Photo Disc at a PokeStop; however, you can only hold one free Raid Pass at a time.
Before you can have a chance to catch Darkrai, you’ll first need to defeat it in battle, and it’ll prove to be a tough opponent. Darkrai is a pure Dark-type, which means it is susceptible to Fighting, Bug, and Fairy, so you’ll want to have Pokemon of these types on your team when you challenge it.
For Fighting-types, Machamp will likely be your best bet, particularly if it knows Counter and Dynamic Punch. Heracross and Scizor are both good Bug-types to use, the latter especially if it knows X-Scissor. Fairy-types are harder to find because they’re among the rarest Pokemon in the game, but Gardevoir with Dazzling Gleam is a good choice.
However, two types you’ll want to avoid using are Ghost and Psychic. Darkrai resists both elements, so those monsters won’t fare very well against it. Note that Gardevoir is also part Psychic, but it takes neutral damage from Darkrai thanks to the fact it is also part Fairy, and if it knows the aforementioned Dazzling Gleam, it can hit the Mythical Pokemon super-effectively. Follow these tips and you should have no problem taking Darkrai down.
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/pokemon-go-darkrai-raid-guide-darkrai-counters-how/1100-6470701/
Destiny 2‘s Season of the Undying continues to unfold week by week, and more new content is on its way with the next weekly reset. We’re seeing the toughest waves of the Shadowkeep expansion’s Nightmare Hunt activity showing up, as well as a new quest for a rare and unique Exotic weapon: Leviathan’s Breath.
Bungie detailed the first month of live content in Shadowkeep and the Season of the Undying on its content calendar, which includes Nightmare Hunts; a new dungeon; the upcoming Halloween event, Festival of the Lost; and the Final Assault portion of the Vex Offensive activity. As Bungie noted in its latest This Week at Bungie blog post, the Leviathan’s Breath quest becomes available on October 22, kicked off by visiting Banshee-44 in the Tower.
We already know a little about what to expect from Leviathan’s Breath. The Exotic weapon is a Void bow that uses Heavy ammo. It’s capable of firing heavy bolt that can stagger unshielded enemies. When the bow is fully drawn, it also creates a concussive blast that knocks back enemies.
It’s not clear what the Exotic quest will require players to do, although the name Leviathan’s Breath suggests it’s related to Cabal Emperor Calus. If recent quests are any indication, it’ll probably include several steps–including one or two specific missions. The mission is only available if you’ve purchased the season pass for the Season of the Undying, though. It was included with Shadowkeep, but if you’re playing the free-to-play New Light version of Destiny 2, you’re out of luck for Leviathan’s Breath.
We’ll have a full guide for Leviathan’s Breath after it releases with Tuesday’s weekly reset. In the meantime, there are more Exotic weapons to track down in Shadowkeep and the Season of the Undying. Those are Deathbringer, a Hive-themed rocket launcher that works more like a mortar, and Divinity, the Garden of Salvation Raid trace rifle that includes a lot of puzzle-solving.
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/destiny-2s-next-exotic-quest-leviathans-breath-sta/1100-6470703/
Ready your spells because it’s time for a new type of battle royale. To celebrate the arrival of the closed beta for Spellbreak, we joined forces with developer Proletariat so 1,000 readers can get a chance to see which player has the best magic gauntlet.
To enter the giveaway you just have to read the official rules, accept the terms and conditions and fill out the form below. If you have trouble seeing the form on your mobile device, please use this link.
Remember to check your email on Oct. 25 at 9 a.m. PT because we will be emailing the code directly to the winners.
Head out to the comments section and let us know which element-type magic you would choose to play the game. Good luck, everyone!
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/spellbreak-giveaway-win-a-free-code-for-the-closed/1100-6470691/
Dear Bethesda,
At E3 2018 you revealed that you’re making Elder Scrolls VI, a new entry in the much loved Skyrim line of video game product. You showed us next to nothing, but everyone still lost their dang minds. And who could blame them? The *NOT REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ACTUAL GAME* trailer gave fans a brief look at a world they have so much invested in. The rousing orchestral rendition of the Elder Scrolls theme conjured memories of their fondest times with the franchise: filling a room full of cheese wheels, talking to a dog, turning dragons into Macho Man Randy Savage.
