Dropping $60 in a new game is pretty insane with the way the market is flooded with new releases. But do you buy new releases or do you wait for a price drop
It’s time for the guys to hit up a new flea market in the middle of nowhere where they find a potential new lead on some video games. Meanwhile, something that has never happened before sends everyone up dookie river…
Valfaris comes from the same development team as Slain: Back from Hell and uses a very similar art style and Metal musical theme. Set in space this time around, is it worth getting? Find out in our Valfaris Nintendo Switch Review…
While major new changes get all of the attention, here are 10 minor things that you may not have heard about, but could become your favorite new features in macOS Catalina. You can put Dark Mode on automatic, block email senders, use picture-in-picture with QuickTime Player, tint the color of your screen, and much more.
Following on from my underrated solos series, I thought I’d do something similar for riffs! I play through a selection of sick, underappreciated riffs as chosen by you guys and myself, cramming in as many as I can within a reasonable time frame. No Whole Lotta Love or Back In Black here i’m afraid!
Enslaved: Odyssey to the West. An action-adventure game set within a fantastical post-apocalypse, Enslaved charmed many people with its exciting combat and heartfelt story, but sold well under what most games of its genre typically boast upon its release, resulting in it quickly slipping under the radar for most mainstream gamers. Yet its development – which saw several famous Hollywood figures team up with Ninja Theory – served as an invaluable learning experience for the studio, teaching its staff lifelong lessons on how to engage players using narrative and gameplay in tandem, as well as how to craft deep and emotionally fulfilling characters within the medium’s limitations. It helped its creators transition from being a good video game developer, to a great one, and set them up to eventually become even better with its subsequent endeavors.
Sometimes, the destination is the most important part of video game development – while other times, the journey is paramount. With Ninja Theory’s third project, the latter proved more true than anything else.
This is the history of Enslaved: Odyssey to the West.