I did chuckle that halfway through an article about the revival of this game, there was a link “Read More: There is No Saving Cyberpunk 2077.”
I did chuckle that halfway through an article about the revival of this game, there was a link “Read More: There is No Saving Cyberpunk 2077.”
I get why companies prefer to just do their own thing now, but E3's demise does make me a bit sad.
Honestly I wish more developers would be willing to be less specific. The whole series could be “A Lord of the Fallen”, “Another Lord of the Fallen”, “Some Lords of the Fallen”, etc.
Hmmm... I don’t recall learning about this in law school, but I’ll take your word for it. If you can’t trust a random person on the internet, who can you trust?
You don’t get to do this on your first sequel, the second game has to be either numbered or have a subtitle. You only get to do the same name twice after multiple sequels and at least a decade have passed.
I’ve checked the law and found that this is true, what they are doing is illegal, don’t look it up.
It’s much less effective than in the original though because it cuts to that canned animation. It’s best in the VR version because you might be expecting it to switch to a cutscene but nope, that sucker comes flying directly at you.
Bobby Kotick. Bobby Kotick is that moron.
always a funko shred truther in the mix.
Bobby Motick is a piece of shit, who cares what he has to say.
Please, we all know the point of any Sims game is to see how many housemates you can murder by trapping them in pools with no ladder.
Honestly, EA and Tecmo need to join forces to produce a game that combines The Sims and Deception/Trapt into a single franchise that lets you build deceptively lovely houses... and then…
Okay, can we all just agree that “open beta”, “alpha”, and the like don’t actually mean anything anymore? We’ve had games that are incomplete but pushing e-sport style competitions for $50,000 prizes (ARK: Survival Evolved), a game that has been in “Alpha” long enough to almost be legal to drive (7 Days to Die), and…
Its also an insane comparison to make. High on life is a polished shooter with a decent budget, a big team, and a juvenile sense of humor. Sludge life is an indie exploration game with some wonky platforming and a deeper message. They're nothing alike.
Steam does have those occasionally, but they make it hard to find....
No joke, I read the headline as “execs” and thought this was going to be about games that shut down their services because company executives wanted to save money on underused servers.
Since it wasn’t anywhere to be found in the actual post:
Oh can you stop calling Ray Tracing as RTX, it’s a marketing term used by Nvidia. If rays are being traced on consoles it’s definitely not “RTX” since they use AMD GPUs. If you need to shorten Ray Tracing just use RT like Digital Foundry does. It makes more sense and uses one fewer keystroke.