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Who will win February 2025’s RPG Royal Rumble? Kingdom Come, Assassin’s Creed, Avowed or Monster Hunter?

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Who will win February 2025’s RPG Royal Rumble? Kingdom Come, Assassin’s Creed, Avowed or Monster Hunter?


In recent years, some of gaming’s biggest breakout successes have been released during the post-Christmas lull between New Year and Spring. Traditionally, it’s supposed to be a quieter time on the calendar – where we’re all too full of turkey and trimmings and sated by games gifted over the holidays to have an appetite for anything new.

But for the last ten years or so, it’s been publishers’ secret weapon to cut through the noise and score a solid hit with an underappreciated gem that would otherwise get beaten out by bigger-name competition.

One of the first I can remember was Dying Light, a bone-creaking 10 years ago already, which broke records on release in 2015 as a new IP, perfectly pitched at the peak of both zombie and PS4-era open-world hype.

After that, it felt like almost every year a well-funded indie or under-rated series would sneak into success by ditching the Christmas crush in Fall and landing on a clear runway when players were supposedly spent up.

But the trend was further solidified year after year, like when Resident Evil reannounced itself as one of the dominant franchises in gaming with the imperious Resident Evil 2 Remake, an incredible game that grabbed the zeitgeist and popularised a trend we’re still seeing today.

In 2025 though, the cat is most definitely out of the bag. In February alone, we’re now looking at 4 would-be huge releases from some of the world’s biggest publishers and plushest independent studios.

Some stumbled into the slot through delays and development mishaps (like Assassin’s Creed and Avowed), while two games on this list (Monster Hunter and Kingdom Come) have benefitted from the magical launch spot before, and are surely looking to repeat the trick.

However they got there, February 2025 is shaping up to be an RPG royal rumble of epic proportions. Many 100-hour RPGs can make a claim for your limited free time, but only one can reign supreme – let’s meet the contenders.

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 – February 4, 2025

First up, Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is stepping up to take the crown, literally. In some ways the most grounded of the 4 games, but the most ambitious in others, Kingdom Come: Deliverance works on the “dungeons not dragons” mantra to deliver authentic medieval role-playing that’s one part ren-faire, one part sandbox adventure, and another part chaotic jank-fest.

This is because Kingdom Come is developed in CryEngine, an FPS-focused engine designed to have a dozen characters on-screen at any given time, but stretched to accommodate the bustling towns and permanent world state demanded by an open-world RPG. The result, in the first game, was an incredible and beautifully realised world… that was constantly teetering on the precipice.

I played a huge amount of the first Kingdom Come and the series is full of novel role-play ideas that sound incredible in principle, but have mixed results in practice. For instance, rather than the traditional difficulty curve with skills getting more complex as you level them up, Kingdom Come tries to simulate your advancing knowledge by making things easier the more you do them.

Image credit: Warhorse Studios

An interesting thought, right? But it made things like lockpicking hilariously impossible at launch, and turned required story fights into a death loop if you prioritized stealth or speech. However, it also did really interesting things like scramble every book, recipe and roadsign until you found a monk and learnt how to read.

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is a direct sequel to the original, again starring Henry of Skalitz as a supposedly low-born blacksmith elevated by happenstance and ingenuity to become a key player in the fight for the Holy Roman Empire. I’m really interested to see how the new game handles this realistic progression with an existing character (who can’t just be zapped by a “Forget All Your Powers From The Last Game Beam” like Ratchet or Kratos or somebody).

Reportedly twice as big as the already sprawling and incredibly deep base game, with much better performance and some of the major pain-points sanded off, how Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 adapts to this increased scope will be key to its success, which could easily see it surprise some people in a month of heavy hitters.

Assassin’s Creed Shadows – February 14, 2025

Despite its setbacks, I have faith in the studio that came out with my personal favourite Assassin’s Creed game – 2018’s galloping Grecian caper Assassin’s Creed Odyssey. But as one of gaming’s best-known franchises, Assassin’s Creed Shadows has the most to prove out of any game releasing in February, particularly in light of Ubisoft’s recent, expensive, missteps in Skull and Bones and Star Wars: Outlaws.

Assassin's Creed Shadows

Image credit: Ubisoft

Japan has been a dream location for the series since Assassin’s Creed started, but with Ghost of Tsushima and Rise of the Ronin beating Ubisoft to the punch on what an open-world feudal Japan can look like, it’s easy to wonder how fresh and engaging Ubisoft can make the landscape – especially without the familiar, but otherworldly touchstones of Ancient Greek and Norse mythology.

