herbivores
2o2i
herbivores

Surprisingly, yes. Most first party titles still have active servers, as does rockstar’s games, and Activision’s games. Even the EA-ported Team Fortress 2 is up. PS3 in 2021 is more alive than its been in five years.

we don’t need no education

Welcome back, Jason.... or should I say, Report From Bloomberg.

Borderlands Dance game, when?

You’re absolutely right — webmasters can block ads from certain advertisers from appearing via Google AdSense.

That ad was served via Google AdSense — G/O has no control over what AdSense serves up. (Google does.). By tapping the X in the top right you have the option to report an ad.

Advanced Warfare, Blops 3, and Infinite Warfare are the only advanced movement games in the series.

Finally, a spiritual successor to Mall Tycoon.

Fan developers do their work in the open for a number of reasons`-fangames are an extension of the fan art community, or because they are doing of as a hobby, or because individuals just simply don’t have the skill to carry it on their own.

Creating legally distinct soundsimilars will probably become a small cottage industry in the near future

Good old late stage capitalism, where “growth” is the only goal, money doesn’t matter, and everyone dresses like a 1990s Tom Hanks romcom character.

xCloud's Fallout New Vegas might be the worst way to play it, but hey, it works on the toilet, so count me in you magnificent bastards

Still have to write comments pre-emptively dunking on manbabies sometimes but Kotaku comments in 2021 are way better than 2013, just less.

Apple Arcade is also kinda playable on M1-enabled.Macs and on Apple TV. It feels like Apple is building a massive catalog of games ahead of a future console launch.

lmao they were probably still mad over the kaeprnick capers

You can, actually, but you have to ensure you're not violating any design patents, copyright, or trademark.

“hey guys, why is our launcher constantly playing videos in the background?”

Xbox 360/PS2 era was absolutely littered with $50 titles, especially in Alberta, for some reason. Games also had fairly long shelf lives, ensuring you could often snag a new-in-box physical release for $40 or $30 just a year after release.

Games went from $16/basic blank cartridge to $5/disc by 1998. Even today, the platform licensing fee for physical distribution is still around that $5. Retail distribution traditionally was a 50% split of sale value between retailer and publisher, the publisher afterwards taking their cut and passing the rest to the

DLSS comes with boosted anti-aliasing and so far, Nvidia’s DLSS chips all have supported High Dynamic Range.