Todd Howard Rules Out Fallout 1 and 2 Remakes

Amid the increasing popularity of the Fallout franchise, some fans have called on Bethesda to remake the much-loved first two games in the series — but according to Bethesda Game Studios chief Todd Howard that’s not on the cards.

In an interview with YouTube channel MrMattyPlays, Howard said that some of the charm of Fallout 1 and 2 has to do with the fact they remain firmly rooted in the old-school PC role-playing game era of the mid-to-late 90s, so he’s happy to leave them where there while ensuring they run well.

“The main priority for us is to make sure they’re available and you can still play them,” Howard said. “So on the PC obviously they’re there for people to go and get and play, and making sure that they run okay. As far as beyond that, we’ve talked about it, but our priorities in terms of, hey let’s go do dev work and make certain things work, they haven’t been in those areas. So again, priority is, hey can people load it up and play it?

“We want it to load up and run well. The rest of it, I could argue some of the charm of games from that era and the original Fallouts is a little bit of that age. I would never want to paste over some of that with, well we changed how this works so it’s more modern. So as long as you can download it, as long as it loads up and runs, I’d like people to experience it the way it was.”

Led by Interplay producer Tim Cain, the original Fallout games enjoyed critical and commercial success on PC before the company collapsed. Elder Scrolls developer Bethesda later picked up the rights to the franchise and went on to release Fallout 3 in 2008, bringing the post-apocalyptic series into first-person and full 3D.

Despite their age and archaic design, Fallout 1 and 2 remain much-loved by fans of the series, and are often held up as two of the greatest role-playing games ever released. Indeed the recent franchise boost fueled by Amazon Prime’s breakout Fallout TV show affected the original games as well as the modern titles with increased player numbers across Steam.

Right now, if you ask me, the best way to play it is on a PC, mouse and keyboard, the way it was.

And so, the calls to modernize Fallout 1 and 2 are louder than ever, but clearly Howard has more pressing matters to attend to, including ongoing updates for Fallout 76 and, eventually, Fallout 5, which is set to come out after The Elder Scrolls 6.

Howard even ruled out bringing Fallout 1 and 2 to console. “Anything is possible, but that’s going to be a longer dev throw,” he replied when asked if such a port were even possible. “And you have to ask yourself, is that where we want to put our time right now? Or is it best played the way it was on a PC? Right now, if you ask me, the best way to play it is on a PC, mouse and keyboard, the way it was.”

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Spear Mains Rejoice as Helldivers 2 Patch 1.000.402 Issues Tons of Fixes

Helldivers 2 developer Arrowhead has followed up last week’s release of the game’s big balance update and premium warbond with a new patch that applies a long list of fixes.

The highlight is a fix for the Spear support stratagem, which has suffered all sorts of problems since the PC and PlayStation 5 co-op shooter launched earlier this year. What should be a reliable monster of a weapon has for so long been fickle, with its anti-tank homing missile failing to properly track locked-on targets.

According to the update 1.000.402 patch notes, there’s a fix for the Spear not targeting several entities (spawners, compound objects, etc). This should encourage more players to bring the Spear onto the battlefield.

And here’s another helpful fix: Hellbombs now get called down facing the player, rather than away from the player. Players have got used to Hellbombs facing away from them, so there will be a bit of unlearning to do with this one.

Arrowhead updated the known issues list, too, outlining what the studio is working on fixing with upcoming patches. Of note: the Bile Titan sometimes does not take damage to the head, and the Charger’s butt does not take damage from explosions. What an arse!

Last week was a big one for Helldivers 2 and Arrowhead, which recently revealed it was in the process of setting the studio up so it could “make more and better stuff” in the long-term. In an introductory post on reddit, new CEO Shams Jorjani, who recently replaced previous Arrowhead CEO and now current Chief Creative Officer Johan Pilestedt, said the studio has had to adjust to the enormous success Helldivers 2 has brought to the company.

Helldivers 2 is the fastest-selling PlayStation game of all time, having shifted an incredible 12 million copies in just 12 weeks since going on sale earlier this year. Amid the huge revenue Helldivers 2 has generated, Arrowhead itself has suffered a number of crises, including launch server problems and, most recently, a battle with Sony itself over the console maker’s controversial attempt to force Steam players to account link to PlayStation Network.

