PCGamesN |
- Total War: Warhammer 3 and Darktide devs set for Skulls Showcase stream
- Nvidia might finally unveil ray tracing support for Doom Eternal
- Old Need for Speed games are being delisted – today
- World of Warcraft: Burning Crusade release time confirmed
- Minecraft: Caves & Cliffs part one launches in eight days
- Best gaming mouse – the top mice in 2021
- Two Point Hospital goes to college in the newly-leaked Two Point Campus
- Intel reiterates it’ll be a couple of years before the gaming PC part shortage lets up
- Ubisoft Connect’s revamped chat service arrives this week
- This Biomutant mod tunes its graphics for maximum beep-boop
- XCOM 2’s massive The Long War of the Chosen mod is nearly done
- PUBG’s publisher is making a new game based on a series of Korean fantasy novels
- The Days Gone mods have started flooding in now that it’s on PC
- It’s time to play Minecraft with a Bop It
- Lost arcade game preserved for the first time in the latest MAME release
- Resident Evil Village modded to make Lady Dimitrescu even taller
- One of the best horror games on Steam is free to keep for one more day
- Hades fans are releasing an Iliad audiobook
- RetroArch gets an easy way to play HD, widescreen SNES games
- What if: Resident Evil Village’s Lady Dimitrescu got her own game?
- Biomutant devs say upcoming patch will improve basically everything that’s bad
- Call of Duty: Warzone devs are fixing the DLSS aim problems
- Looks like Steam’s getting a library manager to show which games take the most space
| Total War: Warhammer 3 and Darktide devs set for Skulls Showcase stream Posted: 31 May 2021 01:55 PM PDT If you're a fan of digital adaptations of Warhammer, you've got an exciting week ahead of you. The Skulls for the Skull Throne event returns with a shorter name on June 3, and the event begins with a stream promising news from some of the biggest publishers with access to the Warhammer license - including the studios behind Total War: Warhammer 3 and Darktide. The Skulls Showcase will broadcast on Thursday, June 3 at 10am PDT / 1pm EDT / 6pm BST on Twitch, and it will feature "world premieres, exclusive first looks, details of special offers and free-to-keep video games, and new video game announcements". A tweet about the event includes logos for Fatshark, Sega, and Creative Assembly, so updates for some of the most hotly-anticipated Warhammer games out there are very likely. There's also a logo for Frontier Foundry, a publishing venture from the studio behind Planet Coaster and Elite Dangerous. Frontier told investors last year that it had picked up the rights to the Warhammer license for an Age of Sigmar RTS, though it sounded like that project would be developed internally - if it's a Foundry game, that means they'll be working with an external studio on it. RELATED LINKS: Total War: Warhammer 3 release date, Total War: Warhammer 3 trailer breakdown, The best strategy games on PC |
| Nvidia might finally unveil ray tracing support for Doom Eternal Posted: 31 May 2021 01:49 PM PDT Doom Eternal released over a year ago and is still one of the best looking FPS games around, but publisher Bethesda teases that a visual upgrade is just around the corner. It's scheduled to appear during Nvidia's Computex keynote later today and with Hell reportedly looking better than ever, it's likely official ray tracing support is on the way. While the game launched with standard lighting techniques and has relied on mods to simulate ray tracing, the feature was originally announced during Doom Eternal's reveal in 2019. During Gamescom, 2020, lead engine programmer Billy Khan explained that "it's not just about making visual fidelity improvements," which is why it's taking so long to implement. "It's also about the gameplay," Khan continues. "What can we do with ray tracing to make the games better? And that's where we're investing quite a bit of time, to make sure that we don't just make the reflections look better, we want to make sure that we use it in a way that enhances the gameplay." RELATED LINKS: Best SSD for gaming, How to build a gaming PC, Best gaming CPU |
| Old Need for Speed games are being delisted – today Posted: 31 May 2021 11:08 AM PDT If you want to own a digital copy of a Need for Speed in the late 2000s or early 2010s, you might want to hurry up. EA has announced that five Need for Speed games are being delisted from digital stores today, and while you'll still be able to play them if you own them, they will no longer be available for purchase going forward. Need for Speed: Carbon, Undercover, Shift, Shift 2: Unleashed, and The Run will all be removed from sale today, May 31. Undercover, Shift, and Shift 2 are available on Steam as of this writing. All five games appear to have already been removed from sale on EA's own Origin PC launcher. If you've previously purchased these games, they will still be available to download from your library on the relevant platform. However, in-game stores are being shut down today, and all online services will be retired on August 31. You'll still be able to plate the affected games offline, but don't expect any online multiplayer matches in them. |