However, mechanically at least, Assassin’s Creed Shadows looks to address some of the key issues that the series has been crying out for. First, the dual-protagonists, the shinobi Naoe and samurai Yasuke, seem to have a much more involved, diverse and interactive range of combat styles, making use of katana, tanto short swords, kanabo clubs and naginata bladed spears and many more.

Next, something I truly cannot fathom why it’s taken so long, is a reworked stealth system. Will this finally be the Assassin’s Creed where the stealth game actually has stealth mechanics – huge, if true.

But on that front, there also looks to be an interesting dynamic between the two main characters. Yasuke, tall and imposing, is not stealthy in the slightest – in gameplay videos people literally stop what they’re doing, turn and look at him wherever he goes. Naoe, conversely, embodies the stoic, scarfed stereotype of the silent assassin.

Watch on YouTube

I felt that Assassin’s Creed Valhalla’s runtime was incredibly padded, not just in the side-activities, but the main story as well, where you did not much but spam combat abilities and press triangle to interact. From what we’ve seen, at least some of Shadows’ missions expand on the less guided approach we’ve seen in the last couple of Assassin’s Creed games, so, with a greater variety of more engaging and meaningful play mechanics across two characters thrown in, maybe this can be the Assassin’s Creed that turns the series around yet again?

Avowed – February 18, 2025

The cruel irony of a delay in a fluid and competitive release calendar means that even if you run away from other games, there’s no guarantee they won’t chase you. So after slipping into 2025 to avoid internal Game Pass competition from the likes of Stalker 2 and Indiana Jones, Obsidian Entertainment’s Avowed now finds itself slap-bang between two of the biggest releases of the year – but is the low barrier of entry just what it needs to succeed?

If The Outer Worlds was Obsidian’s slimmed-down and sci-fi Fallout, then Avowed is Skyrim by way of Dragon Age, as you explore smaller, self-contained maps filled with loot, baddies and the twisty quests full of surprise, tough decisions and intrigue that the studio is known for.

Watch on YouTube

As a massive fan of pretty much every game Obsidian has ever released – obviously Fallout: New Vegas, but Alpha Protocol, Grounded and even South Park: The Stick of Truth as well – Avowed is the game I’m personally most excited about in February, but also the one I think might get glossed over.

Set in the Pillars of Eternity universe, with a dreamy, sparkling and swashbuckling fantasy art-style, Avowed’s strengths will lie in the quality of its storytelling and good old-fashioned questing; but if it can provide the gameplay hooks to go with that narrative complexity, then it can definitely punch above its weight as likely the lowest budget game here by far.

Monster Hunter Wilds – February 28, 2025

The Monster Hunter franchise is in such a different place to when Monster Hunter World made full use of a free week back in February 2018. After threatening to break out in the West for a decade, with a clear schedule and the world’s attention, this revamped and expanded Monster Hunter finally clicked in a huge way.

With numerous imitators now also looking for a slice of the monster hunting genre, from the free-to-play Dauntless (a recent major update to which went extremely badly), to the indie Fera: The Sundered Tribes and bigger budget EA Original Wild Hearts, Monster Hunter Wilds has returned to mark its territory as the best in the business.

A hunter engages a Quematrice in Monster Hunter Wilds - there is an explosion as the best recoils away from the hammer-wielding player.

Image credit: Capcom

While the Switch-first – and brilliant – Monster Hunter Rise was a big success, it was still a smaller scale game built for a smaller scale console. Wilds on the other hand, looks truly massive, with more interactive environments, difficult to traverse terrain, and greater variety and verticality across the different biomes.

Monsters burst in-and-out of sand, slither along branches to reach high places in battle, and travel in packs to overwhelm impudent hunters, adding yet more personality to the dangerous and expressive roster of beasts that’re the true stars of every Monster Hunter game.

Make no mistake, Monster Hunter is no longer niche and this is sure to be a big hit – we’ll just have to see how many explorers hold back their supplies in preparation before the expedition kicks off at the end of the month.

