Author: Game Infliction
Thunderful Games’ 3DS And Wii U eShop Sale Is Now Live
Update: Now open for NA too.
Update : Thunderful Games’ final 3DS and Wii U eShop sale is now available in North America too, offering 80% off a series of titles from both Thunderful and Rising Star Games.
It looks like the list of discounted games is slightly different on the North American eShop to those on offer in the EU (which you can still find in our original coverage below). Check out the following list to see what’s included in the NA sale:
Read the full article on nintendolife.com
Wayfinder Looks to Reconnect With the Spirit of MMOs Past
Wayfinder does not intend to be a brainless loot-grind or a dispiriting digital roulette wheel. Digital Extremes, the studio behind Warframe publishing this new fantasy RPG, is aware of all the pitfalls that tend to sink modern multiplayer games; how, more often than not, it feels like the designers are actively trying to take advantage of its players. But after a few hours with the game, and a gaggle of rollicking dungeon crawls and hubzone idle time, it’s clear that Wayfinder is trying to harken back to a more wholesome age of cooperative monster slaying. If you too grew up on World of Warcraft, Guild Wars, and Final Fantasy XI, Digital Extremes intends to bring you home.
In its most simple definition, Wayfinder is an MMO. Players take control of a slew of heroes — known as, you guessed it, Wayfinders — which are subdivided into classic tank, healer, and DPS roles. These characters come pre-equipped with names, backstories, and a League of Legends-style tray of three abilities and an ultimate, which means you aren’t going to be nurturing a mute, enigmatic player-character towards the level cap. The combat itself is steeped in that quasi-RPG magic that defines Destiny, Borderlands, and yes, Warframe. (Expect a lot of white damage numbers to come flying out of your opponents, but you’ll also be asked to aim your weapons, time your parries, and dodge-roll out of attacks.) You’ll be outfitting your roster of characters with a huge, interlocking talent tree, which will juice the integers of whatever build you’re currently targeting. In that sense, Wayfinder is well within the thrall of some of the most popular video games on the planet, but in the couple hours I’ve spent on the live servers, I haven’t grown bored by that familiarity.
A lot of the appeal can be chalked up to Wayfinder’s character design. The studio behind the game, Airship Syndicate, most recently worked on Ruined King, the League of Legends-based RPG, and you can see the influence of Runeterra’s gorgeous cartooning bleeding through. I spent most of my time with Senja, a yoked gladiator donning a spiky blonde haircut and a heavy, Kratos-sized ax. She served as the tank for most of our expeditions, and is buoyed by a mechanic where her abilities increase in potency as an unseen audience is whipped up into a frenzy. Senja showboats, flexes, and gestures to the cheap seats before she lines up another blow. When it connects, the crowd goes wild. It’s hard to step behind Senja’s controls without immediately adoring her vibe.
This is what Wayfinder will undoubtedly hang its hat on. Like Warframe, progression here seems to be mostly built around unlocking new characters, and from the ones I played, they all immediately glimmer with charisma and potential just like Senja. (Another Wayfinder I played, known as Niss The Shadow Dancer, is outfitted with a cocktail of shinobi-esque mobility options that make quick work of her enemies.) You’ll be taking this crew into the Overlands — a shared adventuring space for all players, like Blizzard’s Elwynn Forest or Bungie’s Europa — as well as “Lost Zones,” Wayfinder’s parlance for randomized dungeons, where you will carve through the modulated corridors in search of treasure and glory. Airship has made it clear that players will be given a ton of control over the loot that pops up in these dungeons to avoid the soul-killing grind of repeating the same instance, indefinitely, while searching for a furtive one-percent drop. The studio has learned from the mistakes of its forebears.
Everyone involved with Wayfinder kept hammering one point home over and over again: That this game, at its core, is an MMO. If Airship’s dreams come true, they’ll have created a lively realm of bustling General Chats, breezy dance contests, and the tragedies and triumphs of tough, mechanically-rich boss fights. By the end of my demo, it became clear that the people who made this game miss the golden age of the genre, and are desperate to recreate the conviviality of sharing a dungeon with a party of friends. From everything I’ve seen so far, Wayfinder looks to be up to the task.
Why is Sons Of The Forest exactly like an early-00s b-movie thriller, though?
Thus, in a spirit of pure scientific enquiry, I booted up Sons Of The Forest and immediately discovered that everyone has been lying to me, because Sons Of The Forest is not a survival game. Sons Of The Forest is very clearly an early 00s b-movie action thriller. The script was left in a filing cabinet in Slough in an empty office until the office was repurposed into a call centre, at which point it was found by a middle-manager whose paintball team thought it was awesome, and somehow he sent it to a game developer by mistake. This is what happened, and you cannot convince me otherwise.
