Tag Archives: showcase

Steamworld Heist 2 Announced: We Talk to Thunderful After the Sequel’s Indie World Showcase Reveal – IGN

  1. Steamworld Heist 2 Announced: We Talk to Thunderful After the Sequel’s Indie World Showcase Reveal IGN
  2. One of Steam’s best-reviewed games gets a surprise open world sequel, and it’s a plunder-em-up built around rickety pirate robots PC Gamer
  3. SteamWorld Heist 2 revealed, bringing a ragtag crew of seafaring robots to PC this August Rock Paper Shotgun
  4. An incredible XCOM-like strategy game is finally getting a sequel after 9 years – the latest in a criminally slept-on series that’s never seen a bad game Gamesradar
  5. SteamWorld Heist 2 Brings More Ricochet-Centric Tactics Action This August GameSpot

Read original article here

Forza Motorsport Cover Revealed, More Info to Come in June Showcase & Monthly Shows – GTPlanet

  1. Forza Motorsport Cover Revealed, More Info to Come in June Showcase & Monthly Shows GTPlanet
  2. Turn 10 details Forza Motorsport’s double showcase airing in June Eurogamer.net
  3. [VIDEO] 2024 Corvette E-Ray to be Featured on the Cover of Forza Motorsport – Corvette: Sales, News & Lifestyle Corvette Blogger
  4. Turn 10 reveals Forza Motorsport cover art and gameplay showcase plans | VGC Video Games Chronicle
  5. Forza Motorsport Cover Cars Confirmed, Career Mode Gameplay to be Shown in June | XboxAchievements.com XboxAchievements
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Rumor: Metal Gear Solid 3 Remake is a PS5 Exclusive, Might be Announced at PlayStation Showcase – News – VGChartz

  1. Rumor: Metal Gear Solid 3 Remake is a PS5 Exclusive, Might be Announced at PlayStation Showcase – News VGChartz
  2. Rumours About PS5 Exclusive Metal Gear Solid, Silent Hill, and Castlevania Send the Web Potty Push Square
  3. Sony Has Struck Exclusivity Deals With Konami for MGS3, Silent Hill, and Possibly Castlevania, Jez Corden Says Wccftech
  4. Metal Gear Solid 3 Remake to be Announced at PlayStation Showcase, Exclusive to PS5 – Rumour GamingBolt
  5. Metal Gear Solid 3 Remake: PS5 exclusive and PlayStation Showcase announcement, according to Nick Baker – Game News 24
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

LA lawyer on the lam lived it up at Las Vegas hotel on more than $10.2 million of company funds and took pictures with NFL quarterbacks to showcase fake ‘connections’: Lawsuit – Law & Crime

  1. LA lawyer on the lam lived it up at Las Vegas hotel on more than $10.2 million of company funds and took pictures with NFL quarterbacks to showcase fake ‘connections’: Lawsuit Law & Crime
  2. California lawyer accused of living ‘extravagant lifestyle’ gambling on $10M of company’s funds: reports Yahoo News
  3. Lawsuit: Lawyer misspent $10M of firm’s money partying at Las Vegas Strip resort FOX5 Las Vegas
  4. Lawsuit: California lawyer used lending business to support gambling in Vegas Las Vegas Review-Journal
  5. Woman blows $10million of her company’s money ‘partying at Las Vegas Strip casino’ The Mirror
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

NASA images showcase eerie beauty of winter on Mars

Ice frozen in the soil left polygon patterns on the Martian surface. (NASA, JPL-Caltech, University of Arizona)

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

ATLANTA — Mars may seem like a dry, desolate place, but the red planet transforms into an otherworldly wonderland in winter, according to a new video shared by NASA.

It’s late winter in Mars’ Northern Hemisphere, where the Perseverance rover and Ingenuity helicopter are exploring an ancient river delta that once fed into Jezero Crater billions of years ago.

As the planet’s main feature, dust also drives Martian weather. Dust usually heralds winter’s arrival, but the planet is no stranger to snow, ice and frost. At the Martian poles, the temperature can dip as low as minus 190 degrees Fahrenheit.

There are two types of snow on Mars. One is the kind we experience on Earth, made of frozen water. The thin Martian air and subzero temperatures mean that traditional snow sublimates, or transitions from a solid directly to a gas, before touching the ground on Mars.

The other type of Martian snow is carbon dioxide-based, or dry ice, and it can land on the surface. A few feet of snow tend to fall on Mars in its flat regions near the poles.

