Author: dpugh007

  • The Witness' Developer Says Speedrun Still Took Him Over Six Hours

    The Witness' Developer Says Speedrun Still Took Him Over Six Hours

    Even knowing all of the ins and outs of the game’s puzzles, it still took developer Jonathan Blow over six hours to make it through a speedrun of his next work-in-progress game, The Witness

    Though he said he forgot a part of the game after the fact, Blow played through The Witness as fast as he could yesterday, and managed to finish it in a little over six hours and 20 minutes. But that doesn’t mean Blow’s fastest time offers any indication of how long the average player will be able to make it through on their first playthrough; Blow also shared on Twitter that The Witness is somewhere in the range of “10x as big as Briad.” However, that comes with the disclaimer, “The time may change as the game continues to be worked on!”

    Last month, Blow revealed that The Witness’ 677 puzzled are locked in. “This means that all puzzles that will be in the game when it ships are in the game now,” Blow said in a developer diary entry.

    Blow also recently told Engadget that he’s put all the proceeds from Braid into funding the development of The Witness, and that he’s had to borrow money to finish the project.

    [Editor’s Note: Due to some confusion with this article’s previous headline, which was “It Will Take You at Least Six Hours to Finish The Witness,” the headline and some introductory text have been updated to offer greater clarity. We apologize for any confusion the previous story’s wording may have caused.]

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  • Watch 24 Minutes of Xenoblade Chronicles X Open World Gameplay

    Nintendo has released a new, 24-minute video showing off open-world gameplay footage of the upcoming Wii U exclusive Xenoblade Chronicles X.

    Unfortunately, the video is only available in Japanese at the moment, but you can still gather a lot about the game by just watching gameplay. You’ll get to see a little bit of group combat, exploring a few of the game’s huge open areas, and some of its giant robots flying around.

    Xenoblade Chronicles X will launch in Japan on April 29, and in North America and Europe later this year.

    In other Xenoblade Chronicles news, Nintendo recently announced that Xenoblade Chronicles 3D, the upcoming port of Monolith Soft’s Wii game, will launch exclusively for the New Nintendo 3DS on April 10.

    The reason Xenoblade Chronicles 3D is exclusive to the New 3DS is because the system packs a speedier CPU that is necessary for running the game. It’s the only game to be announced so far that requires the new system, which also plays all regular 3DS games.

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  • Battlefield Hardline Beta Hits 5 Million Players, More Than Destiny Beta

    Battlefield Hardline Beta Hits 5 Million Players, More Than Destiny Beta

    The Battlefield Hardline beta is proving to be incredibly popular as it passed the 5 million player mark.

    “Wow, we’ve passed 5 MILLION players in the #BFHardline beta!” General Manager of developer Visceral Games and Executive Producer of Battlefield Hardline Steve Papoutsis said on Twitter. “So proud of our team. Glad you’re having fun and keep that feedback coming.”

    To put things into perspective, Destiny‘s beta, which was the biggest for a new IP on consoles, had 4.6 million players. However, Battlefield Hardline’s beta has the advantage of both being on the PC, and coming from a well established franchise.

    The beta started on Tuesday, February 3 across North America, Europe, and all other major territories that the game will ship on, and ends today. It was available on PC (Origin), PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360. The one exception is Japan, where the beta was not available on Xbox platforms.

    The Battlefield Hardline release date is March 17 in the US and March 20 in the UK on Origin for PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3, Xbox One, and Xbox 360.

    For more on the game, check out GameSpot’s previous coverage of Battlefield Hardline.

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  • Evolve Impressions: ‘Just One More Round’

    Evolve Impressions: ‘Just One More Round’

    Evolve Impressions: ‘Just One More Round’

    Evolve can be simplified in many ways, and you’ve probably heard them all before. It’s a first-person shooter. It’s like Left 4 Dead, four players banding together, but you’re up against a Tank—played by a fifth player—each round. It’s one big boss battle, over and over. But the details that go into the new game, which comes out on Tuesday, a year since we first saw it , actually make it a lot more complex than that.

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  • The Art Of Jupiter Ascending

    The Art Of Jupiter Ascending

    The Art Of Jupiter Ascending

    The general consensus on Jupiter Ascending seems to be this: terrible movie, but it’s very pretty to look at. Which is good for us, because this is a gallery of concept art for the movie.

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  • Guy Swatted In Front Of 60,000 Viewers While Playing Runescape

    Guy Swatted In Front Of 60,000 Viewers While Playing Runescape

    Guy Swatted In Front Of 60,000 Viewers While Playing Runescape

    Joshua Peters, a US Air Force vet who hangs out on Twitch playing video games, was the victim of a swatting hoax last week, during which his home was stormed and the police reportedly pointed guns at his brothers.