Discord Voice Chat Is Now Available on PlayStation 5
Update 03/08/2023: Discord voice chat is finally available to PlayStation 5 users, allowing them to share voice channel parties with users on PC, Xbox, and mobile.
Revealed in a blog post, the “cross-voice” feature is available once users have linked their Discord and PlayStation accounts. This can be done by visiting the Settings menu on Discord itself (on PC or mobile), then selecting Connections followed by PlayStation.
Discord voice chat was originally released in PS5 beta, meaning it was available to select users who tested new features, but is now available to all.
Original Story 02/02/2022: A new PS5 system software beta has added Discord voice chat and Variable Refresh Rate support for 1440p displays, among a number of other upgrades.
Announced on the PlayStation Blog, the new system software is available for beta participants in the U.S., Canada, Japan, UK, Germany, and France. Its main feature is the addition of Discord voice chat, which allows cross-platform calls through the popular Discord system. Users will need to link their Discord and PlayStation Network accounts to use the service, and then begin a call on the Discord mobile app before transferring it to their console. It seems a little more fiddly than a standard PSN party, but will no doubt be very welcome to those who frequently play with friends who are on Xbox and PC.
The other headline feature of the beta update is Variable Refresh Rate support for 1440p resolution displays. This allows smoother visual performance when using a VR-compatible HDMI 2.1 display, provided the game supports Variable Refresh Rate. VRR can be enabled from your Screen and Video settings.
The new beta also provides a variety of smaller user experience-focused upgrades. These include the ability to share you screen directly from a friend’s profile card; a “Friends Who Play” tile that shows who on your friends list also plays the game you’re looking at; a new manual upload function for sending specific gameplay captures to the PS App; PS VR and PS VR2 filters for the game library; a new PS5 to PS5 data transfer function (available over Wi-Fi or LAN); and a notification pop-up for PS4 games that alerts you to any PS4 save game data you have in the cloud.
There’s also a limited U.S. and UK release for video capture voice commands. This allows users to say “Hey PlayStation, capture that” to save a video clip of gameplay. It’s the Xbox Kinect days all over again.
For more from the world of PlayStation, check out the games coming to PS Plus in February, as well as the news that the PS5 PS Plus Collection is being removed entirely later this year.
Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Features Editor.
The Mageseeker brings sick 2D action to the League Of Legends world next month
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Report: LEGO Disney And Guardians Of The Galaxy Projects Among Multiple Cancellations At TT Games
In-progess LEGO Star Wars Mandalorian DLC apparently in jeopardy, too.
In April 2022, TT Games and Warner Bros. Interactive launched the highly anticipated LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga, an ambitious project and one that reportedly took its toll on studio employees. The game has been a sales success, selling 3.2 million copies in less than two weeks after launch, which must have come as a relief to TT studio management considering the project’s troubled development. In fact, we have spoken to multiple sources confirming the cancellation of various projects at the studio featuring high-profile IP, including a Lego Disney title that was terminated just last year.
Known internally as ‘Project Marley’, this Lego game is said to have featured multiple worlds and Disney characters including Jungle Book, Nightmare Before Christmas, Pirates of the Caribbean, Maleficent, Muppets, Frozen, Toy Story, Winnie the Pooh — any animated Disney property that’s had the Lego treatment, it seems — with the player exploring a large overworld and Diablo-like dungeons. The player’s overarching goal was to rid each world of an evil purple force corrupting the environment.
Read the full article on nintendolife.com
Atelier Marie Remake Adds English Subtitles To Atelier Marie Plus
Launching on Switch this July.
The Atelier series has grown in popularity here in the west in recent years, and now to top off the upcoming release of Atelier Ryza 3 later this month, Koei Tecmo will also be launching a remake of Atelier Marie on Switch this July.
If the return of the original 1997 game wasn’t already exciting enough, it’s now been revealed the bonus game Atelier Marie Plus (included with the Digital Deluxe Edition) will feature full English subtitles. This game was originally exclusive to Japan, so this translation will make it even more accessible.
Read the full article on nintendolife.com
Random: Rare Pikachu Trading Card Auctioned For $480K Gets Zero Bids
Better luck next time.
Pokémon Trading Cards are as popular as ever – with original holographic Charizards often going for huge sums of money nowadays. It seems this isn’t necessarily the case with every Pokémon card sale though.
A recent eBay auction featuring a holographic Illustrator Pikachu in “near-perfect condition” has apparently attracted “zero” interest. This special Japanese promotional card released in 1998 had a PSA 8 grading with the seller – “passionate Pokémon fan” Tomoya Ohno – asking for a starting bid of $480,000 USD. One of these same cards sold for $900,000 last year.
Read the full article on nintendolife.com