“Enough falls that you could snowshoe across it,” said Sylvain Piqueux, a Mars scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement from a NASA release. “If you were looking for skiing, though, you’d have to go into a crater or cliffside, where snow could build up on a sloped surface.”

So far, no orbiters or rovers have been able to see snowfall on the red planet because the weather phenomenon only occurs at the poles beneath cloud cover at night. The cameras on the orbiters can’t peer through the clouds, and no robotic explorers have been developed that could survive the freezing temperatures at the poles.

Patchy carbon dioxide frost, or dry ice, can be seen inside a crater during winter in the Martian Southern Hemisphere. (Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona)

However, the Mars Climate Sounder instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter can detect light that’s invisible to the human eye. It has made detections of carbon dioxide snow falling at the Martian poles. The Phoenix lander, which arrived on Mars in 2008, also used one of its laser instruments to detect water-ice snow from its spot about 1,000 miles away from the Martian north pole.

Thanks to photographers, we know snowflakes on Earth are unique and six-sided. Beneath a microscope, Martian snowflakes would likely look a little different.

“Because carbon dioxide ice has a symmetry of four, we know dry-ice snowflakes would be cube-shaped,” Piqueux said. “Thanks to the Mars Climate Sounder, we can tell these snowflakes would be smaller than the width of a human hair.”

Ice and carbon dioxide-based frosts also form on Mars, and they can occur farther away from the poles. The Odyssey orbiter (which entered Mars’ orbit in 2001) has watched frost forming and turning to a gas in the sunlight, while the Viking landers spotted icy frost on Mars when they arrived in the 1970s.

At the end of winter, the season’s buildup of ice can thaw and turn into gas, creating unique shapes that have reminded NASA scientists of Swiss cheese, Dalmatian spots, fried eggs, spiders and other unusual formations.

During winter in Jezero Crater, recent high temperatures have been about 8 F, while lows have been about minus 120 F.

Meanwhile, at Gale Crater in the Southern Hemisphere near the Martian equator, the Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012, has been experiencing highs of 5 F and lows of minus 105 F.

Seasons on Mars tend to last longer because the planet’s oval-shaped orbit around the sun means that a single Martian year is 687 days or nearly two Earth years.

NASA scientists celebrated the Mars new year on Dec. 26, which coincided with the arrival of the spring equinox in the Northern Hemisphere.

“Scientists count Mars years starting from the planet’s northern spring equinox that occurred in 1955 — an arbitrary point to begin, but it’s useful to have a system,” according to a post on the NASA Mars Facebook page. “Numbering Mars years helps scientists keep track of long-term observations, like weather data collected by NASA spacecraft over the decades.”

Photos

Related stories

More stories you may be interested in

Read original article here

NASA images showcase eerie beauty of winter on Mars

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



CNN
 — 

Mars may seem like a dry, desolate place, but the red planet transforms into an otherworldly wonderland in winter, according to a new video shared by NASA.

It’s late winter in Mars’ Northern Hemisphere, where the Perseverance rover and Ingenuity helicopter are exploring an ancient river delta that once fed into Jezero Crater billions of years ago.

As the planet’s main feature, dust also drives Martian weather. Dust usually heralds winter’s arrival, but the planet is no stranger to snow, ice and frost. At the Martian poles, the temperature can dip as low as minus 190 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 123 degrees Celsius).

There are two types of snow on Mars. One is the kind we experience on Earth, made of frozen water. The thin Martian air and subzero temperatures mean that traditional snow sublimates, or transitions from a solid directly to a gas, before touching the ground on Mars.

The other type of Martian snow is carbon dioxide-based, or dry ice, and it can land on the surface. A few feet of snow tend to fall on Mars in its flat regions near the poles.

“Enough falls that you could snowshoe across it,” said Sylvain Piqueux, a Mars scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement from a NASA release. “If you were looking for skiing, though, you’d have to go into a crater or cliffside, where snow could build up on a sloped surface.”

So far, no orbiters or rovers have been able to see snow fall on the red planet because the weather phenomenon only occurs at the poles beneath cloud cover at night. The cameras on the orbiters can’t peer through the clouds, and no robotic explorers have been developed that could survive the freezing temperatures at the poles.

INTERACTIVE: Mars and other places to search for life in the solar system

However, the Mars Climate Sounder instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter can detect light that’s invisible to the human eye. It has made detections of carbon dioxide snow falling at the Martian poles. The Phoenix lander, which arrived on Mars in 2008, also used one of its laser instruments to detect water-ice snow from its spot about 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) away from the Martian north pole.

Thanks to photographers, we know snowflakes on Earth are unique and six-sided. Beneath a microscope, Martian snowflakes would likely look a little different.

