Apex Legends Season 4 Makes Bloodhound Into A Much Scarier Hunter

Season 4: Assimilation adds Revenant as a new playable character in Apex Legends, and the synthetic nightmare even gives Caustic a run for his money when it comes to creepy one-liners (though it’s cute that Caustic is the only one who doesn’t bully him). But Revenant isn’t the only scary change to Apex Legends; Bloodhound‘s new buff has transformed them into a terrifying hunter.

In Season 4, two legends got new buffs: Crypto and Bloodhound. Crypto can no longer destroy friendly Gibraltar Dome Shields with his EMP, giving the recon legend the chance to safely use his ultimate ability while teaming up with the friendly giant. Honestly, it’s only an okay change–the buffs to Crypto in late Season 3 seem a lot better.

Bloodhound, on the other hand, got a great buff. Bloodhound’s ultimate ability, Beast of the Hunt, allows them to easily track enemies to wherever they’re hiding by marking the path someone took while moving around the map. Originally, the ability only lasted a little over half a minute. Now, Beast of the Hunt can be extended by five seconds for every target that Bloodhound downs.

Note that this effect only requires you down an enemy–you don’t actually have to kill them in order to lengthen Beast of the Hunt. So if you manage to down the two members of a squad and then defeat a third enemy from another, netting you an extra 15 seconds of Beast of the Hunt, you could possibly have enough time to track down and finish off that second team.

Beast of the Hunt is already a terrifying ability. Bloodhound elicits a monstrous roar when it activates and there’s no way to really counter the skill other than finding a way to run away without touching anything (fly through the air on an Octane Jump Pad, for instance, or disappear Into the Void with Wraith). And now the hunter can extend the duration of their hunt just by using it for its intended purpose: taking targets out. Imagine trying to run from a Bloodhound, knowing that as your teammates fall behind you, their sacrifice is only extending the chance that your foe will have enough time to ultimately hunt you down.

Now Playing: 1 Year Of Apex Legends: Highs, Lows, And Biggest Changes

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Rockstar Co-Founder Dan Houser Leaves Company

Dan Houser, the co-founder of Rockstar Games and head writer on games like Bully, Red Dead Redemption, and Grand Theft Auto, is leaving Rockstar and Take-Two Games.

According to Take-Two Interactive, the parent company of Rockstar Games, Dan Houser will be leaving the company on March 11, 2020. He previously worked on numerous GTA games as well as Red Dead Redemption 1 and 2.

In a statement published ahead of the company’s Q3 2020 financial report, Take-Two said:

“We are extremely grateful for his contributions. Rockstar Games has built some of the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful game worlds, a global community of passionate fans and an incredibly talented team, which remains focused on current and future projects.”

Houser already took an “extended break” that began in the spring of 2019 after the launch of Red Dead Redemption 2 in November 2018.

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Dan along with his brother Sam Houser were executives at BMG Interactive before it was acquired by Take-Two. The Houser brothers founded Rockstar Games under Take-Two in December 1998. At Rockstar, the brothers wrote and developed games like GTA and Red Dead, but also Bully, Midnight Club: Los Angeles, and Smuggler’s Run.

Houser is credited as a writer on most of the Grand Theft Auto games from Grand Theft Auto 2 to Grand Theft Auto 5, as well as head writer on Bully, Red Dead Redemption, Max Payne 3, and Red Dead Redemption 2.

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IGN has reached out to Rockstar Games for a statement.

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Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN. You can reach him on Twitter.

Star Wars: Mandalorian Spinoffs and Legacy Characters Are a ‘Possibility’

Disney boss Robert Iger gave an update on the future of the Star Wars Universe and where the company will be shifting its creative focus over the coming years during a quarterly earnings call.

“We’re taking a bit of a hiatus in terms of theatrical releases, we finished the nine-episode Skywalker Saga and we’re developing both television and features,” Iger explained. “The priority in the next few years is television, with The Mandalorian: Season 2 coming in October and then more coming from The Mandalorian thereafter, including the possibility of infusing it with more characters and the possibility of taking those characters in their own direction in terms of series.”

