PC Gamer
League of Legends Dominion
It's happened LoL fans! Dominion has been released. The chaps at Riot games have just announced that all the Legends (read: players) on the North American and European servers can enjoy the new mode. It's more concerned with capturing and holding than hacking and grinding. It's also completely awesome.

Tim got to play last week. Why not read his League of Legends: Dominion first impressions as your client updates eh?

Never played League of Legends? It's free and loads of fun. Sign up here to see what all the fuss is about. See you on the Crystal Scar people! I'll be playing a Yordle, because that's how I roll. Teeeeeeeeeemo!
PC Gamer
League of Legends Dominion Thumbnail
I've been tinkering a little bit with Dominion, the new capture and hold map for League of Legends that not so quietly slipped into public beta testing yesterday. It’s available to play during off-peak hours (i.e. daytime) to all regions. And it turns out it’s... good. I think it’s going to be a huge success for developers Riot, with a few caveats.



I can see exactly why I like it already. It’s World of Warcraft’s Arathi Basin battleground all over again, but with the rapid levelling and item purchases of DOTA. And with creeps. I think I’m going to get lost here.

Here’s how it works. The map is circular, with five capture points arranged at the points of a star. Each can be captured by either team. When it is captured, creeps start streaming out from behind the point and into the circle, spreading both clockwise and anti-clockwise. You start with your Nexus at 500 health. If you capture control points, the enemy team’s Nexus health depletes. If they capture points, yours depletes. The spawn point for each team is protected by some brutal turrets behind the nexus. So don’t go up there.

So: you charge out of base, try and capture as many points in the opening zerg, then rush around heading off enemies looking to snipe your points, while making pushes where you think the opposition is vulnerable.



The compressed RPG mechanics of DOTA have been compressed even further. You get massive amounts of gold very, very quickly, and you’ll level up even faster. Creeps die in a zap, and so do you; particularly if you run into a turret.

It’s insanely, almost absurdly fast paced. Games are done with in about 15-20 minutes. It’s a constant barrage of team-fights, clicking to level up, buying stuff, and running around. It was only in my third or fourth match that I really found the rhythm to play. The first time was overwhelming.

Why the Arathi comparison? For a start; the win mechanics are near identical, and some of the same strategies we used to run in old guild battlegrounds still work. Second: the way the map is clearly defined into locations reminds me of Arathi. The only real differences is the lack of elevation change, and there’s no central base in the centre of the map. Finally: I absolutely loved playing Arathi Basin with an organised team. I can see how this is going to turn very competitive, very very quickly.



Here are my caveats. If DOTA felt unfriendly to newcomers, Dominion isn’t going to change that. It’s so fast paced that newcomers won’t even get a chance to read the tooltip text, let alone understand what’s going on. Second: the small scale favours a certain type of Champion. In the matches I played, tanks and melee dps characters completely trounced all the ranged players. As Tristana, I found myself seriously running out of room to pull back to to escape. And when I did, I’d simply circle into another enemy group. Finally, the middle space of the map feels extremely under-used - it’s just a series of paths to escape to, and a few buffs.

Dominion is available to play off-peak. If you’re a League of Legends player, you’d best get online and try it. It’s very, very exciting. I can't wait to see what the e-Sports scene makes of it.
Counter-Strike
Intel Extreme Masters
The best Counter-Strike 1.6, StarCraft 2 and League of Legends players will clash in New York next month, hoping to win a share of the enormous $93,000 prize pot up for grabs at the Intel Extreme Masters Global Challenge event. It all kicks off on Thursday October 13 and runs through until the finals on Sunday October 16. The best teams will also win the chance to participate in the Intel Extreme Masters World Championship in Hanover, Germany next year.

Counter-Strike 1.6 players will be competing for the largest sum. The best team will take home $16,000. Top prizes of $12,000 will be awarded to the victorious League of Legends team, and the winning StarCraft 2 player stands to win $6,500. The rest of the prize pool will be divvied out among the runners up. For coverage of the qualifiers, and more information on Global Challenge New York, head over to the Intel Extreme Masters page.

