Monthly Archives: July 2014
Daily Scoop: July 9, 2014 – End of the Eye Candy Bundle
The Humble Eye Candy Bundle is about to end, so you should grab it! Pay what you want for 140, KAMI, and Ballpoint Universe – Infinite. Pay more than the average to unlock Secrets of Rætikon + Artbook, Antichamber, and Cinders. Pay $12 or more to unlock Mercenary Kings! You don’t have much time to get these, so scoop ’em up while you can!
Indie Royale has a new bundle called the “Donut Bundle,” which says they are “nuts for donuts.” Hit the current minimum for Chronology, Nightmares from the Deep: The Siren’s Call, The Book of Legends, Guns n Zombies, and Quest of Dungeons.
Over at Steam, they’ve got two new deals as well – the Midweek Madness deal is Car Mechanic Simulator 2014 for $6.79, and the Daily Deal is Ys Origin for $4.99.
There are some pretty great t-shirts today, most of which are, once again, Pokemon-themed!
Deep Silver is asking fans to create the Dead Island 2 Collector’s Edition
The last time Deep Silver created a Collector’s Edition for a Dead Island game, they came up with Dead Island: Riptide‘s infamous “Zombie Bait Edition.” The centerpiece of that package was a bikini-clad bloody torso statue that sent the Internet into an uproar. So the publisher is turning to the public for help in designing the Dead Island 2 Collector’s Edition.
A new survey posted by Deep Silver asks their fans to rate 28 different items on a scale of one to five. The options include the expected (character figurines, art book), the unexpected (zombie arm back scratcher, beer cooler case), and the downright bizarre (zombie Oscar statuette, a real zombie). Voting is open now and closes on Monday, July 14 at midnight. So if you want to vote, you better hurry.
Dead Island 2 will be released for the PC, PS4, and Xbox One in Spring 2015.
Respawn announces second TitanFall DLC pack: Frontier’s Edge
Before it launched, Respawn revealed that TitanFall would be followed by three DLC map packs. The first, Expedition, was released in May. And now we know the name of the second: Frontier’s Edge.
Like Expedition, Frontier’s Edge will include will include three new maps. The three maps will be known as “Dig Site” (an “isolated mining outpost”), “Haven” (an “exclusive beach resort”), and “Export” (a “mining hub on the side of a mountain”). If you purchased the TitanFall Season Pass, you’ll be able to download the Frontier’s Edge DLC for free. It will also be available individually at a price of $9.99.
The one thing that Respawn didn’t announce for Frontier’s Edge is a release date. It’ll be available eventually, that’s all we know at this point.
Gearbox announces MOBA-like “hero-shooter” Battleborn
In Borderlands, Gearbox created a unique first person shooter that fused frantic gunplay with RPG-style leveling and loot drops. Now, they’re going to flip the FPS script once more with the MOBA-inspired Battleborn, which is in development for the PC, PS4, and Xbox One. The game will likely be released sometime in 2015, but an early 2016 release is also a possibility.
Battleborn takes place in the “the distant future of an imaginative science-fantasy universe” and features a slew of heroes (including a nymph-like creature, a dandy robot wearing a bowler hat, a musclebound Rambo-type, a pretty pink princess, and a swordsman wielding dual Lightsabers laser swords) battling cooperatively through a story-driven campaign and competitively in traditional multiplayer deathmatches.
“If Borderlands 2 is a shooter-looter, Battleborn is a hero-shooter,” said Randy Pitchford, president of Gearbox Software. “As a genre-fused, hobby-grade, co-operative and competitive FPS exploding with eye-popping style and an imaginative universe, Battleborn is the most ambitious video game that Gearbox has ever created.”
Um… sure. It looks like 2015 is going to be a very confusing time for gamers as now we’ve got Bloodborne, Battleborn, and BattleCry all scheduled for release within the same year. I’m sure some publisher will announce “Blood Cry” any day now.
PS Store Today: The Wolf Among Us Episode 5, One Piece Unlimited World Red, more
It’s another grab bag of games in this week’s PlayStation Store update. Leading the charge is Cry Wolf, the fifth, and final, episode of Telltale Games’ The Wolf Among Us for the PS3. Also available this week is…
- Anime adaptation One Piece Unlimited World Red (PS3)
- Cycling simulation Le Tour de France: Season 2014 (PS3)
- Re-released platformer Another World: 20th Anniversary Edition (PS3, PS4, Vita Cross-Buy)
- Cheesy puzzle adventure MouseCraft (PS3, PS4, Vita Cross-Buy)
- And the adventure game Sacra Terra: Kiss of Death (PS3)
More information on all of these games can be found after the break. And a full rundown of this week’s new game add-ons can be found at the PlayStation Blog. (more…)
Is Destiny fated to appear on Wii U? Nintendo fans want to believe so
With the Destiny hyperdrive roaring towards its September release date, Activision and Bungie have been revealing lots of information recently. The beta test for both of Sony’s PlayStation systems will arrive on July 17, while Xbox 360 and Xbox One owners will have to wait one full week more to get their hands on the sci-fi FPS. Beta access is only available via pre-order, and will end on all systems on the 27th.
