V Rising Is Coming to PS5 This Year – State of Play 2024

At the first State of Play of 2024, Stunlock Studios announced that its fantasy survival game V Rising is coming to PS5 sometime this year.

V Rising was released in Early Access in May 2022 on Steam. Set in an open world, V Rising has players controlling a vampire who recently woke up and tasked with venturing across the world and defeating bosses, feeding on the blood of enemy NPCs, and avoiding hazards that will kill your character, such as direct sunlight.

Following its release into Early Access, Stunlock Studios announced V Rising was close to hitting 50,000 players a day after its release.

In our review of V Rising, we said: “While its time-consuming crafting aspects can take the bite out of the vampire fantasy, V Rising really does rise to the occasion with its excellent boss design and respectable ARPG combat.”

Developing...

Taylor is a Reporter at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Obsidian Explains Why Avowed Won’t Let You Romance Your Companions

With games like Starfield and Baldur’s Gate 3 last year having players wax poetic about which of their video game besties they most want to smooch, it can sometimes feel like romance systems are becoming a staple of AAA party-based RPGs. But that’s not going to be the case with Avowed, which is opting to forego a dedicated romance system for a focus on “building thoughtful relationships” with companions instead.

This comes from an interview IGN did with Avowed game director Carrie Patel, where she confirmed Avowed would not feature romance options, and why:

“We are building thoughtful relationships with our companion characters,” she said. “Ultimately, I personally am a fan of making that an option, but I feel like if you’re going to do it, you really, really have to commit and make sure that you’re giving all to fulfilling that in a way that feels both true to the character, but also creates an engaging player experience. So not something we’re doing for Avowed, but I wouldn’t say never.”

Patel points out that having a dedicated romance system in a story-focused game is a ton of work: you need options for both a fulfilling romance as well as a regular friendship for those who don’t want to go down that path. In addition, players generally expect multiple romance options, and expectations around the depth of such relationships only seem to be climbing higher and higher with each new Karlach and Shadowheart video games introduce. It’s a big ask, and also not a necessary one if the story of the game doesn’t lend itself to romance in the first place.

Later in our interview, Patel further hinted at the ways in which Avowed’s non-romantic companion relationships could possibly manifest. Thus far, the studio has given multiple nods to how player choices will impact the world around them, most notably showing this off during a quest in the latest Xbox Developer Direct. Patel and I chatted a bit about this in the context of games like Avowed letting players shape their character’s moral compass via character actions and reactions. Avowed is not a game with a morality meter, she said, but characters will certainly have feelings about the actions you take, and won’t be shy about expressing them.

We are building thoughtful relationships with our companion characters

“One of the fun challenges with design, particularly around consequences or even sometimes around player options that are reactive to either the kind of character you’ve built or choices you’ve made earlier in the game is over the years I’ve learned that that stuff is always a lot less obvious to the player than to the designer,” Patel said. “And so I think sometimes you have to be a bit more direct in tying those options and those consequences to content that’s come before, because if it feels too natural and too understated, it feels like a thing that’s happening, not a thing that’s happening because of what you did.”

In short: prepare for characters, possibly including your companions, to let you know if you’re behaving like a little jerkwad.

Avowed is steadily nearing its 2024 release, having first been revealed back in 2020 at the Xbox Games Showcase and getting a deeper look at a 2023 Xbox showcase. It’s set in Eora, the world of Pillars of Eternity, which incidentally just got an update earlier this month despite the game being nine years old.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

First Image from Among Us Animated Series Officially Revealed

Out of nowhere, Inner Sloth released the first image from the highly anticipated Among Us animated Series, offering fans a familiar glimpse of the show.

The first image, as seen in the post on the official Among Us X/Twitter account, shows the cafeteria from Among Us’ original map, the Skeld. Pizza and plates spread across the tables, along with some balloons and a blood-covered banner that visibly shows the words “We’re Dead.”

The Among Us animated series was first announced last June, and it was reported that the developer was involved in the project, with Regular Show writer and storyboard artist Owen Dennis spearheading the project. Titmouse, the studio behind animated series such as Big Mouth and Star Trek: Lower Decks, is tasked with animating the series.