Helldivers 2 update 1.000.402 patch notes:

Overview

For this patch, we have made improvements and changes to the following areas:

  • Quality of life improvements
  • Crash fixes
  • General bug fixes

Fixes

Crashes

  • Fixed various crashes that would sometimes occur when changing settings.
  • Fixed potential crash or corrupted font texture when changing the language
  • Fixed a crash that might occur after exiting a mission.
  • Fixed a crash that occurs when opening the social menu with more than 100 friends. As a result we have also limited the friends list visibility to 100. You will remain friends with anyone over 100, but you may not be able to see them if they are offline.
  • Fixed crash when opening social menu and having many blocked players and/or friend requests.
  • Fixed a crash when minimizing after changing fullscreen mode.
  • Fixed rare crash which could occur when picking up equipment.
  • Fix a crash when a client interacts with a terminal in a waiting state after host migration.
  • Fix a crash related to minefields.

Misc Fixes

  • Fix issues with dodge and prone.
  • Fix not being able to stand up when wielding the ballistic shield.
  • Fixed the Recoilless reload speed.
  • Fixed issue where users couldn’t write a description on console when reporting a player.
  • Fixes vehicle preview not despawning in Warbonds when quickly scrolling through the catalog.
  • Fix Spear not targeting several entities (spawners, compound objects, etc).
  • Sentries have a higher destruction value so most explosions do not instantly destroy them regardless of the damage amount.
  • Fixed bug where operation progress would be lost when kicked due to inactivity,
  • The “Remove Friend” and “Block Player” buttons are now hold-to-confirm instead of a single click.
  • Fix bug where dying would try to enter ADS.
  • Fix a soft lock if you receive an interact emote while holding a grenade.
  • Fix projectile to crosshair inaccuracies in ADS when the player is in different stances
  • Fixed broken player model in career tab when on someone else’s ship.
  • Adjudicator: fixed incorrect recoil values.
  • Fixed armory terminals losing their functionality if the last client player who interacted with them leaves the host’s ship.
  • Fix missing localization for flying patrols operation modifiers.
  • Fix issue where throwing knives could be left floating in the air.
  • Support for non-latin fonts in the game’s install folder path.
  • Vehicle skins are now applied to all vehicle variations when equipping directly from Warbonds.
  • Fixes flag objectives not properly tracking Helldiver’s position while on a Combat Walker.
  • PH-202 Twigsnapper helmet: fixed missing description.
  • Fixed the issue where the shuttle would clip through Bile Titans and terrain during landing sequences.
  • Improved performance on PS5 when CPU bound
  • Fixes FX remaining when destroying Spore Spewer
  • Ensure stim vfx remains on screen for the entire duration of the stim effect when med-kit bonus is present.
  • Fix for emote receiver players being able to use their weapons during emote animation
  • Hellbombs now get called down facing the player, rather than away from the player.

Known Issues

These are issues that were either introduced by this patch and are being worked on, or are from a previous version and have not yet been fixed.

  • Sending friend requests via friend code in game currently does not work.
  • Players may be unable to be joined or invited to the game.
  • Players added to the ‘Recent Players’ list will appear in the middle of the list.
  • Players may experience delays in Medals and Super Credits payouts.
  • Available Operations are generated again after reconnecting after getting AFK kicked.
  • Enemies that bleed out do not progress Personal Orders and Eradicate missions.
  • Arc weapons sometimes behave inconsistently and sometimes misfire.
  • Most weapons shoot below the crosshair when aiming down the sights.
  • Plasma Punisher is unable to shoot out of the shield generators.
  • Stratagem beam might attach itself to an enemy but it will deploy to its original location.
  • “Hand Carts” ship module does not reduce Shield Generator Pack’s cooldown.
  • Bile Titan sometimes does not take damage to the head.
  • Charger’s butt does not take damage from explosions.
  • Players may become stuck in the Loadout when joining a game in progress.
  • Reinforcement may not be available for players who join a game in progress.
  • Planet liberation reaches 100% at the end of every Defend mission.
  • “Raise Flag of Super Earth” objective does not show a progress bar.
  • Mission count in the Career tab is being reset to zero after every game restart.
  • Some weapons’ descriptions are out-of-date and don’t reflect their current design.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Paradox Officially Cancels Its Long-Delayed The Sims Competitor Life by You

Paradox Interactive announced that its long-delayed The Sims-style life sim Life by You is officially canceled in a post on their website today.