“Because carbon dioxide ice has a symmetry of four, we know dry-ice snowflakes would be cube-shaped,” Piqueux said. “Thanks to the Mars Climate Sounder, we can tell these snowflakes would be smaller than the width of a human hair.”

Ice and carbon dioxide-based frosts also form on Mars, and they can occur farther away from the poles. The Odyssey orbiter (which entered Mars’ orbit in 2001) has watched frost forming and turning to a gas in the sunlight, while the Viking landers spotted icy frost on Mars when they arrived in the 1970s.

At the end of winter, the season’s buildup of ice can thaw and turn into gas, creating unique shapes that have reminded NASA scientists of Swiss cheese, Dalmatian spots, fried eggs, spiders and other unusual formations.

During winter in Jezero Crater, recent high temperatures have been about 8 F (minus 13 C), while lows been about minus 120 F (minus 84 C).

Meanwhile, at Gale Crater in the Southern Hemisphere near the Martian equator, the Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012, has been experiencing highs of 5 F (minus 15 C) and lows of minus 105 F (minus 76 C).

Seasons on Mars tend to last longer because the planet’s oval-shaped orbit around the sun means that a single Martian year is 687 days, or nearly two Earth years.

NASA scientists celebrated the Mars new year on December 26, which coincided with the arrival of the spring equinox in the Northern Hemisphere.

“Scientists count Mars years starting from the planet’s northern spring equinox that occurred in 1955 — an arbitrary point to begin, but it’s useful to have a system,” according to a post on the NASA Mars Facebook page. “Numbering Mars years helps scientists keep track of long term observations, like weather data collected by NASA spacecraft over the decades.”

Read original article here

Hollinger’s Showcase notebook: Suns’ $4 billion sale renews NBA expansion buzz

LAS VEGAS — Usually the G League Winter Showcase marks a beginning point for a big chunk of the NBA’s trade conversations. Even in our networked/texting/Zooming world, face time matters. Nearly every exec in the league spends at least a day here hobnobbing.

Front office members and staffers see each other at the two courts where the event is held, and perhaps at the bar at the end of a long day, too, since virtually everyone is in the same hotel. Relaxed without the prying eyes of fans around, they trade bits of information and crop up conversations. Next thing you know, there’s a three-team, eight-player deal on the table. It still takes the urgency of the trade deadline in February to actually get these conversations to the finish line, but this week is often the catalyst.

This year has felt … different. The overarching theme is that things seemed quieter than usual.

“Quiet” isn’t the same thing as “dead,” of course, and flickers of trade market life could be detected if one looked closely enough. Teams spent the week kicking the tires on Chicago’s situation. Phoenix’s exiled Jae Crowder remains a target for several contenders. Oh, and have you heard Atlanta’s John Collins is available?

Nonetheless, the cold math remains: It’s tough to have buyers without any sellers, and there just aren’t many sellers right now. That may change as we get closer to the trade deadline and more teams see their preseason hopes collide with the realities of their rosters. Right now, however, the potentially interesting sellers are either straddling .500 or, in a few cases, clinging resolutely to the delusion that they can get there. Instead of actual trade talks, we’re left speculating about guys who might, maybe, at some point, want to be traded. Fun times.

Instead, it was a different transaction that got everyone’s attention this week.

Four billion dollars? Now that got people talking. That was the valuation Mat Ishbia agreed to this week in purchasing a controlling stake of the Phoenix Suns and the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury.

It’s one thing when the LA Clippers go for billions, but Phoenix? A growing but transplant-heavy market, with a tired arena and lots of pro and college sports competition? That’s news. In October, Forbes rated the Suns the 13th-most valuable NBA property, at a value of $2.7 billion. Ishbia went much higher than that.

The sale of the Suns and Mercury should have a big impact on NBA business in two areas. First of all, it could precipitate moves in other markets. The working presumption by many insiders is that we would see a raft of sales after the new collective bargaining agreement and next TV deal are finalized, since secure labor peace and a potential TV money bonanza would likely increase valuations. (As would expansion fees that might happen concurrently, but more on that below.)

However, economists who believe in efficient market theory would tell you this knowledge should already be baked into bidders’ valuations. The Suns’ sale seems to be a perfect example. At first glance, it seems like a wild overvaluation, but it makes a lot more sense if one is looking at the post-2026 market.

So the question becomes: What other owners might realize that they don’t need to wait and can cash out right away? Certainly, Portland comes to mind. There may be other reasons for Paul Allen’s estate to wait a while longer, but getting a price in the $3 billion to $4 billion range right now could easily trump them.

