There are 40 Ooblets in the Early Access version of Ooblets. Finding all of them will take a lot of work in making items, but also locating and battling the enemy Ooblets.
To meet new Ooblets and have dance battles with them, you need specific items. Some items need to be grown in your farm, while others require to be processed in other facilities.
It can all be very confusing, so I thought I’d put everything you need for all the items into one place.
Monster collecting games have been very popular for decades, but there have been few examples on PC. I first heard of Ooblets many years ago, but it is now in Early Access on Epic Games Store, complete with dancing plant-like creatures.
But what is Ooblets? How do you farm your creatures, and how do you raise your dance troupe to be the best movers and shakers in all the land?
It’s funny how remaking a game can give you a wholly different vibe. The original Resident Evil 2 was a great game for its time, but by today’s standards it’s as scary as a children’s Halloween costume, unless you’re playing it for the very first time. The Resident Evil 2 remake, however, is a modern horror masterpiece.
Pencil-drawn games aren’t unheard of in 2D games, but seeing monotone pencil textures on 3D models is more uncommon. They’re uncanny really, which I suppose is a great fit for horror. Mundaun is an indie horror game set to folk legends in a secluded valley in the Alps. It’s shown up again in a new trailer to announce a spring 2021 release date.
Look, we’re all worn out from this summer-long celebration of FakE3, right? What better way to wind down than with the digital release of that Bugsnax bop and some Bugsnax-related reveals? The former’s out today, with a vinyl release planned for later. The later is coming next week on Monday, July 27th. Will we actually find out what the heck this game is, or will it just create more questions about Bugsnax?
Hi-Rez Studios, the makers of Smite and Tribes: Ascend, today launched their latest multiplayer game. Rogue Company is a class-based, third-person shooter which, from what I’ve seen, looks like an arcade-y kinda Counter-Strike thing. Not quite sure. Here’s the launch trailer which makes the game look like something entirely different.
There are perks to being dead, it turns out. You can talk to your dog who is also dead, talk to other ghosts, and look inside just about anything to take a peek at what’s hidden within. Hollow Ponds gave folks a look inside I Am Dead, explaining how recently deceased museum curator Morris Lupton and his dog Sparky will save the Shelmerston with their new ghost powers.
has had several lovely upgrades for its PC release, including uncapped frame rates, 4K resolution support and Nvidia’s DLSS 2.0 tech. But the one I’ve been most looking forward to trying out is its 21:9 ultrawide monitor support. After all, Death Stranding is effectively Beautiful Landscape: The Game in addition to being a surprisingly engrossing postman sim, and seeing its huge, expansive vistas in all their ultrawide and post-apocalyptic glory has definitely enhanced my overall enjoyment of it. Here’s a quick tour of what it looks like, how it works, and why it’s one of the best ultrawide PC games you can play today – even if Kojima has pulled a fast one on its actual resolution support.
Although us PC folks didn’t get to snag Ustwo Games’ puzzle game Monument Valley, they did grace us with their more recent puzzler Assemble With Care. They’ve announced their next project and heyo, looks like we’ll get to check it out as well. Ustwo announced Alba: A Wildlife Adventure and say it’s coming soon to several platforms including PC.