Life by You was initially announced in May of 2023. At the time, an early access release was planned for September of that year. It was initially delayed to May of 2024, then in February, Paradox announced an additional delay, pushing Life by You’s Early Access release to June 4th. Two weeks before the June 4 release, it was delayed again, this time without a release date, because, in the words of Paradox Deputy CEO Mattias Lilja, “additional time [was] needed.”

Paradox Interactive released a statement from CEO Fredrik Wester explaining the decision on its website. The full statement is as follows:

Paradox Interactive (Paradox) has today decided to cancel the release of the game Life by You. This means that the second quarter of 2024 will be impacted negatively by MSEK 208 from the write-down of the game’s total capitalized development costs.

For a long time, we’ve held hopes for Life by You and the potential we saw in it, but it is now clear that the game will not be able to meet our expectations. A version that we’d be satisfied with is too far away, and therefore we are taking the difficult decision to cancel the release. Moving forward, we should perform at a much higher level, and it’s obvious that we have work ahead of us, said Fredrik Wester, CEO of Paradox Interactive.

We’ve performed poorly in recent releases, continued Wester. Even though we now start new projects in a different manner, it is clear that we must make further changes so that quality is more consistent and the promises we make to our players are met. We have to evaluate how we manage projects and how we organize, for we will and must get better. We have a very solid financial position and a strong core game portfolio, which keeps us confident about our future.

This disclosure contains information that Paradox Interactive AB is obliged to make public pursuant to the EU Market Abuse Regulation (EU nr 596/2014). The information was submitted for publication, through the agency of the contact person, on 17-06-2024 21:45 CET.

Life by You’s cancelation marks the latest in what has been, by Paradox’s own admission, a years-long rough patch that has affected their last few games and development process. Cities Skylines 2 had a disasterous launch that Paradox is still trying to sort out more than eight months after release, and Steam reviews for the city builder remain mixed.

Jail sim Prison Architect 2 has also been the victim of numerous delays, the most recent of which pushed the release date back to September due to “unexpected issues occurring too often.” The Paradox-published Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 has also endured a troubled development that has seen several years of delays, the depature or firing of several senior staff, and, ultimately, a change in developers. Thankfully, it seems to be back on track after new gameplay footage was revealed in January.

The publisher’s most recent release, the Ironclad Games-developed Sins of a Solar Empire 2, dropped it’s Early Access label earlier this year ahead of its planned August Steam release. In our review, we said “Sins of a Solar Empire 2 is a faithful follow-up to a beloved strategy game, but it is still in a buggy and clearly unfinished state despite its stealth launch out of early access.”

Will Borger is an IGN freelancer. You can find him on Twitter @bywillborger.

Bethesda Doesn’t Feel the Need to ‘Rush’ Fallout 5 in the Wake of TV Show’s Success

Bethesda Softworks head Todd Howard knows fans are looking forward to Fallout 5, especially in the wake of the Prime Video show’s success, but he isn’t interested in rushing it out the door.

Howard opened up about the future of the hit post-apocalyptic RPG series during an interview with YouTube content creator MrMattyPlays. He says Bethesda spends a lot of time plotting out how to handle the direction of its franchises.

“For other Fallout games in the future, you know, obviously I can’t talk about those right now, but I would say, sort of rushing through them, or we kind of need to get stuff out that is different than the work we’re doing in 76…we don’t feel like we need to rush any of that,” he said. “The Fallout TV show fills a certain niche in terms of the franchise and storytelling.”