| World of Warcraft: Burning Crusade release time confirmed Posted: 31 May 2021 10:33 AM PDT World of Warcraft: Burning Crusade launches (again) tomorrow, and Blizzard has already made planning your return quite easy with a list of launch timings provided a month ago. If you've missed the Burning Crusade release time details, well, we're here to help - here's what to expect from the launch. Burning Crusade Classic launches on June 1 at 3pm PDT / 6pm EDT / 11pm BST. That translates to June 2 at 12am CEST / 6am CST / 7am KST / 8am AEST through much of the rest of the world. So yes, we're getting a single, global release time for our return to Burning Crusade, so there'll be no looking longingly at players in other regions getting early access to the game. The Burning Crusade pre-patch has been live for a few weeks, giving you a chance to get a head start on the expansion, and to decide whether you want to move forward, stay behind on vanilla Classic, or pay a controversial amount of money to do both at once. RELATED LINKS: WoW Shadowlands review, WoW Shadowlands leveling guide, WoW Classic leveling guide |
| Minecraft: Caves & Cliffs part one launches in eight days Posted: 31 May 2021 09:42 AM PDT We figured it was close, and it's even closer than we suspected - the Minecraft 1.17 release date is now set for June 8. A new pre-release version is here too, if you'd like to check out some fresh bug fixes, but the bigger news is that the first half of the Caves & Cliffs content will be available in the live game in just over a week. Again, Minecraft: Caves & Cliffs part one is now officially set to launch on June 8. As one half of the split release of the new update, this part will contain new mobs like the goat, axolotl, and warden, and new blocks including copper, but won't include the new biomes and world generation features, which will instead launch with part two this holiday. The release will be available across both Java and Bedrock editions, so wherever you play Minecraft, you'll be able to get in without issue. The latest pre-release version is available right now, but there are no new features to test out - if you want a look at the bug fixes, you can check out the patch notes at the official site. RELATED LINKS: Minecraft console commands, Minecraft skins, Minecraft mods |
| Best gaming mouse – the top mice in 2021 Posted: 31 May 2021 09:41 AM PDT Picking the best gaming mouse is far more difficult than it used to be, with more brands to choose from than ever before - and with advancements in low latency technology, even the best wireless gaming mouse is an option. Nailing down exactly what you want can be tricky, as it's a delicate balance of finding the right mix of features and design. You have to juggle comfort, ergonomics, performance, reliability, specs, and, as always, aesthetics. Figure out which of these attributes are most important to you, and then take a dive into the comparisons below. While it used to be as simple as buying Logitech or Razer, competition is hot with rodents from SteelSeries, Corsair, Roccat, and more in 2021. We've tested a wide variety of gaming mice and have finally narrowed down our favourites based on the genres of games, grip styles, and hand sizes they're most suited to, as well as the more affordable options for those of you that don't mind sacrificing a few features. RELATED LINKS: Best SSD for gaming, How to build a gaming PC, Best gaming CPU |
| Two Point Hospital goes to college in the newly-leaked Two Point Campus Posted: 31 May 2021 09:18 AM PDT Two Point Hospital was a delightful successor to Bullfrog's classic Theme Hospital, but it looks like the devs at Two Point Studios are breaking out into a fresh, er, theme for the follow-up. Two Point Campus has leaked via a Microsoft Store listing, and it looks to continue the line of zany management games into the world of college life. The product page has since been pulled from the Microsoft Store, but the game was listed for release on PC and Xbox consoles (and, of course, releases on other consoles and PC platforms are likely, too). The full listing was preserved by the folks at Gematsu, and the broad strokes of the game sound pretty much as you'd expect. Two Point Campus will let you build a university with degree focuses like 'Knight School' and 'Gastronomy'. You'll be able to build the entire campus, from libraries and teaching facilities to outdoor decorations. You'll also need to take care of your students, filling their needs with clubs and entertainment, and helping facilitate their social lives. |
