Lian Li is no stranger to making some of the most covetable PC cases, but its new DK07 gaming desk PC case takes things to a new level. Able to house two whole gaming PCs, with a glass top to allow you to gaze down at your expensive hardware, it makes for a striking yet hopefully practical way to house your whole gaming setup. This isn't actually Lian Li's first stab at a gaming desk PC case, with its existing DK-05F & DK-04F offering a similar set of features. However, those original versions are now discontinued, and this new best PC case and best gaming desk contender comes in at a lower MSRP, making it a more attainable option. Read the rest of the story... RELATED LINKS: Lian Li's classy new wooden case is ideal for a budget mini PC build Fill your whole PC case with RGB lighting with this one simple upgrade Lian Li just revolutionized PC PSU design, and we're here for it View the full article
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Do you live your life a quarter star system at a time? Well, if you do, and you're into Mass Effect, here's some good news. It's been revealed that BioWare's sci-fi RPG series is getting its own TV show from Amazon, with development having already kicked off. Read more View the full article
Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6 developer Treyarch Studios has confirmed that Prop Hunt, a much-loved party mode, will be returning with the game's Season 1 Reloaded update. Call of Duty: ****** Ops 6's very first season is set to launch on November 14 with a plethora of new content to jump into, but fans looking to check out Prop Hunt will need to wait until the mid-season update, which usually occurs approximately one month after the season's release. View the full article
Could tower defence be the ultimate "it's Friday and I am here in body only" genre? I haven't really thought about it before, but Rift Riff's effusively laidback crowd control has me pondering those optimal moments in any tower defender when the incoming horde hits the flamer-MG triangle just right, and you can settle back comfortably into the role of clockwatcher. Rift Riff encourages this behaviour by being nice to look at. Created by a trio of developers including Hidden Folks designer Adriaan de Jongh, it's a world of spacey, sun-carved mountains, forests and monoliths. The towers resemble the sacred architecture of Monument Valley, and the colour scheme and general ambience remind me of Cocoon. There's a demo, if you fancy it. Read more View the full article
The popular city-building game Cities: Skylines 2 has recently been attacked by malicious malware corrupting the games Traffic mod, and publisher Paradox Interactive has shared a final update on the pressing issue. Mods continue to be an important part of the Cities: Skylines 2 experience while also being subject to malicious software. However, the team behind the game is driven to safeguard that corner of gameplay despite malware evolving at an alarming rate. View the full article
How do you play the Liberty Falls easter egg song? There's something incredibly satisfying about ******* bullets at the ****** or blowing things up when there's a heavy beat complimenting the sound of your ****. You may not know that Treyarch's zombie games feature musical easter eggs that trigger a secret metal track, picking up your spirits when you need them most as you ****** for your life in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. As ever, there are new secret tracks to unlock in all the BO6 Zombies maps, this time by locating abandoned bunny headphones. We've got separate instructions on how to trigger the Terminus easter egg song in ****** Ops 6. Read on to discover the Mr Peeks headphones locations in Liberty Falls. Read the rest of the story... RELATED LINKS: ****** Ops 6 just revealed its Season 1 content, and CoD fans are feasting ****** Ops 6 Zombies Terminus easter egg song Liberty Falls vault code - How to open the Liberty Falls vault in BO6 Zombies View the full article
Here's a great opportunity to spec up a new budget PC build, and still get great performance. This AMD Ryzen deal not only enables you to get a decent six-core gaming CPU for a discount price of just $224, but you also get a 1TB Kingston PCIe 4.0 SSD thrown into the mix, meaning you can upgrade your storage at the same time. As we found in our Ryzen 5 7600X review, this chip offers great performance, but at the time we criticized its overly expensive MSRP of $299. A price drop later, however, and this AMD chip landed a place on our guide to the best gaming CPU, and now it's even cheaper. At its current price, you save 25% on the MSRP, and that's before you even consider the free SSD in this Newegg deal. Read the rest of the story... RELATED LINKS: AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D overclocked to 6.9GHz already, hits 1,500fps in CS2 AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D gaming CPU spotted in benchmark ***** sporting 16 cores Best gaming CPU 2024 View the full article