So, which are you going to pick up? Which are you going to play in four years when you finally get around to it? The choices are seemingly endless this month alone, and that’s before you even get to new releases like Elden Ring: Nightreign, Borderlands 4, Death Stranding 2, Ghost of Yotei, Pokemon Legends Z-A, and, of course, the almighty GTA 6…



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The Best Video Game Remakes And Remasters Of 2024

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The Best Video Game Remakes And Remasters Of 2024


Oh, look, another Night Dive Studios joint! This time around, the team remastered a beloved cult classic from the PS2 era: The Thing. The third-person shooter might not have had the best combat around, but it made up for it with great atmosphere and a unique AI/squad system that forced you to be careful around your NPC friends lest they assume you were a dangerous alien in disguise. But at the same time, as you tried to survive the arctic base from the movie, you had to worry about your own squad mates acting strange. Were they just scared? Angry? Or were they actually the deadly alien, masquerading as your friend?

This system made every moment of the original tense, and The Thing Remastered cleans up the UI and textures, and makes this chilling shooter easily playable on modern consoles. Now a whole new generation of kids can be scared by The Thing.



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Game Pass’ New Year’s Shuffle: A Flurry of Arrivals and Departures | TheXboxHub

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Game Pass’ New Year’s Shuffle: A Flurry of Arrivals and Departures | TheXboxHub


xbox game pass image 4
Xbox Game Pass – New Year changes

As we bid farewell to 2024 and welcome the fresh start of a new year, Xbox Game Pass is undergoing its own transformation with a flurry of game arrivals and departures.

It’s all change in fact, and as December rolls to a close, and January 2025 kicks into action with a host of new games, Game Pass whips up a frenzy. While we’re sad to see some beloved titles leave the service, there’s also excitement for the newly confirmed addition that will soon be gracing our Xbox and PC libraries.

Saying Goodbye to Familiar Faces

This week is a busy one for Game Pass subscribers and on December 31st 2024, we’ll be bidding adieu to six games across Cloud, Console, and PC:

BlazBlue: Cross Tag Battle: This anime-inspired fighter combines characters from various franchises for a crossover clash of epic proportions. A 4.5/5 scored review needs reading.

Close to the Sun: If it’s an atmospheric adventure you need, this one will sort you out, taking players on a chilling journey through a mysterious scientific facility.

Humankind: This historical strategy game allowed players to rewrite the course of human history and build their own civilisations.

Lego 2K Drive: Open-world driving combined the fun of LEGO and the thrill of arcade racing. What’s not to like? It may not have wowed us like we had hoped, but it’s still well worth a play.

McPixel 3: A quirky and chaotic puzzle game that challenges players to save the day with unconventional solutions.

Party Animals: This physics-based party game brings together adorable animals for a hilarious and chaotic multiplayer experience.

None of these are included in our Game Pass Gems article, but you may still lament their loss…

Welcoming New Arrivals

But there is some good news in return.

We’re still awaiting a full January line-up, but for now there’s a new game confirmed for subscription play. While we’re sad to see these titles go, there’s also excitement for the new game joining the Game Pass family:

Carrion (Cloud, Console, and PC): This reverse horror game lets you unleash your inner monster and wreak havoc as a terrifying creature. We found it to work rather well, concluding our review with ‘Carrion on Xbox is a very well-designed and crafted game. Whilst it can be frustrating to backtrack and redo levels when you’ve got a new power, the backtracking is part of the design rather than a flaw‘.

You’ll find this one available on January 2nd 2025 for Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard. If you can’t wait, you can purchase a download of Carrion from the Xbox Store for cash.

A New Year of Gaming Goodness

As always, Xbox Game Pass continues to deliver a diverse and ever-evolving library of games for subscribers to enjoy. While some titles may come and go, the service remains a fantastic value for gamers who want to explore new experiences and discover hidden gems.

So, as we raise a glass to the new year, let’s also take a moment to appreciate the games that have entertained us in 2024 and look forward to the exciting new adventures that await us in 2025!



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How to Cook Lightning Bolt in Disney Dreamlight Valley

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How to Cook Lightning Bolt in Disney Dreamlight Valley


Lightning Bolt is one of the 5-star Appetizer Meals added with the Storybook Vale expansion. Players can make this meal for themselves to restore energy or gift it to villagers to increase their Friendship Level. However, this recipe is exclusive to the owners of the expansion. This guide will help you cook a Lightning Bolt in Disney Dreamlight Valley.

Required Ingredients to Make Lightning Bolt in Disney Dreamlight Valley

Players can make a Lightning Bolt appetizer meal with the following ingredients.

