Tag Archives: siege

Rainbow Six Siege director says making a sequel after 9 years would be a mistake: ‘I’m not going to name names, but you see games go through sequels and just completely drop the ball’ – PC Gamer

  1. Rainbow Six Siege director says making a sequel after 9 years would be a mistake: ‘I’m not going to name names, but you see games go through sequels and just completely drop the ball’ PC Gamer
  2. Rainbow Six Siege Y9S1: Operation Deadly Omen — Huge Update! Esports Illustrated
  3. Rainbow Six Siege – Official ‘Exploring Deimos’ Mysterious Past’ Trailer IGN
  4. Operation Deadly Omen: Deimos is Siege’s new operator, new Anti Cheat update, shield rework, Azami nerf, R4C gets ACOG back, and more! SiegeGG
  5. New ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ Operator Deimos Is The First Playable Villain Forbes

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Israel-Hamas war: Gaza City hospitals face strikes and siege as Israeli troops fight Hamas – The Washington Post

  1. Israel-Hamas war: Gaza City hospitals face strikes and siege as Israeli troops fight Hamas The Washington Post
  2. ‘Please stop this.’ Gaza’s hospitals are failing under the weight of war. US medical groups are scrambling to help CNN
  3. Gaza hospital nearly at its breaking point as it operates without power CBS New York
  4. Israel is bombing hospitals in Gaza with Israeli doctors’ approval Al Jazeera English
  5. Gaza’s main hospital goes dark in intense fighting as Israel’s attacks put it at odds with allies Boston.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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TikTok, Instagram Target Outlet Covering Israel–Palestine Amid Siege on Gaza – The Intercept

  1. TikTok, Instagram Target Outlet Covering Israel–Palestine Amid Siege on Gaza The Intercept
  2. Parents urged to delete their kids social media accounts ahead of possible Israeli hostage videos CNN
  3. In Israel-Hamas war, social media isn’t neutral The Washington Post
  4. Jewish schools, community groups warn parents to monitor kids’ social media amid conflict in Israel ABC News
  5. Israeli and Jewish schools reportedly urge parents to tell their kids to delete Instagram and TikTok to avoid disturbing images of hostages CNBC
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukrainian Gunners Are Hunting Down Russia’s Siege Mortars – Forbes

  1. Ukrainian Gunners Are Hunting Down Russia’s Siege Mortars Forbes
  2. Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukraine gains foothold in strategic south-eastern village, minister says The Guardian
  3. Russia-Ukraine war news: Ukrainian forces claim to enter Robotyne; Americans told to leave Belarus – The Washington Post The Washington Post
  4. Ukraine says it gains foothold in strategic southeastern village Reuters
  5. ‘Putin’s thugs’: Ukraine’s desperate fight to keep Kupiansk from 100,000 Russian troops The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn Is, Genuinely, an Elden Ring and God of War Mash-up

There’s a majesty in Elden Ring that few other games can contend with. Its world is densely packed with a thousand waiting discoveries, its combat systems are richly layered, and its lore begs to be chronicled by a dozen YouTube scholars. But every now and again I can’t help but wonder what Elden Ring would be if it were not so beholden to FromSoftware’s own rules. What if it had the sense of cinematic spectacle that fuels Sony’s blockbusters? A story-rich narrative with the flashy, ability-augmented combat of God of War? The answer, it seems, may well be held in Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn.

At Gamescom 2022 I sat down with a couple of developers from A44, the New Zealand-based developer behind Ashen, to watch them play around 30 minutes of Flintlock. They explained that their new Soulslike RPG, set in a fantasy world of ancient magic and blackpowder guns, is designed to sit somewhere between Elden Ring and God of War, taking the challenge and discovery of the former and combining it with the narrative-focused, glossy presentation of the latter.

This approach is clear to see in the demo’s boss battle, which sees protagonist Nor Vanek face off against the imposing God of Knowledge, a towering spirit encased in golden plates of triangular armour. As the Soulslike genre dictates, the boss has an inflated health bar, deals huge damage with telegraphed attacks, and becomes more fearsome in its second phase. The initial steps to overcome all this follows the Dark Souls playbook; a well-timed dodge roll is followed by a few aggressive axe strikes, and then a patient wait for an attack that can be parried. But it’s in the parry that Flintlock’s God of War influences begin to show through; Nor knocks the God to its knees and the camera flies in close to perfectly capture a brutal blow to the side of its head.