While we have yet to learn much about the show’s premise, if it’s anything like the games, it will be a suspenseful series with social deception and comedy playing big roles in the story.

Among Us was first released in 2018 but blew up in popularity in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to the unexpected rise in its favor, Inner Sloth canceled the sequel and focused on post-launch support for the original game. Following the sequel’s cancellation, Inner Sloth released new features, such as Hide ‘n Seek mode, and new maps, including the Airship. Among Us has also been ported into VR headsets, including the Meta Quest.

Taylor is a Reporter at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League Review in Progress

My first 11 or so hours with Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League have left me with wildly mixed thoughts. There are things I like, things I don’t, and worst of all, things that elicit no emotional response at all. The guns-blazing combat can be fun, and the story of DC heroes and villains swapping roles is for the most part engaging, but thoughtful mission design is almost non-existent and many of its looter shooter systems fall flat. On the plus side, apart from being kicked to the main menu a few times, the servers have been relatively stable for an online-only game at launch (though I have primarily been playing solo, so I’ll see how co-op holds up in the coming days). So far I’ve reached the end of its short-ish campaign, but I’ve yet to dive into whatever the endgame has waiting for me – but for now, I’ve had a fun enough time playing through its well-told story, even if I was left wanting far more from the missions that make it.

While the comparison might seem like low-hanging fruit, Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League really is of a similar construction to Marvel’s Avengers – a game I spent dozens of hours enjoying despite its glaring deficiencies. They’re both live services aiming to offer extensive postgames – of course, in Avengers’ case, that promised service was cut short when Crystal Dynamics shut down development two years after launch. For Rocksteady, another famous single-player-turned-online developer, the first step toward trying to avoid a similar fate would be to create a compelling combat system that makes me want to return to Suicide Squad week after week, which it hasn’t quite achieved at this point. The studio known for revolutionising tight melee combat with its Arkham games has instead opted to make this a third-person shooter, which is a bold choice – but one that doesn’t make complete sense considering the traditional methods of violence implemented by most of Task Force X, AKA the Suicide Squad.

As far as the story itself goes, the Justice League is acting out of sorts as they cause city-wide destruction with glowing wide-eyed glee. It doesn’t take a brainiac to work out what’s happening here, but it does take one to mastermind it all. Yes, traditional Superman villain Brainiac has hatched an evil plan to take over the planet and remake it in an image of his own and that involves controlling members of the Justice League’s minds. So, and you’ll never guess this, the Suicide Squad is called in to take down the Justice League by any means necessary.

It doesn’t take a brainiac to work out what’s happening here.

What threatens to be a straightforward story branches out around the halfway point into interesting directions. Yes, what have now become recognisable comic book cliches do dampen some of the big revelations (if you know anything about the endgame you’ll know what I mean) but there’s a level of storytelling on display here that harkens back to those Arkham glory days. That’s in no small part thanks to the phenomenal character design work and scriptwriting that brings each member of the cast to life as they successfully banter along that tightrope-thin line between charming and insufferable.

Close-ups are also liberally used to show off the graphical power that Rocksteady wields, and it’s frequently impressive to watch as cutscenes come to life. That technical prowess is also reflected in the voices behind the faces, too. The late, great Kevin Conroy excels in one of his final turns as The Dark Knight, showing us an even darker side to the caped crusader than we’ve seen from him before. Tara Strong is pitch-perfect as the anarchic Harley Quinn, and Joe Seanoa (WWE’s Samoa Joe) dryly delivers each of King Shark’s one-liners to great effect.

There are fun and wildly different abilities that Rocksteady could have taken advantage of to create varied vigilantes.

Playable team members Harley Quinn, Deadshot, King Shark, and Captain Boomerang are exciting characters with trademark weapons, from boomerangs to booming hammers and sharpshooting sniper rifles to sharp-toothed snapping. There are fun and wildly different abilities that Rocksteady could have taken advantage of to create varied vigilantes who each bring their own style of play to the table. Instead, they’re all reduced to the same baffling blueprint as damage-output-chasing characters who seem to love nothing more than firing guns and occasionally throwing grenades. Granted, they do each have signature melee and traversal attacks, like Harley’s sweeping baseball bat hits or Boomerang’s enemy-chaining namesake, but the overwhelming focus here is on shooting and collecting an increasingly powerful arsenal of guns.

