#uncharted: the lost legacy roleplay
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Hello! (26m) I've been hooked on the new Tomb Raider games/animated series and Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, so I've been aching to do a roleplay set in one of those settings, though please be 18+! 🌴🦖
I have an OC I've been writing as for a few years now, and I'd love to write him against Lara Croft from Tomb Raider or Chloe Frazer from the Uncharted series, specifically Uncharted: The Lost Legacy. Lots of chances for some explorers/treasure hunters to get into all sorts of trouble in some strange place! I do write more mature themes (NSFW included) so if you're down to ship and if our characters get along, maybe we can work something out!
My timezone is American CST and I typically work later in the evenings, so I'm mostly active on Discord so we can write/chat about our characters and the story/share memes whenever! If you're interested, feel free to leave a like on my ad and I will reach out to you through Tumblr's messaging system or by an ask, so make sure you check your DMs/inbox!
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#eighteen and over#cst#tomb raider#tomb raider roleplay#tomb raider rp#uncharted: the lost legacy#uncharted: the lost legacy roleplay#uncharted: the lost legacy rp#oc#oc roleplay#oc rp
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my motivation returned, somewhat so I'm going to try this one more time! Click here if you would like to join an uncharted rp server on discord! Oc friendly!
#uncharted#uncharted the lost legacy#uncharted 4: a thief's end#Uncharted rp#tomb raider rp#Discord rp#uncharted roleplay
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“I quite miss enjoying the adventures, the travels, the annoying sound you make when I say something wrong, your hand stealing my book, your bright eyes glaring to mines. Yeah...I quite miss you, Chloe..”
#roleplay#otp prompts#chloefrazer#nathan drake#uncharted#uncharted rp#uncharted the lost legacy#victor sullivan#elena fisher#sam drake#literate rp#any rp#rp#mature rp#new rp
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New Muse;; Sam Drake
Samuel Drake from the Uncharted games. I’ve been wanting to rp him for a while and I now have someone who will indulge my musings (thank you @apotheosistm).
muse;; left with this strange feeling of emptiness (samuel drake)
v;; the hand dealt (main; samuel drake)
#muse;; left with this strange feeling of emptiness (samuel drake)#v;; the hand dealt (main; samuel drake)#uncharted 4#uncharted lost legacy#uncharted roleplay
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We are a brand new globe-trotting 18+ adventure roleplay based on all your favorite fandoms such as: Uncharted, Indiana Jones, Tomb Raider, and The Mummy. Original characters are encouraged, and so are the canon characters of your favorite franchise.
Plot | Rules | Member Groups | Face Claim | Who's Who | Canon Claim | Want Ads | FAQ
#uncharted#indiana jones#tomb raider#the mummy#roleplay#jcink roleplay#nathan drake#lara croft#rick o'connell#drake's fortune#among thieves#drake's deception#a thief's end#the lost legacy#writers#writers on tumblr#fandom rp#rp#wanted ad#character request#jcink premium#site advertisement
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Under the cut you will find 125+ Icons of Chloe Frazer from Uncharted : The Lost Legacy. Feel free to use for your roleplaying needs! :)
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Greedfall and other games coming to Xbox One this week
Greedfall and other games coming to Xbox One this week. Path of Exile: Blight (September 09, 2019) Stop the spread of the deadly Blight by building towers to defend yourself against monsters. This expansion includes the Blight challenge league, three revamped balance archetypes with new skills and support gems, plenty of new items, two old leagues being integrated into the core game, and a focus on giving you more freedom to choose which aspects of Path of Exile's content you play and when. GRID (September 10, 2019) Offering unrivalled moment-to-moment racing, GRID returns with an all-new experience where every race is the chance to choose your own path, create your own story, and conquer the world of motorsport. Fight in thrilling wheel-to-wheel battles with the most iconic and desirable race cars, from GT through Touring and Muscle to Stock and Super Modifieds – and in some of the world’s most iconic locations. eFootball PES 2020 (September 10, 2019) Experience the most realistic and authentic soccer game with PES 2020, featuring Juventus exclusively licensed, alongside partnerships with FC Barcelona, FC Bayern München, and Manchester United! New features: GAMEPLAY: New dynamic dribbling skills, new first touch techniques, and finely-tuned ball physics, all developed in close consultation with renowned midfielder Andrés Iniesta.MATCHDAY: Pick a side and join forces with newcomers and veterans alike in a grand struggle for dominance in this new online competitive mode.MASTER LEAGUE: A completely revamped ML experience awaits — featuring a new interactive dialogue system, an overhauled menu design, and a more realistic transfer market realized through improved data integration. NHL 20 Ultimate Edition (September 10, 2019) EA SPORTS™ NHL® 20 introduces cutting-edge gameplay innovation to showcase your skills, more customization to unlock your style, and new modes to compete with friends. RPM Tech-powered gameplay introduces Signature Shots that replicate your favorite NHL players’ real-world shot styles. Over 45 new shot animations make every attack a threat, and new passing and puck pick-ups create faster, fluid gameplay executed at full speed. A revamped broadcast package delivers all-new visuals and commentary. Combined with over 1,100 new customization items for your club and character, your biggest goals look incredible during the action and in the highlight reel. Finally, NHL 20 adds three new game modes. HUT Squad Battles features weekly teams, built by athletes and artists, to challenge for unique rewards. The fan-favorite ONES can now be played with friends on the couch, and the all-new Eliminator mode in World of CHEL introduces winner-take-all competition where you and your friends compete to be the best in the barn.