The demo is filled with these moments. Nor might unleash a roundhouse kick that sends a foe flying, or tackle an enemy to the ground before firing her pistol into their face. The camera swoops around the action, triggering bursts of slow motion to truly emphasise spectacle. It may use the FromSoft ruleset, but Flintlock’s combat looks flashier – more fantastical, even – than any Souls game has ever been.

I walk away from the appointment convinced that Flintlock is the best thing I’ve seen at Gamescom.

But it goes further than just glossy animations and cool camera angles. Nor has a range of abilities that make her much more dynamic than a Souls character, including acrobatic jump strikes and being able to quickly switch between her guns and axe. She’s also accompanied by Enki, a fox-like creature who can, among other skills, freeze an enemy in mid-air and absorb their health. Think of him as a little like God of War’s Atreus, just infinitely old and with the ability to channel dark magic.

Since I’ve not yet played Flintlock, it’s impossible for me to know right now if that blend of challenge and cinema results in a tight, responsive combat system. But the signs are good, and A44 clearly believes in its combat so much that it even has a Devil May Cry-like Stylish Rank system. Each attack, skill, and combo performed by Nor and Enki is awarded points, which rack up in their thousands over time. This score, known as your Reputation, doubles as a currency which can be used to buy new weapons and items at the black market. But, as in the real world, Reputation can be lost. Dying reduces your score to zero, locking you out of the black market’s inventory. Thankfully it can be restored if you pick it up from the location you died.

Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn – Gamescom 2022 Screenshots

Don’t mistake Reputation for Souls, though. Character progression is not tied to this temporary score; instead Nor and Enki evolve through the use of XP points, which when earned stay with you permanently. That XP is used to unlock upgrades on what A44 describes as an “intentionally overwhelming” skill tree, with far more options than is possible to unlock in a single playthrough. Further progression comes through victories; each defeated boss rewards you with its special ability, and so with each major kill comes a significant expansion of your power arsenal. Divorcing the die-and-drop mechanic from character development is a huge deviation from the FromSoft formula, and could well be one of Flintlock’s key weapons in bringing the joy of Soulslike combat and worlds to a wider audience.

Outside the heat of battle, Flintlock’s demo shows a similar rethinking of Soulslike principles. Nor navigates the open world on foot but can also jump up high, 3D platformer-style, using grenade blasts to reach ledges and hidden items or, with specific unlocks, can have Enki teleport her over huge distances.

It’s the way A44 treats its world and population, though, that could truly mark new ground for a Soulslike. During the demo Nor and Enki come across a village that has been overrun by the undead (the old gods have torn open the doors to the underworld, hence Flintlock’s big zombie and deity problem), which triggers a ‘Hamlet Liberation’ activity. Defeating the mini-boss that has taken up residency here sees the original community return to their homes, a change that won’t be reset by resting at a bonfire checkpoint. These villagers can then offer up new quests; I watch as Nor introduces herself to a bizarre collection of limbs (character designs can get very out-there) that asks her to help satisfy its coffee obsession. This all suggests that progression doesn’t just come in the evolution of your character build and position on the main story path; there’s also advancement in the world around you and the communities that you encounter. It’s the kind of approach I’d expect from a more traditional RPG over a Soulslike.

As the demo progresses, game director Derek Bradley constantly tells me about other things in the game that he can’t show right now. The open world is home to lots of optional dungeons and bosses, some of which are linked to side questlines or endgame objectives. You can stumble upon a variety of incidental stories, from a man being robbed on the roadside to a whole cult obsessed with death. There are special items to be found, including one that resurrects you as an undead if you die. Over time you recruit a team of engineers who can use explosives to open up access to shortcuts and secret areas. There’s a story mode that recalibrates the difficulty to something more accessible should people need it. Each new feature he mentions reshapes my expectations and increases my excitement. I walk away from the appointment convinced that Flintlock is the best thing I’ve seen at Gamescom.

My enthusiastic chatter about Flintlock convinces my colleague, IGN’s executive news editor Joe Skrebels, to book a last-minute appointment to see it. There, Bradley tells him that Elden Ring pushed Soulslikes in a new direction, and he wants Flintlock to push even further. It’s clear that A44 has serious, shoot-for-the-moon ambition, then. And right now, without having played Flintlock, I can’t say with confidence how close the modestly-sized studio has come to those lofty goals. Bradley notes that his 60-person team doesn’t have the immense budget of Sony Santa Monica, and while that’s clear in Flintlock’s not-quite-AAA visuals, I’m hopeful money won’t impact its ability to be a bold rethink of what a Soulslike can be. Because, more than anything else, the thing that I think will make Flintlock special isn’t its cinematic approach, but its understanding that the FromSoftware formula is not a set of rules to replicate, but a framework to build upon.