The obvious omission from the list (aside from the PC) is Nintendo’s Wii U, which has been shunned by many developers entirely. A motivated group of fans known as “The Guardians” have hijacked Change.org and launched a petition to bring Destiny to the Wii U. The group hopes that if enough Wii U owners sign up, Activision and Bungie will take note, and hopefully adapt the game for the console. Given that the game is coming to previous generation consoles, and the Wii U has seen a sales spurt thanks to Mario Kart 8, their list of excuses seems to be narrowing. That said, any work to port the game would mean it’s release would most likely be a year after the game goes on sale for every other platform on September 9. Still, there can be little harm in Nintendo fans vocally encouraging third party developers to take note of their growing presence.
After all, it worked for Operation Rainfall.
Daily Scoop: July 8, 2014 – Humble 2K Bundle
There’s a brand-new Humble Bundle, and it’s the Humble 2K Bundle! Pay what you want for BioShock, The Bureau: XCOM Declassified, and The Darkness II. Pay more than the average to unlock BioShock 2, Mafia II, and Spec Ops: The Line. Pay $20 or more to unlock XCOM: Enemy Unknown and BioShock Infinite. And if you hop over to the Humble Store, you can also snag Shadowrun Returns for $3.74, Monaco for $2.24, and Democracy 3 for $8.49.
Steam’s Daily Deal today is Stronghold Crusader HD for $3.39, and their Midweek Madness deal is The Wolf Among Us for just $12.49. The Internet is hype about the latter, and that is a great price for it, so hop on it!
There is a ridiculous number of Pokemon-themed shirts today!
British tabloid claims games are as addictive as heroin, game journalists respond in kind
The Sun, Rupert Murdoch’s ever colourful tabloid that often likes to stretch the truth to within a hair’s breadth of fiction, decided to bait some video game players and journalists with the bold headline, “Gaming as addictive as heroin.” Written by Sun writer Lee Price, who won his job in a competition entitled “Column Idol,” the article makes some rather haughty claims that video games pose as big a health risk as drug and alcohol abuse, despite zero deaths being directly linked to the former and over 10,000 deaths per year blamed on the latter.
Video game players and journalists have been swift to condemn the article as little more than click-bait. Ironically, the article itself is hidden behind The Sun’s paywall.
Fellow journalists at The Market for Computer & Video Games (MCV) went beyond what started as a “spirited debate” on Twitter with Dan Silver, The Sun’s Deputy Head of Publishing, and found several holes in the story. The first was that Dr. Mark Griffiths, director of the International Gaming Research Unit at Nottingham Trent University and a contributor to the story, essentially debunked The Sun’s claims, stating it was factually incorrect to suggest that Britain was in “the grip of a gaming epidemic.” The website for the Alchemy Clinic, run by former football agent and gambling addict (not gaming, gambling) turned counsellor Steven Noel-Hill is no longer active, despite The Sun’s claims that the clinic received 5,000 calls for help with video game addiction. A press release from the clinic’s opening two years ago had Noel-Hill listing video games as one of a variety of factors that caused teenagers to grow into adult addicts.
“Many of my clients exhibited problem traits during their adolescence, with events such as expulsion, excessive drug and alcohol use, self-harming and excessive computer gaming characterising their behaviour. Parents and schools are too willing to believe that it is just a phase and they will grow out of it. But many don’t and we are left with young adults who are unable to cope with life. There is nothing inevitable about a self-destructive life pattern. With early recognition and intervention, lives can be transformed.”
Yet despite his own addictions and his work for The Priory Clinic in London, Noel-Hill does not seem to be a qualified medical expert, and does not appear to be on any accredited register in Britain. It has been left to Jo Twist, CEO of the Association for UK Interactive Entertainment (UKIE) to bring some logic and reason to the debate. She told MCV:
“The games industry takes the health and wellbeing of all consumers very seriously and there is currently no official medical diagnosis of video game addiction, either from the American Medical Association or the World Health Organization. Like any other pastime, a common sense approach should be applied and players should take regular breaks of at least five minutes every 45-60 minutes. Stories like these completely ignore all the positive effects of playing games and the fact that millions of people round the world play video games safely and sensibly every day.”
We can only presume The Sun launched the blistering, unprecedented attack on the culture of video games at the behest of its owner, Rupert Murdoch. Perhaps he kept losing at Flappy Bird.