GreedFall (September 10, 2019)
Explore uncharted new lands as you set foot on a remote island seeping with magic, and filled with riches, lost secrets, and fantastic creatures. Forge this new world’s destiny, as you befriend or betray companions and entire factions. With diplomacy, deception and force, become part of a living, evolving world - influence its course and shape your story. Engage in a core roleplaying experience – achieve quests and complete objectives in a multitude of different ways – through combat, diplomacy, deception, or stealth.Complete freedom in character progression – play as a male or female, customize your appearance, and freely choose your abilities, spells and skills.Delve into a mysterious world of magic – begin a grand journey and uncover ancient secrets protected by supernatural beings, manifestations of the island’s earthly magic. NASCAR Heat 4 (September 10, 2019) NASCAR Heat 4, the official video game of NASCAR, looks, sounds, and plays better than ever! New Features: Track Maps, Unlockable Paint Schemes, Dynamic User Interface, More Driving Control Options, Deeper Career Mode, Sonoma Raceway & Charlotte Roval Track UpdatesNew Graphics & Sound - Complete overhaul of all graphics and audio packagesDraft Like a Pro - Team up and draft with other drivers with the drafting featuresSmarter, Competitive AI - The AI now runs multiple racing lines and utilizes new controls to adjust its skill range, stability and spreadCompete for a Real NASCAR Esports Team - NASCAR Heat 4 is the only way to qualify for the eNASCAR Heat Pro League where you can race for a real NASCAR team. (Note: the eNASCAR Heat Pro League is currently available to USA players only) Gears 5 (September 10, 2019) From one of gaming’s most acclaimed sagas, Gears is back and bigger than ever, with five thrilling modes and the deepest campaign yet. With all-out war descending, Kait Diaz breaks away to uncover her connection to the enemy and discovers the true danger to Sera – herself. In addition to the epic campaign (with 3 player co-op), experience the all-new Escape multiplayer mode, compete online in Versus, team up with friends in Horde, and create custom maps with the new Map Builder. Distraint (September 11, 2019) DISTRAINT: Deluxe Edition is a 2D psychological horror adventure game that tells the story of Price, a young man who seizes an old woman’s apartment. After seizing her home, his humanity is now gone. So begins his tale of regrets… Creep your way through different locations, learning the backstory of Price and his motivations that led him down this dark path. Progress through the somber story by solving light puzzles across a variety of different scenarios and settings! Features: Side scrolling 2D art with dynamic hand drawn graphicsAtmospheric music and sound designMinimalist interface so your focus never wavers from the experienceDelve into a unique story full of intriguing twists Super Dodgeball Beats (September 12, 2019) Take part in insanely cool dodgeball games played to the rhythm of 18 original music tracks. Conquer your rivals in style with perfect rhythm and sweet moves. There’s nothing else like it! MULTIPLAYER: Play against a friend via couch co-op and show off your amazing skills. Choose from 4 different teams, 8 gorgeous hand-drawn levels, and select any music track you want! Perfectly time your supercharged moves to finish off your opponents! CHAMPIONSHIP MODE: Be the galaxy’s best dodgeball team in this intense single-player mode! Your squad of 4 dodgeball students must rise through the ranks and face the weirdest foes, from the fearsome Vampire dodgeball masters to the mysterious thunder-infused ancients. Make it far enough and you’ll face even weirder and more powerful dodgeball bosses! INSANE POWERUPS: Turn the tide of battle by utilising a plethora of powerups including grenades, doughnuts, stone golems and more. Colina: Legacy (September 13, 2019) Alex wakes up in his grandmother's home alone and unsure of where everyone has gone. As he begins to escape from the house, the feeling of something watching him lingers on his mind. Facing the unknown, Alex must make it through the night, and the house, before he loses more than just his mind in this indie horror game. Ellen – The Game (September 13, 2019) Help young investigator James uncover the dark truth behind the murder of the Smiths' and their missing daughter Ellen in this thrilling 2D pixel horror game. If you don’t believe in paranormal events, meet the people from White Hill. It’s been years since all but the daughter in the Smiths’ family were found brutally murdered. The people of the town are getting uneasy as more and more witnesses have spoken about seeing the silhouette of a little girl standing in the house. Rumors spread that the silhouette has to be Ellen, the daughter of the Smith’s family, whose body was never found during the investigation of the murders. 