The last mainline Fallout game was Fallout 4, which released in 2015. DLC content for the entry was steadily released for PC and consoles over the next year, and in 2018, Bethesda launched its multiplayer-centered offshoot, Fallout 76. While fans slowly flocked to the West Virigina-set open-world RPG, it wasn’t until the premiere of Prime Video’s Fallout TV show that the Bethesda series reached a new level of attention.

Still, Howard won’t budge when it comes to desires for a substantial video game release. For him, it comes to down to wanting to treating its franchises with care.

“I don’t think it’s bad for people to miss things.

“Totally get the desire for a new kind of mainline single-player game,” he added. “And look, those things take time. I don’t think it’s bad for people to miss things. We just want to get it right and make sure that everything we’re doing in a franchise, whether it’s Elder Scrolls, Fallout, or now Starfield, that those become meaningful moments for everybody who loved these franchises as much as we do.”

Howard spoke to IGN about Fallout 5 earlier this year. He admitted that Bethesda is focused on The Elder Scrolls 6 for now and is still committed to updating Starfield but added, “that doesn’t mean that we’re not making plans for other things.”

Elsewhere in his conversation with MrMattyPlays, Howard touched on the negative response Bethesda has received when it comes to paid mods in Starfield. He also touched on how the studio will continue to build on its recent space RPG with more story expansions. While we wait for more Fallout, you can check out the latest update on Fallout Season 2. For everything else we know about Fallout 5, you can click here.

Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor with IGN. He started writing in the industry in 2017 and is best known for his work at outlets such as The Pitch, The Escapist, OnlySP, and Gameranx.

Be sure to give him a follow on Twitter @MikeCripe.

Live-Action Totally Spies! TV Series in the Works With Will Ferrell Executive Producing

A live-action Totally Spies! TV series is in the works at Prime Video and Will Ferrell is onboard as an executive producer, IGN has confirmed.

Totally Spies! is a French animated series that began in 2001 and recently recieved its seventh season in France this past May after a nearly 11-year break. That isn’t it either, as Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA and French kids network Gulli just ordered an eighth season of the show.

As for what the live-action series will be about, we can glean some insight from the official logline:

“Totally Spies! is a YA live action adaptation of Banijay Kids & Family’s hit animated series of the same title, following stylish best friends Clover, Alex and Sam as they navigate saving the world as international spies, while trying to survive the ups and downs of first year college life.”

Joining Ferrell will be Gloria Sanchez’s Jessica Elbaum and Alix Taylor and Banijay Kids & Family’s Benoit de Sabatino.

“Totally Spies! is a huge success for Banijay Kids & Family, having been translated in 60 languages and sold to more than 220 territories,” di Sabatino said in a statement. “With a social media base of 3 million, the series continues to thrive in its animation form with the recently launched 7th season. Rola Bauer approached me for a live action adaptation, and we were thrilled to partner with Amazon MGM Studios. With her, Ludovic Attal, and Punit Matoo’s support, we are honoured to join such a stronghold of female-focused producers in Gloria Sanchez Productions to produce for Prime Video.”

“The themes of girl-power, never sacrificing friendship, fun, or your true self to be successful resonated with us then, and feel ripe to revisit now.

“Will, Alix and I are thrilled to be joining our partners at Amazon and Banijay to bring Totally Spies! to life as a live action show,” Elbaum said. “Gloria Sanchez was originally founded to tell stories about complicated characters and empower female voices and storytellers. As longtime fans of the animated show, we couldn’t think of a story more fitting to our ethos. The themes of girl-power, never sacrificing friendship, fun, or your true self to be successful resonated with us then, and feel ripe to revisit now.”

Totally Spies! has nearly 200 episodes to its name and has received a prequel film called Totally Spies! The Movie, a spin-off series called The Amazing Spiez! that ran for two seasons, comic books, novels, and even a handful of video games.

Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.

Adam Bankhurst is a writer for IGN. You can follow him on X/Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on TikTok.

Overwatch 2 Teases Transformers Collab in Season 11 Trailer

Blizzard Entertainment is teasing an Overwatch 2 Transformers crossover when Season 11 arrives in just a few days.