Similarly, Michael Jordan in Charlotte has been whispered about for ages as a potential seller. Though the Hornets haven’t exactly set the league afire, he bought the team for relative peanuts in 2010 (a reported net price of $175 million) and would make a mint on a sale, perhaps 10 times what he paid. New Orleans is another franchise that many insiders mention as a sale candidate, although the search for a local buyer could stymie a transaction. Those are the known knowns, in Rumsfeld-speak.

But what about the known unknowns? Are there other owners who weren’t really thinking about selling a week ago, but now might suddenly be tempted if they can get a number like $4 billion?

And whither the T’wolves? The bizarre multi-installment sale from Glen Taylor to Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore is still creaking along toward its Dec. 31, 2023 completion date, but should anything go amiss, Taylor could seemingly make a lot more money from another buyer. Needless to say, if the new dudes so much as misplace a comma in a document, Taylor is massively incentivized to nuke the deal and start over. The valuation on that Timberwolves sale was $1.6 billion, so Taylor might make an extra billion if the team went back on the market! Fortunately, this is the Minnesota Timberwolves, so nothing crazy like that could possibly happen.

However, even that pales in comparison to the other important piece of the Suns’ sale news: what it means for expansion.


The chances of the NBA returning to Seattle keep growing. (Joe Nicholson / USA Today)

Basically, it makes it seem almost inevitable that we’ll have two new teams within the next half decade. (Not breaking any news here, but every single person I asked thinks those teams will be in Seattle and Las Vegas. My personal crusade for Bali and Kauai appears to have gained little traction.)

If you want to understand why the Phoenix sale is so important to this, do the math. The biggest obstacle to expanding from 30 teams to 32 is not a lack of available markets in which to sell tickets or pipe in local TV broadcasts. It’s because they dilute the national TV money.

The league’s national TV deal has become an increasingly large portion of teams’ budgets, and that amount is only expected to rise in the next TV deal. Adding two new franchises dilutes each one’s share of that piece by roughly 1/16, and does so in perpetuity. That would be fine if adding teams grew the TV pie proportionately, but it doesn’t, because the NBA already has more games than ESPN and TNT can possibly air. Sure, they might get slightly higher ratings in Seattle and Las Vegas than many other cities, but that’s a barely noticeable blip on a national level.

The only thing offsetting the loss of national TV money is the expansion fee, which is shared by the 30 current owners. That fee, alas, is only paid once, and not year after year, and thus needs to be many multiples of the lost annual TV revenue for the league’s owners to come out ahead — and thus, presumably, vote in favor of expansion. This is why some of my spies were pouring cold water on expansion speculation: The financial math wasn’t guaranteed to pencil out for the 30 owners.

The exact break-even point is a complex calculation based on projections of future TV revenues, future interest rates and investment returns, an estimate of the expansion fee and what economists call the discount rate for the time value of money, accounting for the fact you’d rather have your money today than 10 years from now.

Instead, let me make some grossly simplifying assumptions to walk you through the exercise. I have an economics degree and I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night. This should go great.

The last TV deal was $24 billion over nine years. Let’s say the next one is $75 billion over nine years, which some have estimated.

Now, for some math. (Sorry). Divide by 30 and you have each team’s share of that package ($2.5 billion). Divide that number by nine and you have each team’s annual share ($277 million). That share, in turn, is diluted 1/16 by expansion. The dilution, then, is worth about $17.3 million annually. If an owner’s financial mandarins end up with a 10 percent annual discount on future revenues (this is a quasi-reasonable ballpark), they will want the expansion fee to be at least 10 times the diluted revenue to justify a yes vote.

And that is why an expansion fee in the $4 billion to $5 billion range is so important. It’s so much easier to pencil out the owners coming out ahead than if the fee were, say, in the $3 billion to $3.5 billion range.

Which, in turn, is much easier to imagine happening if an existing franchise just sold for $4 billion. Most observers I spoke with see a Vegas team as being of similar or slightly greater value than Phoenix, and a Seattle team as being worth considerably more. Suppose, for argument’s sake, it was $4 billion for Vegas and $5 billion for Seattle. That’s an instant $300 million windfall for every owner … and a roughly 17x ratio to the diluted TV money.

Yes, my math here involves sweeping assumptions and simplifications. Nonetheless, let’s exit the financial weeds here and conclude with the big-picture takeaway from this exercise. If the expansion fees were $3 billion, it would seem like a close call for the league’s owners to approve it.

If it’s at $4 billion? It’s a no-brainer.



