UK government says Нет to British companies selling game controllers to Russia, to combat the use of drone attacks

It’s hardly news that game controllers are used in modern warfare, as the compact, multi-buttoned devices have been used by armed forces for remote applications for years. However, with the rise of the use of drone attacks in the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine, the UK government has decided to implement further export restrictions…

Read More

Baldur’s Gate 3’s new Giant Barbarian is beating out one of D&D 5e’s oldest powergamer builds, making Karlach the MVP of my second Honour Mode playthrough

With Patch 8 of Baldur’s Gate 3 landing earlier this month, I’ve saddled myself with the accursed duty of completing another Honour Mode playthrough. Given that Patch 8 gives me the constituent parts for one of D&D 5e’s oldest powergamer builds, the Sorcadin, I reckoned I’d give it a go. The Sorcadin, for the uninitiated,…

Read More

REPO will never be free-to-play ‘as we don’t want to add microtransactions’, say devs—hinting at earned cosmetics in the future

Semiwork has announced that REPO will never be free-to-play, a promise meant to avoid ever featuring microtransactions within the game. As it stands, everything you need to play, even including personalisable flourishes like customising the color of your robot, is standard-issue or unlockable with in-game currency. In a recent Q&A uploaded to YouTube, semiwork explained…

Read More

Larian honcho Swen ‘The Hammer’ Vincke takes a new victory lap on ‘high-profile people’ who say singleplayer is dead: ‘We’ve proven with BG3 that you can put in a pretty high budget and expect pretty high results’

I’m fairly certain I’ve been alive long enough to see singleplayer games definitely, 100%, for sure die at least three times, roughly on par with the number of times I’ve seen industry panjandrums declare PC gaming dead, too. These days, it’s because C-suites are convinced splashy live-service games stuffed to the gills with microtransactions are…

Read More

There’s a 25-year-old piece of PC hardware that’s still being used in even the most powerful gaming PCs sold today. Happy birthday to USB 2.0

Ah, birthdays. Love them or hate them, there’s no escaping the unwavering gaze of Father Time. Except in the world of computing, where most tech only sees a handful of birthdays before heading out to pasture. There are one or two exceptions to this, though, and this year sees the 25th birthday of USB 2.0—the…

Read More