1x Stygian Mudskipper

1x Lamprey

1x Lightning Spice

1x Lightning Spice

1x Any Sweet

Stygian Mudskipper is a seafood that you can get by fishing in the Gold Ripples in the Mythopia (Storybook Vale) biome. Using an elixir or potion on the fishing rod will increase the chances of catching the Stygian Mudskipper. You can get Lamprey by fishing in the Gold Ripples in the Everafter biome. Again, use the potion to increase the chances of catching Lamprey. The Lightning Spice grows wild on the ground in all the areas within the Mythopia biome. You can harvest Lightning Spice from the ground.

For the final ingredient, you can use any sweet ingredient. A few of the easiest sweet ingredients to get are Vanilla, Sugarcane, and Cocoa Beans.

How to Cook Lightning Bolt in Disney Dreamlight Valley

After gathering all the ingredients for the Lightning Bolt, go to any Cooking Station to start making it. Go to any cooking station in the Valley/Eternity Isle and interact with it. After that, put the ingredients into the Cooking Pot individually and then select the “Start Cooking” option to cook the Lightning Bolt Appetizer Meal.

Use of Lightning Bolt

Players can choose to eat the Lightning Bolt to restore 5,000 Energy, gift it to another villager to increase their Friendship Level or sell it to Goofy for 5,038 Star Coins.



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Heartlight – A Spectrum port/remake of a Polish Boulder Dash clone

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Heartlight – A Spectrum port/remake of a Polish Boulder Dash clone


If you remember playing xLand Games Boulder Dash clone of ‘Heartlight’, a game which was released way back in 1991 to 1993 for the Atari 8bit, Amiga and PC, then you are going to like this latest news story that’s just been sent to us. As we’ve been told that Ralf has made available the ZX Spectrum port remake of, yes you guessed it, ‘Heartlight’. A new game in which the creator has kindly shared with the community as a Christmas gift. In light of this news, we’ve got some more info from the developer as well as a gameplay video.

Here’s what the developer says about Heartlight via the Spectrum Computing forums. “Some time ago I decided to make a Spectrum port/remake of the game called Heartlight. It was quite well known in Poland in its time (I’m from there, you know? ) and even got an international release. Has anyone here heard of it? It’s a clone of Boulder Dash with several twists, more focused on puzzles than action. All the gameplay happens on single screen and there is no scrolling. The early levels are rather easy, then it becomes harder. My Spectrum version was 95% complete for 3 years or so and gathering dust on my hard drive until I made the final touches recently and released it today”.

Links :1) Source 



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Game of the Year 2024 – Best Nintendo Switch Game | TheSixthAxis

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Game of the Year 2024 – Best Nintendo Switch Game | TheSixthAxis


This time next year, we’ll hopefully be talking up a storm about the delights of the Nintendo Switch 2, how Nintendo has handled their own cross-gen transition and the games that have straddled the generations. With that in mind, 2024 has felt like Nintendo playing for time, leaning heavily on remakes and remasters once again – trawling the GameCube and 3DS libraries for inspiration – though with a clutch of new entries in beloved series that absolutely had the capacity to delight and surprise. Notably, the princesses got to step out of the shadow of Nintendo’s leading men and have adventures of their very own.

One of the longest-running jokes in video games came to a head this year as Zelda finally got to star in her own adventure, with Link having to play second fiddle for once. The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom could so easily have been a character transplant with Zelda picking up sword, shield and boomerang just as Link would – and Zelda has been a badass warrior, pirate, ninja and more in the past – but as is often the case, Nintendo and developer Grezzo sought to do something a little bit different.

Leant the ability to summon objects and creatures, and attach to them in multiple ways, everything from simply navigating the world to fighting enemies becomes a magic-infused puzzle, lending this game its own distinctive tone and style. Sure, it does fall back on classic Link combat in short bursts, but for the most part you summoning blocks of water to swim through, attaching to a spider that will then clamber up a wall or over a tree for you, setting field alight with an arsonist Zol, or simply stacking beds in gravity-defying fashion to create a set of stairs.

It’s thoroughly enjoyable and a wonderful surprise that has us keen to see Zelda step into the limelight much more often in future.

Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island – Runner-up

So many roguelikes and dungeon crawlers place an emphasis on build-crafting, and how the emergent gameplay experience can be dished out through satisfying skill combinations or optimized weapon upgrades. Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island is a delight because your build, and your optimized run, and your upgraded gear are all affected by the environment you find yourself in and the way the elements of the game-world naturally bounce off of each other.

Like the chemical reactions in Breath of the Wild that cause burning grass to create flight-enhancing wind gusts, there are layered systems in this game that crash together in consistently unexpected and hilarious ways. It’s an excellent twist on the usual number-crunching ethos of the modern roguelike, and perfect for a quick commute play-session on the Nintendo Switch.

– Miguel M

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door – Runner-up

Nintendo’s approach to remasters and remakes has been fairly scattershot on Nintendo Switch (outside of quickly porting across all the major Wii U games in the first few years of its replacement’s arrival), but as part of that, they’ve also struck a rich vein of 20-year-old games from the GameCube era.

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door transplants what is widely considered to be the very best Paper Mario game into a modern game engine, giving it a buff and polish to help it stand up alongside more modern titles on the system, and in doing so gives us a perfect reminder of why Mario RPGs are so beloved, with all the quirkiness and charm of the story and character alongside the original Paper Mario combat style.

Honourable mentions (in alphabetical order)

What have you been playing on Nintendo Switch this past year? Let us know in the comments.



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10 Games With The Highest Concurrent Peaks In 2024, Ranked

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10 Games With The Highest Concurrent Peaks In 2024, Ranked


2024 will be remembered for a lot of great games: Black Myth: Wukong, Helldivers 2, Marvel Rivals, and Path of Exile 2 all come to mind.

As great as these new games are, there are plenty of beloved titles from recent memory that are still popular today. These include games like Baldur’s Gate 3, Counter-Strike 2, Elden Ring, and others that are regular parts of our gaming portfolio.

While we can make some good guesses for the most popular games of 2024, we can use data from SteamDB to run down the top ten games of the year based on concurrent player counts. Some of the titles we mentioned will appear on this list, and a handful of surprises.

We almost had a beta test make the cut, too, with the Monster Hunter Wilds Beta just missing the mark at a player peak of roughly 450,000. So, who did make the cut? Let’s find out.

10 Helldivers 2

2024 peak players: 458,709

One of the year’s best co-op shooters is also one of 2024’s most popular games.

Thanks to a content update, Helldivers 2 is experiencing a resurgence of active players, proving that concerns about its long-term viability need to be dismissed.

Helldivers 2 is still a great four-player experience, whether you want something to shoot with friends or enjoy its player-driven narrative. It’s never too late to jump in and do what you can to save democracy!

9 Marvel Rivals

2024 peak players: 480,990

marvelrivals-000-1

Marvel Rivals is the team-based shooter we deserve.

While some may dismiss the game as a simple Overwatch clone, it combines accessibility, surprising hero balance, and deep strategy the more you play.

Related

Marvel Rivals Review

It really makes you feel like Spider-Man.

Every hero role (Tank, Healer, DPS) is enjoyable to play, and the Team-Up abilities add a new level of strategy when choosing heroes.

Plus, living out your superhero fantasies is always a good time. Who doesn’t want to play as Venom while taking on Magneto?

8 Path of Exile 2

2024 peak players: 578,569

Path of Exile 2-1

Path of Exile 2 is an incredibly deep, addicting Action-RPG experience that caters to veterans and newcomers alike.

Whether you’ve been upset with the state of Diablo 4, a long-time Path of Exile fan, or someone just looking to see what the hype is about, you’ll find something to enjoy.

Even in its Early Access state, Path of Exile 2 is a massive improvement over its predecessor, with nowhere to go but up. It’s a benchmark for the ARPG genre and will continue improving over time.

7 Elden Ring

2024 peak players: 781,261

Shadow of the Erdtree Elden Ring

It turns out that when an incredibly popular game releases critically acclaimed DLC, it’s going to see a spike in player count.

That’s precisely what happened when the Shadow of the Erdtree DLC for Elden Ring was released.

While its inclusion on several Game of the Year lists is controversial, the Elden Ring DLC is undoubtedly one of the year’s best releases.

It’s a vast improvement on an already excellent game, adding nearly 50 hours of content to an already lengthy game.

6 PUBG: Battlegrounds

2024 peak players: 808,258

PUBG Battlegrounds

Winner winner, chicken dinner.