The Knicks’ punishment for tampering with Jalen Brunson was as tame, as expected. (Brad Penner / USA Today)

Some other thoughts from the Showcase:

That’ll show ‘em, huh?

The other hot topic in league circles was the collective eye roll at the NBA’s decision to penalize the Knicks a 2025 second-round pick for tampering in signing Jalen Brunson. As many have already noted, giving up a second-rounder to sign a max-level free agent is a trade every team in the league would make in a nanosecond. Once you’re dealing with All-Stars and max players, there is no amount of second-round picks the league could penalize a team to disincentivize them.

On the flip side, league personnel I talked to recognized the impossibility of the league’s situation. The underlying issue isn’t that the Knicks (or Sixers, for that matter) cheated the letter of the rule this summer, but that the current rules on free agency are virtually unenforceable. There is only one rule most execs really care about: Tampering with a player whose team is still playing games remains an absolutely uncrossable red line, one that should be punished with a decades-long banishment to a dank, windowless cell, containing only a bed made of carpet from the visiting locker room in Oracle Arena and a big screen TV showing games from the 1998-99 lockout year.

As for jumping the July 1 deadline on contacting free agents by a few hours (or days, or weeks) …. whatevs. There are rules written on paper about audits and commandeering phones and whatnot, but nobody wants to actually do that.

In reality, the league’s de facto policy is “just don’t embarrass us.” Which is hard to write about, because we’ve become part of the problem.

News flash: Teams have been jumping the gun on free agency for years and years and years. The news just didn’t get out nearly as fast in the past. It worked in 2012. It doesn’t in 2022.

You can see the problem: The league doesn’t want news leaking of complicated sign-and-trades mere seconds into the alleged start of free agency, nor does it want breathless coverage of back-and-forth free agent negotiations on June 26. Well, good luck with that. Unless every social media outlet simultaneously fails while cutthroat reporters throttle back to Andrea Bargnani-esque tameness, it’s virtually impossible to keep the genie bottled.


The Elam ending factored prominently in the Showcase, even if the word Elam was never mentioned.

The G League has used it in overtime all year to generally positive reviews, requiring teams to score eight points rather than playing for a specified amount of time. That change got a thumbs-up from NBA personnel I spoke to, with the consensus being that NBA overtimes are too long right now and deflate drama from the end of the fourth quarter. The target score also eliminated the chance of multiple overtimes and the crazy player minute situations they can engender. The G League staffers all love it, too.

However, using it for the entire fourth quarter generated opposite reactions. Playing a fourth quarter with a “target” of 25 points more than the leading team’s score, rather than a set time, created a host of new issues. For starters, coaches were left guessing on substitutions without a clock to indicate how long players had played (or rested).

This was particularly true in lower-scoring games, a couple of which became interminable as teams struggled to hit the target score. And this was in today’s more open, offensive era! Imagine my Grizzlies playing, say, Utah in 2016, and try to figure out how long they’d need to play for one team to get to 25.

Secondarily, the target score produced some interesting strategy of its own. If your opponent is three points away from the target score, do you foul to eliminate losing on a 3-pointer? Concede a layup to do the same? (I saw a couple of teams in this situation hug all the shooters and leave gaping holes down Main Street). What about in a one-point game? Would any ref dare call defensive three seconds?

For those reasons, the Elam ending seems much more likely to gain eventual NBA-wide adoption in overtime than in regulation. Regardless, kudos to the league for continuing to use the G League as a lab to experiment with improvements to the game.

(Top photo: Lucas Peltier / USA Today)



Read original article here

Everything We Saw At Today’s Nintendo World Showcase

This game, Blanc, is probably gonna mess me up emotionally.
Image: Casus Ludi

Nintendo wrapped up its Indie World Showcase today, highlighting a ton of upcoming and just-launched games for the Switch. There’s a little bit of everything here, from a cute puzzler with a mischievous cat to a Fox and the Hound-like adventure game. This indie presentation was pretty big, so let’s get into everything that was shown:


Venba

Nintendo

A wholesome narrative cooking game about an Indian mother who recently immigrated to Canada, developer Visai Games’ Venba sounds like it’ll tug on all the heart strings. Telling a story of reconnecting with one’s heritage, you’ll whip up a variety of saliva-inducing South Indian dishes while using branching conversations to uncover this tale of love and loss. Venba hits Nintendo Switch sometime this spring.

Goodbye World

Nintendo

Goodbye World, developed by YO FUJII, is another one of those games about games. Specifically, this pixelated narrative adventure is about two friends looking for the perfect idea for their next game. So you’ll play through various puzzle-platforming levels as the protagonists fine-tune their ideas and face the strain game development can put on a friendship. Evocative stuff. Goodbye World lands on Switch this month.