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Between *****, Half-Life, Battlefield, and Counter-Strike, the FPS formula has been smoothed and perfected. Mechanically, the genre is straightforward. Aim your ****, ****** enemies, and don't get shot yourself. But it's the finer details that make one shooter different from the next. ***** Eternal, for example, has the ultra-fast movement and the meathook shotgun. Titanfall 2 has free-running and the set-piece mech sections. And in Metro, it's all about the equipment. Weapons fall to pieces. Kinetic flashlights have to be recharged. Your gas mask gets covered with water and mud. These may seem superficial, but in practice, they make Metro 2033, Last Light, and Metro Exodus some of the tensest FPS games of the last 20 years - and now you can get them all for $7. Read the rest of the story... RELATED LINKS: Forget Fallout, and get the best apocalypse FPS series for under $10 Watch the smoke pour out of this Metro Exodus gaming PC build Metro Exodus dev shares tease for mysterious sequel View the full article
It may not feel like it, but we’re closer to the start of Season 1 in ****** Ops 6 than we are to the game’s launch. As we’ve come to expect from each new season, this one is also full of new content that caters to all players. Read more View the full article
I’m partial to a jellybean now and then. My favorite flavor is juicy pear, but it’s so popular at my local candy shop that it almost always sells out. Sometimes, if I’m feeling daring, I scoop up some ****** jellybeans. But what herb gives ****** jellybeans their distinctive flavor? The NYT Mini Crossword is dying to know. “Herb that gives flavor to ****** jellybeans” Nov. 8 NYT Mini Crossword hints Six across. Screenshot by Dot Esports Hint 1: It starts with the letter “A” Hint 2: In Greek aperitif, Ouzo. Hint 3: Star _____. Hint 4: Similar to fennel, liquorice, and tarragon. Stop right here! I’m about to give away the answer. View the full article
It's safe to say that excitement for Monster Hunter Wilds has reached a fever pitch. Despite some pretty awful performance issues, the recent beta was played by 463,798 players at its peak, making it one of the most-played games of this year, having the 22nd-highest concurrent player count on Steam of all time in the process. View the full article
The arsenal available in Call of Duty: Warzone will soon pass a major milestone of 200 weapons to pick and choose from. Over the years, Call of Duty: Warzone has accumulated a massive armory due to its persistent nature. View the full article
Due to the abundance of feedback the development team received from its Steam Next Fest demo several weeks ago, they have decided to release this upcoming tactical CRPG in Early Access first at a heavily discounted price. View the full article
Various monsters could be returning to Monster Hunter Wilds according to a recent *****. As with every game in the franchise, Monster Hunter Wilds will feature the biggest and baddest monsters in the Monster Hunter universe. And while each entry includes a different subset of giants to slay, there are many species that fans have known to love and hate. View the full article
Dragon Age: The Veilguard got a little bit of negative press when it was first announced thanks to its new art direction. Whereas the previous games have all been fairly dark and gritty - with each entry getting progressively less gritty - The Veilguard feels more akin to a Disney movie, with every character having smooth-as-butter skin and cartoonish faces. Naturally, those who were expecting something like the original games were a little disappointed and began stating their opinion loudly online. View the full article
Echos of the past has a few puzzles that can stump players in Dragon Age: The Veilguard. While many puzzles are short and easy, this puzzle can be complicated because of the hidden items. The crystals needed to open the doors are hidden in the area, making it a pain to try and open. You can find them quickly and easily once you know where they are. View the full article
Your Party composition in Metal Slug Tactics is incredibly important in getting through missions. Unlike most games, you can't just run the same party through. Each party member has their own strengths and weaknesses, so some are more suited to certain playstyles than others. You want to ensure that you organize each party based on the mission you handle because not every mission is about taking out all the enemies; some are escorts, and others are about survival. View the full article
Over the three years since the release of co-op survival game Icarus, developer RocketWerkz has continually updated it. And by continually, I mean on a weekly basis: the newest update is the 153rd since December of 2021. That's a lotta patches!.. Read more.View the full article