One of the original Battle Royale games is still going strong today. PUBG: Battleground holds up surprisingly well today.

PUBG’s renewed focus on its competitive scene and continued updates throughout the year are helping it remain relevant to players today.

While it will never reach the same heights during its peak, PUBG has carved out a respectable place in today’s gaming landscape that shows no sign of slowing down.

5 Banana

2024 peak players: 917,272

Banana

Sometimes, you can’t explain a game’s popularity. That’s the case with Banana, a free-to-play clicker game where you, well, click a banana. You’ll then have a chance to grow your collection of bananas.

Look, I don’t get it, but it clearly has an audience. At the time of writing, it had over 100,000 concurrent players—more than Call of Duty, Baldur’s Gate, and Helldivers 2.

But hey, it’s been popular this year, and people love the game, so more power to them.

4 Dota 2

2024 peak players: 951,239

Dota 2

From one free game to another, though, Dota 2 offers a little more substance than Banana.

Even after all these years, Dota 2 remains immensely popular in 2024.

Yes, its highly competitive nature makes it inaccessible, but there’s nothing quite like the thrill of Dota 2. Its addictive balance of skill, tactical prowess, and teamwork results in some of the most exciting gameplay moments I’ve ever experienced.

Every now and then, I get the itch to boot back up Dota 2, and I’m always glad I did. Until I join a team of feeders, that is.

3 Counter-Strike 2

2024 peak players: 1,740,261

Counter-Strike 2 game

Some say that Dota 2 is Valve’s juggernaut, but the reality is that the title belongs to Counter-Strike 2.

The game’s popularity will simply never end. Since Counter-Strike 2’s launch in 2023, the game’s popularity has never been higher.

Related

Counter-Strike 2: 10 Best Guns, Ranked

Wondering what weapons you should master in Counter-Strike 2? Well, we have a list for you!

A combination of a thriving competitive scene and the same pick-up-and-play team-based gameplay that is as popular today as it was twenty years ago helps make it one of 2024’s most popular games.

Just like Dota 2, booting up a game of Counter-Strike 2 is always a good decision, whether playing with friends, strangers, or messing around in Gun Game.

2 Palworld

2024 peak players: 2,101,867

Palworld gameplay

One of the biggest gaming stories of the year, Palworld is the game that keeps going.

Heavily inspired by the Pokemon franchise, Palworld brings the concept to modern audiences, borrowing elements from the open-world survival crafting genre.

With every update, Palworld adds more content, depth, and things to see and do.

It’s come a long way from its shallow state at launch, and provided lawyers don’t stop it, it shows no signs of slowing down.

1 Black Myth: Wukong

2024 peak players: 2,415,714

Black Myth Wukong game

One of the year’s best games is also one of the most popular games of 2024.

Few games in the Soulslike genre have seen the sustained success of Black Myth: Wukong.

While its linear progression may deter some, the game’s challenge, gameplay, and boss battles more than compensate for it.

Few games can deliver the spectacle that Black Myth: Wukong does; it’s no wonder why it’s one of the most popular games this year.



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Fortnite players have game-changing suggestion for popular skins

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Fortnite players have game-changing suggestion for popular skins


You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you’re reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games here

Fortnite users are notably obsessed with skins, which are cosmetic items that allow them to personalize their characters. Skins in Fortnite range from sleek warriors and futuristic androids to quirky mascots and legendary pop-culture crossovers. Players eagerly await new skin releases, often strategizing their V-Bucks spends or grinding the Battle Pass to get the most desired outfits.

While numerous skins may be purchased or earned in-game, Fortnite Crew takes exclusivity to a new level. This monthly subscription service not only gives customers V-Bucks and access to all passes, but it also gives them premium, exclusive skins that they can’t get anywhere else. These Crew Pack skins frequently contain high-quality graphics and unusual themes, making them must-haves for collectors and Fortnite fans alike.

However, now players have a game-changing suggestion to make Fortnite Crew more appealing than it already is in Chapter 6.

Fortnite players demand skin collection choices in monthly Crew subscriptions

Fortnite users like Less_Tennis have offered a game-changing solution to make the Crew Packs more interesting than they are. According to their Reddit Post, they suggest that Fortnite Crew “should let you pick a skin from the collection each month instead of just the newest one.”

Fortnite crew pack skins
Fortnite players want Epic to offer skin options in their crew subscription. Image by Less_Tennis.