What we do know about it comes from Todd Howard himself, and it’s that it’s probably going to be some time until the game is ready for us to play. Howard said it’s “not coming anytime soon” and, “I don’t even know what the world is going to be like when it comes out.”
It might look more like Fallout if we’re not careful, am I right folks?
Anyway, it’s clear the game is still early in development, which means this is the perfect time for us, the gamers–the fans–to get our requests in … Because that’s definitely how game development works.
My request is a simple one and it involves including a character that has become critical to fantasy fiction. A figure that transcends intellectual properties and franchises to become part of the tapestry of the genre, as necessary as swords and shields, magic and mysticism, small cheese wheels and big cheese wheels. I am, of course, talking about the great and powerful Potion Seller.
For those who aren’t keeping up with all the modern greats in the fantasy genre, Potion Seller is a character created by Justin Kuritzkes for his magnum opus, a seminal piece of fantasy fiction titled, “Double U, Double U, Double U Dot YouTube Dot Com Forward Slash Watch Question Mark V Equals R Underscore FQU4KzN7A.” The beloved story focuses on a single conversation between a knight and a merchant selling potions.
Although the scale of the story may be small, what it depicts is still impactful. The knight, preparing to go into battle, asks for the Potion Seller’s “strongest potions,” to which the Potion Seller responds by rebuking his request. His potions, as it turns out, are too strong for the knight, according to the seller, and thus the knight would not be able to handle them.
The knight, exerting whatever authority he has, attempts to press on, demanding that the Potion Seller give him his “strongest potions” once again. “My strongest potions will kill you, traveler, you can’t handle my strongest potions,” he replies. In this moment, the message behind the story becomes clear. You see, in the eyes of the Potion Seller, the knight is just another person, a “traveler.” Whatever accolades the knight has gathered in battle thus far are not important, for the seller, the power of his potions are all that matter and it is his responsibility to ensure that they are only given to those he has confidence in … for their own good.
“YOU BETTER GO TO A SELLER THAT SELLS WEAKER POTIONS,” says Potion Seller, attempting to make the knight see sense.
The knight, taken back by the Potion Sellers unwavering morals and values, arrogantly asserts himself once again. “I’m telling you right now,” he begins, “I’m going into battle, and I need only your strongest potions.” The arrogance of the knight becomes clear. This is a story about hubris and how it can be the undoing of even the most self-assured heroes.
“MY STRONGEST POTIONS WOULD KILL A DRAGON, LET ALONE A MAN,” the Potion Seller clapeth back. “YOU NEED A SELLER, THAT SELLS WEAKER POTIONS … because my potions ARE TOO STRONG.” The knight’s desperate pleas are cast aside, “YOU CAN’T HANDLE MY STRONGEST POTIONS. NO ONE CAN!!!!!!!! MY STRONGEST POTIONS ARE FIT FOR A BEAST LET ALONE A MAN.”
In this moment, it becomes clear that “Double U, Double U, Double U Dot YouTube Dot Com Forward Slash Watch Question Mark V Equals R Underscore FQU4KzN7A” is also the story of how those that the masses would dismiss as a lowly member of society–a mere potion seller–can wield strength even greater than champions of the realm.
He may be branded “a rascal with no respect for knights” but, ultimately, the Potion Seller stuck to his convictions. He respected the power of his potions and, in the face of a would-be hero, he stuck up for himself, begging the question: Who was the real hero?
In The Elder Scrolls VI, whatever it may become, players will inevitably be cast as the hero and go on a journey to save the lands, untangle political turmoil, and become a legendary figure for the peoples of the lands to sing songs about and deify. But there’s also an opportunity to make the little characters count, to remind adventurers that, while they may be on a quest to decide the fates of many, others have their own destinies, be it collecting wheels of cheese or choosing who to sell potions to.
And who better to remind people about this than arguably the most important representation of the little-guy-standing-up-for-himself fantasy archetype, the Potion Seller. He deserves to be in The Elder Scrolls VI. He is too important to fantasy fiction not to be. To that end, we at GameSpot have created a petition to urge Bethesda to reach out to acclaimed author Justin Kuritzkes and bring Potion Seller to The Elder Scrolls VI. Please sign and support this noble cause.
Thank you,
GameSpot’s Very Online Staff Members
from GameSpot – Game News https://www.gamespot.com/articles/the-elder-scrolls-6-petition-please-bethesda-put-t/1100-6470695/
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