Apr 08, 10:00


PCGamesN Saturday, April 8, 2023 7:45 AM
     Prime Gaming offering an excellent modern FPS as a free game

Fancy a brilliant modern FPS game for over the Easter break? How about if it's also a free game with quite a period of time to redeem it as well? You do have to be subscribed to a service to get the code, but once you own this title, it's yours to keep forever. If you hadn't already guessed it from the image, you can get Wolfenstein The New Order for free as part of Amazon Prime Gaming.

MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Wolfenstein: The New Order review, The best FPS games on PC, Best games of 2014: Wolfenstein: The New Order

PCGamesN Saturday, April 8, 2023 6:48 AM
     American McGee's Alice Madness Returns sequel dropped by EA

The sequel to Alice Madness Returns, titled Alice Asylum, has been scrapped by EA according to designer American McGee. The potential action-adventure game had been in Patreon-funded limbo for some time, as fans of the cult classic helped make the design document eventually seen by EA a reality, but the publisher has decided not to move forward with the series, despite calling it an "important" part of their library.


PCGamesN Saturday, April 8, 2023 5:39 AM
     Minecraft isn't trying to

With the Minecraft Legends release date around the corner, PCGamesN had the chance to chat with developer Mojang all about the strategy game spin-off while at GDC 2023 in San Francisco, and we asked if the colossal crafting game is going to keep expanding into other genres, and got an interesting answer off the back of Minecraft Legends.

MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Minecraft Legends release date, The best strategy games on PC, The best crafting games on PC

Rock Paper Shotgun Latest Articles Feed Saturday, April 8, 2023 4:49 AM
    

512GB Micro SD cards have continued to come down in price, and today we've spotted a great deal on a 512GB option from Integral that offers read speeds up to 180MB/s. It's available for £39.99, down from £48, which is the best price we've seen for this spec.

That makes this Micro SD a premiere option for Steam Deck owners, who will benefit from faster copying times when transferring game directories from the internal storage to Micro SD or downloading from the internet, and game load times should also be as speedy as anything with this A2-rated drive.

Read more


Siliconera Saturday, April 8, 2023 9:00 AM
    

Void Terrarium 2 Featured

Sometimes, games use their art style to build on or set their tone and themes. Other times, they have tones and themes that go completely against what you'd expect based on the artistic direction. Void Terrarium 2 falls into the latter category. You play as a cute little robot named Robbie, you protect the absolutely adorable Toriko, and you get to customize the terrarium Toriko lives in with cute decor and plants and things. Then, you get to the story.

Void Terrarium 2's narrative is sad, touching, and definitely one of the game's strong points; there's a lot to it and it's not afraid to go into some darker subject matter. For starters, it's set in a post-apocalyptic world in which the atmosphere has become heavily contaminated to the point of being uninhabitable. You and your sentient computer friend factoryAI must protect Toriko, the last surviving human, from both the toxins in the air and the slow progression of the disease plaguing her body. All the while, you have to learn what exactly her illness is in order to try to find a way to cure it. For how nice and cutesy everything looks, the story is the total opposite in a very good way.

Void Terrarium 2 Start

Beyond the story, the gameplay of Void Terrarium 2 is also handled quite well, though it isn't without its quirks. Right off the bat, you're thrown into a dungeon called a "wasteland" with absolutely nothing. There's no tutorial, no explanation of what's happening, and no dialogue or text of any kind. Fortunately, that wasteland is incredibly short and simple, but the immediate jump into that certainly threw me off since I didn't know things like controls yet. There are tutorials that come after this, though, as well as dedicated tutorial and practice dungeons, which are a big help before you really dive into the wastelands proper.

The wastelands themselves are, of course, randomly generated from the rooms and how they're connected to the enemies and items scattered throughout. As these have a starting area and several branching areas that you move to as you progress, it's phenomenal for keeping things feeling fresh, but it's not a perfect system. Just about every expedition has you out searching for an item that's usually lying on the ground somewhere on one of the deeper floors of whatever area it's found in, so they often feel like fetch quests. There's also little in the way of boss fights, especially unique boss fights, which left me a bit disappointed. There are what the game calls "monster houses," rooms filled to the brim with monsters that are nice, but even those often feel a bit more like a time sink than a challenge considering that you can just take one step back into the corridor you entered from and fight the monsters one by one by one.

Void Terrarium 2 Monster House

There's also a perk system in Void Terrarium 2, in which you can select one of two random perks each time you level up, and it's a good way of adding variety to expeditions. There are countless perks to unlock, ranging from standard stat boosts to item efficacy upgrades to buffs when certain conditions are met. There are so many perks to unlock and test out that you end up with plenty of ways to go about completing an expedition, with your strategy often changing at least a little bit depending on which ones you get. Naturally, you don't always get great perks, which can lead to your run ending pretty early on, but that's part of what makes rogue-likes fun. If you didn't get anything great, you jump right back in and hope the randomizer shows a little mercy.