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  • So Long, RadioShack, And Thanks For All The Sweet/Shitty Box Art

    So Long, RadioShack, And Thanks For All The Sweet/Shitty Box Art

    So Long, RadioShack, And Thanks For All The Sweet/Shitty Box Art

    RadioShack is gone , but it is not forgotten. Amidst all the weekend obituaries for a company that had already been dead for years, though, people seem to have forgotten one thing: the company’s legacy of making its own supremely dorky box art.

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  • Transformers Commercials So Old They Weren't Even Called Transformers

    Transformers Commercials So Old They Weren't Even Called Transformers

    Transformers Commercials So Old They Weren't Even Called Transformers

    Hardcore fans already know this, but Transformers weren’t always Transformers.

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  • ‘Straight Outta Compton’ Red-Band Trailer: “It’s Non-Violent Protest”

    straight outta compton trailer

    This first Straight Outta Compton trailer, which dramatizes the rise of the rap group N.W.A, comes complete with a long intro featuring founding members Ice Cube and Dr. Dre.

    In the film, Cube’s son O’Shea Jackson Jr. plays his father, while Corey Hawkins and Jason Mitchell are Dr. Dre, and Eazy-E respectively. The film follows the late-’80s rise of the group, set against the conservative climate that was freaked out by the vivid portrayal of urban life, and goes at least up to the 1992 riots that were sparked by the beating of Rodney King. This Straight Outta Compton trailer is a full-on red-band edit, with some nudity and the hint of violence, but all the language necessary to represent N.W.A in their prime. It’s a great trailer, watch below. 

    F. Gary Gray directs, and Paul Giamatti plays manager Jerry Heller, who helped bring N.W.A to the masses before the heavy attention he gave to Eazy-E soured his relationship with the group.

    (It’s my understanding that the intro to this trailer is what was being filmed when Suge Knight got into an argument with a couple guys, leading to the hit and run incident that killed one man and injured another, and for which he’s now facing life in prison. )

    Straight Outta Compton opens on August 14, 2015. Trailer via Universal.

    In the mid-1980s, the streets of Compton, California, were some of the most dangerous in the country. When five young men translated their experiences growing up into brutally honest music that rebelled against abusive authority, they gave an explosive voice to a silenced generation. Following the meteoric rise and fall of N.W.A., Straight Outta Compton tells the astonishing story of how these youngsters revolutionized music and pop culture forever the moment they told the world the truth about life in the hood and ignited a cultural war.

    Starring O’Shea Jackson Jr., Corey Hawkins and Jason Mitchell as Ice Cube, Dr. Dre and Eazy-E, Straight Outta Compton is directed by F. Gary Gray (Friday, Set It Off, The Italian Job). The drama is produced by original N.W.A. members Ice Cube and Dr. Dre, who are joined by fellow producers Matt Alvarez and Tomica Woods-Wright. Will Packer serves as executive producer of the film alongside Gray.

    straight-outta-compton-poster

    The post ‘Straight Outta Compton’ Red-Band Trailer: “It’s Non-Violent Protest” appeared first on /Film.

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  • Early Buzz: Terrence Malick’s ‘Knight of Cups’ Provokes Divided Reactions in Berlin

    Knight of Cups reviews

    Terrence Malick‘s new film Knight of Cups, starring Christian Bale, Natalie Portman, Cate Blanchett, and Antonio Banderas, premiered last night in Berlin, and as you might expect from a new Malick movie, reactions are fairly divided.

    That didn’t stop distributors from showing interest, however, and Broad Green Pictures — the relatively new outfit backed by hedge fund manager Gabriel Hammond and his younger brother Daniel Hammond — picked up US rights to both Knight of Cups and the currently untitled Austin-set film which will be Malick’s next release. Along with that news comes a lovely new international poster for Knight of Cups and a bevy of reviews covering the spectrum of opinion on the movie. Check it all out after the break.

    First up, here’s the poster. Click to enlarge.

    knight-of-cups-poster

    Reviews seem very much split along the already well established lines between the “if you like Malick you’ll be on solid ground here” camp and those who don’t care for his current output at all.

    The THR review starts out with a suspect line that makes me question the whole thing (“Having swung so far out of orbit on To the Wonder to have been sucked into a creative black hole”) but does say,

    A resolutely poetic and impressionist film about creative paralysis, indecision, father and sons, female muses and life slipping away as surely as water down a river, the seventh feature from this takes-his-time writer-director is far more partial to free association and stream-of-consciousness notations than to conventional storytelling. The upshot is a certain tedium and repetitiveness along with the rhythmic niceties and imaginative riffs. But whereas his last work of real weight, The Tree of Life, achieved rarified moments of emotional and lyrical expressiveness, this one mostly operates on a more dramatically mundane, private and even narcissistic level.

