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5 votes
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2K announces the founding of Cloud Chamber, a new studio starting work on the next BioShock game
5 votes -
Death Come True announced - A full motion video game directed and written by Danganronpa creator Kazutaka Kodaka
5 votes -
Building a map with secret paths for Shovel Knight: King of Cards
3 votes -
Can you beat Pokemon Blue without getting hit? | VG Myths
7 votes -
Magnus Carlsen, the world's best chess player for the last decade, is on the brink of reaching the top in another game – fantasy football
12 votes -
Tough love: On Dark Souls' difficulty
7 votes -
Halo Master Chief Collection PC release confirmed, Halo Reach coming to Halo MCC
32 votes -
Black Mesa (the fan-made recreation of Half-Life) has released a complete beta version
16 votes -
PlayStation: The first twenty-five years - An oral history of Sony’s big gaming play, and how it changed the world
6 votes -
Credits are not 'extra' - why game credits matter
5 votes -
Can't seem to play the games I want to play, considering a forced-march approach
I was wondering if anybody had any tips for muscling through a game. I've got a few games I want to play or go back to, such as Stardew Valley (I completed it before the 1.3 update, wanna play...
I was wondering if anybody had any tips for muscling through a game. I've got a few games I want to play or go back to, such as Stardew Valley (I completed it before the 1.3 update, wanna play 1.4), and Factorio (I bought in a fit of passion, haven't gotten an hour in). There are others, but these are the two I find myself going "I'm going to play this!" and I just never get to, and it's not for time.
I like the concepts of these games, and I've got something like 135 hours on Stardew Valley, but seem to get bored after I've restarted it (I lost some key items and bugs caused me to never get them back, plus the mine completion bug fixed in 1.3). I started Slime Rancher after playing through it in early access, but can't seem to get back into it after it went gold a couple years ago.
I realize I'm sort of asking for a way to force myself to play games, but has anybody done this? I'm thinking for a given game I can set smaller goals to strive for, and work on doing that, but was wondering if anybody has any ideas.
9 votes -
Humble seems to have accidentally revealed the games from its first "Humble Choice", which will replace Monthly on Dec 6
As previously discussed here, Humble Monthly is switching to a new model with no "mystery games" where you'll be able to choose which ones you want to keep from a set selection. It looks like the...
As previously discussed here, Humble Monthly is switching to a new model with no "mystery games" where you'll be able to choose which ones you want to keep from a set selection.
It looks like the games were inadvertently revealed already (image link), so the first month's options will probably be:
- Shadow of the Tomb Raider
- Blasphemous
- Void Bastards
- Phantom Doctrine
- Dead In Vinland
- Horizon Chase Turbo
- Dark Future: Blood Red States
- Desert Child
- Aegis Defenders
- X-Morph: Defense
If that's an interesting set of games to you, you'll probably want to subscribe to Humble Monthly now to be grandfathered in on the "Classic" plan, which will let you keep all 10 games every month for $12/month (and you should be able to "pause" if you don't like a particular month). Otherwise, the plan options that will be available after Dec 6 are more expensive for fewer choices.
9 votes -
Games like Frostpunk and Papers, Please offer a unique opportunity to learn about oppressive regimes
5 votes -
Fantastic collectible, trading, expandable and living card games that aren't Magic: The Gathering
7 votes -
Lost piece of gaming history uncovered
4 votes -
The Last of Us — The art of video game storytelling
5 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
15 votes -
DJMax Respect V will release a PC port in Steam Early Access on December 19, with 161 songs planned for release
6 votes -
Riot Games announces Riot Forge, a publishing label that will work with smaller studios to create games using League of Legends IP
7 votes -
GameRankings.com will shut down on December 9, replaced with a redirect to Metacritic
6 votes -
The modders who spent fifteen years fixing Knights of the Old Republic 2
10 votes -
Destiny 2: Season of Dawn
4 votes -
Dead Cells "The Bad Seed" | DLC teaser, coming Q1 2020
5 votes -
Rune II developer Human Head Studios is being sued by publisher Ragnarok after it abandoned the game one day after its release in order to join Bethesda
7 votes -
The hidden secrets of The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind
8 votes -
The making of Facing Worlds, Unreal Tournament's most popular map
7 votes -
Alien Isolation Switch review: Image quality is better than PS4
8 votes -
Dicebreaker website launches - a new site devoted to tabletop games from Gamer Network (owner of Eurogamer, GamesIndustry.biz, RPS, etc.)
5 votes -
"Randomizers" are breathing new life into old games
18 votes -
Super Mario Maker 2 - A Legendary Update, coming Dec 5
11 votes -
Riot Games will pay at least $10 million to settle gender discrimination suit, split between all female employees who worked there in the last five years
17 votes -
A slower speed of light
8 votes -
Let's rename some gaming genres to make them more accurate
A recent discussion got me thinking about how a lot of the standard genre descriptions for games are either opaque to the unfamiliar or seemingly incongruous with what they are describing. Almost...
A recent discussion got me thinking about how a lot of the standard genre descriptions for games are either opaque to the unfamiliar or seemingly incongruous with what they are describing. Almost any game can be described as a "role playing" game because you "play" the "role" of a given character. Adventure games often aren't very "adventurous" and often just mean that characters talk to each other instead of shoot each other. In survival games you survive; in racing games you race; in casual games you... well, usually match 3 but not always? Also why are we so focused on camera for some games (e.g. first-person shooter) but not for others (e.g. third-person sports)?
So, let's throw away everything we know about genres and start fresh. No baggage from gaming history; no widely understood conventions; no games that reference other games (e.g. "Souls-like"). Your goal is to make gaming genres as clear and accurate as possible, at the expense of convenience, tradition, and, in some cases, good taste.
Turn "roguelike" into "procedural death labyrinth". Turn "battle royale" into "shrinking-zone dead-is-dead killfest". Feel free to propose not just genre redefinitions but whole a whole taxonomy if you feel it's warranted. After all, some genres need a hierarchy of identifiers.
Be as formal or loose as you want, and the main purpose of this is to have fun, though if some great new terms happen to fall out of it you won't hear me complaining.
25 votes -
The trouble with the video game industry
17 votes -
Impostor Factory trailer - The third game in the To The Moon series
12 votes -
Artificial Loneliness - Appreciating the rare moments of emptiness inside the busy worlds of modern gaming
6 votes -
Hit the High Notes 🎤🎶 singing game
4 votes -
Go grandmaster Lee Se-Dol retires saying artificial intelligence cannot be defeated
22 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
13 votes -
Codemasters has acquired Project CARS developer Slightly Mad Studios for $30 million
6 votes -
Hytale november development update
5 votes -
Pour one out for the Steam Controller, now on closeout sale for just $5 plus shipping
27 votes -
The Stanley Parable narrator responds to your letters and emails - Ultra Deluxe remaster/expansion delayed to 2020
8 votes -
No Man's Sky - Synthesis update (releasing tomorrow)
7 votes -
The Stardew Valley 1.4 content update is now available on Steam and GOG
25 votes -
The Steam Autumn Sale is now live - runs until Dec 3 at 10 AM PST
15 votes -
Beat Saber developer Beat Games has been acquired by Facebook
15 votes -
Eurogamer is publishing a series of thirty individual "Games of the Decade" articles this week, reflecting on games significant to their writers
12 votes -
Boneworks is a first-person shooter in virtual reality. Here's a look at a near-final version of the game before its upcoming release.
8 votes