FPS games were largely considered Doom clones until games like GoldenEye and Half-Life reconsidered what first-person shooting could be. Flintlock, if it’s everything it promises, could well be part of the vanguard that makes Soulslikes much more than just Dark Souls copies.

Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Features Editor.

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Hotel siege in Somalia ends after 30 hours with 21 dead, 117 hurt

Somali authorities on Sunday ended an attack by Islamic extremists that left 21 people dead and over 110 wounded when gunmen stormed a hotel in the capital. It took Somali forces more than 30 hours to contain the fighters who had stormed Mogadishu’s Hayat Hotel on Friday evening in an assault that started with loud explosions. 

The attack is the first major terror attack in Mogadishu since Somalia’s new leader, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, took over in May.

The siege ended around midnight, police commissioner Abdi Hassan Hijar told reporters.

“During the attack, the security forces rescued many civilians trapped in the hotel, including women and children,” he said.

Health Minister Dr. Ali Haji Adam reported 21 deaths and 117 people wounded, with at least 15 in critical condition. He noted that some victims may not have been brought to hospitals, and the death toll could rise. 

Soldiers patrol outside the Hayat Hotel in Mogadishu, Somalia, Aug, 20, 2022.

AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh


The Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, which has ties with al Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack, the latest of its frequent attempts to strike places visited by government officials.

Al-Shabab opposes the federal government and outside groups that support it. Al-Shabab remains the most lethal Islamic extremist group in Africa and the biggest threat to political stability in the volatile Horn of Africa nation.

Police have not yet given a detailed explanation of how the attack unfolded and it remains unclear how many gunmen entered the hotel. A police officer told Reuters that two car bombs targeting the hotel’s front barrier and gate had been used to gain access to the hotel on Friday evening. 

Ismail Abdi, the hotel’s manager, told The Associated Press early Sunday that security forces were still working to clear the area. The sound of gunfire ended at 9 a.m. Onlookers gathered outside the gates of the badly damaged hotel on Sunday morning, surveying the scene.

Somalia’s previous president, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, avoided any major confrontation with al-Shabab. But Mohamud has said his government will take the offensive against the group’s thousands of fighters, with the backing of returning U.S. forces.

Al-Shabab charged via its Andalus radio station that the attack on the hotel was in response to Mohamud’s assertion that he would eliminate the group from Somalia.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the attack, saying the U.N. supports the people of Somalia “in their fight against terrorism and their march towards peace.”  

Mohamed Abdirahman, director of Mogadishu’s Madina Hospital, told the Associated Press that 40 people were admitted there with wounds or injuries from the attack. While nine were sent home after getting treatment, five are in critical condition in the ICU, he said.

“We were having tea near the hotel lobby when we heard the first blast, followed by gunfire. I immediately rushed toward hotel rooms on the ground floor and I locked the door,” witness Abdullahi Hussein said by phone. “The militants went straight upstairs and started shooting. I was inside the room until the security forces arrived and rescued me.”

He said on his way to safety he saw “several bodies lying on the ground outside hotel reception.”

Al-Shabab has seized even more territory in recent years, taking advantage of rifts among Somali security personnel as well as disagreements between the government seat in Mogadishu and regional states. It remains the biggest threat to political stability in the volatile Horn of Africa nation.

Forced to retreat from Mogadishu in 2011, al-Shabab is slowly making a comeback from the rural areas to which it retreated, defying the presence of African Union peacekeepers as well as U.S. drone strikes targeting its fighters.

The militants in early May attacked a military base for AU peacekeepers outside Mogadishu, killing many Burundian troops. The attack came just days before the presidential vote that returned Mohamud to power five years after he had been voted out.

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At least 12 killed in Somalia hotel siege, intelligence officer says

MOGADISHU, Aug 20 (Reuters) – At least 12 people have been killed in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu after al Qaeda-linked militants attacked a hotel, seizing control in a siege that authorities are still battling to end, an intelligence officer told Reuters on Saturday.

The attackers blasted their way into the Hayat Hotel on Friday evening with two car bombs before opening fire. Somalia’s al Shabaab insurgents have claimed responsibility. read more

“So far we have confirmed 12 people, mostly civilians, died,” Mohammed, an intelligence officer who only gave one name, told Reuters. “The operation is about to be concluded but it is still going on.”

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The detonations sent huge plumes of smoke over the busy junction on Friday night, and the sound of gunfire still crackled across the capital by 0700 GMT on Saturday.

