Resident Evil 3 Mod Gives Nemesis a Beach Thong

The Resident Evil 3 remake may not be officially out until April 3, but that hasn’t stopped enterprising modders from giving us what we’ve wanted all along: Nemesis in an Umbrella-branded beach thong.

First spotted by Eurogamer, a Patreon-backed modder by the name of Marcos RC is responsible for this new abomination. As if Resident Evil 3’s iconic undead, invincible boss wasn’t already bad enough, we now get to see him stomping around the streets of Raccoon City all half-naked. You can watch Marcos RC’s video on his YouTube channel, or check out screenshots below.

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The mod is officially called the “Beachboy Nemesis” mod, with a 3D body base created by “MisterHecks.” You can download the mod from Marcos RC’s Patreon page here. Could you imagine how horrifying this would be with the first-person Resident Evil 3 mod?

Sexy Nemesis mods are all we get for now, since Capcom recently delayed the Resident Evil Resistance beta on PS4 and Steam, with the Xbox One version rolling along as originally planned. Capcom has also warned that physical editions of Resident Evil 3 may be delayed in Europe thanks to COVID-19 impacting shipping infrastructure.

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MisterHecks, who created the Nemesis model that Marcos RC utilized, similarly made a thong mod for Mr. X in the Resident Evil 2 remake.

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Joseph Knoop is a writer/producer for IGN, and looks forward to gamers rising up for this mod.

Watch the Premiere Episode of Syfy’s Vagrant Queen for Free

In this quaran-tainment era, with a ton of TV being postponed and hit movies hitting VOD sooner, Syfy has posted the premiere of its new snarky space opera, Vagrant Queen, on YouTube for all to see.

Vagrant Queen, based on the Eisner Award-nominated comic series by Magdalene Visaggio, follows a self-exiled child queen, Elida (Adriyan Rae), who’s now grown up living the life of a scavenger and outlaw. When an old frenemy turns up with news about her long-lost mother, Elida is forced to return to her broken kingdom with in hopes of staging a rescue.

The first episode, “A Royal Ass-Kicking,” is now posted for free viewing, with the series’ first season having just started on Syfy on Friday nights.

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Click the pic to watch Vagrant Queen’s first episode, “A Royal Ass-Kicking,” on YouTube.

In other sci-fi news, check out our review of Star Trek Picard: Season 1, Doctor Who giving self-isolation tips, and news of a Terminator star being cast in The Mandalorian: Season 2.

CBS All Access is also free until April 23, allowing you to watch the first season of Picard and both seasons of Star Trek: Discovery.

Vagrant Queen airs on Syfy on Fridays at 10pm EST/9pm CST.

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Matt Fowler is a writer for IGN and a member of the Television Critics Association. Follow him on Twitter at @TheMattFowler and Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBFowler.

Daily Deals: Get 60 Days of ComiXology, Save Big on Dell PCs

It’s the weekend, and with it comes more deals to help keep you entertained during these quiet times. Kicking things off is a 60 day trial (normally only 30) to ComiXology, which is followed up by some great deals on Dell computers, and digital games. If you’re going to be home, might as well have a great gaming time in the process!

ComiXology Free Trial Extended to 60 Days

Normally 30 Days

The 60-day extension (normally $30) has never, ever happened before. ComiXology is Amazon’s digital comic platform and is the largest digital retailer of American comics. The site hosts 20,000 digital comics, graphic novels, and manga from DC, Marvel, Image, Dark Horse, and more. Here’s your chance to access all of it, totally free, for 30 60 days. If you’re an avid comic reader, you might want to consider continuing on afterwards, since it’s only $5.99/month. You can even sign in with your Amazon account.

New Alienware Aurora R9 AMD Ryzen 7 3700X AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT Gaming Desktop PC for $1110

For those of you who haven’t been keeping up with the Intel vs AMD CPU war, AMD has been giving Intel a run for its money with its flagship processors. The new AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-core processor is comparable to the Intel Core i7-9700, both in terms of gaming and workstation performance. It’s paired with an RX 5700 XT video card, which is on par with the RTX 2070. If you want to upgrade the RAM or hard drive, I’d suggest doing it on your own. You’ll save money, and the Aurora R9 allows for toolless access without voiding your warranty.