This creates an awkward dissonance between how these villains play and how they’ve been written. Rocksteady has clearly gone to great lengths to create a detailed world full of memorable characters who behave true to their comic book roots, which could have served as a joyous playground for DC fans. But instead, it’s like going to see your favourite football team only to find that, for some reason, they’re being asked to play tennis instead. Sure, you recognise their famous faces, but they’re out of their element. Whether their method of destruction makes sense is a completely different question from whether it’s fun, though. And the answer to this is: well, yes and no.

Where the Arkham games had a much more deliberate flow as you waited for enemies to make the first move before delivering crushing counters, Suicide Squad cranks up the speed as you zoom around hurling bullets into them at a relentless pace. It’s undeniably impressive at times, with an emphasis still placed on combo-chasing and stylish takedowns while taking no damage. These combos can rack all the way up to 50, which provides a high skill ceiling and a real challenge to master. There are even bits that remind me of some of my favourite action games, such as the Shield Harvest mechanic which encourages aggressive play, echoing the attitude of Doom or Control wherein the best form of defense is to attack even more. This philosophy inherently lends itself to a chaotic breed of action that I enjoyed as I zipped around arenas scrambling for shield pick-ups and ammo. The inclusion of an active reload mechanic gives you something to do other than hold down the button, as it has for so many other shooters since Gears of War.

Once you eventually get to grips with all of the kit, a tight and satisfying rhythm can be found. 

And there’s more, too – you steadily unlock new abilities and modifications as you progress. One is Affliction Strikes, which add an extra layer to combat by imbuing your melee attacks with properties such as venom, which turns your enemies against each other when struck. There are so many different ideas and mechanics, in fact, that it can all get a little overwhelming to juggle at times, and the constant stream of tutorials seemingly never ends throughout the entire campaign. But once you eventually get to grips with all of the kit, a tight and satisfying rhythm can be found.

Just go into Metropolis expecting something a bit more hectic than the slower, puzzle-like encounters found around Gotham, I can see Rocksteady’s thought process behind this shift in tempo. The speed of these combat systems does reflect their respective heroes, however, Batman is always one step ahead, whereas Amanda Waller’s guns for hire are rasher, zany, and frankly enjoy getting stuck into the violence of it all.

Each character specialises in certain skills as well and can be tweaked to fit your style thanks to extensive skill trees. For me, though, the biggest deciding factor in choosing which criminal fit my style best is in testing out each of their movement abilities, as most of them felt clunky to me at first. After a bit of experimentation, I settled on Aussie inmate Captain Boomerang and his teleporting Speed Force Gauntlet, which I used to flank enemy hordes to my heart’s content. I just never fell in love with Harley’s swing-and-grapple Spider-Man/Batman hybrid moveset or Deadshot’s jetpack hovering, mainly due to their ungenerous cooldowns limiting the distances you can travel quickly. And Shark’s quite basic run-and-jump combo frankly just never excited me.

I pretty much found all of the gear I needed to make each encounter a breeze on the story’s halfway point.

I steadily constructed an effective close-up Boomerang build with traversal mods that gave me a 40% damage boost to enemies within five metres, and paired that with a freezing melee attack and a legendary shotgun that shattered all who got near. It was a satisfying playstyle, but I pretty much found all of the gear I needed to make each encounter a breeze on the normal difficulty by the story’s halfway point. This meant I felt no need to engage in any of the crafting or looting systems for the most part, and instead just focussed on tuning the talent tree as I unlocked more points to fit my up-close-and-personal approach.

Speaking of getting up close and personal, I couldn’t help but notice the diminishing effect of Rocksteady’s dramatic shift in genre from a single-player story to a co-op looter shooter when it came time to interact with the characters that inhabit Metropolis. This is perhaps best exemplified by The Penguin’s role in Suicide Squad. The once-powerful Gotham crime boss who was crucial to the events of the Arkham series, including one of the trilogy’s most memorable levels in Arkham City, is reduced to nothing but a weapons vendor this time around. Sure, he’ll offer you a semi-limited range of guns that can be tweaked to your heart’s content as you figure out which of the city’s four “manufacturers” have attributes and perks that work best for you, so he’s at least decent at this job. Of course, with this being a looter shooter, they come in multiple tiers of rarity ranging from standard common and rare guns to unique, high-powered Notorious and Infamous-level weapons, which are all themed around different DC villains.