Sounds of explosions punctuated the night as government forces tried to wrest control of the hotel back from the militants, witnesses said.

Large sections of the hotel were destroyed by the fighting, they said.

Friday’s attack was the first major attack since President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud took office in May.

The al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab group claimed responsibility for the attack, according to a translation by the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadist group statements.

Al Shabaab has been fighting to topple the Somali government for more than 10 years. It wants to establish its own rule based on a strict interpretation of Islamic law.

The Hayat Hotel is a popular venue with lawmakers and other government officials. There was no immediate information on whether any of them had been caught up in the siege.

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Reporting by Abdi Sheikh
Writing by Duncan Miriri
Editing by Sam Holmes and Frances Kerry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Russia advances in Ukraine’s Donbas as Mariupol steelworks siege ends

  • Weeks-long siege ends at Azovstal, Russia says
  • Russia intensifies offensive in Donbas
  • Zelenskiy seeks deal to secure Russian compensation
  • Russia stops Finland gas flows over payment dispute

KYIV, May 21 (Reuters) – Russia pressed for control of Ukraine’s Donbas region, claiming victory in the months-long battle for Mariupol’s steel plant and launching a major offensive on the remaining Ukrainian-held territory in the province of Luhansk.

The last Ukrainian forces holed up in Mariupol’s smashed Azovstal steelworks surrendered on Friday, Russia’s defense ministry said. That ended the most destructive siege of the war.

“The territory of the Azovstal metallurgical plant … has been completely liberated,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that 2,439 defenders had surrendered in the past few days, including 531 in the final group.

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Hours earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the last defenders at the steelworks had been told by Ukraine’s military that they could get out and save their lives. The Ukrainians did not immediately confirm the figures on Azovstal.

Ukraine’s General Staff of Armed Forces did not comment on Russia’s claim in its morning update on Saturday.

Russia also launched what appeared to be a major assault to seize the last remaining Ukrainian-held territory in Luhansk, one of two southeastern Ukrainian provinces Moscow proclaims as independent states.

Serhiy Gaidai, the governor of the Luhansk region, said in a social media post early on Saturday that Russia was trying to destroy the city of Sievierodonetsk, with fighting taking place on the outskirts of the city.

“Shelling continues from morning to the evening and also throughout the night,” Gaidai said in a video post on the Telegram messaging app.

In early hours on Saturday, air raid sirens were going off in much of Ukraine, including in the Kyiv capital region and the southern port of Odesa.

Capturing Luhansk and Donetsk provinces, much of which make up Ukraine’s industrial Donbas region, would allow Moscow to claim a victory after announcing last month that this was now its objective.

Despite losing ground elsewhere in recent weeks, Russian forces have advanced on the Luhansk front.

“This will be the critical next few weeks of the conflict,” said Mathieu Boulegue, an expert at London’s Chatham House think tank. “And it depends on how effective they are at conquering Sievierodonetsk and the lands across it.”

The city of Sievierodonetsk and its twin Lysychansk across the Siverskiy Donets river form the eastern part of a Ukrainian-held pocket that Russia has been trying to overrun since mid-April after failing to capture Kyiv.

Ukraine’s general staff said on Saturday that Russian forces were preparing to try again to cross the river, after a previous attempt earlier this month led to one of the largest battles in the conflict so far.

BATTLE FOR MARIUPOL

The end of the Mariupol siege was an important symbolic moment for Russia, after a series of setbacks since the invasion began on Feb. 24, but it came at the cost of massive destruction.

Zelenskiy said the region had been “completely destroyed” by Russia and proposed a formal deal with the country’s allies to secure Russian compensation for the damage its forces had caused. read more

Natalia Zarytska, wife of an Azovstal fighter who surrendered, said she had not heard from him since a Telegram message exchange two days ago. She believed he was still alive.

“The situation is really hard and horrible and my husband is on the way from one hell to another hell, from Azovstal steel plant to a prison, to captivity,” Zarytska said in Istanbul, where she and other relatives lobbied Turkey to help save the fighters.

The Red Cross said it had registered hundreds of Ukrainians who surrendered at the plant as prisoners of war and Kyiv says it wants a prisoner swap. Moscow says the prisoners will be treated humanely, but Russian politicians have been quoted as saying some must be tried or even executed.

Russian forces in Ukraine have been driven in recent weeks from the area surrounding Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, their fastest retreat since being forced out of the north and the Kyiv region at the end of March.

But they still control a large swathe of the south and east, and the end of fighting in Mariupol means that that territory is now largely unbroken.