Alienware m17 17″ Intel Core i7-9750H GeForce GTX 1660 Ti Gaming Laptop for $1086

This is another $50 price drop from yesterday’s already excellent price. The m17 is the 17″ variant of the new generation of Alienware m-series gaming laptops. Despite the larger screen size, it still clocks in at only 5.8 pounds.

Dell G5 Intel Core i5-9400 GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER Gaming Desktop for $1095

If you want a new 2019 model AND a tremendous value, then take a look at this Dell G5 gaming desktop. This is a customizable config so you can pick and choose your preferred combination of components. The config we chose gives you a 9th generation Intel Core i5 6-core processor and a powerful RTX 2070 SUPER video card for about $1000. That’s hard to beat. Despite the fact that the G5 model is not as pricey as Alienware, it still boasts a toolless chassis so you can easily upgrade your memory and hard drive.

World War Z for PC is Free at the Epic Games Store

The PC version of this game still sells for $35 elsewhere but you can get it from Epic Games for absolutely free. If you like zombie horde shooters like Days Gone, Dying Light, or Left 4 Dead, you’ll feel right at home with this game. For more info, check out our review.

Onward Is Coming to Disney+ on April 3

Sign up for a 7-day free trial now and you’ll be able to watch the recently released Pixar’s Onward movie before the trial expires. In the interim, you can binge watch other big hits like Frozen 2, The Lion King, Aladdin, and every episode of The Mandalorian Season One. If you want to keep the subscription afterwards, it’s only $6.99 per month (or better yet, get a  $69.99 annual subscription). Or sign up for Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ all for $12.99/month.

$20 Off Street Fighter II: Champion Edition X Replicade Fully Functioning Mini Arcade Cabinet

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This cute little cabinet currently sells for $120 on Amazon, but you can get it for $20 off at StackSocial. This 1:6 scale cabinet is only 12″ tall but you can still play the original Street Fighter II: Champion Edition and Super Street Fighter II Turbo arcade games. In addition to a miniature fight stick control panel on the cabinet itself, the kit also includes a separate USB mini fight stick for 2-player mayhem.

8BitDo SN30 Bluetooth Gamepad for $23.95

This cute retro controller is inspired by the Game Boy Pocket. It’s compatible with the Nintendo Switch, PC, Mac, Android, and Raspberry Pi. The built-in 480mAh lithium battery gives it up to 18 hours of playtime between charges. You can get it for $30 on Amazon, or you can get it for 20% less at StackSocial with free shipping.

Green Man Gaming March Madness Sale: Nier Automata GOTY Edition for $17

Save on some highly rated PC games. That includes Resident Evil 3, which is out in 7 days. GMG is a legit vendor, and the games are downloadable via the Steam platform.

Xbox One X (Factory Refurbished) with Bonus Witcher 3 Game for $229.98 at Dell

This is the lowest price we’ve ever seen for an Xbox One X gaming console from a reputable vendor, plus you’re getting an outstanding game. Note that this is a Microsoft refurbished item, which means that it still comes with a 90-day warranty. Note that you do not need to be a Dell member or student to get this deal; simply use guest checkout.

Alienware Aurora R8 Intel Core i7-9700 GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER Gaming Desktop PC for $1460

This Alienware desktop boasts a  toolless chassis so you can easily upgrade the RAM and hard drive components on your own, saving your hard earned money. The new RTX 2080 SUPER is the latest generation of RTX cards and is modestly superior to the RTX 2080 (which is already more powerful than the GTX 1080 Ti). This makes the card the second most powerful card available. It’s paired with a 9th generation Intel Core i7 processor.

75″ Samsung UN75RU8000 4K Smart HDTV for $1049

Apply the code in shopping cart and you’ll see this price at the last step of checkout before you place your order. This is $250 less than the best price on Black Friday. The RU8000 is Samsung’s highest end non-QLED TV of 2019. It’s very thin thanks to the LED-edgelit panel.

Get 2 Months of Kindle Unlimited for Free

Normally 30 Days

Make your life stuck at home (and for many of you, with kids) a lot easier. Kindle Unlimited is a great way to keep yourself at home and still get access to a virtual library of over 1 million Kindle eBooks and over 20,000 digital comics This deal is typically for new subscribers only, but there have been reports that it has worked for people who have previously subscribed for Kindle Unlimited but are not current members. Check out this very awesome Harry Potter “Kindle in Motion” book with animated art, free with a Kindle Unlimited subscription.