The quick tease arrives at the tail end of a new Season 11 trailer that premiered earlier today. It takes up so little space in the video that there’s a good chance many may have missed it, but those who stuck around to the end will catch the familiar Autobot logo and its iconic transformation sound effect.

That’s all we can see from what will inevitably become a full-fledged collaboration between Overwatch 2 and Transformers for now. Thankfully, this is far from the first time Blizzard has tied its hero shooter in with another property, so we at least have a few guesses about how the Autobot and Decepticon content will eventually roll out.

One of the earliest collabs saw One Punch Man skins making their way into the game, giving characters like Doomfist, Genji, Soldier 76, and Kiriko outfits themed after characters like Saitama, Genos, Mumen Rider, and Terrible Tornado. This same crossover event introduced additional anime-themed challenges, poses, voice lines, and more. Other crossovers brought IP like Cowboy Bebop, Diablo, and even Porsche into the fold, with each giving at least one character special skins for players to purchase and wear into battle.

While the Cowboy Bebop event saw Overwatch 2’s resident cowboy, Cole Cassidy, getting a Spike Spiegel skin, we can probably guess that some of Blizzard’s many robotic characters will be the ones gifted Transformers skins this time around. Our eyes are on heroes like Bastion, Orisa, Zenyatta, Ramattra, and Echo.

Overwatch 2 Season 11 drops June 20. While it’s unclear how and when the Transformers content will appear, today’s trailer gives players a look at a lot of the other highlights the forthcoming additions will bring. This season’s battle pass is Ultrawatch superhero-themed, introducing a long list of very ’90s, Power Rangers-like cosmetics to suit up with. Ashe gets the Mythic skin this time around, meaning her robot counterpart, B.O.B., gets some powerful new threads, too. Other promising additions include items that celebrate Overwatch 2 reaching the 100 million-player milestone, a new Push map called Runasapi, a Mythic weapon for Reinhardt, and a rework for the Colosseo map.

For more on how Blizzard is keeping Overwatch 2 up to date, you can read up on why the studio chose to remove its Hero Mastery Gauntlet PvE mode last month. Then be sure to check out our 8/10 Overwatch 2 review, where we said, “Overwatch 2’s switch to a 5v5 format breathes new life into what was once the sharpest shooter around. It just hasn’t quite recaptured all of that glory – yet.”

Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor with IGN. He started writing in the industry in 2017 and is best known for his work at outlets such as The Pitch, The Escapist, OnlySP, and Gameranx.

Be sure to give him a follow on Twitter @MikeCripe.

Wonder Woman Video Game Details and Artwork Reportedly Emerge Online After Apparent Online Survey Leak

Warner Bros. Games’ long in-development Wonder Woman game appears to have suffered a leak stemming from an online marketing survey.

Users on Reddit and ResetEra posted concept art and a synopsis of the Wonder Woman game, currently in development at Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor maker Monolith Productions, based on this apparent survey. The concept art was subsequently removed from Imgur and various social media posts “in response to a report from the copyright holder.” It is unclear when the marketing survey was released. Warner Bros. declined to comment when contacted by IGN.

IGN will not publish the leaked artwork or details, but the leak is worth being aware of if you’re hoping to go into the game completely fresh when it eventually comes out.

Monolith Productions is famous for Shadow of Mordor’s Nemesis System, which in that game generates seemingly endless possibilities for the enemies you face, the way they act, and the stories that emerge as they face you again and again. The Nemesis System returns for Wonder Woman, Warner Bros. has confirmed.

Wonder Woman was announced in December 2021 with a brief teaser trailer and description. Warner Bros. has remained largely quiet on the project in the years since, although we do know Wonder Woman is a single-player action adventure set in a “dynamic” open-world, is played in third-person, and lets players become Diana of Themyscira in an original story set within the DC universe. Based on what we know of the game and what we’re hearing now, Wonder Woman sounds like a mix between the Batman Arkham games and Monolith’s own Shadow of Mordor.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

As Starfield Steam Reviews Plunge to ‘Mostly Negative,’ Todd Howard Responds to Paid Mods Backlash

Bethesda Game Studios chief Todd Howard has responded to a backlash over Starfield paid mods, confirming the developer will look at its pricing model for Creations content.