They further continued, “It’s probably pretty rare that everyone likes the next upcoming Crew skin – personally I haven’t liked one since the spartan skin in the last chapter. But since Crew now has a collection of around 50 skins and (I think) most people haven’t been subscribed since 2021, why not let people get a token each month that can be redeemed for any Crew skin? That way there’s a much larger chance people get a skin they like.”

This suggestion drew the attention of many Fortnite players who have been a Crew subscriber on and off from time to time. One such player said, “Just give us a token, or a token fragment every month. Allowing us to get an old skin every 1 to 3 months subbed”, where another continued, “That would incentivize a continued subscription like they want, I could definitely see them doing token fragments.”

To those unaware, currently, Fortnite Crew offers a free skin, alongside the Crew Bonus Legacy styles for each month you’re subscribed to the service. Those styles are unlockable for previous skins, along with types of pickaxes that were once available to players.

While the service is a great alternative for players willing to save up on spending V-Bucks, it still needs a lot of work so players can set their own terms of the subscription, including which skin they want from their pack.


Three characters overlooking a vibrant, lush video game landscape with rivers, fields, and distant towns under a clear blue sky.Three characters overlooking a vibrant, lush video game landscape with rivers, fields, and distant towns under a clear blue sky.

Fortnite





Platform(s):
Android, iOS, macOS, Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series S/X


Genre(s):
Action, Massively Multiplayer, Shooter


9
VideoGamer



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Popeye, Tintin enter the public domain in 2025

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Popeye, Tintin enter the public domain in 2025


Tintin, the seminal hero of the pulp genre of boy adventurers, enters the United States public domain in 2025, though in a way that probably wouldn’t please his creator Hergé very much. Not necessarily because the cartoonist would be angry at other folks being able to legally make Tintin stories — but because the Tintin story entering the public domain is among his least favorite ones.

On Jan. 1, 2025, works first published in 1929 (and sound recordings from 1924) will enter into the public domain in the United States, and that includes a good portion of Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, a work of explicit and broad anti-Soviet/Marxist propaganda that Hergé was so embarrassed by that he refused to allow it to be reprinted for 40 years.

But Tintin and his little dog Snowy aren’t the only comic strip characters whose earliest adventures will no longer be covered under copyright. Popeye (you know, the sailor man?) also appeared in E.C. Segar’s Thimble Theater for the first time in 1929. Though, at that point, Thimble Theater had already been running in the New York Journal for a decade — Popeye was merely a one-arc guest character in the adventures of Ham Gravy (boyfriend to Olive Oyl) and Castor Oyl (brother to… yeah, you get it). The nautical hombre hadn’t even developed his trademark spinach-powered super strength, and Olive Oyl wouldn’t break up with Ham Gravy to date him until 1930.

Other 2025 entries to the wild world of public domain art include many films from the bleeding edge of the Silent Era and the Talkie revolution, including Alfred Hitchcock’s first sound film, Blackmail, and the first feature-length Marx Brothers movie, The Cocoanuts. Numerous Disney animated shorts also enter the field, like “The Skeleton Dance,” whose dancing skeletons (what else?) have gained new life in celebratory Halloween gifs.

Mickey and Minnie Mouse themselves made a big splash last year when their earliest shorts hit public domain, enabling gleefully emotionally transgressive and carefully not-legally transgressive horror art, and more than a dozen more 1929 Mickey Mouse shorts will follow in 2025, including “The Karnival Kid,” in which the famous mouse has a speaking role for the first time.

What would this writer like to see in the public domain in 2025? Maybe our universal agreement that, in the pursuit of something to do with newly public domain art, low-budget horror is low-hanging fruit. (Of course we are getting Popeye the Slayer Man in 2025.)

For more notable works entering the public domain in the United States in 2025, you can check out the Center for the Study of the Public Domain’s yearly bulletin.



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The Wolf Among Us: Episode Two – Smoke & Mirrors (2014) – Game details | Adventure Gamers

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The Wolf Among Us: Episode Two – Smoke & Mirrors (2014) – Game details | Adventure Gamers



Bigby Wolf, a man once more infamously known as The Big Bad Wolf, is now the sheriff of a hidden community in New York City. Exiled from the land of fairy tales, Bigby is tasked by the bureaucrat Snow White to keep order within a society of mythical creatures and characters trying to remain undetected in the world of the mundane.



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