Sling Blue Free Trial Extended to 14 Days

Normally 7 Days

Keep up with live news updates for free. Sling Blue gives you access to CNN, MSNBC, HLN, and Fox News. You’ll also get access to HGTV, Food Network, A&E, Bravo, TNT, Comedy Central, Cartoon Network, The Discovery Channel, Nick Jr, and more. The Sling Blue service normally costs $30/month but it still might be worth it for all the great shows.

Binge Picard and Star Trek: Discovery with a CBS All-Access 30-Day 60-Day Free Trial

Normally 7 Days

This is really simple to pull off. Simply apply both codes “GIFT” and “ENJOY” at checkout. With 30 days, you’ll have plenty of time to binge exclusive CBS All Access shows like Picard, Star Trek: Discovery, The Good Fight, and more. Afterwards, you can renew for only $5.99/mo (or $9.99/mo for the ad-free option), or just cancel before your trial ends. The trial normally is for 7 days, and this 1 month extension usually only happens two to three times a year.

2017 Apple MacBook Pro 13.3″ Retina Intel Core i5 8GB Laptop (Refurbished) with 2 Year Accidental Damage Warranty for $999.99

This laptop might be a few generations older but it’s still a very capable workstation. This is a 3-pound laptop that boasts an Intel Core i5 processor with Turbo Boost to 3.6GHz, 8GB of RAM, 128GB SSD, and Intel Iris Plus graphics. There’s no Apple warranty but you do get a 2 year accidental damage warranty provided by CPS.

Star Trek: Picard Episode 10 “Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2” Breakdown & Easter Eggs

In a final confrontation on planet Coppelius, home world of the synths, Picard (Patrick Stewart), the La Sirena crew, and Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), await the Romulan warbirds led by General Oh on their way to kill the synthetics, and plan to stop Soji and Sutra (Isa Briones) from summoning dangerous synthetics who will bring about the annihilation of organic life. Picard hopes that the Federation will provide assistance and that Starfleet will come to help them. We also get cameos from a couple of Picard’s old friends.

As usual, there are more Star Trek Easter eggs and references in this episode, calling back to The Next Generation and Voyager.

Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company.

Call of Duty Datamine Reveals Possible Modern Warfare 2 Remaster Release Plans

In what seems to be becoming a regular thing, a well-known dataminer, Senescallo, leaked a bunch of upcoming Call of Duty content on Reddit, revealing plans for the rumored Modern Warfare 2 Remaster, along with details on new maps and weapons that are headed to Modern Warfare (you know, the latest one) Season 3.

Perhaps the biggest bit of information revealed by the Call of Duty leak seems to indicate that the highly anticipated Modern Warfare 2 Remaster could be sold from within Modern Warfare (2019) and as a standalone game. Further, spotted by Eurogamer, the Reddit leak indicates that Activision only plans to remaster the Modern Warfare 2 campaign, not the multiplayer.

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Based on the leak, players will be able to purchase the remaster as a standalone game and will receive the Underwater Demo Team Classic Ghost Bundle with their purchase. Alternatively, players could purchase the Ghost Pack: Oil Rig Bundle from within Modern Warfare to receive the MW2 campaign remaster, a legendary skin for Ghost, weapon blueprints for the M4A1 and 1911, and a few other commodities.

Purchasing the Modern Warfare 2 Remaster from within Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is expected to cost 10,000 COD points, which comes out to about $80. It’s currently unclear how much the standalone version would cost.

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Remaster’s aside, the leak also revealed some information about Modern Warfare Season 3, which is expected to release in the coming weeks. It seems that two maps from previous titles will be making a return to the franchise in the third season — Backlot (Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare) and Village (Modern Warfare 3).

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Source: Reddit user Senescallo
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Source: Reddit user Senescallo

 

Additionally, an SKS Sniper and a Renetti Pistol are likely two be added along with two new Operators, Alex and Ronin. Lastly, Season 3 could be receiving creator codes, which would allow players to support their favorite Call of Duty creator with any in-game purchases. Activision and Infinity Ward have yet to confirm any of this, so of course take it all with a grain of salt.

Developers recently launched Warzone, the highly anticipated battle royale mode, which hit 6 million players in the first 24 hours. While it’s gotten off to a great start, we think Warzone is imbalanced in one specific way. For more on Warzone, be sure to check out our review.