| Intel reiterates it’ll be a couple of years before the gaming PC part shortage lets up Posted: 31 May 2021 06:03 AM PDT We're all sick of that 'out of stock' sign by now, but it could be a while longer before you're able to upgrade to the best graphics card or CPU. Foxconn CEO Young-Way Liu sees the chip shortage lasting until at least the second quarter of 2022, but Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger goes a step further, stating it could rage on for another couple of years. Offering an explanation to Computex attendees, Gelsinger attributes the "cycle of explosive growth in semiconductors" to the increasing number of people working from home putting a significant strain on global supply chains. "While the industry's taken steps to address near-term constraints, it could still take a couple of years for the ecosystem to address shortages of foundry capacity, substrates, and components," he continues. This echoes Gelsinger's interview with the Washington Post in April, where he gave a similar time frame and laid out plans to start producing chips within the next nine months - although it'll be US car plants that receive the first few batches. RELATED LINKS: Best SSD for gaming, How to build a gaming PC, Best gaming CPU |
| Ubisoft Connect’s revamped chat service arrives this week Posted: 30 May 2021 02:32 PM PDT Ubisoft is bringing chat back to the in-game overlay function in its PC desktop app, Ubisoft Connect. Ubisoft Connect replaced the old Uplay app when open-world game Watch Dogs Legion launched last year, and since then, the company has been working on bringing the in-game chat function in line with the rest of the refreshed experience. A patch set to deploy Monday, May 31 will update the Ubisoft Connect chat feature, which will include some notable changes from the legacy version of chat. First, all currently active one-on-one chats, and their chat histories, will be erased. Ubisoft recommends assigning nicknames to anyone on your friends list who likes changing their Ubisoft Connect nickname frequently. With the new chat service, group chats will be capped at 24 members, and any chat groups that currently contain more members than that will be removed when the patch goes live. Your group will stick around if it has fewer than 24 members and has been active at all in the past 30 days. RELATED LINKS: Watch Dogs Legion review, Watch Dogs Legion release date, Best sandbox games |
| This Biomutant mod tunes its graphics for maximum beep-boop Posted: 30 May 2021 01:54 PM PDT Furball-based RPG game Biomutant may have taken a bit of a bruising from critics when it launched last week. You can read our own Biomutant review, but forget the score for a moment because despite some aggravating design choices, there's plenty here to love. While we wait for Experiment 101 to roll out a patch that's supposed to fix basically everything anyone's ever complained about, right now we have a mod that'll correct some of the more aggressive graphics decisions in Biomutant. Maximum Beep Boop by Xayjyn pulls out some of Biomutant's graphics settings that you can't alter in the game menus - it removes visual effects like chromatic aberration and the intense depth of field, reasoning that Biomutant is a game and not a movie. Similarly, it removes the smudgy temporal anti-aliasing, since "no one likes vaseline on their monitor." Motion blur and film grain? Into the bin. In their place, the mod adds ACES tonemapping for "far more naturalistic" colour correction, which you'll see most dramatically on screens that support high dynamic range. The mod also enables colour correct bloom and subsurface scattering, although with most people in Biomutant being covered in luxurious fuzz, that effect won't show up all that often. |
| XCOM 2’s massive The Long War of the Chosen mod is nearly done Posted: 31 May 2021 06:29 AM PDT A huge community modding project for turn-based strategy game XCOM 2 is almost complete. XCOM 2: The Long War of the Chosen is a complete overhaul of both the base XCOM 2 game and the popular Long War 2 mod, and it incorporates the new mechanics introduced in the War of the Chosen expansion. As Dominic Tarason points out on Twitter, this is the biggest mod for XCOM 2, as anyone who's played the original Long War or Long War 2 mods can confirm. The basic idea is to expand the base game's campaign into a much lengthier and challenging experience. The Long War of the Chosen adds a host of new features and mechanics, including building up a resistance force, the ability to field multiple squads at a time, and fighting the Chosen on both the strategic and tactical battlefields. There are eight new soldier classes, and each of these has eight ranks to unlock, with the choice of one of three abilities at each promotion. There are officers who provide buffs to your squads, new technology trees to explore, new mission types like Jailbreak and Smash and Grab, and all-new enemy types. RELATED LINKS: XCOM 2 Tips, XCOM 2 DLC guide, Play XCOM 2 |