On Steam, Starfield’s recent user reviews are now on ‘Mostly Negative’ after disgruntled players hit out at Bethesda for charging $7 for a single Starfield mission. The second mission of the recently released Trackers Alliance is only available as a Starfield Creation and costs $7, or 700 credits.

Creations are built via Starfield’s Creation Kit, and include free and paid-for mods. Creations include new missions, gear, skins, and weapons. Here’s the official blurb from Bethesda:

Trackers Alliance establishes the first of several missions enabling you to live your best bounty-hunting life. The first mission, The Starjacker will have you in contact with a mysterious Tracker located in settlements throughout the Settled Systems. From there, let the hunts begin!

The second Trackers Alliance mission, The Vulture is available within the new Creations menu. And what bounty hunter is without their trusted methods to get the job done?

While this latest backlash revolves around The Vulture mission, Bethesda has faced criticism over paid mods before. Indeed it’s the studio’s continued effort to enable paid mods for its games that has rubbed some players up the wrong way.

“Really? Another push for curated paid mods no one asked for?” reads one negative Steam review. “There is a simple reason why many players and modders enjoy modding their games for decades: it is done as a hobby, for players by players, without corporate responsibilites and apart from donation opportunities, without asking for or expecting monetary compensation.

“You are not aiding modding in the slightest. You are trying to turn modding into a business opportunity, to be a parasite that profits from underpaid work you do not want to do yourselves.”

Now we definitely see the feedback right? And that’s not what we want at all.

In an interview with YouTube channel MrMattyPlays, Todd Howard responded directly to the criticism, and confirmed plans to look again at Bethesda’s pricing for Creations content.

“We hear that feedback, too,” Howard said. “First of all I’ll say that stuff gets priced based on things that we’ve done before both in Creation Club and then Fallout 76, and we’re always trying to be looking at what else is out there, really make sure we’re giving value to everybody and where we’re not, hey you know, we definitely will adjust.

“The one thing I want to say on The Trackers Alliance, that was really an attempt to something we did in Creation Club where we’d say, hey you get this special outfit and you get this special weapon, we wanted to put them together, and then thought, let’s go the extra mile and wrap those around a quest.

“But now we definitely see the feedback right? And that’s not what we want at all in terms of, oh no, this looks like a faction that we’re chopping up and then selling for 700 credits at a time. And so I do think we are going to take a look at that and how we deliver content like that, and whether we’re changing pricing or breaking it up or what we should do there. So, great feedback from the community.”

Howard insisted, however, that Bethesda’s policy on paid mods has the health of the modding community at heart.

“As it comes to, particularly the creators out there, look, our view is, a lot of them have gone from hobbyists to professionals. And it’s part of our job to make sure they can do that and they do get paid and they see the monetary rewards if they make awesome content,” Howard said.

Elsewhere, Howard has confirmed plans to release a second story expansion for Starfield following this year’s Shattered Space, and commented on the long development of The Elder Scrolls 6.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Elden Ring Director Hidetaka Miyazaki May Consider ‘Beginning to End, Total Co-Op’ in Future FromSoftware Games

FromSoftware president Hidetaka Miyazaki has said the studio may consider including “beginning to end, total co-op” in future games.

Elden Ring’s co-op summoning system can be a lifesaver for tarnished in need of a little help to take down a troublesome boss. However, its design leaves some pretty significant barriers to players hoping to enjoy a sustained co-op experience. For example, players are booted back to their own world rune arc in hand the moment the area boss is defeated, or as soon as they unceremoniously bite the dust. Summoning also prevents you from riding atop your trusty steed Torrent, which can make Elden Ring’s expansive open world seem a little too expansive on occasion.

To get around these limitations, Elden Ring’s modding community created the seamless co-op mod for the PC version of the game, which theoretically allows a band of up to five tarnished to complete the entire game from tutorial to conclusion in a single uninterrupted session. It’s a pretty significant overhaul of FromSoftware’s vanilla Elden Ring co-op experience, which removes the fog walls that ordinarily restrict a party’s movement, while ensuring that the death of a boss, or player, won’t boot your compatriots back to their respective worlds.