1 year later, James, a bright and eager investigator, has taken matters into his own hands to finally reveal the truth of what happened that horrible night. Features: Play as James, an intelligent detective who is trying to get to the bottom of the paranormal events happening in the Smiths' Residence at White Hill.Dive into an emotional and thrilling experience while solving puzzles and persisting through nerve-racking scenarios.Listen to breath-taking soundtracks as you’re traversing through the unnerving residence of the Smiths' in a beautiful pixel art style.Enjoy the atmospheric storytelling as you unfold the mystery by completing all chapters. Light Fairytale – Episode 1 (September 13, 2019) - Introduction: Light Fairytale is a turn-based Japanese-style RPG in full 3D, set in a dying underground world ruled by a fierce and powerful empire. The goal of this project is to bring back the immersion and emotion of 90's era JRPGs on current hardware, with the expected evolution in both design and technique. - Story: A long time ago, the world was prosperous. Technology and sciences were quite advanced, and people lived in great pleasure and casual excess. However, this proved their undoing when the world as they knew it, seemingly in an instant, was destroyed forever. Desperate and forlorn, the survivors of civilization resorted to fleeing to the only place on the planet where it was still possible to live - deeply underground. And so there they stayed, and survived. Thousands of years later, the history of the surface has been forgotten, left to dust, and the wealth of the past lost to time. Even the very word "sky" has lost all meaning... And then, a young boy named Haru wakes one day, fleeting dreams of vast green plains and a clear blue void locked in his memory; deep rooted, unshakeable... and driving him to know just what he saw. Now, he must embark on a great adventure in order to discover the mysteries of the lost world, confronting the rulers of this dystopian society and beyond with the aid of a mysterious, silver haired girl... Light Fairytale will span over multiple episodes. A long journey awaits! - Characters: Haru: A bit lazy and a lot naive, Haru nonetheless is a kind soul and knows how to handle himself if push comes to shove. His noble heart can move people to do things they'd never dreamed themselves capable. Kuroko: She might be short and cute (sometimes), but don't let that fool you: Kuroko is exceedingly capable in battle and always willing to step up. She's also fond of technology - maaaybe a bit too much so. - About neko.works neko.works is a one person indie game studio from France making modern renditions of classic concepts. Features: Classic turn-based battles that happen directly in the field.Modern real-time 3D graphics.Cute chibi characters.Two playable stories with many alternate events and a few exclusives. Read the full article
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Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
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Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
0 notes
Text
Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
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Charlie when he sees Chloe's ass.
#chloefrazer#literate rp#nathan drake#new rp#rp#uncharted#uncharted the lost legacy#elena fisher#any rp#sam drake#victor sullivan#charlie cutter#chloe frazer#nadine ross#oc rp#mature rp#open rp#literate roleplay#meme
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Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
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Text
Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
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Text
Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
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Under the cut you will find 60+ Icons of Sam Drake from Uncharted : The Lost Legacy. Feel free to use for your roleplaying needs! :)
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Here’s Everything Sony Just Announced at the PlayStation E3 Show
After Microsoft’s Sunday afternoon salvo for its 4K-angled Xbox One X games console (and rejoinder to rival Sony’s boutique PlayStation 4 Pro), it was Sony’s turn to argue the case for its PlayStation platform suite. The messaging this year, after last year’s barrage of new hardware: games, games and more games.
Sony Interactive Entertainment boss Shawn Layden took the stage to fete the company’s software lineup. “We have an even more diverse range of blockbuster games coming soon,” he said. “PlayStation is home to all the biggest and best franchises in the world.” And then he vanished, making way for an hour of riveting game trailers intended to express the company’s confidence in what it views as its brand’s broad and idiosyncratic mix of gaming experiences.
Another glimpse of Uncharted: The Lost Legacy
The showcase soft-opened with a quartet of musicians (including a sitar player) in a contemplative, tuneful windup to a new teaser for Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Naughty Dog’s standalone followup to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End that’s due for PlayStation 4 on Aug. 22. Though nowhere as capacious as Nathan Drake’s final adventure, The Lost Legacy — which transpires in India and stars two female leads — looked lush and incredible.
An expansion for Horizon: Zero Dawn
It’s called The Frozen Wilds, and appears just as it sounds: a bosky, spacious snowscape through and through. The trailer promises lots more rumbling with mechanical dinos, as well as the return of Aloy, apparently sojourning here to explore a Devil’s Tower-ish mountain and “face the beast that guards it.” Look for it later this year.