| PUBG’s publisher is making a new game based on a series of Korean fantasy novels Posted: 30 May 2021 09:34 AM PDT The company that now owns PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, Krafton, is working on a new game based on the series of popular Korean fantasy novels The Bird That Drinks Tears. While there's not a lot of information on what the game itself will look like, Krafton has enlisted the help of a Hollywood concept artist to establish a look and ambience for the game. Dubbed Project Windless, Krafton's plans for The Bird That Drinks Tears extends beyond a single game - it aims to create a "larger multimedia franchise" based on the intellectual property. The novels are set in a distinctively Korean fantasy world that's populated with mythical creatures like dokkaebi (sometimes thought of as a 'Korean goblin' or nature spirit) and naga, and characters learn the Korean folk wrestling style of ssireum. Artist Ian McCaig, who has done concept art for Star Wars characters and franchises like Harry Potter and The Avengers, is working with Krafton to visualise novelist Yeong-do Lee's universe. An early piece of art shows a wooden structure built high on a stone tor above the desert, with a long platform extending on one side. RELATED LINKS: PUBG new map, PUBG weapons, Play PUBG |
| The Days Gone mods have started flooding in now that it’s on PC Posted: 30 May 2021 07:50 AM PDT Now that zombie open-world game Days Gone has arrived on PC, modders have quickly set to work adding their own enhancements and changes. Days Gone launched for PC less than two weeks ago, but there are already Reshade settings, weapon tweaks, and other customisations you can download to tailor the experience to your particular tastes. If you're interested in getting a more cinema-style experience, you have a few options. The Romero Swarmers mod by Spooder slows the ambient solo freakers down to a classic zombie movie shamble, so they won't come hurtling at you as soon as they spot you. The mod doesn't change their speed while they're part of a horde, though - you'll still need to keep your wits about you in those situations. You also might want to try the Dawn of the Dead Reshade settings by kyOuZz_-. This Reshade preset bumps up the contrast and sharpness, adding a little colour saturation but leaving some of the bleached feeling that Days Gone starts out with. The effect is reminiscent of Zack Snyder's Dawn of the Dead remake from 2004. |
| It’s time to play Minecraft with a Bop It Posted: 29 May 2021 03:50 PM PDT Gamepads? Old news. Keyboards? Too many buttons. Mice? Too much control over your input. When you wanna play Minecraft, you need to do it with a 90s children's toy, and luckily, one person has made that possible. If you ever wanted to play Minecraft with a Bop It, that is apparently possible - all it takes is an amount of programming knowledge and a willingness to do a lot bopping, twisting, and pulling. Seth Altobelli breaks down the Bop It controller process in the video below (via Kotaku), but basically it involves replacing the toy's internal electronics with a Raspberry Pi Pico that translates the Bop It inputs into keyboard commands. An additional accelerometer adds a further layer of control, and it all comes out to PC via a micro-USB port. Want to jump? Bop it. Move left and right? Twist it. Use the hotbar? Pull it. Movement and looking is handled mostly through the accelerometer, and you can toggle between the two modes using the second bop button. RELATED LINKS: Minecraft console commands, Minecraft skins, Minecraft mods |
| Lost arcade game preserved for the first time in the latest MAME release Posted: 29 May 2021 03:10 PM PDT Just as 'Doom clone' became an entire genre in the mid-90s, the world of 80s arcade games was dominated by Pac-Man-likes. Some were brazen knock-offs, but the broader idea of controlling a character getting chased through a maze defined about a zillion of the era's quarter-munchers. But some of them never made it to market, and that includes Mrs. Dynamite, which has just been preserved for the first time in the latest MAME release. Mrs. Dynamite appears to have only been available in location tests back in the 80s, though given the poor records of the era, it's tough to say for sure. (Rapper Ms. Dynamite has also made the game pretty much un-Googleable.) Either way, publisher Universal never saw fit to give the game a wide release, and it's been lost even to the world of online ROM dumpers until very recently. The new release of MAME 0.232 includes support for Mrs. Dynamite, and provides another stark reminder that sometimes emulator devs are the only ones keeping the forgotten corners of gaming history alive for the world. |