In a recent interview with PC Gamer ahead of htis month’s launch of Elden Ring’s first and only DLC, Shadow of the Erdtree, Miyazaki revealed that he has no hard feelings over the unsanctioned multiplayer overhaul, or its burgeoning popularity.

“It’s definitely not something we actively oppose or want to downplay, wanting to go through the whole game together,” explained Miyazaki. “In terms of where we were with Elden Ring, it was simply a case of wanting that more loose, casual style — drop in, defeat a boss, drop out. It doesn’t put any technical restrictions on the player, it just sort of lets them complete this focus and then move on, so to speak.”

During the interview, Miyazaki revealed that FromSoftware may consider taking a more comprehensive approach to cooperative play in subsequent titles, which would prove to be a popular decision among the over 3.7 million PC gamers who have already downloaded the unofficial mod. “That’s not to say we won’t consider other ways, like you and your friend played, from beginning to end, total co-op — that’s not to say we won’t consider ideas like that with our future games,” said the FromSoftware president.

Shadow of the Erdtree is set to expand on Miquella’s story, and introduce a host of new enemies, bosses, weapons and fighting styles to FromSoftware’s hit RPG when it releases on June 21. Be sure to check out IGN’s comprehensive guide detailing how to get your tarnished warrior ready for everything that the DLC has to throw at you, and be wary of spoilers that have emerged online.

Anthony is a freelance contributor covering science and video gaming news for IGN. He has over eight years experience of covering breaking developments in multiple scientific fields and absolutely no time for your shenanigans. Follow him on Twitter @BeardConGamer

Still Wakes the Deep Review

When a game is trying as hard to terrify and unsettle me as Still Wakes the Deep is, and instead I mostly feel kind of bored a lot of the time, I start to question whether this type of experience simply doesn’t tingle my spine anymore. But digging deeper, there are a lot of specific reasons this feels like a lackluster attempt at that formula. It has almost all of the hallmarks of a creepy, Amnesia-style, first-person horror game with a powerless protagonist – the very same sort I’ve been playing and enjoying for almost 15 years now. But despite great dialogue, superb voice-acting, and a memorable setting, irritating level design and sometimes silly scenarios meant this dreary tale never fully got its Lovecraftian tendrils into me.

The premise is simple but promising: You play as Caz, an electrician on an offshore Scottish oil rig in the 1970s, diving head-first into a world that has been meticulously realized – from the period-accurate outfits to the technology to the delightful dialects of the cast. They even have dialogue subtitles and a full translation of the UI into Scottish Gaelic, a language with less than 100,000 native speakers, and I have to respect that. It clearly wasn’t going to boost their sales, so they must have included it for cultural or artistic reasons.

The rig, unfortunately for everyone on it, drills down into some kind of deep sea alien nonsense that starts transforming the environment and the crew into Cronenbergian body horror abominations, leaving poor Caz to traverse storm-swept decks and cramped corridors to try and escape. And damn, it is a beautiful game. From the weathered, hulking, industrial presence of the rig itself, to the unsettling infection spreading throughout it, to detailed weather effects that I could practically feel on my own skin, developer The Chinese Room has gone above and beyond in taking full advantage of Unreal Engine 5 here.

It’s a shame, then, that these environments end up being absolutely, tyrannically linear most of the time. Still Wakes the Deep feels like it absolutely hates the concept of exploration, and that got on my nerves. There is generally exactly one path, rarely more than an arm’s length wide, through any given area. The very beginning sequence allows you to collect some lore on your fellow crewmates by visiting their cabins, but never again was I rewarded for trying to go off the main track or snoop around in side areas – of which there really aren’t many to begin with.

There’s so much “yellow paint” it almost feels like a parody of the entire debate.

Almost every door you find is locked, unless you need to be able to break it open for plot reasons. Outside that very beginning area, there are no hidden collectibles, not even stray bits of paper strewn about that give you more context on the story. A single six-hour playthrough, sprinting to the end, will show you 95 percent of everything there is to see. There are entire plot points that could have been resolved by someone being able to fit through a gap that looks easily big enough for their body.

