Devil May Cry 5 gets the Bloody Palace mode on 1st April as part of a free update, Capcom has announced.
Bloody Palace is a fan-favourite mode that challenges players to fight against waves of enemies for placement on online leaderboards. As you fight your way through the Bloody Palace, the enemies get harder and harder. The goal is to get to the top, but that's easier said than done.
All in all, Bloody Palace mode should keep Devil May Cry 5 players who've finished the story occupied for a few weeks at least.
The creator of the original X-COM, Julian Gollop has endured a backlash after signing a Epic Games store exclusivity deal for his next title.
Hotly-anticipated turn-based strategy game Phoenix Point, billed as a spiritual successor to the original X-COM, was crowdfunded to the tune of $765,948 by over 10,000 backers on FIG back in June 2017. At the time, a Steam key for Phoenix Point was promised to those who'd helped make the game a reality.
Fast forward to March 2019, and Phoenix Point is now exclusive to the Epic Games store for one year. While backers will get a Steam or GOG key after the first year in addition to their Epic key, they'll also get three DLC packs for free. Gollop is also offering a full refund to any backer who wants it.
It's been a good long while since an officially-licensed Snooker game hit the latest generation of consoles. Snooker 19, out this spring on PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch, breaks off right on cue.
Snooker 19, developed by Leamington Spa-based studio Lab42, has 128 officially-licensed pros in it, including big hitters Ronnie O'Sullivan, Judd Trump, Mark Selby and Ding Junhui, and older pros who are still knocking about on the pro tour, such as Peter Ebdon, Ken Doherty and Jimmy White. It's also got virtual recreations of The Crucible and Alexandra Palace, among other famous snooker venues.
Gameplay wise, Snooker 19 sees the player line up shots, apply side or spin to the cue ball, set stroke power then use the left stick to pull back before flicking forward at just the right time. Time your shot well and you'll strike the ball cleanly. Time it badly and the cue ball will wobble off course.
Given this week's earlier leak displayed the Firestorm tutorial, it's not exactly the first time we've seen Battlefield 5's battle royale mode in action - but the official trailer is now here, so you can take another look anyway.
Announced at the end of the trailer is news the mode will release on 25th March. Hopefully this will give it some breathing room from Apex Legends, which is due to unveil its battle pass and first season at a mystery date this month.
The trailer itself, meanwhile, displays more of the vehicles (including an amphibious car) and the highly destructive firestorm itself. This is able to wipe out entire buildings, but players seem capable of staggering through the flames - albeit with some serious burns. It's impressive they can survive when buildings can not.
Turtle Rock has announced its next game: Back 4 Blood.
Back 4 Blood is a co-op first-person zombie shooter and, with a name like that, rekindles memories of Left 4 Dead. That's no surprise: Turtle Rock is the development team behind Left 4 Dead, which it made for Valve before moving on to Evolve for 2K.
"It's hard to overstate what an awesome opportunity this is," said Chris Ashton, co-founder and design director of Turtle Rock.
Ever thought you could do a better job than Legolas at the Battle of Helm's Deep? Well now you can prove it, as the final version of this incredible Lord of the Rings Skyrim mod has just been published.
The Elder Scrolls V Middle-Earth began back in 2014 and has seen several updates, but Maldaran told me the Redone version adds new content, solves bugs, re-works the portal corridor and streamlines all the past versions into one neat package.
The remarkable one-person project, made by 26-year-old Maldaran from Germany, allows PC players to explore many of the most famous locations in Lord of the Rings, including The Shire, Lothlorien and Rivendell. You can re-enact the Battle of Helm's Deep, fight goblins in the mines of Moria and even battle the Balrog. Players can also craft Mithril armour, and Maldaran told me the latest version introduces even more craftable items, along with new spells to learn.
PlayStation 4 exclusive God of War leads this year's British Academy Games Awards shortlist, with an impressive 10 nominations.
Santa Monica Studio's Norse-inspired Dad simulator is up for 10 gongs, including Best Game, Best Narrative, and Performer for Stargate SG-1's Christopher Judge, who plays Kratos.