The other aspect of Void Terrarium 2 is its caretaking element. Toriko is very frail and as her guardian it's your job to keep her happy and healthy. The best part of the caretaking system is that Toriko needs food, which you have to scavenge for in the wastelands. That means you have to manage your inventory a bit in order to bring food home for her, and you also have to be careful of just what you're giving her. Food has contamination levels, and the more contaminated what you feed her is, the more her own contamination level rises. Naturally, hers can be brought back down, but that isn't always easy if you can't find clean food. The other elements of the caretaking system feel a bit more chore-like than anything, with you even needing to literally clean the terrarium. They're not terrible and are quite simple, but they feel like they take more time than they should for you to just stand in place and hold a button until Robbie is done sweeping.

Lastly, there's the terrarium editor, which is a neat and rather strange part of the game. As you return from expeditions, you gain materials that you use to craft items for the terrarium. Many of these items offer base stat bonuses, meaning you go into expeditions stronger, and that's a very clever tie-in between the dungeon and caretaking elements that helps encourage doing both. That said, there are elements to the terrarium such as temperature and humidity, and those seem a bit out of place. Their seemingly only use is for growing plants, which is fine on its face, but plant growing's only benefit seems to be that you get more terrarium decorations that adjust the temperature and humidity. It's nice that it's almost a self-contained system within the terrarium editor, but that's also what makes it feel a bit odd. The good news is that you can completely ignore it after you've learned how it works if you so choose. Really, though, it does lend itself to the terrarium editor as a whole. It's a nice little break between expeditions that gives you time to relax and do a little inconsequential interior design work to help liven up Toriko's living space.

Void Terrarium 2 Editor

Overall, Void Terrarium 2 is a solid rogue-like. The dungeon dives are plenty of fun even if there are a few underwhelming aspects, and it offers some nice side content to wind down with between runs. It's certainly not perfect, and some parts feel more optional or redundant than anything else, but it more than kept my interest throughout.

Void Terrarium 2 is available now on Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4.

The post Review: Void Terrarium 2 Is More Than Meets the Eye appeared first on Siliconera.


Siliconera Saturday, April 8, 2023 5:00 AM
    

Best Fire Emblem Engage Gregory Classes, Skills, and Emblem Rings Fell Xenologue

We don't get Griss as a playable character in Fire Emblem Engage, but after the Fell Xenologue DLC campaign someone does add Gregory to their army. He's somebody who's absolutely fantastic with magic. Also, like Madeline, he's a fairly straightforward character to prepare and build to use in your army.

Possible Gregory Classes in Fire Emblem Engage

Gregory is a Sage when he joins your army, and it absolutely works for him. His highest stats are magic and resistance. Everything else is average at best. So focus on making sure he always uses magic whenever possible.

Leaving him as a Sage is a bit questionable though, just because Spell Harmony conflicts with his personal skill. Survival Plan means his avoidance increases by 20 if there are more enemies than allies around him. But Spell Harmony increases his attack based on how many other tome-wielding allies are around him. You could make him a High Priest and have him heal allies around him. However, with his magic stat being as high as it is, I'd go with Mage Knight. That gives him more movement and increases his speed with the Chaos Style skill that increases speed by three if he attacks people with weapons with magic or people with tomes with a weapon.

Possible Gregory Emblem Rings in Fire Emblem Engage

If you're going to stay on the offensive route and avoid making Gregory into a healer after the Fire Emblem Engage Fell Xenologue campaign, then you basically want to ensure he equips either Celica or Soren as his Emblem Ring. Celica's Resonance will increase his damage with tomes and give him the Warp Ragnarok attack to allow him to become something of a magical scout if you'd like.

With Soren, you can set someone else as a Decoy to help keep Gregory alive. You could take advantage of his magical aptitude with the Cataclysm attack or Flare to deal more damage and increase his survivability. There's also Anima Focus of course, so he'd inflict debuffs on foes after using tomes. Again, he could be a magical scout.

Possible Gregory Skills in Fire Emblem Engage

Since you really want to rely on Gregory's magical abilities, I'd suggest looking into these skills for him.

  • Anima Focus: 800 SP and level 5 bond with Soren. "When using tomes, unit inflicts Def-3 with fire, Hit-20 with thunder, or Mov-2 with wind magic for 1 turn."
  • Block Recovery: 1,500 SP and level 13 bond with Soren. "When attacking a broken foe with a tome, grants a cahnce the foe will remain broken. Chance increases with high Spd."
  • Magic Guard 5: 1,000 SP and level 19 bond with Soren. "If foe is equipped with a tome, unit takes 5 less damage during combat."
  • Resonance+: 3,000 SP and level 16 bond with Celica. "When equipped with a tome, if unit's HP is 2 or more, unit loses 1 HP at start of combat and deals +3 damage during combat.
  • Tome Precision 5: 2,000 SP and level 17 bond with Celica. "Grants Hit/Avo+15 when using a tome.

Fire Emblem Engage is available for the Nintendo Switch, as is the Fell Xenologue DLC.

The post Helpful Fire Emblem Engage Gregory Classes, Skills, and Emblem Rings appeared first on Siliconera.


iDev Games Feed Saturday, April 8, 2023 9:10 AM
     Word spelling game where players tap on the letters in the correct order to spell words....