In a sign of Russia’s aim to boost its war effort, the parliament in Moscow said it would consider letting Russians over 40 and foreigners over 30 join the military.

The past week has also seen Sweden and Finland apply to join NATO, although Turkey has threatened to block them, accusing the Nordic countries of harbouring Kurdish militants.

Russia’s Gazprom (GAZP.MM) on Saturday halted gas exports to Finland, the Finnish gas system operator said, the latest escalation of an energy payments dispute with Western nations. read more

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Reporting by Natalia Zinets, Max Hunder, Tom Balmforth in Kyiv and Reuters bureaux; Writing by Peter Graff, Patricia Zengerle and Richard Pullin; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien and Bradley Perrett

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Russia says Azovstal siege is over, shows video of defenders surrendering

May 20 (Reuters) – Russia’s defence ministry on Friday said the last group of Ukrainian forces holed up in Mariupol’s Azovstal steel works had surrendered, marking an end to a weeks-long attack that left the city in ruins.

The full abandonment of the bunkers and tunnels of the bombed-out plant by the Azov Regiment means an end to the most destructive siege of a war that began when Russia invaded Ukraine nearly three months ago.

“The territory of the Azovstal metallurgical plant… has been completely liberated,” the ministry said in a statement. It said the group that had surrendered comprised 531 people.

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A defence ministry video purporting to show the surrender showed a line of unarmed men approaching Russian soldiers outside the plant and giving their names. The Russians then carefully searched each man and their possessions and also appeared to be asking the defenders to show their tattoos.

Moscow calls the Azov Regiment “Nazis”. The unit, formed in 2014 as a militia to fight Russian-backed separatists, denies being fascist, and Ukraine says it has been reformed from its radical nationalist origins.

“The underground facilities of the enterprise, where the militants were hiding, came under the full control of the Russian armed forces,” said the Russian statement, adding that a total of 2,439 defenders had surrendered in the past few days.

Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has told President Vladimir Putin that both Mariupol and the steel plant have been fully liberated, it said.

Ukraine ordered the garrison to stand down on Monday. Hours before the Russian announcement, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the defenders had been told by Ukraine’s military that they could get out and save their lives.

Kyiv calls the defenders heroes, saying their dogged stand helped tie down Russian forces and allow Ukraine to succeed elsewhere on the battlefield.

Zelenskiy said Ukraine’s air force had tried to fly in supplies to Mariupol but had been beaten back, taking major losses.

“A very large number of our pilots died, sadly,” he told Ukrainian television. “They were absolutely heroic people who knew it was hard, that to fly in there was almost impossible, to fly to Azovstal with medicine, food, water, and to bring back bodies and the wounded.”

Ukrainian interior ministry adviser Anton Gerashchenko said the defence of the plant would be taught in military schools for years to come. Those inside had no clean water, only enough food for one meal a day, and virtually no medical supplies, he said.

“Do you understand what it is to amputate a limb without anaesthetic? What you see in Hollywood horror movies is nothing compared to what the defenders of Azovstal saw and endured,” he told Ukrainian television before the Russian announcement.

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Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Grant McCool and Rosalba O’Brien

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Rainbow Six Siege Down This May 14 on All Platforms

It seems Rainbow Six Siege down reports have surfaced this May 14 (May 15 for those in Asia) , and is affecting all plaforms (PC, PlayStation, Xbox). Reports have surfaced from the community across different platforms, and we’re here to help in terms of server status and whatot.

Rainbow Six Siege Down Status and Updates for May 14 (May 15 for those in Asia):

Update: Ubisoft has finally acknowledged the outages! Here’s the announcement via the Ubisoft forums:

Hello everyone. We’re aware of an issue currently affecting connectivity and are working towards resolving this. We apologize for any inconvenience caused and appreciate your patience. Please be sure to check this thread for future updates. Thanks.

The official Rainbow Six Siege server status page now says “unplanned outages” on all platforms too!

We’ll be updating this article as more news develops.

Here are some of the reports from the community:

Servers down? from Rainbow6

(ps4)how do I get past this? I tried restarting my ps4 or test Connection my internet is working fine from Rainbow6

Ubisoft servers be like from Rainbow6

Unfortunately, the official Rainbow Six Siege Twitter account and the official Ubisoft Support account have not acknowledged the server outages so far. The only official confirmation we’ve gotten so far is from the Xbox Support account which made the following announcement:

The official Rainbow Six Siege server status page has all platforms tagged as “no issue” for now as well, but we’re on the lookout to see if things change. Same as before, if you can login, share which platform you’re on and where you’re playing from.



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