| Resident Evil Village modded to make Lady Dimitrescu even taller Posted: 29 May 2021 02:23 PM PDT Given the space in horny jail taken up by devotees of Resident Evil Village's Lady Dimitrescu, everyone was expecting the nude mods - but somehow the possibility of a mod to make her even taller had not entered my mind. Yet, of course, it's happened. For those of you who simply aren't satisfied with being murdered by a 9'6" tall vampire woman, you can now make her even taller. xRaq's Taller Alcina Dimitrescu mod is available on Nexus Mods, and it does exactly what the name suggests. You download it, extract it to your mods folder, and Lady D gains another few feet of height, making her a little bit taller than the bottom of the chandelier in the castle foyer. The mod will work with any alternate appearance mods, too, so if you've got an alternate outfit for Alcina (Lord give me strength) you should be good to go. There's also a mod to make Lady Dimitrescu normal height. I can't decide which of these mods is more ridiculous and spent about 45 minutes this afternoon trying to decide which one would make the better absurd mod headline. I hope I've made the right choice, but I'll never be 100% convinced. RELATED LINKS: Resident Evil Village review, Resident Evil Village bosses guide, The best horror games on PC |
| One of the best horror games on Steam is free to keep for one more day Posted: 29 May 2021 01:51 PM PDT If you're looking to get spooky in June, there are few options better than Little Nightmares - especially now that it's free. The adorably grotesque adventure is free-to-keep on Steam this weekend, so if you're looking to add it to your collection, you should do it fast. (Goodness knows you don't already have enough free PC games in your library.) Little Nightmares is free for you to claim on the Steam store until Monday, May 30 at 10am PDT / 1pm EDT / 6pm BST. You can hit that link and hit the 'add to account' button to permanently tie it to your library, and it'll be available for you to download from then on just as with any game you might purchase for actual money. Plenty of people have been enjoying the promotion, too. SteamDB shows a new record concurrent player count today of 78,169, astronomically bigger than the sub-2k player number at launch. Another free giveaway earlier this year brought 19,111 players digging in all at once, so this weekend's freebie has proven even more popular. RELATED LINKS: Little Nightmares system requirements |
| Hades fans are releasing an Iliad audiobook Posted: 29 May 2021 11:00 AM PDT A lot of people really liked Supergiant's mythological roguelike game, Hades. (It ranks high on our GotY 2020 list, too.) Now, it's inspiring fans not just to get into Greek myth, but to record their own reading of The Iliad, one of the most notable writings of classic myth, and one of the most foundational works of Western literature. The Iliad Project is a reading of The Iliad, as translated by Robert Fagles, set to be released on June 20. The recording is done by 27 community readers, and even includes the vocal talents of Courtney Vineys, the actor behind Dusa and Aphrodite. It will be available on YouTube and various podcast apps, following a release stream on June 20 at 3pm PDT / 6pm EDT / 11pm BST. As you might imagine, the Hades developers are excited about it too, and creative director Greg Kasavin is even providing a forward for the project. "It's wonderful when Hades can help spark new or renewed interest in Greek myth," the devs say on Twitter. "These folks from our community will soon be taking it to the next level with a complete audio recording of the Iliad of Homer, which inspired our Achilles and Patroclus and many other details." RELATED LINKS: Hades Review, Best RPGs, Best indie games |
| RetroArch gets an easy way to play HD, widescreen SNES games Posted: 29 May 2021 09:54 AM PDT The hardcore members of the emulation scene will always recommend that you stick with standalone emulator releases, because they offer more options and greater flexibility. And, well, those people are right, but you still can't beat a front-end like RetroArch for convenience. Luckily, one of the most exciting recent developments in SNES gaming is getting much easier to use in RetroArch. bsnes HD is a fork of the popular Super Nintendo emulator built to allow HD, widescreen output for SNES games. By default, it can make Mode 7 backgrounds scale and rotate in HD at modern aspect ratios, and ROM hackers are working on patches to allow more robust widescreen versions of games like Super Mario World and Super Metroid. The new RetroArch core for bsnes HD aims to make it easy to apply those patches and get good results from those games. "In anticipation of Vitor Vilela's Super Mario World widescreen patch I have added support for dynamic patches and setting overrides to the Libretro core," bsnes HD developer DerKoun says on Reddit. "This means that RetroArch users can now enjoy the same near zero configuration effort previously only available in the standalone version." |