    The Playlist gets into questions of interpretation, saying,

    There will be arguments about “Knight of Cups” similar to those there were over “To The Wonder,” and probably even more pointless. Because in this brimful film, provided you haven’t rejected it outright as overly pretentious and self-indulgent, you can find an image, or a line of voiceover to suit any thesis you care to make. In fact, a kind of referential mania overcomes you when you try to figure out the symbolism of clear water vs cloudy water, open doors and closed doors, mother and father, pilgrim and pearl. But there is no decoder ring provided, no single key to unlocking any single meaning. In fact, the Tarot reference may be more appropriate than we know, and “Knight of Cups”may be designed to be a deck of cards from which everyone makes their own hand. For me, I took this line from the palimpsestic voiceover, “You think when you reach a certain age, things will start making sense, but that’s what damnation is, all these pieces of your life just splashed about.”

    The Guardian, in a review that professes admiration for To the Wonder, really takes Malick’s latest to task,

    With his latest film Knight of Cups, however, Malick has frankly declined. There are moments of visual brilliance here, moments of reverence and even grandeur. He is always distinctive, and anything he does must be of interest. But his style is stagnating into mannerism, cliche and self-parody. Where once he used his transcendant visual language to evoke heartland America, these tropes are now exposed in being applied to tiresome tinseltown LA, where a screenwriter played by Christian Bale undergoes what has to be the least interesting spiritual crisis in history.

    And IndieWire wrestles with the disparate elements,

    There’s a sense of freshness to watching Malick’s dreamlike storytelling take root in a fully modern setting for the first time: Strip clubs, drab highways and even the Warner Bros. backlot take on a poetic quality that reflects Rick’s sense of dislocation. As always with Malick, individual moments hold substantial intrigue: An early sequence finds Rick feeling the ground outside his apartment in the aftermath of an earthquake as he seeks to become one with the natural world beyond the grasp of his superficial surroundings. But Malick’s free-wheeling approach means that the movie never lingers on its compelling images or philosophical conceits too long. A tone poem on the vapidity of fame, “Knight of Cups” rarely sits still, and its restlessness eventually grow tedious.

    While Time Out London sums things up nicely,

    This new film feels very much like part of the same project as ‘The Tree of Life’ and ‘To the Wonder’. All three films strive to make sense of a dislocated man reaching into his past. All three reach for the stars (there’s even a shot of Earth from space in ‘Knight of Cups’) and grasp for answers out of our everyday reach. All of them, too, feel like waking dreams that only their maker could truly explain or maybe even appreciate, meaning they’re as infuriating and impenetrable as they’re magical and open.

    Twitter was the home of many positive reactions.

    KNIGHT OF CUPS: Flirtations w/ narrative, fragments of a life, and a portrait of Los Angeles that outdoes all others. A masterwork.

    — Filmbrain (Andrew G) (@Filmbrain) February 8, 2015

    KNIGHT OF CUPS: Well, at least I know what film we’ll be arguing about for the rest of 2015. #teamkoc

    — Filmbrain (Andrew G) (@Filmbrain) February 8, 2015

    Malick continues to circle around Tree of Life’s huge themes (death, longing, faith) with KNIGHT OF CUPS. Glad to say it works. #berlinale

    — Jutta Sarhimaa (@JuttaSarhimaa) February 8, 2015

    KNIGHT OF CUPS feels like another branch off of TREE OF LIFE, just as TO THE WONDER did. And it’s spectacular.

    — David Cox (@david_t_cox_) February 8, 2015

    Knight of Cups: Terrence Malick’s latest is a captivating critique of Hollywood hedonism. America’s response to The Great Beauty #Berlinale

    — Peter Yeung (@peteryeung_) February 8, 2015

    KNIGHT OF CUPS is Malick at his most explorative—TTW was an awkward step toward what he’s arrived at here…Great? Maybe. Astonishing? Yes.

    — Adam Cook (@AdamCook) February 8, 2015

    Still a bit shaken after KNIGHT OF CUPS – Malick’s best since THIN RED LINE, surely. TO THE WONDER essentially an elaborate sketch for this.

    — Neil Young (@JigsawLounge) February 8, 2015

    Knight of Cups – Malick is BACK & better than ever! Stunning. Mesmerizing trip thru life of an actor, pretending to be anyone but himself.

    — Alex Billington (@firstshowing) February 8, 2015

    Finally, for a good laugh, here’s footage of two “journalists” addressing questions to Terrence Malick at the Knight of Cups press conference… despite the fact that he wasn’t there.

    The post Early Buzz: Terrence Malick’s ‘Knight of Cups’ Provokes Divided Reactions in Berlin appeared first on /Film.

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