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Disney Plus Has Seven Marvel Series In Development

The streaming service Disney+ has been pushing out plenty of original content from Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and more. And there’s even more coming, including two Marvel series we didn’t know about.

Disney CEO Bob Iger briefly discussed what’s coming down the line for Marvel on Disney+. “There are seven other Marvel series in various stages of development or pre-production,” he said. Currently, we know of five series that are in production for the streaming service.

Disney+ Marvel series in development:

  • The Falcon and Winter Soldier
  • WandaVision
  • Loki
  • What If…?
  • Hawkeye

This also wouldn’t include the Disney+ Marvel-related series–Marvel’s Hero Project–as it has already been released. It is possible that Iger’s comment could include the documentary series Marvel 616, which arrives this year. The Disney CEO didn’t comment further on exactly what these series were. Additionally, Iger wasn’t also referring to Disney+ and Hulu combined though, as Hulu–on its own–has six series already in some form of production.

Hulu Marvel series in development:

  • MODOK
  • Helstrom
  • Hit Monkey
  • The Offenders

As to what the mystery shows could be at this time is unknown as they have not been revealed to the public at this time. That wasn’t the only big announcement coming from Disney+. WandaVision, The Falcon and Winter Soldier, and Mandalorian all got rough release dates for 2020.

Disclosure: ViacomCBS is GameSpot’s parent company.

Now Playing: Best Things To Stream For February 2020 – Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Amazon Prime Video, Shudder

WandaVision Release Date Confirmed for December on Disney Plus

Disney+ will release its upcoming MCU-set series WandaVision in December 2020, Disney confirmed in its Q1 earnings presentation to investors.

WandaVision was initially slated to debut in 2021, but the release date was recently moved up to 2020, moving closer to the August release date for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.

Watch the new Super Bowl big game spot for all of Marvel’s Disney+ shows, including Falcon and Winter Soldier, WandaVision, and Loki, below:

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Disney+ Confirms August Release Date for The Falcon and The Winter Soldier

Update, 2/4: Disney has confirmed that The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will premiere in August, announcing the news during their February 4 investor earnings call. 

Disney+ launched a first look at its upcoming Marvel Falcon and the Winter Soldier, WandaVision, and Loki in a recent Super Bowl spot, which you can watch below.

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Disney also confirmed a December 2020 launch date for WandaVision, and an October release for Season 2 of The Mandalorian.

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The release of Marvel’s The Falcon and the Winter Soldier on Disney+ has reportedly been moved up to August of this year.

According to a recent Deadline report, the highly anticipated miniseries is now expected to hit the streamer towards the end of the summer, slightly ahead of its original Fall 2020 debut, though Disney has yet to officially confirm this schedule shift.

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As it stands, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is set to be the first MCU spinoff series on the Disney+ release calendar. The Phase 4 production started filming towards the end of last year, with Anthony Mackie and Sebastian Stan reprising their roles as Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes respectively, alongside Emily VanCamp, Daniel Brühl, Desmond Chiam, Wyatt Russell, and Miki Ishikawa. The new report shares that Noah Mills has also recently signed on in an undisclosed role.

If confirmed, The Falcon and The Winter Soldier’s new premiere date would be the second shake-up to the Disney+ streaming schedule, as the House of Mouse previously revealed the release of Marvel’s WandaVision had been moved up to 2020, ahead of its originally planned Spring 2021 debut. It is now possible that the sitcom-style show will take the newly-opened Fall 2020 slot in order to stagger the two new shows, though exact release dates have yet to be announced.

For more on The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, read our explainer on Falcon’s tenure as Captain America, check out the concept art for the new costumes, and take a closer look at Sam and Bucky’s new looks in the first poster. Alternatively, find out more about every upcoming MCU movie and TV show that has been announced so far.

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Adele Ankers is a Freelance Entertainment Journalist. You can reach her on Twitter.