There are six nominations for the critically-acclaimed Return of the Obra Dinn - from Papers, Please creator Lucas Pope. The Annapurna Interactive-published mobile game Florence is also up for six prizes, as is Rockstar's AAA cowboy sequel Red Dead Redemption 2.
New Overwatch hero Baptiste will be released for players on all platforms on Tuesday, 19th March. As with all new heroes, there will be a one week period after his arrival before he is available for Competitive Play.
Baptiste is a support hero with some powerful new abilities. He has an Immortality Field, which bubbles out like a Winston shield and prevents anyone within from dying while active - giving him plenty of time to pump healing grenades in, or to activate his immediate area-of-effect heal.
His rifle is hitscan so the small bursts of bullets arrive at their destination as soon as he shoots - great if you've got good accuracy - and he gains a lot of manoeuvrability and access to high ground by being able to crouch and charge a super-jump.
If you're a woman and a gamer, it's extremely common to run across other gamers that, through some moral failing or lack of guidance, will lob gendered insults at you for no reason other than existing. You don't have to search for long to find evidence of this constant harassment either - Twitch streamer Spawntaneous has an eight-part series dedicated solely to how men treat her in multiplayer games that is distressing to watch. This is common among any and all multiplayer games, to the point many women may decide to 'play incognito' instead. After all, GamerGate sent a clear message to women in games: "You're not welcome here."
Since then, companies made efforts to clean up the toxic communities plaguing their online titles. The results vary, but unfortunately, it's still all too common for women to be harassed online. However, Respawn's battle royale Apex Legends offers some real options in communication that can make the experience wonderful for women - namely, the game's robust pinging system.
Most games contain some sort of rudimentary way of communicating with your teammates online. Unfortunately, most of these options are either lacking or are too cumbersome to use. This makes a microphone essential for communicating with other players, particularly if you who want to win. But Apex Legends' context-sensitive pinging system is easy to use and helps alleviate these frustrations.
There are many things I love about Ghost of a Tale, which makes its PS4 debut this week - the ivy bursting through its bulging masonry, the witty and affecting script (with beautifully concise, optional footnotes for those who fancy diving into the lore), or the fact that one of the quests actually has you distinguishing trees by their bark and leaf shape in order to identify the mushrooms growing beneath them. But the biggest compliment I can pay it, perhaps, is that nobody in it feels expendable. The setting may be a prison, an edifice designed to crush the soul and rob the individual of identity, but the story is broadly about reclaiming that identity and finding community in a world of brutal divides. Even the rat guards who chase you around the battlements of Dwindling Heights are people, warts and all, though it's easy to forget this when you're spotted for the umpteenth time exiting a bolthole and the somewhat lumbering pursuit music kicks in.
"They're not monsters or demons, intent on killing all the mice - sometimes they don't give a fuck," says Lionel Gallat, the French animator responsible for the majority of a project that has been in development since 2013. "They're just doing their jobs. They're living their lives. And their job is to catch the mouse who escaped from his cell, so that's what they're doing in the game. Until you find the guard armour, put it on and then you can talk to them, and you discover that, no, these are not just enemies you have to kill or avoid. You can talk to them, and you have to talk to them to learn about stuff."
Among the things you'll learn, as the aforesaid mouse runaway Tilo, is that the guards don't want to be here either. They're the dregs of the rat army, incompetents and misfits banished to a neglected fortress to babysit a sad little crowd of thieves, pirates and political agitators. In the course of this handsome 20 hour adventure your relationship with them slowly evolves, from fear through irritation to a sense of tentative camaraderie. It's one of the many splendours of a storybook realm whose personalities, society and history are as cleverly wrought as its cobwebbed undervaults and turrets. "When the game starts, all the characters you meet have led lives, they come from somewhere," Gallat continues. "It's the same with a movie - you need to have the feeling that this world has been going on for a while. The characters don't suddenly pop up because the story needs them, and you need to believe that they're going somewhere."