Seven minutes of Days Gone
The company’s mammoth open world zombie game appears to be coming along nicely, and the showcase trailer let viewers feast on seven minutes of anarchic undead mayhem. A zombie dog chases the protagonist fleeing on a motorcycle, eventually finding his way to a hostile camp of other human survivors he surveils before sabotaging by, among other things, calling in a horde of ravenous zombies. There’s still no release date for this one, though.
A Monster Hunter game for PlayStation 4
Capcom’s maiden monster-stalking roleplaying game for the PlayStation 4, dubbed Monster Hunter World, looked just as you’d expect a high-definition Monster Hunter to. A quintessential fantasy dude sporting an enormous sword strapped to his back strode through a jurassic forest, hiding from reptilian creatures and trailing something vaguely T-Rex-ian. Then he pounced, and an epic 30-second takedown ensued. This one’s coming in early 2018.
A Shadow of the Colossus remake
Not a remaster, not a sequel, but a full-on remake of Fumito Ueda’s masterwork for the PlayStation 2 (and later remastered for the PlayStation 3). It looks as stunning as you’d expect a ground-up remake for the PlayStation 4 to, and it’s coming in 2018.
Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite has a release date
And a second story trailer for this mashup brawler starring Capcom and Marvel’s arsenal of game icons, superheroes and villains. You can play the full game on September 19, or download the “story demo” today.
Call of Duty: WWII and Destiny 2
We’ve played so many Call of Duty first-person shooters that it’s sometimes hard to tell them apart. This year’s return to World War II courtesy Sledgehammer makes that easier, trading the muzzled pops and sizzle of futuristic weaponry for the metallic clatter and thunk of wood stock, bolt-action rifles. It’s available Nov. 3.
Sony also gave us further look at Destiny 2 with a story trailer followed by a sizzle reel of exclusive features coming to the PlayStation 4. Bungie’s online shooter is also bumping up by a few days, arriving on Sept. 6. (It had been Sept. 8.)
New experiences for PlayStation VR
PlayStation VR got its due with a handful of new experiences in the offing. You’d think with its gazillion versions (including one due shortly for the Nintendo Switch) that it’s time for Skyrim to retire, but its 2011 visuals make perfect sense for PSVR, with screen technology that benefits little from the sort of crisp graphics the newer 4K consoles specialize in.
Sony also showed off a new VR sci-fi game by Playful called Star Child, a psychological horror experience by Supermassive called The Inpatient, and a goofy Final Fantasy XV-inspired fishing game titled Monsters of the Deep. But of all these, Polyarc’s Moss — a game about a mouse exploring Hayao Miyazaki-like scenery — seemed the most promising. Look for the latter this holiday.
Mega-monsters lurk in God of War 4
Director Cory Balrog’s cranky-dad-schools-neophyte-son (while grappling with his own sordid past) looks both lovely and harrowing, somewhere between a bona fide Shakespearean tragedy and a Ray Harryhausen monster movie. It’s not technically an open world, but its crazy vistas sure make it look like one. It’s coming in early 2018.
Detroit: Become Human wants a revolution
It’s hard to discern where Detroit: Become Human‘s gameplay diverges from its cinematic sequences, but then that’s a David Cage game for you. The showcase trailer urges players to “Create [their] own story” in Cage’s tale of artificially intelligent humanoids rebelling against their human overlords. You can lead an android revolution, opting for violence or pacifism in a game where “your actions impact the world.” (No updates on a release timeframe for this one.)
Our first look at Spider-Man
Rocksteady’s Batman Arkham games deserve their plaudits as superhero-gaming’s finest, but there were moments when Treyarch’s Spider-Man games came close. Insomniac’s total series rethink looks more than ready to vie for the title after a stunning gameplay trailer that rounded out the showcase.
The trailer revealed a very different sort of Spider-Man whose maneuvers were lightning fast yet somehow easy to follow. It’s hard to say how much of that was the trailer’s editing or the game design itself, but if the game plays like the trailer, Insomniac may be playing with the continuity of motion, slowing it down then speeding it up in ways that map wonderfully to comprehensibility. Look for this one in 2018.
Short, sweet, confident but indie-less
Yes, Microsoft’s Xbox One X is the most powerful console on the planet. And yes, Microsoft’s E3 software showcase was itself formidable. That Sony was content to spend less than an hour rolling through a montage of anticipated games we’ve mostly already seen speaks to its self-assurance about the immediate prospects of its platform. It has over 60 million PlayStation 4s in the wild not four years from launch, after all, a life-to-date record for the brand. The only downer in all of this, and to be fair Microsoft’s showcase was only marginally better in this regard, was the absence of smaller studio games.
from DIYS http://ift.tt/2rV40XX
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