The Mandalorian Season 2 October Release Confirmed by Disney

The Disney+ streaming service has announced a release window for its popular new Star Wars series, The Mandalorian, which will debut in October 2020.

The announcement was made by Walt Disney boss Robert Iger during the company’s quarterly earnings call. Iger went on to say that Baby Yoda “has taken the world by storm,” and promised that more consumer products featuring “The Child” will be hitting the market in the coming months.

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Iger also revealed that Disney+ has amassed 28.6 million subscribers to date, which is an impressive number, considering the streamer made its debut just three months ago.

“We had a strong first quarter, highlighted by the launch of Disney+, which has exceeded even our greatest expectations,” Iger said. “Thanks to our incredible collection of brands, outstanding content from our creative engines and state-of-the-art technology, we believe our direct-to-consumer services, including Disney+, ESPN+, and Hulu, position us well for continued growth in today’s dynamic media environment.”

While Disney+ has grown substantially since its launch, the company still trails Netflix, which currently sits at over 158 million subscribers worldwide. In more Disney+ news, both WandaVision and Marvel’s The Falcon and The Winter Soldier were given 2020 release windows.

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David Griffin still watches DuckTales in his pajamas with a cereal bowl in hand. He’s also the TV Editor for IGN. Say hi on Twitter.

GeForce Now Game Streaming Opens To All: Free Vs. Paid, How It Works, And More

Today, Nvidia has officially unveiled and launched a new version of GeForce Now, its game streaming platform. The service has been in closed beta since 2015 and it’s now open to the public with two different subscription models, one free and one paid at $5 USD per month. GeForce Now uses remote servers to run games in the cloud and stream them to your screen with the proper internet connection, just like Google Stadia or Microsoft Project xCloud, but there are some important distinctions to make with Nvidia’s service.

How GeForce Now Works

Using either a free or premium account, GeForce Now lets you stream PC games to your Mac, PC, Nvidia Shield TV, or Android-based device. Since GeForce Now is not a storefront and does not sell games itself, the service plays games based on your library in existing platforms like Steam and Epic Games. Although Nvidia hasn’t put out an exact number, GeForce Now supports hundreds of games, and you can use this search tool to see if a game is compatible to run on the service. If it is, GeForce Now asks you to sign in to the platform for which you own the game to validate ownership, then the game will run in the cloud–there are also over 30 free-to-play games available on the service like Destiny 2, Warframe, Fortnite, and more.

Right now, GeForce Now can play games up to 1080p resolution and up to 60 frames per second. Since it’s running PC games, you’ll have to be mindful of graphics settings, but Nvidia’s servers should be powerful enough to handle the games it supports. While you can customize your stream quality, three presets are available: Balanced, Data Saver, and Competitive. Data consumption for Balanced is said to consume around 10 GB of data per hour of gameplay, while Data Saver uses about 4 GB per gameplay hour and Competitive is at around 6 GB per hour. Customization options include max bit rate, resolution, frame rate (60 FPS or 30 FPS), dynamic settings for network conditions, and VSync.

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According to Nvidia, there are a few system requirements to at least run GeForce Now, such an internet connection of at least 15 Mbps, though Nvidia recommends 25 Mbps or higher. All other requirements are detailed below:

  • PC: Windows 7 (64-bit) or better, 4GB of RAM and a 2.0GHz dual-core CPU or higher, and a DirectX 11 video card
  • Mac: macOS 10.10
  • Nvidia Shield TV: Base and Pro models (2015 and on)
  • Mobile: devices with Android 5.0 or higher can run the app

Free Vs. Founders Subscriptions

Anyone can sign up for GeForce Now for free and start playing as long as they meet the system requirements. With a free membership, you can play games up to one-hour per session. You will then need to jump back in once your time runs out, meaning that if there is a queue to connect to servers, there’s a possibility that you’ll have to wait.

However, the Founders membership comes with a few perks. You’ll be able to play up to six hours per session and get priority access to GeForce Now servers, essentially skipping a line for server access if there is one. You also get access to ray tracing hardware through the cloud allowing you to turn on RTX features in games that have them, like Metro Exodus.