And I know “yellow paint” being used to indicate interactable objects or the correct path forward has become a point of discourse again recently, but Still Wakes the Deep is like Yellow Paint: The Game. There is so much yellow paint everywhere that it almost starts to feel like a parody of the entire debate. They’ve gotten enough feedback on it, in fact, that the studio informed us the day I finished writing this review that it is planning to add an option to hide most of the paint at some point after launch. But I’m not sure that’s actually the main problem. The real issue is that the level design doesn’t seem to have any other way of indicating where you’re actually, physically allowed to go, so I think people would get hopelessly confused without it.

I’d commonly come across obstacles about the height of my shins that couldn’t be jumped over due to invisible walls. Why even give me a jump button then? Certain fences can’t be climbed, except at one specific point where they put a yellow blanket over one of them and now, magically, you can! And this happens basically everywhere. There is so little in-world logic to which areas can be traversed and which can’t, that I often needed the yellow paint to figure out what the hell they even expected me to do. It’s a very heavy-handed fix for a fundamental failing in the way areas are presented and laid out.

Gaps in logic extend to the story as well. In fact, one of the main emotional moments, which I won’t spoil here, is greatly undercut by the fact that it only happened due to the kind of willful, “Let’s split up, gang!” stupidity that you’d expect in a schlocky slasher flick or an episode of Scooby Doo. One developer described the story as “The Thing on an oil rig,” which is an unflattering comparison, as it only highlights the lack of intrigue and interpersonal drama that made that film a classic. The only characters you will have any meaningful conflict with have already clearly turned into monsters, for the most part. It doesn’t really dial up the paranoia.

You’ll pull some levers, turn some valves – it’s all pretty unsurprising stuff.

And that’s where my biggest point of disappointment comes in: Still Wakes the Deep is not that scary. Not for a lack of trying, of course. I played it in the dark, with the windows shuttered, in 4K HDR, while using high-end, noise-canceling headphones – doing it as many favors as I could – as all horror games deserve to be experienced. But the fear I was hoping would grip me, like it did in previous games by The Chinese Room like Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs, never arrived.

I even had to stop and ask myself if that was a sign I’ve just become completely jaded and inoculated to these sorts of “Amnesia-like” horror experiences. It’s hard to say. Certainly, this one doesn’t do anything new or surprising that might have put me on my toes right when I thought I knew I was in for. Sometimes you have to run from a monster down a corridor while it screams bloody murder behind you. Sometimes you have to sneak around through the vents, or throw a bottle to distract them. You pull some levers, turn some valves, and occasionally engage in some fiddly swimming and platforming. It’s all pretty familiar, uninspiring stuff to me at this point, which doesn’t really retain its impact when I’ve seen it so many times already. Someone completely new to this kind of game might find it more affecting, but I can only speculate on that, because I really didn’t.

There isn’t even anything I would really describe as a puzzle. It’s all going from one place to another and then interacting with clearly-labeled machinery. You never really even have to backtrack, except in a couple cases where one linear segment is just going through the previous linear segment in the opposite direction. I never even had to search for a door code or a key or anything like that. So Still Wakes the Deep not only discourages exploration, it doesn’t even want you to have to think too hard about how to overcome its obstacles, which makes it more underwhelming.

All the same, I did care about Caz and his crewmates. The voice acting, as I mentioned before, really is top-notch, with a cast of mostly Scottish actors speaking in authentic and evocative dialects. Few games are this effective at making me feel transported to a specific place at a specific point in time, and the backdrop of the tempestuous, unforgiving North Sea adds a lot to the experience – especially when the storms really start raging. And the great sound design only enhances this.

We learn a fair bit about Caz’s backstory and why he’s here, which lends heartbreaking context to his plight. The final moments are an emotionally-affecting payoff to his character arc, but once again, the stifling lack of anything approaching player agency throughout the story undersells it a bit. We’re watching someone else’s tale, through his eyes, but I never came to identify with him as strongly as I might have if at least some of these important choices had been within my control. I probably would have made the same choices Caz did anyway, but it would have been nice to have a choice.