Have A Nice Death

Nintendo

Developer Magic Design Studios’ Have A Nice Death has been out for six months now, and the 2D action roguelike is finally making its way to Nintendo Switch. You play as Death Inc. CEO Death as he reaps his way through the corporate underworld to “restore work-death balance” with 70 different weapons and spells at your disposal. And, of course, you’re Death! You can’t die, so you can use what you’ve earned and learned to get better with each run. Have A Nice Death drops on March 22, 2023.

Aka

Nintendo

Aka by developer Cosmo Gatto is a lowkey “small open-world game” with a singular goal: Help the retired warrior Aka find inner peace on an isolated island paradise. You’ll explore hand-crafted environments, like tropical forests and steamy hot springs, while performing tasks such as building shelters and feeding adorable baby dragons. It kinda gives me A Short Hike vibes. Aka lands on Nintendo Switch on December 15.

Pepper Grinder

Nintendo

A fast-paced 2D action-adventure game, developer Ahr Ech’s Pepper Grinder puts you in the treasure hunting shoes of Pepper, who’s been shipwrecked and robbed. Now, with your trusty drill in tow, you must reclaim what was stolen from you by digging through the terrain, solving tricky puzzles, and grinding bosses to a pulp. There’s no definitive launch date yet, but Pepper Grinder is slated for a 2023 release.

Coffee Talk Episode 2: Hibiscus & Butterfly

Nintendo

Toge Productions is back with the sequel to one of my fave narrative barista games, Coffee Talk Episode 2: Hibiscus & Butterfly. With an expanded drink menu and an even more robust cast of characters, this looks to be a relaxing visual novel with a vibin’ lofi soundtrack. Coffee Talk Episode 2: Hibiscus & Butterfly arrives this spring.

Oni: Road To Be The Mightiest Oni

Nintendo

Coming from tag-team developers Kenei Design and Shueisha Games, Oni: Road To Be The Mightiest Oni is about a demon warrior who, after getting his ass whooped by a Japanese folktale hero, joins forces with a spirit to become stronger than before. You control both the demon warrior Kuuta and the spirit Kazemaru simultaneously, using Kuuta’s club to bludgeon enemies so that Kazemaru can suck up their souls for power. Oni: Road To Be The Mightiest Oni launches on March 9, 2023 for Nintendo Switch.

Desta: The Memories Between

Nintendo

Alba: A Wildlife Adventure and Monument Valley creators ustwo games is back with another character-driven narrative adventure that has some roguelite elements to it in Desta: The Memories Between. You play as the eponymous character who enters a mysterious dream world filled with scattered memories every time they fall asleep. These memories, of forgotten spots and old faces, also contain orbs for Desta to play a surreal turn-based ball game as you perform perfect throws and trick shots while changing the course of character interactions. Desta: The Memories Between sounds like an amalgam of Dodgeball Academia and Pyre, and drops in early 2023.

A Space For The Unbound

Nintendo

A Space For The Unbound, developed by Mojiken, is a slice-of-life adventure set in late ‘90s rural Indonesia. Following high school sweethearts Atma and Raya, the game shows the two navigating their way through feelings of anxiety and depression while using newly discovered supernatural powers to prevent the end of the world. Very cute, very cataclysmic. A Space For The Unbound lands on January 19, 2023.

Dordogne

Nintendo

Dordogne by collaborating studios Un Je Ne Sais Quoi and Umanimation is an adventure game about Mimi, a young woman searching for her mysteriously forgotten childhood memories. You play Mimi in the past and present to reconnect her to herself, as she returns to her grandma’s home only to find a series of letters constructing a facsimile of Mimi’s past. It sounds incredibly touching as the story seeks to establish the bond between grandmother and granddaughter, something I feel rather acutely as someone who lost their grandmother early this year. Dordogne comes out this spring.

Botany Manor

Nintendo

If you’ve ever wanted to be a master gardener, developer Balloon Studios has you covered with Botany Manor. An exploration adventure-puzzler, Botany Manor puts you in control of Arabella Greene, a retired botanist with a massive estate all to herself. As the name suggests, this game is all about taking care of a huge garden, tending to the leaves, propagating seedlings, solving plant-based puzzles—that sorta thing. Though there’s no release date yet, Botany Manor does hit Nintendo Switch next year.