If you sign up for the Founders membership, you’ll have to pay $5 USD per month, which is its price for the next 12 months; there’s no annual commitment required, however. Additionally, Nvidia currently offers the first three months of a Founders membership for free.

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For more on cloud game streaming, you can check out our review of Google Stadia, read about how Microsoft’s Project xCloud fits into Xbox’s future, or read up on all the different game streaming services out there right now. We have extensive coverage on Sony’s PlayStation Now and a review of the Shadow PC game streaming app and set-top box as well.

Saints Row 4: Re-Elected Officially Announced for Switch

Saints Row 4 : Re-Elected, the curren-gen port of the 2013 Superhero-President-Sandbox game, has been announced for Switch by Deep Silver.

The new release, which will launch in both physical and digital formats on Nintendo Switch, will land on March 27 and include 25 pieces of DLC as well as the main game.

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Included among that huge pile of DLC are the two major story expansions, Enter The Dominatrix and How The Saints Save Christmas, as well as content packs such as the Dubstep Gun (Remix) pack and the Commander-In-Chief pack, which add new weapons and outfits to the game.

As well as the main campaign, which sees your Saint take on the role as the President of the United States AND gain superhuman powers while also fending off an alien invasion, other key elements make their way to the Switch port, including an improved version of the drop-in, drop-out co-op the series is known for.

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Our review of the original Saints Row 4 awarded the game a 7.3, noting that the game feels like “enabling god-like cheat codes in Saints Row The Third and going nuts,” while our Re-Elected updated review pushed that score up to 7.8. Our own Jeremy Azevedo also argues that Saints Row 4 is the best sandbox game of all time. If you agree with him, then this Switch port is likely made for you.

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Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Entertainment Writer. You can follow him on Twitter

Pathfinder: Kingmaker Developer’s New RPG Is Infested With Demons

When Owlcat Games released Pathfinder: Kingmaker in 2018 to mostly positive reception, its epic isometric RPG spanned an incomprehensible ocean of story, worldbuilding, character subplots, and lore, with an overarching kingdom-building macro layer that somehow neatly tied in your character choices in meaningful ways. It was an incredibly ambitious take, but at launch, it was also incredibly buggy and was prone to cascading difficulty spikes that easily destroyed your good work if you were careless.

But Owcat has spent the time since Kingmaker’s release refining its game with a near endless stream of post-launch updates, support, and downloadable content, to such a degree that Pathfinder: Kingmaker is now an excellent version of itself. And now that expertise is driving the studio’s next RPG.

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So we, as fans of isometric roleplaying games, should all be collectively excited at the prospect of Owlcat’s next venture, Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous – a faithful adaptation of the tabletop roleplaying adventure storyline of the same name released by Paizo [the developer of the Pathfinder tabletop game] in 2013 and ‘14.

The Wrath of the Righteous

Owlcat’s video game adaptation won’t be due out until sometime in 2021, with the Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous Kickstarter campaign just kicking off today, but it’s already well into development. The Wrath story itself takes place several years after the events of Kingmaker, in another nation, so while some of the peoples and places you recognize from Kingmaker may be a reference, Wrath of the Righteous isn’t a sequel or really connected

“We’re taking the story and making a CRPG out of it: a lot of choices, a lot of consequences, a lot of topics like corruption and redemption,” said creative director Alexander Mushlin. “Will you be willing to sacrifice people to reach your goal?”

“We consider ourselves GMs [Game Masters] for this adventure: we’re adding some stuff, removing some stuff, adding more choices and consequences, adding more side stories, and stories about companions.

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“The biggest change we’re making to the source material is we’re allowing players of any alignment where the original adventure was strongly aligned toward good characters fighting the demons,” Mushlin said. This is important since Pathfinder has a wealth of character classes to pick from, some of which didn’t make it into Kingmaker but will be coming to Wrath of the Righteous.