This review covers the single-player campaign of Empire of the Ants. For the multiplayer modes (which are much better!), read the multiplayer review. [/url] It may be nice to look at, but Empire of the Ants’s single-player campaign is outright terrible and dull. It’s around 12 hours worth of missions that pivot between being pointlessly easy – due to a passive ****** AI that doesn’t even know how to use powers to buff its troops, which is crucial to success – to obnoxiously difficult on a dime, and it doesn’t let you save mid-mission. Most infuriatingly, there’s one where nine waves of enemies spawn and ******* from all directions, and you instantly fail if you lose control of a single one of the seven nests you have to defend – so many that it’s impossible to upgrade them all with effective defenses. That last wave is a doozy, too, which meant I had to replay it from the start multiple times just to overcome the final challenging moments where they come in large enough numbers to be a threat. Mixed in with those combat missions are absurdly tedious ones where you only control your single ant as you hunt for tiny bugs – which are usually very effectively camouflaged thanks to the realistic art style – spread across a big map. You’re guided only by a non-directional proximity sensor, so you have to run in circles to triangulate each bug. There are also “stealth” missions that don’t actually care if you’re detected as you scan ****** legions (dying has basically no consequences either), and these similarly amount to running around a map looking for things. Sometimes you’re told to catch butterflies or fireflies that fly away when you get close – the only way I found to do it was to wait for them to repeat their scripted movement pattern and land right in front of me, and that is exactly as much fun as it sounds. Considering you can climb any object and walk on the ceiling, it’s surprising that only a couple of the missions make any use of this ability at all, and those that do are mostly the boring, non-combat variety. (There was only one mission where my units fought upside-down, which was very funny because the corpses of ***** ants rained down.) Similarly, the only thing Empire of the Ants does with its impressive sense of scale is give you a few objects – like a glass bottle or a toy giraffe – to run around, picking up little glowy things as you explore them. I’ll grant you that this does remind me of how I’ve seen real ants figure out if an object is something they want to eat, but I don’t think ants are doing this for fun, and I am not having much fun doing it either. I don’t think ants are doing this for fun, and I am not having much fun doing it either. You aren’t forced to do all of these missions to complete the campaign – you select missions by speaking to quest-giving ants in a sequence of hub areas that serve as a sort of menu – but I don’t recommend any of them, or the campaign in general. The nicest thing I can say about it is that it’s not all that buggy (other than… you know). The other thing you do in these hubs is talk to ants. I haven’t read the books Empire of the Ants is based on, but if the Wikipedia synopsis is anything to go by this game’s story isn’t even close to following them because there are no human characters or secret ant weapons to make it remotely interesting. I’m going to assume that its numerous conversations about how your nest is threatened by termites and other visually identical ant species or floods don’t do the novels justice. Even the ant civil war that breaks out is over almost as abruptly as it begins, ensuring there’s no substance there either. View the full article
This review covers the multiplayer mode of Empire of the Ants. For the campaign, read the single-player campaign review. In short: It's very bad! [/url] Empire of the Ants is striking to look at. For a moment, you might even believe it’s real macro-lens footage of ants in a nature documentary, and the level of detail on the textures of the forest floor is extremely impressive. It’s not really what it appears to be, though: this may be a real-time strategy game with swarms of insects on screen at once, but you’re never actually commanding more than seven units – and given the somewhat clumsy way its controls make you cycle through them to give orders, that’s a mercy. You may be capturing and building up nests, but there’s literally nothing beneath the surface. So while it appears vast, Empire of the Ants is actually a pretty small-scale strategy game in most other ways, and the lack of unit variety and multiplayer modes make it feel smaller still. Multiplayer matches have a fair amount of nuance in how you use your small number of units and build out your nests to tech up, and there’s ample room for skilled players to turn a situation to their advantage with smart use of powers to boost their bugs’ damage output and debuff