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Weird West Review
In this alternate universe, the West was won by trying a bunch of ideas so crazy they just might work… and if they don’t, hitting the quick-load button to revert to an earlier save and trying something even crazier until you pull it off. Thanks to that freedom to experiment with its world as you explore, Weird West is one of those games that feels like a stealth and combat playground even as it tells five mostly serious, well-written stories with interesting decisions throughout and a thoughtful conclusion. And with so much ground to cover and replayability to investigate, it’s well worth putting up with some quirks and underwhelming loot. What ties Weird West’s plot together is a group of shadowy figures using a magical brand to force your character’s consciousness into the bodies of various unsuspecting people. It’s a clever play on the way so many games have us take control of a character who already exists in that world but still need to bring us up to speed on their identity: h...
Warhammer 40K: Rogue Trader – How Did it Take This Long to Get a Warhammer CRPG?
It’s truly bizarre that across the nearly 30 years of Warhammer video games, we haven’t had a single one that attempted to channel the tabletop Warhammer experience by utilizing the genre that feels best suited to do so: CRPGs. But that’s all about to change, as Pathfinder developer Owlcats has been cooking up something to fill this void. During an extensive hands-off demo of Warhammer 40K: Rogue Trader, I checked out its extremely chunky turn-based combat system, drowned in its plethora of dialogue options and social skill checks, and nodded approvingly at its lovingly faithful depiction of Warhammer’s morbid universe. While it’s still very early, so far this CRPG is shaping up to be everything I’ve wanted from a Warhammer video game. If you’ve ever played (or even glanced at) a game of Warhammer 40K, then you probably know it’s designed for a hyper-specific kind of nerd who loves calculations, large-scale drama, and an incredibly detailed world one could easily get lost in. Warham...
Kingdom Hearts Series Comes to PC in March
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Square Enix’s Kingdom Hearts series is coming to PC. The publisher confirmed the main Kingdom Hearts games are coming to the Epic Games Store exclusively on March 30, 2021. Epic Games confirmed that Kingdom Hearts 1 and Kingdom Hearts 2 Remix editions, Kingdom Hearts 3, and the rhythm game Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory will be coming to PC exclusively through the Epic Games Store next month. Kingdom Hearts, the long-running RPG series that combines the worlds from Square Enix and Final Fantasy with Disney, is finally coming to PC starting with a brand new PC collection. The series began on the PlayStation and the series is typically associated with Sony platforms, though spinoffs were released on Nintendo handhelds and mobile. [ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2018/11/20/kingdom-hearts-iii-together-trailer"] Kingdom Hearts 3 was a multi-platform release and the series’ debut on the Xbox, but none of the Kingdom Hearts games were released on PC, until now. The series stars (usually) a young boy named Sora as he travels different Disney-inspired worlds to fight a dark force that threatens the universe. He is joined by companions like Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy, as well as iconic Disney characters like Elsa and Woody. You can read IGN’s Kingdom Hearts 3 review here. Although it was the first mainline Kingdom Hearts game in 14 years, the series isn’t done yet as creator Tetsuya Nomura says there are more stories left to be told in the Kingdom Hearts universe. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Matt T.M. Kim is a News Editor at IGN.
source https://www.ign.com/articles/kingdom-hearts-is-coming-to-pc-in-march
source https://www.ign.com/articles/kingdom-hearts-is-coming-to-pc-in-march
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