Friday news, part two:
Hitman 3's new name, new mode, and new graphics tech are here
https://www.pcgamer.com/hitman-3s-new-name-new-mode-and-new-graphics-tech-are-here/
The day is finally here, folks. Hitman 3 has evolved into a new form, becoming Hitman: World of Assassination, a newer and simpler version that casts off the original's baffling array of purchase options in favour of a single, easy-to-understand package that encompasses all three games, plus an optional deluxe pack that includes the DLC for 2 and 3.
Exclusive: The sickest pinball game of 2019 is getting a sequel
https://www.pcgamer.com/xenotilt-the-sickest-pinball-game-of-2019-is-getting-a-sequel/
Pinball contains multitudes. I mean, not just multiball—pinball has a rich history of games within games, like the mini pinball table below the playfield in The Munsters or the boxing minigame in Champion Pub. 2019's Demon's Tilt, a pinball game I loved, embraced the benefits of a virtual table by being multiple screens tall, throwing bullet hell attacks at your ball, and having more than one secret sub-table to discover (real-life bowling would be a lot cooler if there was a giant skull at the end of the lane).
The sequel goes full videogame: it adds guns.
>> There's a video of the game, in case you want to see it.
Meet Your Maker, one of the year's most promising shooters, is having an open beta in February
https://www.pcgamer.com/meet-your-maker-one-of-the-years-most-promising-shooters-is-having-an-open-beta-in-february/
Behaviour Interactive's Meet Your Maker, an asynchronous "first-person building-and-raiding game," earned a place on our list of 2023's most promising FPSes earlier this month, and pretty soon you'll be able to try it out yourself. The studio announced today that a week-long open beta will begin on Steam on February 6.
Bungie is finally giving players a way to earn classic shaders and armour sets
https://www.pcgamer.com/destiny-2-lightfall-legacy-focusing-shaders/
(...)
In a post on the game's upcoming economy changes, Bungie finally reveals the long-teased "legacy focusing" system, and how it will let players earn old weapons and armour sets that no longer drop from the game's core activities—spending engrams earned from ranking up with their respective vendors to unlock or earn new roles on equipment that's otherwise no longer available. It's also announced a new section of Ada-1's armour shop, which—as of Lightfall's release—will stock a rotating selection of old shaders, three per week for the cost of 10,000 glimmer.
Bungie's narrative team reveals why SIVA never came back in Destiny 2
https://www.pcgamer.com/bungies-narrative-team-reveals-why-siva-never-came-back-in-destiny-2/
(...) Across Destiny's almost nine-year history, there's an absurd number of ideas and concepts. There are mysterious planetary anomalies, wish-granting dragons, and even the Nine—eldritch consciousnesses formed from loops of dark matter created from the gravity of the planets of our solar system. It's a wild ride.
But no dormant plot thread is as oft-discussed among the Destiny community as SIVA—the self-assembling, self-replicating nanotechnology that formed the basis of Destiny 1's Rise of Iron expansion. The tech was designed to accelerate humanity's ascent, specifically intended for use in easily constructing new colonies off-planet. But, as tends to be the way, SIVA ended up as a weapon used against us by a sect of Fallen known as the Devil Splicers.
Hogwarts Legacy will have more than 100 sidequests and doesn't care if you cast evil spells
https://www.pcgamer.com/hogwarts-legacy-will-have-more-than-100-sidequests-and-doesnt-care-if-you-cast-evil-spells/
Hogwarts Legacy will have more than 100 sidequests, and it won't just give players something different to do when they need a break. Narrative director Moira Squier told our colleagues at GamesRadar that the way players take on those sideline activities can have an impact on the main campaign.
The Day Before developers now say the launch delay was planned before the Steam takedown
https://www.pcgamer.com/the-day-before-developers-now-say-the-launch-delay-was-planned-before-the-steam-takedown/
It's been a super-weird ride for The Day Before, the open world zombie survival game being developed by Propnight studio Fntastic. The hype was incredible—it was the second-most-wishlisted game on Steam, behind only Hogwarts Legacy, despite virtually nothing being known about it—but just days before Fntastic was due to finally show off the first raw gameplay in two years, The Day Before was completely removed from Steam.