The prize pools for each IEM competition seem to keep growing and growing as esports become more popular, and more exciting to watch. Many of the matches should hopefully be broadcast through ESL TV's standard streaming service, with paid upgrades available if you want higher quality video.
PC Gamer



Riven is the latest champion to join League of Legends' ever growing army of heroes. She's a very mobile close ranged fighter, with abilities that let her dart forwards in short bursts to harass enemies and get out of trouble. You'll find out everything you need to know in the typically intricate League of Legends hero spotlight video above, which shows how she can be used effectively to chase down enemy heroes. See some screenshots below, showing the three very different appearances provided by her alternative skins.

League of Legends is free to play. You can sign up for an account over on the League of Legends site to get started. League of Legends is on the verge of the huge Dominion update, which will add a whole new game mode, with a brand new map that will encourage faster, deadlier battles for a series of control points. Watch the League of Legends Dominion trailer for an idea of what to expect.









PC Gamer
PCG_final_cover-crop
For our first-ever cover featuring a free-to-play game, it had to be the incredibly popular League of Legends. Our in-depth guide to LoL's upcoming new Dominion mode will ensure that you have the advantage on launch day by taking you through the ins and outs of the map, plus a look at the map creation process and upcoming champions in the works at Riot Games. As if that wasn't enough, you'll also find a code in every issue for an exclusive Caitlyn skin (good on North American servers only) which will also unlock the champion herself if you've yet to purchase the sultry sniper.

In other mega-news, our extensive Diablo III hands-on preview will tell you everything you need to know about the much-anticipated hack-'n'-slash ahead of the beta, and addresses your Auction House concerns. Meanwhile, we've the inside scoop on supernatural steampunk-style FPS thriller Dishonored and the verdict on the tropical zombie-bonanza that is Dead Island. Missing this issue is, in a word, inadvisable.



PC Gamer
League of Legends Dominion mode
Dominion is the new game mode that's set to turn League of Legends upside down. Instead of the traditional, DotA-esque tug of war, it's a fast and frenzied arena mode fuelled by a series of capturable control points. A collection of new Dominion items will be added to League of Legends to help heroes adapt to the change of pace. Riot have updated their Dominion Overview page with details of the new gear. Some of the finest examples include the Ionic Spark, which unleashes a bolt of chain lightning with every fourth attack, and the Sanguine Blade, which lets you steal life from enemies by hitting them. In League of Legends, violence is the best medicine.
PC Gamer
StarCraft 2 TvZ
It looks as though e-sports spectators are on the rise. The MLG Raleigh tournament that took place the weekend before last is the most watched MLG event to date. At its highest point, 138,000 people were watching the MLG Raleigh live streams. According to info MLG sent over, viewers tuned in from 173 countries and three million hours were "consumed" over the course of the competition.

Raleigh is the fourth competition in a six-part city-hopping tour and MLG will be live-streaming their events in Orlando and Providence, too. If you missed the StarCraft 2 and League of Legends tournaments that took place in the last event, MLG Raleigh 2011tournament matches are now free to watch on demand. Check out some of the best e-sports players in the world doing their best work, and be inspired/slightly crushed by the ludicrous ability on display.
PC Gamer
StarCraft 2
If you missed last weekend's live stream of the MLG Raleigh pro gaming tournaments then we've got some good news. MLG's new video player provides access to on-demand streams of all the key games from last weekend's contests. Simply head over to the Major League Gaming TV page and select the tournament you want to watch from the selection across the top. Here's your chance to watch some of the best StarCraft 2 and League of Legends teams in the world fight for glory, cash prizes, and your entertainment.
PC Gamer



Recently we got a chance to see the brand new League of Legends map, which adds a take-and-hold control point mode designed to deliver shorter, more intense skirmishes. In the developer diary above, Riot games explain how the new map will differ from the traditional two-base, three-lane structure of the other two LoL arenas, and describe the new quest system, which will throw players bonus tasks for a chance to earn some extra experience.

League of Legends is free to play. You can sign up and download the client through the League of Legends site.
PC Gamer



On this week's episode, Evan, Josh, and Logan deliberate the recent Diablo 3 news, give impressions on League of Legends' new game mode, discuss Bethesda's strange legal poke at Minecraft, and Chris files a report from the floor of QuakeCon. Forgive the late-ish post this week--most of us were out of the office on Thursday, when we usually record.

PC Gamer US Podcast 283: Golden House

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