Owlcat has announced it’s adding the Witch and Oracle classes to Wrath of the Righteous, with more classes to be announced as development continues. And that translates to a ridiculous amount of additional content with no intention of watering down the complexity if you’re looking for it.

[poilib element=”quoteBox” parameters=”excerpt=Owlcat%20is%20adding%20the%20Witch%20and%20Oracle%20classes%20to%20Wrath%20of%20the%20Righteous.”]“We really like how deep our character customization is, and our fans also like it. In terms of gameplay, we had about one thousand spells, feats, and abilities to build the characters [in Kingmaker], and for this game, you can expect that number to grow two times over,” Mushlin said.

Unfortunately, if you’re jumping into a CRPG as a novice there’s a bit of an uphill battle – one that’s well worth the climb, but it’s a climb all the same. Not only are you learning how to play the video game, but you’re also learning how to play the tabletop game at the same time. It can be daunting if you’re unfamiliar with either, let alone both. So Owlcat tried to figure out a way to keep the depth fans love and be inviting enough for new players, without being overly handhold-y.

“We’re not going to lose the depth of the game. We’re be building an unobtrusive, integrated, optional tutorial that not only teaches how to play our game but also the Pathfinder system itself,” Mushlin said.

For example, during character creation, if you want to play an archer and you want that archer to be really charismatic, Wrath will have little tools tips that say, “Hey, archers use dexterity as their primary attribute, so you might want to build into dexterity to have a really effective archer.” And you’re free to ignore it if you like, but it’s there.

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Another example is the crazy number of stats-modifications and how they interact with one another. If there’s a conflict between buff spells and items, or buffs and buffs, or items and items, Owlcat plans to spell those out. So if you’re wearing full plate mail with a high armor class and put on a ring of protection and wonder why your overall armor class isn’t getting better, the tooltip will tell you – armor class buffs from items don’t stack, so since your plate mail armor class is much higher of than the ring, we’re just counting the better of the two so that ring is useless on this character. That’s just an example but they’ll drill down as far as they need to go on these.

But compared to Kingmaker, Wrath of the Righteous will change in some ways – namely in technical improvements, development tools, and the grand strategy layer. But the most obvious will be tone. Wrath focuses on a demonic invasion and, well, demons are a little more intense than the pissed off fey creatures of Kingmaker.

“This time around, as most games these days, we’re going a bit more dark, a bit more epic, and a bit more realistic,” Mushlin said. “It comes with the territory because we’re fighting demons and demons tend to do bad things to people and you have to show that.

We’re making a little shift in that direction. We still want to have lighter parts to the story and we still want for you to have a spectrum of emotions, not just doom and gloom, and ‘everyone’s going to die eventually.’”

The Crusaders

Like Kingmaker, the Wrath of the Righteous story will kick off with your character thrust into the events – a demonic invasion of a major city – because they were in the right place at the wrong time. And like Kingmaker, you’ll still be splitting time between your character and the party’s exploration and that higher-level strategy element. In Kingmaker, it was wrestling the Stolen Lands into submission to build a kingdom from nothing, and navigating the pitfalls of diplomacy in a wilderness positively lousy with curses.

In Wrath of the Righteous, Owlcat is moving on from the comparatively pedestrian problems of would-be rulers, focusing instead on your goals as the upstart leader and architect of the Fifth Crusade. Demonic and devilish fiends are everywhere, and like the many crusades before you, you’ve got to gather an army, upgrade and outfit it, assign officers, and set goals for them and their troops as you collectively pierce the heart of the invasion and beat back the Demon Lords of the abyss.

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“We liked how the strategic layer allowed us to show the companions in a different perspective as a governing person rather than just one of your followers,” Mushlin said. “And we liked how it allowed us to show you a more strategic part of the nation-building and solving the crises to decide what kind of nation you’re going to build.

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But like differences between running a nation and managing a crusade, there are fundamental differences that Owlcat sees as opportunities to improve that strategic layer this time around. Namely, time. In Kingmaker, time was the greatest enemy. While exploring you constantly had to be wary of how long you’ve been away from the capital, lest things start going sour and your kingdom comes apart. That’s not going to be the case in Wrath of the Righteous.

