Ron Burke
Ron Burke is the Editor in Chief for Gaming Trend. Loves RPGs, action/adventure, and VR, but also dabbles in 3D printing, martial arts, and flight!
When I was younger, scraping by with my meager earnings from serving in the military, I would supplement my income by building PCs. In the halcyon early days of the battle between Intel and AMD, the two chip manufacturers would routinely chase one another with the latest features. By the
by Ron Burke
There are plenty of open world games on the market, and more on the horizon, but I can’t think of a single one that so completely captured my attention, being equal parts frustration and fun. Accurately representing the painful machinations of life in the 15th century, Kingdom Come: Deliverance
by Ron Burke
Virtual Reality is meant to transport you to a new world, letting you become a spellcaster (Our preview for The Wizards), a silver bug that bumps its ass on the walls to music (Our review for Thumper), a Ultramarine (Our preview for The Horus Heresy: Betrayal at Calth), another kind
by Ron Burke
Wait, what year is it? Street Fighter V launched on February 16th of 2016, but here we are in January of 2018 and it’s time to take a look at Street Fighter V once again. Now given the subtitle Street Fighter V Arcade Edition, could this version shore up
by Ron Burke
Jon Jones was one of the most powerful fighters ever to step into the Octagon, Ronda Rousey was the reigning undefeated champion, and the most dangerous fighters on the mat were coming out of the TUF house. That was in 2014, and EA had taken over the UFC fight game
by Ron Burke
It has been a whopping twelve years since the original release of Shadow of the Colossus in October of 2005 for the PlayStation 2. Re-released on PlayStation 3 in October of 2011, the game saw new life for a fresh generation of gamers. Now, the game has come to PlayStation
by Ron Burke
If you’ve been a devotee of Harmonix for a while, you know they seem to have one overriding goal — to make music luddites sound like Mozart. Frequency and Amplitude, Guitar Hero 1 and 2, Rock Band 1 through 4 and its offshoots, the Dance Central series, and their more
by Ron Burke
If you are a tabletop fan, you recognize The Horus Heresy: Betrayal at Calth as a rather beefy tactical game from Games Workshop in which the Emperor lays his plans for the enlightenment of the galaxy at the feet of his son, Horus. Horus, much to his father’s disappointment,
by Ron Burke