Outside of that bit of costuming, though, the guns themselves are frustratingly bland. The world and characters are packed full of charm and colour, something that just isn’t reflected in the dull arsenal. You’ll largely be wielding a standard selection of rifles, SMGs, pistols, etc., as you circle around enemies with a routine of flank-and-fire strategy. The different weapons manufacturers offer their own quirks, be that burst-fire options or greater ammo capacity, but nothing is anywhere near as exciting as the variety of weaponry Borderlands’ similar setup can boast – the looter- shooter that popularised the genre with its ever-increasing wacky range of weaponry remains hard to compete with in that arena.

When you go to modify some life into your firearms you’re limited to fairly standard buffs like critical damage boosts or cooldown decreases, none of which really lean into capturing any of that superhero/villain magic. Instead of more damage boosts or predictable poison debuffs, I kept hoping to see something crazy – like a gun that fires exploding, chattering Joker teeth or a Clayface cannon that covers the ground and enemies in clay, immobilising them in the process. But having finished the campaign (admittedly not turned over every rock in Metropolis just yet) there’s just a disappointing lack of imagination on display here, even for those rarest, top-tier options. That’s particularly a shame because I can see the bones of a truly exciting loot and combat system here –, it’s just hidden in the blandness of its solid but unspectacular gunplay and weapons.

It’s not the combat itself that’s the issue, but more the rinse-and-repeat encounters.

It’s not the combat itself that’s necessarily the issue, either, but more the rinse-and-repeat encounters you’re given to use it in. Metropolis has come down with a seriously gnarly case of Brainiac-induced acne as you go around popping seemingly endless amounts of purple spots and monsters who don’t have the sharpest AI in the world – sometimes they are even totally unresponsive as you take out their friends standing right next to them. So it’s not a promising start, but I was relieved to find that as you get deeper into the story a greater enemy variety is introduced, and these new foes offer more of a challenge as they channel certain heroic abilities and make you consider your approach in a smarter way.

One consistent factor, however, is that the vast majority of these enemies will be found on top of buildings protecting Brainiac weaponry or causing a general nuisance, which made for the vast majority of my time feeling like I was just bouncing from rooftop to rooftop whacking moles. In fact, a steady cadence of “cutscene, rooftop battle, repeat” persists throughout pretty much the whole of the campaign’s roughly 10-hour runtime. It’s just a stream of uninspired encounter designs with seemingly no ambition shown toward making any authored missions that stand out. You’re regularly just cycling between a handful of basic objective types, such as defending an area, clearing out a group of enemies, or escorting a truck through the city, all of which get tired pretty quickly.

Metropolis itself is fun to move around, with a generous amount of tall buildings to bounce up to and explore, but that’s a strength that’s never incorporated into its mission design. Insomniac has shown us how amazing missions can be in superhero open worlds as you dart through cities in the blockbuster sequences of the Spider-Man games, and while the movement of Suicide Squad may even be reminiscent of Insomniac’s earlier Sunset Overdrive at times, the city feels nowhere near as tailored for such missions.

But before either of those games, Rocksteady built out its Gotham City with numerous landmarks that served as fantastic contained levels inside an open world. In Suicide Squad, interesting interiors are kept at a premium, however, with almost all of the action taking place high above the city and at great speed. Arkham City’s combat arenas were so expertly designed, like mini action levels found within a sprawling open world with environmental takedown opportunities and creative ways to move around constantly present – but here, only “blink and you’ll miss it” flashes of this philosophy can be seen. Ironically, an early Batman encounter is one of these, offering a smart inversion of the Arkham experience
 but then a later confrontation with The Dark Knight, unfortunately, devolves back into a rote bullet-sponge battle.