“Time was a great tool to make you remember to go back to your kingdom and address problems,” Mushlin said. “There are consequences if you neglect your kingdom and it worked well because that’s what a king should do. Time was used to teach you how to manage your personal time between exploring the map and managing your nation.

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“In the crusade war effort, I wouldn’t say there’ll be no time quests at all, but the importance of time will be far less than Kingmaker. For me, time is a tool to tell a story. And for nation-building time is an essential tool, but for a crusade, an army is an essential tool and we’re using the army for this.

The grand strategy crusade element of Wrath of the Righteous is still in development so many of the details are still coming together or being fleshed out. But along the way, there will be tough decisions and you’ll be able to shape the fiber of the crusade as you navigate it both morally, strategically, and logistically. For example, Hell Knights – brutal anti-paladin types that are only concerned with the letter of the law, not the morality of it – will play a major part in the events of Wrath of the Righteous. They get the job done, but with demons and devils on one side, do you really want hell knights on the other? Your decision.

The Path of the Mythics

Much firmer are the developer’s plans to introduce the Mythic Paths – a separate advancement path not tied to your character’s main class or level – your main character class, that allows you to tap into incredibly potent otherworldly forces to harness powers that make up the fabric of the universe and impact the main story.

“Mythic paths are an additional layer of character development that was introduced by Paizo specifically for the Wrath of the Righteous tabletop adventure to allow your characters to become even stronger and fight the demon lords, demigods, and entities of similar power,” Mushlin said.

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“We’re taking the initial idea but we’re approaching it more thematically. So we’re allowing you to become a specific powerful being that affects both the story and strategical and tactical options. So when you select the Mythic path at the end of the second chapter you can merge the main story with this new progress path.”

The first of the four mythic paths that Owlcat is talking about now – with more to be announced later – is the Angel, the leader of celestial forces. He’s essentially the “good” archetype that can summon angels, heal, and protect. His story is entangled with the main storyline and if you select him you’ll be seeing some special choices that aren’t available to other mythic beings.

[poilib element=”quoteBox” parameters=”excerpt=As%20a%20lich%20you’ll%20be%20able%20to%20recruit%20enemies%20you’ve%20defeated%20as%20undead%20minions%20and%20party%20members.”]The second mythic path is the Lich. Liches are what happens when an incredibly powerful magic user pursues power and immortality above all else, performing profane rituals that turn it into an unbelievably potent undead creature.

As the lich, you’ll be able to recruit some of the enemies that you’ve defeated to become your undead minions and eventually your complete party can be comprised of these minions that serve under you. For example, when you kill a boss and choose to bring it back from the dead, it becomes part of your collection.

The third path is Aeon, the cosmic judge of balance. He’s here to fix balance when things are out of sorts and he usually finds the guilty side and destroys it. He’s not good, he’s not evil, he’s lawful. As Aeon, when traveling through the city he’s seeing who’s guilty of destroying the balance and he can try to go up to that person and talk to them to understand what’s happening, then he decides if he wants to fix it, or kill this person, or something else entirely.

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The last mythic path Owlcat has revealed so far is the chaotic Trickster. He’s in here to have some fun, pull some pranks – he’s kind of a Loki type. One of the more meta and interesting Trickster traits is that he understands that beyond this world his fate is governed by dice rolls – kind of a tap on the fourth wall.

Since he’s aware of that, he can manipulate those dice rolls. Every time the system rolls a d20 for him he can change it into a 20 and you’ll be able to see that in the logs and everywhere else.

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It’s still early in production but The Wrath of the Righteous is already shaping up to be a worthy successor to Kingmaker with a welcome flair for the dramatic in its darker subject matter. For more on Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous you can stop by its Kickstarter campaign to follow along.

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Brandin Tyrrel is a Senior Editor at IGN. You can find him on Unlocked, or chat over on Twitter at @BrandinTyrrel.