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Andrew Smith is a freelance contributor with IGN. Follow him on Twitter @_andrewtsmith.

The Jesus Rolls Review

The Jesus Rolls is available to rent or for purchase on Amazon, YouTube, Google Play, and Vudu.

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Actor John Turturro, who’s wanted to make a spinoff movie about his flamboyant bowling ball-licking cameo character from The Big Lebowski for almost two decades, finally got the Coen Brothers’ permission about five years ago. The result is an uneven blending of the suave, arrogant Jesus Quintana and the 1974 French film Going Places by Bertrand Blier.

The Jesus Rolls follows most of the major beats from that movie — the end credits acknowledge The Jesus Rolls as being based on Blier’s original novel and screenplay adaptation — while only providing sporadic charm and unruly happenstance. It’s a harmless mess but there’s never a moment where it doesn’t struggle to justify its existence.

One slight SPOILER at the top, for those of you wondering why, or how, Turturro would want to craft (or borrow) an entire story around Lebowski’s “sex offender.” Well, one of the first things The Jesus Rolls does is turn the whole Jesus “exposing himself to an eight-year-old” tale from the Coens’ film into a misunderstanding made by a very dumb, inappropriate crook. Jesus is not a “pederast,” to use the term John Goodman’s Water said in Lebowski. No, Jesus is just a fly-by-the-seat-of-his-pants petty thief who enjoys roaming the landscape aimlessly while seeking his next sexually-fluid fling.

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The aforementioned aimlessness doesn’t exactly suit the film all that well, however, as we bounce around from one tacky, out-of-touch scenario to the next, with Jesus and his friend Petey (Bobby Cannavale), who’s also his reluctant romantic partner at times, just kind of winging things after Jesus gets out of Sing Sing. One can forgive Turturro, who wrote and directed The Jesus Rolls, for trying to take Coen Bros-light approach to things, but his idea to adapt Going Places, from 46 years ago, just means that the situations and dialogue are going to feel pretty clunky and unenlightened. Basically, Jesus was molded to fit Going Places when it should have been the other way around. Or, best case scenario, just drum up an original story.

The “call in some favors” cast can be fun, in this low-budget romp, as you’ll see Christopher Walken, Jon Hamm, Tim Blake Nelson, and J. B. Smoove pulling one-day-on-set cameos. These stunt-casting scenes help spice up some of the movie’s wanderlust vapidity, but guest appearance-wise, it’s Susan Sarandon and Pete Davidson who help give the film a little extra helping of story. As a fresh out of the joint ex-con who’s wooed by Jesus and Petey, Sarandon is the closest thing we have to an audience surrogate with a touch of depth.

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The third headliner here, along with Turturro and Cannavale, is Amélie’s Audrey Tautou, who plays the duo’s paramour of sorts. The surrogate family atmosphere the trio occasionally manifests is endearing but ultimately no one feels like an adult here. A lot of that has to do with the movie being based on a slice of rambunctiously chauvinist French cinema from four decades ago. The Jesus Rolls starts out as if it’s going to be a Jesus showcase, like how movies get made out of popular SNL characters, but it fast dissolves into something bizarre and, sadly, banal.

11 Times TV Shows Switched Actors And Hoped We Wouldn’t Notice (But We Did)

11 Times TV Shows Switched Actors And Hoped We Wouldn’t Notice (But We Did) – GameSpot

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Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company


Liberated, Scourgebringer and More: The Best Games That Should Have Been at Rezzed 2020

We here in the IGN UK office really like Rezzed. The indie-focused show is: a) Packed to the airy rafters with new, exciting, and deeply strange games, b) Within walking distance of our office, and c) Has a pub on-site.

It’s the best, basically, which makes it very sad that the show has been postponed to this summer. Thankfully, its online equivalent, Rezzed Digital is running in its stead, and its organisers gave us a healthy bunch of the games that should have been on show this weekend to try out from the comfort of our quarantine zones. Here are some of our favourites, which we highly recommend you look up, wishlist and mentally bookmark for future reference.

The Falconeer

falconeerImagine if in Waterworld – yes, the infamously bad post-apocalypse movie featuring Kevin Costner – everyone flew around on the giant eagles that saved Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings. Now imagine those eagles also have canisters strapped to their back that collect lightning from storm clouds, which can then be fired at other eagles. You’re now part of the way to understanding The Falconeer, a gorgeous eagle dogfighting game. Or, should I say eaglefighting?