It’s clear that some imagination has gone into a few of the boss battles, however. They frequently begin with an uninspiring fight against a massive purple cannon, though, which seems a bizarre choice considering we’re in a world full of heroes and villains. But when you do get to finally face off against mind-controlled members of the Justice League themselves, things really do pick up. You can see glimpses of that puzzle-like nature that Arkham’s boss encounters contained shining through, and while there’s nothing quite as memorable as the Mr. Freeze showdown from Arkham City, it’s nice to see that those elements haven’t been completely put on ice (even if some do just boil down to pumping as many bullets into a superhero as you can).

The standout among the boss fights has to be a brawl against Green Lantern.

That lineage can be clearly seen in The Flash fight, for example, as you have to quickly time counter shots before dealing damage. The standout among them, though, has to be a brawl against Green Lantern and his arsenal of glowing constructs in a battle that delivers greatly on both spectacle and excitement by smartly implementing a large custom arena full of high vantage points that can also be used as cover. They’re all a welcome challenge that crucially never feel unfair, with each generously signposting attacks to avoid frustration. Yes, you’re fighting superhumans here, but the way you take them down is supported by reasonably believable story context that allows you to go toe-to-toe with Earth’s mightiest (even if most of those solutions boil down to inventing new types of bullets).

Metropolis itself is a sun-soaked city where superheroes are treated like gods and monuments to them bookend its streets. It’s regularly gorgeous and, if it wasn’t for the small issue of a gigantic brain hovering above it causing widespread mayhem, would probably be a lovely place to spend a weekend. The art direction is superb, with a rich mix of architectural influences combining to create a uniquely inviting skyline – that skyline, though, is often filled with gunfire and smoke thanks to the warzone bubbling beneath it. Yet, it all just feels oddly lifeless at the same time, like a beautifully constructed diorama collecting dust. Like the Arkham games, there’s an eerie lack of civilian activity to make it feel like a place where people actually live and that needs protecting. Additionally, there’s no iconic score sweeping alongside you as you move through its streets, or anything of note happening at all really, apart from enemies patrolling them waiting for your ambush. It’s again, a shame, as it’s undeniably an artistic achievement, but this world just doesn’t have anywhere near enough variety in it to warrant the level of exploration I’d hoped for when I first stepped into it like an eager tourist.

Of course, there are many other familiar DC faces thrown into the mix that I won’t spoil here. There are surprise arrivals and departures scattered throughout that are sure to delight comic book fans, even if it does just make the story ultimately seem like a collection of cool-looking scenes stitched together with over-familiar combat scenarios at times. There are impactful moments, though, which are often full of wonder but go by in a flash. Clocking in about 10 or 11 hours, Suicide Squad’s main campaign isn’t an especially short one (it’s roughly the same as Avengers), but it is perhaps an underwhelming runtime when you consider we’ve waited almost nine years for a new Rocksteady story. That said, there are enough surprises and turns within it for it to stay consistently engaging, even if what you’ll be doing on either side of the rewarding cutscenes isn’t up to the same standard.

But, of course, there’s more beyond the main story of Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League left for me to see, and I’m yet to delve deep into whatever endgame has to offer. For my thoughts on that and our final scored review, please stay tuned in the next few days.

Alan Wake 2 Update 1.15 Lets Players Make the Game Less Scary

Remedy Entertainment has released update 1.15 for Alan Wake 2 on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, and PC, adding a highly requested option to turn down the game’s spookiness.

Revealed in a blog post, the patch notes also point to myriad bug fixes alongside the addition of a chapter select option in the main menu, letting players hoover up those final collectibles with more ease.

Remedy is quick to point out “the update also includes the much-requested option to tune down the horror flashes”, with players able to choose between Low and Normal horror flash visual and audio intensity.

As for chapter select, players can choose to replay any mission in the game, loading into a pre-made save regardless of their own progress.

“This will also make life a bit easier (and we know we’ve made it a bit complicated with some collectibles having to be picked up in a single run) for Trophy and Achievement hunters to get those missing items or collectibles,” Remedy said. The full patch notes are available below.

In our 9/10 review of the game, IGN said: “Alan Wake 2 is a superb survival horror sequel that makes the cult-classic original seem like little more than a rough first draft by comparison.”