the ******. It’s not unlike a slimmed-down version of Company of Heroes in the way you capture territory and generate the two resources – food and wood – and that’s a good starting point. Ant units get locked into melee combat and can’t disengage until one or the other loses, so you can learn to hold off a dangerous Warrior unit until reinforcements arrive or prevent a retreat while you finish off an ******. And while you can quickly rebuild a lost unit if you have the food available, each ant legion has a home nest they’ll respawn from, which can mean there’s a long hike back to the front lines. Each nest you capture has a set number of upgrade slots that can be filled by a building or spent to support a unit from that nest, so turtling up isn’t really an option – you won’t even have enough slots to tech up to tier 3, which means you’ll inevitably be overrun by ants with better stats. All the building is done from a radial menu that pops up when you interact with a nest and, cleverly, you use your ant as a cursor to select things. Crucially, taking out an ******’s nest disables all the upgrades that were based there, up to and including turning off their minimap. (Fog of war is a thing on the minimap, but because you’re viewing the world in third person instead of a traditional RTS overhead view, it’s handy that you can spot a moving legion of ants from a long distance even if their icon hasn’t shown up on the map.) There’s fundamentally only one faction to work with. However, Empire of the Ants feels thin relative to most real-time strategy games, in large part because there’s fundamentally only one faction to work with. Everyone always has the same set of workers, big-headed warriors, and “gunner” ants as their primary units, and they all counter each other in a straightforward rock-paper-scissors balance. (You can’t even play as the visually different termites you ****** against in the campaign.) The only variety comes from the ability to customize your loadout by choosing four of eight available powers for your main ant to cast, swapping out your support unit between healing aphids, armoring snails, or troop-carrying beetles, as well as one of three “super predator” unit types. Those certainly enable different strategies, but I’m not a fan of the way locking those choices in before a match begins limits your ability to pivot to a different approach if your opponent throws you a curveball. I’d rather be able to switch from the flying wasps to the acid-resistant beetles as my choice of predator if my ****** goes heavy on gunner units, for instance, but that’s not an option. Another major weakness of multiplayer is that there are only two modes: 1v1 or 1v1v1. That means there’s no option to play cooperatively against the AI (which is very weak even on the highest difficulties and doesn’t seem to know how to use powers, which are crucial) with a friend. It does have 21 maps, at least, and there’s a fair amount of diversity there in terms of how they’re ***** out and the creeps that guard their resource caches, like huge spiders and praying mantises that are cool to watch your ants take down. That’s good, because it soon becomes clear that there’s basically no variety to the bugs’ animations. At first, skittering around at high speeds can be entertaining, even when the controls freak out because you accidentally climb a small branch and start spinning around it like an actual confused ant. Watching a swarm flow over terrain is convincing and, since we’re up so close, dramatic. Warriors will pick up enemies in their big jaws and shake them around, and ***** bodies are flung high in the air like mortarboards at a high school graduation ceremony (which I don’t think ants actually do?) and then roll down hills. But when you’ve seen one ant-vs-ant ******, you’ve seen them all. Beetles in particular get repetitive to watch very quickly because of their lunging attacks. Even so, there are good reasons to play the Empire of the Ants’s multiplayer, which cannot be said for the single-player campaign. View the full article
The REV-8 has been a transformational addition to Starfield but one creative player managed to fly the vehicle even higher with a fantastic mod. Gone are the days of mindless trudging around planets in the hope of coming across something interesting as Starfield players can now simply climb into the driver's seat of a speedy buggy. Taking that idea one step further, modders quickly figured out how to take the bones of the REV-8 and turn it into something more visually unique without losing its usefulness. View the full article
John DiMaggio and Carlos Ferro will reprise their roles as Marcus Fenix and Dom Santiago in Gears of War: E-Day. Currently in development by The Coalition, Gears of War: E-Day is the latest entry in Microsofts long-running third-person shooter franchise. View the full article
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