| What if: Resident Evil Village’s Lady Dimitrescu got her own game? Posted: 29 May 2021 09:00 AM PDT Depending on how you look at it, Resident Evil Village is either a tightly paced anthology, or three promising but frustratingly underdeveloped horror stories. And also Heisenberg for some reason. I'd like to see these characters given some breathing room. While the tragedy of scarred dollmaker Donna Beneviento and the anguish of Oedipal frogspawn Moreau would make fine extended tales in their own right, what if Capcom decided it liked money (wild, I know), and gave Lady Dimitrescu the spotlight for its next release? If you just felt a knock to the head, please ignore the Shiba Inu with the large bat standing next to you, and focus. Why do this? Because Lady Dimitrescu is the star of Resident Evil Village. Capcom, knowing this, turned fifteen minutes of scripted screen time into an entire marketing campaign. The themes of depraved aristocrats, gothic grandeur, and the bloodlines of nobility being held in higher regard than the lives of the poor are all amazingly fertile ground for sinister storytelling, and Village's ghost train narrative rattled through the castle before we'd even had a chance to admire the decor. RELATED LINKS: Resident Evil Village review, Resident Evil Village bosses guide, The best horror games on PC |
| Biomutant devs say upcoming patch will improve basically everything that’s bad Posted: 29 May 2021 08:38 AM PDT Biomutant's bizarre world, gorgeous vistas, and diverse combat options drew plenty of interest ahead of release - it certainly looked awesome in hands-off previews - but then it came out, and… well, I don't need to reissue our entire Biomutant review here. Suffice to say the game was a disappointment, and the devs are working on a big patch to address many of the complaints. "We are working on an update for Biomutant which we will hope to get into players' hands soon," the devs say in a tweet. "Most likely we will be able to deliver the update to PC platforms first and then to consoles. The update will include bug fixes and changes based on community feedback." The list of issues the devs are looking at is, uh, ambitious, to say the least. "We are working on the pacing of dialogues, narrator settings, difficulty settings, video settings like depth of field and motion blur, loot and enemy tuning as well as sound and combat." |
| Call of Duty: Warzone devs are fixing the DLSS aim problems Posted: 28 May 2021 03:54 PM PDT May 28, 2021 PC studio Beenox and Nvidia are working on a fix for Warzone's DLSS aim problems. In the world of battle royale games, FPS is key - you want as many frames per second as you can squeeze out of your PC to make sure you're getting silky smooth responsiveness whenever you snap your sights on an enemy. Nvidia's DLSS can boost your framerate in Call of Duty: Warzone by using a lower-resolution base canvas, but it seems as though a side effect is that your guns' optics may be out of alignment - a big problem for anyone trying to be the best sniper in Warzone. After players began to notice the DLSS issues earlier this month, the devs have now confirmed that they are "are aware of an issue where DLSS may impact the accuracy of Weapon optics in Warzone. The team is working on a fix for an upcoming patch." As Charlie Intel has highlighted, YouTuber JGOD demonstrates how various DLSS settings in Warzone can cause the crosshairs in your weapon optics to misalign with where your rounds are actually going. Readers will no doubt recall that DLSS works by 'upsampling' a lower-resolution image and using machine learning techniques to interpolate missing visual data on the fly when it's displayed at a higher resolution. The results can be surprisingly clear, even working from a base canvas of 720p. |
| Looks like Steam’s getting a library manager to show which games take the most space Posted: 28 May 2021 03:44 PM PDT Steam's library features have gotten pretty robust over the years, but one thing that could be clearer is just how much space each game is taking up. Sure, you can check any given game's install size by checking the 'local files' section of the properties menu, but that doesn't let you see everything you have installed. It looks like Valve has a solution in mind, however. Dataminers have picked up a new 'library manager' view hidden in a recent Steam update. The tool is nowhere near final, as the sparse UI in the screenshots can attest, but as it stands it provides a list of games in your Steam library folder with their install size displayed right next to the titles. There's also a graph that shows how much hard disc space is taken up by games, DLC, Workshop mods, and other odds and ends. It appears that this will work across multiple library folders, too, so if you have your Steam games spread across multiple hard drives, you can keep an eye on each of those install paths. RELATED LINKS: Free Steam games |
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