Once Upon a Jester

Nintendo

From developers Bonte Avond, Once Upon a Jester is a casual adventure game about improvising a theater show to get invited to the Royal Theatrical Spectacle in the Royal Palace. But of course, protagonists Sok and Jester have a mischievous ulterior motive: Steal the Royal Diamond, which is in the company of the King. So, to get close enough to the diamond, you must put on the best theatrical plays and sock-puppet shows the kingdom has ever seen by using your exceptional—or terrible—improv skills to get that coveted invitation. Once Upon a Jester will be available later today.

Rogue Legacy 2

Nintendo

Launching on Steam earlier this year, developer Cellar Door Games’ Rogue Legacy 2 is a roguelike Metroidvania where every run is different from the last. While you could be a dwarf with vertigo one minute or a giant who can’t jump the next, the goal is always the same: collect riches, fortify your castle, and establish your legacy, with all your upgrades transferring between runs. Rogue Legacy 2 will also be available later today, and the Nintendo Switch release comes with tons of new items and subclasses.

Blanc

Nintendo

A monochromatic adventure game about a wolf cub and a fawn, Casus Ludi’s Blanc tells the story of the two animals who must rely on each other to navigate a vast, snowy wilderness. You’ll follow both creatures’ family tracks, solving environmental puzzles along the way, all in an attempt to lead them back home. Blanc, with its Fox and the Hound vibes, launches on February 14, 2023 as a Nintendo Switch exclusive.

A Little to the Left

Nintendo

A cute and cozy puzzler, Max Inferno Games’ A Little to the Left is about finding satisfying puzzles hidden among household objects. If you can imagine Marie Kondo making a game, this would be it as you tidy up around various disparate environments, organizing things just so. A Little to the Left also has a mischievous, pettable cat that’ll mess up your perfect arrangements when it drops later today.

Sports Story

Nintendo

Closing the Nindies Showcase was an update for Sidebar Games’ Sports Story, an adventure RPG about…sports. Now, instead of just golf and soccer and other expected sports, there are newly-added activities including BMX and cricket. You can quest, kickback at the mall, and explore dungeons in a narrative that’s about more than just sports—though sports are the focal point here. Sports Story comes out next month.

Everything Else

Read original article here

Sony Handed State of Play Branding to Resident Evil Showcase

Sony directly hosted last night’s Resident Evil Showcase on its YouTube channel, and it actually affected the livestream in more ways than one. Firstly, the show’s 15-minute countdown timer was branded as if it were a State of Play event from the hardware manufacturer itself. The usual blue backgrounds, relaxing music, and PlayStation buttons could be seen arranging themselves into all sorts of shapes to make it seem like Sony was running the show instead of Capcom.

Another change took place during the livestream itself. Instead of a trailer that showed off Resident Evil Village on Mac, a fresh look at the game running on PSVR2 was revealed. While the spotlight lacked substantial information on the virtual reality port — instead treated more like a recap — senior director Kenjo Akiyama highlighted new features like a resolution boost, 3D audio, and a generally “more intuitive and realistic gaming experience” thanks to the PSVR2 Sense controllers. You can catch the bonus clip through this link.

As fans continue to wait for even a hint of a PlayStation Showcase, it’s perhaps a little funny to see the State of Play branding suddenly crop up out of nowhere as Sony tries to make a livestream appear its own. Of course, the platform holder seemingly has a marketing deal in place for the Resident Evil franchise, so it’s always going to try its best to associate the survival horror series with PS5, PS4 as much as possible.

Alongside the PSVR2 mode coming to Resident Evil Village next year, the showcase also focused on next week’s DLC Shadows of Rose and the Resident Evil 4 remake, the latter of which we recently went Hands On with. Check out our first impressions through the link having played it.



Read original article here

Resident Evil Showcase: Start Time And How To Watch

Capcom will be hosting a Resident Evil showcase today, October 20. The showcase will feature multiple games, including the upcoming Resident Evil 4 remake–sure to be the most-anticipated Resident Evil game in a very long time. Here’s how to watch and what to expect.

How to watch the Resident Evil Showcase

The Resident Evil Showcase will be available on the series’ official Twitch channel, as well as the official Resident Evil YouTube channel. We’ve also made things even easier for you by embedding the stream right here, so you can watch it all without having to go anywhere else.