In a statement released on January 25, Fntastic said the removal was the result of a trademark claim against the title, which it only found out about on January 19. Because of the dispute, the planned gameplay reveal was put on hold, and the release date was pushed back from March 1 to November 10.
In a new interview with IGN, however, Fntastic founders Eduard and Aisen Gotovtsev said the delay was actually planned before the trademark dispute came to light.
Valve's unusual corporate structure causes its problems, report suggests
https://www.pcgamer.com/valves-unusual-corporate-structure-causes-its-problems-report-suggests/
It's well-known that Valve doesn't work like other game studios. Valve's flat corporate structure means that, as its own New Employee Handbook reads, "we don’t have any management, and nobody 'reports to' anybody else. We do have a founder/president, but even he isn't your manager." The symbol of this freedom is the office's wheeled desks, which allow employees to form ad hoc teams by moving
together when someone—anyone—proposes a project that interests others, then wheeling away once they decide to move on.
It sounds like a wonderful place to work, free from hierarchy and bureaucracy. However, according to a new video by People Make Games (a channel dedicated to investigative game journalism created by Chris Bratt and Anni Sayers), Valve employees, both former and current, say it's resulted in a workplace two of them compared to The Lord of The Flies.
Russia says popular games have 'hidden inserts' targeting its youth, and it wants to whip up a ban list
https://www.pcgamer.com/russia-says-popular-games-have-hidden-inserts-targeting-its-youth-and-it-wants-to-whip-up-a-ban-list/
Russia's quest to remake its videogame industry continues. This time, reports Kommersant, the country's government has tasked the Prosecutor General's office and various ministries with protecting Russian kids from the "negative influence" of games. What kind of negative influence? Well, a commission under the council of legislators looking into the matter alleges that a bunch of unnamed popular videogames contain "hidden inserts" and "ways of spreading information that affect one's consciousness and subconscious".
>> They'll likely go for the games with LGBT content.
Darktide studio admits the state of the game means promised features are being 'pushed back'
https://www.pcgamer.com/darktide-studio-admits-the-state-of-the-game-means-promised-features-are-being-pushed-back/
Fatshark's Warhammer 40,000: Darktide launched in early access in November 2022 and, despite being a pretty good game as it stands, is far from complete. To the extent that a lot of players have lost patience pretty quickly, and the Steam reviews are now mostly negatives that all complain about the same thing: This game doesn't just feel like it's early access, but that it's unfinished. Needless to say, the presence of in-game microtransactions hasn't helped the mood.
The studio has now issued something of a holding statement alongside a laundry list of minor tweaks in a new patch, but I'm not sure how persuasive players will find it. This follows hot on the heels of an open letter from the CEO and co-founder of Fatshark (...)
Last year's most ridiculous FMV game is getting a VR version
https://www.pcgamer.com/last-years-most-ridiculous-fmv-game-is-getting-a-vr-version/
Not For Broadcast, the thoroughly ridiculous full-motion propaganda sim, is getting a VR version. Now, you'll have to use your fallible mortal hands to exercise strict control over Britain's media diet, making sure its ever-more calamitous government keeps looking slick and ship-shape even while everything collapses. Perish the thought.
And here are the GOG and Steam deals for the weekend:
+GOG
+Steam
- The first Weekend Deal is Football Manager 2023, that has a demo, 20% off until February 2nd: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1904540/Football_Manager_2023/
- Juno: New Origins gets a 35% discount until next Thursday: https://store.steampowered.com/app/870200/Juno_New_Origins/
- HITMAN 3/HITMAN World of Assassination, that also has a demo, is going to be 45% off until Thursday, 2nd: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1659040/HITMAN_3/
- Rain World will be 60% off until... yep, the 2nd of February once again: https://store.steampowered.com/app/312520/Rain_World/
- SCARLET NEXUS, that has a demo as well, will be free to try during the weekend and 75% off until Thursday: https://store.steampowered.com/app/775500/SCARLET_NEXUS/
- Watch Dogs®: Legion arrives at Steam with an 80% discount until Thursday, February, 2nd: https://store.steampowered.com/app/2239550/Watch_Dogs_Legion/
- And lastly we have PlayWay's Car Mechanic Simulator Franchise Sale, with up to 90% discounts until the 9th of February: https://store.steampowered.com/sale/CMSfranchisesale2023
And with that, we've reached the end. Until next time, I wish you a happy and gaming weekend.