“But what if there were dinosaurs???” is a setup that goes a long way with me, as a Jurassic World Evolution player and defiant fan of Capcom’s Exoprimal, and in this case, that setup rests atop a tasty-looking fruitcake of references to Warcraft and Stronghold. Woah there, Dr Grant – what the hell are you talking about? Why, the just-announced Dinolords, of course – a blend of strategy and action-RPG from Northplay and Ghost Ship Publishing, in which you raise troops and build castles to fend off armies of T-Rex-riding Danes. Here’s a trailer.
Category: Rock, Paper, Shotgun
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Cyberpunk 2077 2.01 update hits PC with many progress and crash bug fixes
CD Projekt have released the full patch notes for Cyberpunk 2077‘s 2.01 update, which as you might recall, stops people tumbling through certain elevator floors when the frame-rate drops. Out now on PC, the update spans many other technical fixes and improvements, some of them specific to the recently released Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty DLC.
Assassin’s Creed: Mirage PC’s day-one update adds Denuvo DRM, but don’t worry, it runs the same
Very much like an assassin sliding a poison needle into your wrist while shaking your hand, Ubisoft have added Denuvo‘s anti-piracy/anti-cheating DRM software to Assassin’s Creed: Mirage in the game’s day-one update, aka patch 1.0.2. We’ve known for a while that the game would use Denuvo, together with the VMProtect software, but what’s baking the noodles of many players is that the Denuvo functionality has been snuck in after the Assassin’s Creed: Mirage review embargo, denying critics the chance to assess its impact on the game.
Kitfox and Bay 12 share plans for Dwarf Fortress Adventure Mode update on Steam
Kitfox and Bay12 have struck the earth, manufactured a thousand stone blocks, and laid out a roadmap for the Dwarf Fortress Steam edition’s Adventure Mode, together with some forthcoming updates for the existing fortress management mode. Adventure Mode, in case you’ve been living under a rock (which I guess you probably have, if you’ve been playing Dwarf Fortress), is the open world roguelike RPG element of the game, which lets you roam the enormous realm you’ve generated and even tour/loot/disturb the unquiet spirits of your own, abandoned fortress. Alas, there’s no word on a release date for the Steam edition’s Adventure Mode beyond “not this year”.
Another Crab’s Treasure, the exciting shellfish Soulslike, has a demo out now
Another Crab’s Treasure hooked me with its underwater Soulslike premise and cutesy charm. But once you take a closer look at the game’s polluted ocean, filled with plastic shells and weapons, the comparisons to Dark Souls get a little clearer. This is a quiet and kinda melancholy post-apocalypse. We can now find out whether the crustaceans lean on cuteness or sadness more in the game’s new demo, released just yesterday.
Upgrade your Steam Deck with this £80 1TB PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD
The price of Steam Deck SSD upgrades continues to fall, as Integral’s 2230-sized PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD has dropped to £69.95 at Amazon UK. That’s a great price for a drive that more than doubles even the highest capacity Steam Deck sold by Valve, and makes a tremendous upgrade for 512GB and 256GB Steam Deck owners too.
Hitman soon turns 25, so Agent 47 goes clubbing in the newest Elusive Target Mission
The Hitman series soon turns 25 years old, but Agent 47’s unwrinkled face doesn’t carry the “what am I doing with my life?” stress that normally accompanies such a birthday. Developer IO Interactive is instead celebrating with both new and returning events coming to the stealth infiltration mega package that is Hitman: World Of Assassination.
IOI are dropping the game’s next Elusive Target mission, called The Drop, on October 27th. The forthcoming mission sees Agent 47 enter (infiltrate) a shadowy Berlin club to party until he forgets what day it is. He may or may not murder a DJ who’s secretly also a drug lord while he’s there. Our new target is actually modelled off of real-world deckman, DJ Dimitri Vegas. Returning events include the Bad Boy (available October 13-23rd) and Food Critic (available from October 20-30th) missions.
Should you wish to take the stealthy shenanigans on the go and don’t yet own a Steam Deck, there’s some good news. IOI are also releasing Hitman: Blood Money on mobile this Autumn, with a Switch release following in Winter. Hitman has always played more like a methodical, violent puzzle game for me, rather than a purely stealthy-shooty one, so I can imagine that it probably works well on smaller screens regardless.
Cancelled shooter Hyenas was reportedly Sega’s most expensive game ever
Creative Assembly’s Hyenas – the recently cancelled extraction shooter about space Robin Hoods – was supposedly publisher Sega’s biggest budget game ever. New details about the game’s development claim that a lack of direction, slow progress, and an engine change turned the once hopeful “Super Game” into the canned FPS that it sadly is today.
What’s better: Quick restarts, or a diegetic HUD?
Last time, you decided that improvised environmental weapons are better than skipping across a timeline flowchart. I can’t say I’m too surprised, considering that timeline flowcharts are rare and that I did illustrate t’other with multiple screenshots of Kazuma Kiryu smashing men with bicycles. Now if Kiryu had been jumping between timelines… ah, we can’t speculate, that’s not scientific. This week, I ask you to choose between cutting something unnecessary and adding something unnecessary. What’s better: quick restarts, or a diegetic HUD?
The Alters is a fascinating mash-up of survival management and confronting your own multiverse life choices
What exactly is The Alters? It’s a question I’ve been itching to get answers to ever since Frostpunk and This War Of Mine developers 11 bit Studios first announced their strange new game at notE3 last year. Until now, all we’ve had to go on is a cryptic CG announcement trailer that showed a gaggle of identical clone-looking men in bright pink medical gowns, all of whom seemingly live inside a giant wheel full of shipping containers. It didn’t really tell us anything about what the game actually is, or how it plays, and we’ve heard precious little about it since.
Happily, I’ve now seen about an hour of The Alters in action at this year’s Gamescom, and first impressions are very promising. This is indeed a game about sort-of clones living in a big wheely shipping container, but these containers are actually modules you’ll be building in XCOM/Fallout Shelter-style chunks to advance the capabilities of your big wheel base as you work to escape the broiling heatdeath that’s slowly enveloping the planet. You’ll also be venturing out onto the planet’s surface to gather resources, all while managing your crew of clo- sorry, alternate selves – as you assign their daily work tasks, and then there’s the fact that, well, you’re all chuffing different versions of the same person and the literal embodiment of what your life might have been like if you’d done X instead of Y, or Y instead of Z. It’s a fascinating blend of ideas, and if 11 bit can stick the landing, I reckon it could end up being something really quite special. Here’s everything I learned.