“,”480”:”nnnnnnnnnn“}},”siteType”:”responsive web”,”startMuted”:false,”startTime”:0,”title”:”Resident%20Evil%20Showcase%20Livestream%20%7C%2010.20.2022″,”tracking”:[{“name”:”SiteCatalyst”,”category”:”qos”,”enabled”:true,”params”:[{“name”:”charSet”,”value”:”UTF-8″},{“name”:”currencyCode”,”value”:”USD”},{“name”:”siteType”,”value”:”responsive web”},{“name”:”trackingServer”,”value”:”saa.gamespot.com”},{“name”:”visitorNamespace”,”value”:”cbsinteractive”},{“name”:”heartbeatTrackingServer”,”value”:”newimagitasinc.hb.omtrdc.net”},{“name”:”heartbeatVisitorMarketingCloudOrgId”,”value”:”3C66570E5FE1A4AB0A495FFC@AdobeOrg”},{“name”:”partnerID”,”value”:”gamespot”},{“name”:”siteCode”,”value”:”gamespot”},{“name”:”brand”,”value”:”gamespot”},{“name”:”account”,”value”:”cbsigamespotsite”},{“name”:”edition”,”value”:”us”}]},{“name”:”ComScore_ss”,”category”:”qos”,”enabled”:true,”params”:[{“name”:”c2″,”value”:”31824268″},{“name”:”publishersSecret”,”value”:”2cb08ca4d095dd734a374dff8422c2e5″},{“name”:”c3″,”value”:””},{“name”:”partnerID”,”value”:”gamespot”},{“name”:”c4″,”value”:”gamespot”}]},{“name”:”NielsenTracking”,”category”:”tracking”,”enabled”:true,”params”:[{“name”:”host”,”value”:”https://secure-us.imrworldwide.com/cgi-bin/m?”},{“name”:”scCI”,”value”:”us-200330″},{“name”:”scC6″,”value”:”vc,c01″}]},{“name”:”MuxQOSPluginJS”,”category”:”qos”,”enabled”:true,”params”:[{“name”:”propertyKey”,”value”:”b7d6e48b7461a61cb6e863a62″}]}],”trackingAccount”:”cbsigamespotsite”,”trackingPrimaryId”:”cbsigamespotsite”,”trackingSiteCode”:”gs”,”userId”:0,”uvpc”:””,”uvpjsHostname”:”//www.gamespot.com”,”videoAdMobilePartner”:”mobile_web%2Fgamespot.com_mobile”,”videoAdPartner”:”desktop%2Fgamespot.com”,”videoAssetSource”:”Publisher Asset”,”videoStreams”:{“adaptive_stream”:”https://d1care40wy6g6a.cloudfront.net/out/v1/d88f81038ab540f7a19fd4130acc1c0f/master.m3u8″,”adaptive_high”:”https://d1care40wy6g6a.cloudfront.net/out/v1/d88f81038ab540f7a19fd4130acc1c0f/master.m3u8″,”adaptive_low”:”https://d1care40wy6g6a.cloudfront.net/out/v1/d88f81038ab540f7a19fd4130acc1c0f/master.m3u8″,”adaptive_restricted”:”https://d1care40wy6g6a.cloudfront.net/out/v1/d88f81038ab540f7a19fd4130acc1c0f/master.m3u8″},”videoType”:”livestream”,”watchedCookieDays”:1,”watchedCookieName”:”watchedVideoIds”}” data-non-iframe-embed=”1″>

You need a javascript enabled browser to watch videos.

Want us to remember this setting for all your devices?

Sign up or Sign in now!

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.

This video has an invalid file format.

Sorry, but you can’t access this content!

Please enter your date of birth to view this video

By clicking ‘enter’, you agree to GameSpot’s

Terms of Use and
Privacy Policy

Now Playing: Resident Evil Showcase Livestream | 10.20.2022

Resident Evil Showcase start time

The Resident Evil Showcase will stream at 6 PM ET / 3 PM PT.

  • 3 PM PT
  • 5 PM CT
  • 6 PM ET
  • 11 PM BST

While we don’t know a ton about the showcase, we do know it’ll feature updates on the two biggest RE projects currently in development, the Resident Evil 4 remake and the upcoming Resident Evil Village Gold Edition.

That new edition of Village will include several pieces of DLC, which will add a third-person mode to its campaign, as well as several new characters to its Mercenaries mode. Those new characters include Chris Redfield, the mechanically-minded Karl Heisenberg, and the towering Lady Dimitrescu. Additionally, the Winters’ Expansion DLC will continue the story of Village through the perspective of Ethan’s daughter Rose Winters.

The Resident Evil 4 remake is the bigger-ticket item here, as we still know comparatively little about it. Capcom has previously confirmed that it will be a “re-imagining” of the classic action game, and that it will be comparable to the recent Resident Evil 2 and 3 remakes. Still no word on a Code Veronica remake, though we can certainly hope.

The products discussed here were independently chosen by our editors.
GameSpot may get a share of the revenue if you buy anything featured on our site.

Read original article here