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Shiness: The Lightning Kingdom is an action RPG being developed by French studio Enigami. We got our hands on it and find an abundance of Waki constipation and prejudice. What? Watch and find out how the first hour or so of this quirky new game unfolds.
by Josh DevlinI went into Miko Mole with a bit of optimism. “Hey, it’s a new game. That’s never a bad thing, right?” Big mistake. Maybe the graphics should have tipped me off from the start. They look like they could have been done in a mildly ambitious Nintendo 64
by Kyle MoviusThe title just about says it all. Editor Zach Faber and I lost a frustratingly continuous string of matches during Relic’s Dawn of War III closed beta. Zach is brand new to RTS games, but bravely accepted the challenge, learning quickly. Unfortunately, he got stuck with a terrible teammate—
by Mike PearceOn paper, Yooka-Laylee achieves everything it sets out to do. It’s fun, full of life, and a successful homage to the golden age of Nintendo 64-era 3D platformers. Essentially, it delivers the exact gameplay experience that tens of thousands of Kickstarter backers yearned for. But while Yooka-Laylee provides a
by Matt WelshFour years ago, TT Fusion gave us another bite at the LEGO apple with a massive open world unlike any they’d ever built before. As Editor David Roberts called it, a Grand Theft Auto-scale game, but suitable for the whole family. If you missed out on LEGO City Undercover
by Ron BurkeI’m an outspoken Warhammer 40,000 fanatic and the biggest Dawn of War series fan I know. I’m also a fiend for RTS games, and strangely, one of the few RTS enthusiasts here at Gaming Trend. However, one thing I’m not, and never have been, is a
by Mike PearcePoint-and-click adventure games are in a weird state, where every new game is supposed to be the one that brings the genre back from the dead. New games in the genre typically remove old mechanics like inventory puzzles and combining items in favor of just telling a story with some
by Christian DeCosterThe arcade shoot-em-up is a timeless genre that transcends generations of video games. Twitch-like reflexes and challenging enemy patterns are the name of the game with these games, and current generation consoles can beef up the graphics to create a cool-looking battlefield. Vertex Pop’s Graceful Explosion Machine aims to
by Elisha DeograciasShiness: The Lightning Kingdom is an action RPG being developed by French studio Enigami. We got our hands on it and find an abundance of Waki constipation and prejudice. What? Watch and find out how the first hour or so of this quirky new game unfolds.
by Josh DevlinTechland makes a beast of an effort to deliver a spectacular zombie game
Got places to go, gotta follow my rainbow!
Fans of The Dragon Prince Have Rare Opportunity to Gain Access, Credit, and Influence in the Production of the New Series at Select Pledge Levels
Last year at Gen Con, I got a brief look at Disco Heist Laundry and you can read that preview here. A year later and the loose screws are tighter and the music is pumping. Nothing about the core gameplay has changed; you still want to bring goons into the
The 40th anniversary of Mario goes hard
R0DE has been in the premium audio business since 1967, when Henry Freedman, a London-born sound engineer, and his Swedish-born wife, Astrid, formed the company. While we’ve seen generation after generation of audio technologies, ever cleaner and feature-rich, a brand new generation of creators is looking to bring studio-quality
Shiness: The Lightning Kingdom is an action RPG being developed by French studio Enigami. We got our hands on it and find an abundance of Waki constipation and prejudice. What? Watch and find out how the first hour or so of this quirky new game unfolds.
by Josh DevlinI went into Miko Mole with a bit of optimism. “Hey, it’s a new game. That’s never a bad thing, right?” Big mistake. Maybe the graphics should have tipped me off from the start. They look like they could have been done in a mildly ambitious Nintendo 64
by Kyle MoviusThe title just about says it all. Editor Zach Faber and I lost a frustratingly continuous string of matches during Relic’s Dawn of War III closed beta. Zach is brand new to RTS games, but bravely accepted the challenge, learning quickly. Unfortunately, he got stuck with a terrible teammate—
by Mike PearceOn paper, Yooka-Laylee achieves everything it sets out to do. It’s fun, full of life, and a successful homage to the golden age of Nintendo 64-era 3D platformers. Essentially, it delivers the exact gameplay experience that tens of thousands of Kickstarter backers yearned for. But while Yooka-Laylee provides a
by Matt WelshFour years ago, TT Fusion gave us another bite at the LEGO apple with a massive open world unlike any they’d ever built before. As Editor David Roberts called it, a Grand Theft Auto-scale game, but suitable for the whole family. If you missed out on LEGO City Undercover
by Ron BurkeI’m an outspoken Warhammer 40,000 fanatic and the biggest Dawn of War series fan I know. I’m also a fiend for RTS games, and strangely, one of the few RTS enthusiasts here at Gaming Trend. However, one thing I’m not, and never have been, is a
by Mike PearcePoint-and-click adventure games are in a weird state, where every new game is supposed to be the one that brings the genre back from the dead. New games in the genre typically remove old mechanics like inventory puzzles and combining items in favor of just telling a story with some
by Christian DeCosterThe arcade shoot-em-up is a timeless genre that transcends generations of video games. Twitch-like reflexes and challenging enemy patterns are the name of the game with these games, and current generation consoles can beef up the graphics to create a cool-looking battlefield. Vertex Pop’s Graceful Explosion Machine aims to
by Elisha Deogracias