The Falconeer shares a surprising amount with Failbetter’s Sunless games, in that it takes place in a vast, dismal open world dotted with safe harbours where you can dock (or, in this case, perch) to take on mercenary work. That work is often challenging; all the missions I undertook in the demo resulted in the quest giver being rather angry with my performance. Part of it is down to the combat, which – as aerial fights often are – is a little tricky to get the hang of, but also because the instructions aren’t all that clear to begin with. But while there’s a room for extra clarity, The Falconeer has already nailed its beautiful aesthetic and haunting atmosphere; that it manages to be so somber despite its daft bird combat premise is fantastic. – MP

Steam Page, Website

Shadows of Doubt

Shadows of DoubtShadows of Doubt looks like one of those Minecraft maps surgically enhanced by lighting mods, shaders and heavy-duty hardware. But it plays like- er, well I’m not sure what else plays like this, because it’s a simulated open world detective-stealth game. Haven’t come across too many of those. Made by one-man developer Cole Jefferies, it’s a game about the bits of detective work usually deemed unsexy by games – i.e. the actual detective work. Every one of the hundreds of persistent citizens in your procedurally generated dystopian noir city have names, jobs, and houses. You can explore every single apartment, and every room in those apartments. Some of those apartments have TVs playing the sound of real-life detective dramas on them, which isn’t important, but I love anyway.

You piece together cases by visiting crime scenes, interviewing suspects and, quite often, circumventing the law to find the evidence you need. My favourite touch? Your internal notes and objectives are controlled by your own internal red-string corkboard, where you can pick up and rearrange every clue you deem important. Even in its very early stages, I’m overwhelmed by the possibilities in here, and excited by how deep this little thing could get. – JS

Steam Page, Website

Liberated

LiberatedRemember how the Max Payne games told the story via graphic novel segments before each mission? That’s also how noire thriller Liberated reveals its narrative, but it goes one step further: you play the game within those panels, too. As the pages of the dystopian story turn, the key panel of the issue becomes the frame for a black-and-white side-scroller that combines the atmospheric puzzler approach of Limbo and Inside with snappy stealth and gunplay.

When fights break out fantastic ‘BANG’, ‘POW’, ‘UUGH’, and ‘HEAD SHOT’ onomatopoeia words erupt from your weapon and enemies. Scraps are over quickly thanks to low health pools, and so it’s encouraged to sneak and blend in with the shadows to keep yourself alive.

There’s multiple perspectives, too, which provide different gameplay opportunities. As freedom fighter Barry, a member of ‘The Liberated’ who are rebelling against an autocratic state, you’re reliant on little more than your pistol and a phone to hack into computers. But when perspective switches to one of the city’s cops, you’re able to use automatics weaponry and even pilot a bomb-setting drone in one scene, setting up a bloodbath for members of The Liberated. It’s all a bit grim, but nonetheless stylish fun. – MP

Steam page, Website

Scourgebringer

ScourgebringerIt might be structured like Dead Cells, and look like Katana Zero, but this absurdly stylish 2D action roguelite actually reminds me most of Doom (and not just because of the Mick Gordon-esque metal that kicks in during every fight). At first glance, it looks like other combat platformers of its kind, but its combat is faster, meaner and, in my limited experience, cooler. A mixture of light and heavy slashes, dashes – that do not make you invulnerable, crucially – and an ammo-limited gun make up the building blocks, but the cement holding them altogether is how they chain together.

Any time you connect with a hit, your double-jump recharges, meaning you can more or less stay airborne for entire fights. It’s not only thrilling, it’s important, as things begin to tend toward the direction of ‘bullet hell’ before long, forcing you not only to fight well, but move well to make it through its twisting, generative single-screen maps. I want to do much more fighting. I need to do much more moving. – JS

Steam Page, Website

Eldest Souls

EldestSoulsThe name may sound like a cynical SEO trap, but Fallen Flag Studio’s project provides a novel new perspective on edge-of-your-seat boss rush games. Eldest Souls’ combat is built around a charge attack; build up a meter until completely full and your protagonist will dash at the enemy for a strike, but also momentarily gain the Bloodthirst buff. This allows for a powerful overhead sword-swing that not only badly stings a boss, but also restores a chunk of health. Already you can likely see how a battle plays out.

While each boss is distinctly in the mold of Dark Souls (the first two in the demo are a werewolf with a giant bone shield and a colossal knight with a towering halberd), it’s Eldest Souls’ nuances that make it stand out. You’re not limited by stamina for attacks, but you can only dash three times in succession before a cool-down kicks in. It means you can go hog wild on damage, but approaches and escapes demand finesse. Victories also unlock further abilities, such as a dash that deals a flurry of blows as it finishes, which encourages some fun, sometimes risky playstyles. – MP

Steam Page, Website

The Almost Gone

The Almost GoneHow can something that looks this pretty be this dark? The Almost Gone is less of a point-and-click adventure than a point-and-click drama, pitched dreamily between the micro-detail of the Room series and a European art film. The story is, I think, about a child planted in the middle of a divorce, but it’s told through the medium of picking through remains of a literally cracking family home and its surroundings. Its best idea is also its biggest problem right now – every area you visit is atomised into tiny slices of room that can be rotated and prodded at to find clues and unlock new areas.

They’re gorgeous, pastel-shaded bits of architecture and clutter but, once you’re navigating between half a dozen at once, it can begin to feel more of a chore to navigate than it should. It’s a minor gripe, however (and could be easily fixed with a mini-map) and, once you get your head around each location, puzzles unfold naturally and satisfyingly across multiple rooms. Just be prepared to feel quite sad as you complete them. – JS

Steam PageWebsite

Trials of Fire

Trial of FireThe surging popularity of card-based battlers has led to plenty of innovation, and Trials of Fire has several neat mechanics in its deck. Core of these is recycling; each card costs Willpower to play, but you begin each turn with none of the resource. Instead, you must scrap cards in your hand in exchange for Willpower. It’s a system that demands plenty of forward thinking, but is helped out by the fact that each of your three warriors has their own hand of cards. If one character doesn’t need to attack this turn, you can sacrifice their cards to provide Willpower for another character.

Trials of Fire features attack and spells cards with similar traits to games like Slay the Spire, but battles are played on on a hex-based grid, allowing for characters to move across the board each turn. This further complicates battles and allows for tactics such as flanking enemies with multiple fighters, and casting spells with areas of effects.

The battles are framed by a pen-and-paper style RPG adventure told through the turning pages of a dusty old book, but those elements feel merely narrative dressing for the elegantly designed battles, the arenas for which rise out of the tome’s pages. – MP

Steam Page, Website

A Monster’s Expedition

MonsterWhat drew me into A Monster’s Expedition was its self-billed genre – an open-world puzzle game. I kind of got it, but didn’t really have a sense of how it’d work in practice. What I quickly realised was that this wasn’t an open world in the sense of a city to explore or side-quests, but choices. At its heart, this is a sprawling, picturesque puzzler about rolling logs into place to get from miniature island to miniature island (it’s not far in approach from Stephen’s Sausage Roll). It also has a wonderful generated soundtrack to go with your moves, and some very endearing writing.

But its brilliance is that, pretty early on, you begin to see multiple routes appear, then fast-travel, and then you realise you can try things out in different order, and scratch an exploration itch. The only obstacle is your brain getting to grips with the puzzles and their growing set of internal rules (logs pushed on the side roll until they’re stopped, logs pushed from the end move square-by-square, etc.). From what I can tell right now, it’s something like a Metroidvania, except the gear-gating is based on your own neurons connecting and getting smart enough to work things out. I’m in. – JS

Steam Page, Website

Lord Winklebottom Investigates

LordwinklebottomEndearingly low budget, Lord Winklebottom Investigates is a Sherlock Holmes point-and-click adventure, but Sherlock is a giraffe called Winklebottom and Watson is a hippo by the name of Dr Frumple. They’re just the first of a cast of beautifully drawn animal characters, all of whom are animated in a bizzare, stretchy way that makes the entire thing look like a hybrid between Terry Gilliam’s Monty Python skits and an Aardman show, with the static framing of a Wes Anderson movie.

It’s as gently strange and amusing as that sounds, too. It seems like half the cast is voiced by a single actor, and while it’s not clear if the game is in on that joke, it works in its favour. Each animal you meet natters away with one of several British dialects which only strengthens its appeal. Oh, and the very first puzzle involves making a cup of tea, which cements it as probably the most English game ever made. – MP

Steam Page, Website

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