Alan Wake 2 Update 1.15 Patch Notes

New Feature: Chapter Select

  • You can now choose to play any mission in the game that you have previously unlocked.
  • Using this feature loads a pre-made save game regardless of your own progression.
  • This means that item progression and inventory will be pre-determined depending on the mission.
  • You will keep your previous manual saves.
  • Remember to keep at least one manual save with your previous progression if you wish to retain it.

New features

  • Added Chapter Select menu.
  • Added option to choose between Low and Normal horror flash visual and audio intensity.

Gameplay and missions

  • Fixed an issue in The Final Chapter (New Game Plus) where if the player already had Saga’s crossbow in their inventory, they could not complete/open all required Cult Stashes and thus couldn’t get the Lighthouse Key from the final Cult Stash.
  • Fixed an issue where the player could get stuck if they opened the notification about having finished watching the final Koskela brothers’ advert:
    • During RE09 Deerfest when you go to the Oh Deer Diner, the last Koskela commercial is shown and you are given a prompt that you can see it in the Mind Place, but if you press the touchpad as instructed to view it in the Mind Place, nothing happens, and your controls are frozen. The issue remains until you reload the last save.
  • Fixed an issue where the player was not able to collect all the clues around Nightingale’s body.
  • The objects required for the Overlap ritual in RE03 Local Girl can now only be picked up after the player finds their respective clues.
  • The 10th Echo Scene after meeting Casey in the alley now unlocks properly.
  • Players now receive the Coffee World Mug Charm in the The Final Chapter (New Game+) instead of a duplicate Hammer Charm.
  • Fixed the camera perspective on opened Cult stashes, so the note on the lid is now legible.
  • Additional fix for the Cynthia profiling not being available if the player exits the diorama too quickly in the Nursing Home.
  • Resolved an issue in RE05 Old Gods where players could pick up the fuse in the basement from a locked container without solving the attached combination lock puzzle.
  • Propane tanks will no longer reappear after reloading the game in Watery. Less explosions, less fun, but a smoother game.
  • Gave Saga a chance to gain more resources in the RE10 Come Home mission in the subway station.
  • Added missing descriptions for some case files in the Case Cabinet in Saga’s Mind Place.
  • Fixed a multitude of issues with Meta Case clues.
  • Added descriptions for cases that are in progress to the Case Cabinet files.
  • Igniting a flare while hiding in Safe Haven will now be seen as a hostile player action and collapse the Safe Haven if enemies are nearby.
  • Fixed an issue with the player camera occasionally “micro jittering” when rotating the camera in Prologue.
  • Removing the fun. It’s the beginning of the year. Explosions will no longer deal damage through doors.
  • Prevent players from accidentally boosting the flashlight and wasting batteries when picking it up.
  • FBI Service pistol and Revolver now deal enough damage to make cultists’ masks fly off with one, carefully aimed shot. F*ck yeah!
  • Curtain Call. Not the best album. Fixed curtains being incorrectly closed in the Theater Hall in some instances.
  • Fixed an issue where the crossbow with double-barrel upgrade was not being holstered properly.
  • Saga’s phone conversations can’t be interrupted by switching the Flashlight on and off anymore.
  • The item pickup indicator has been re-tuned, so the indicator should be more easily visible now.
  • The player can no longer run off the ledge behind the Monitoring Station in Cauldron Lake.
  • Fixed an issue where Fadeouts in the Poet’s Cinema Theater would sit in the air or inside of the theater seats. That was too spooky.
  • Fixed a, well, uh, issue with a rogue boot moving along the Cynthia boss fight arena.
  • Fixed an issue in IN05 Room 665 where items from a Tim Breaker’s stash could be picked up through the wall in Room 101.
  • Fixed an issue where the wolves would get killed instantly by approaching the cliff at the Radio Tower in Watery.
  • Fixed an issue where the player could get stuck in Norman’s room in the Bright Falls Nursing Home.
  • Fixed an issue where the doors at the Bright Falls Wellness Center kept opening at the wrong time. It’s not spooky season yet.

UI

  • [PC] Added preview images for most tweakable settings in the graphics menu.
  • Add per-chapter counts for found Manuscripts in the Mind Place.
  • Fixed UI layout issues with localized content in the Case Board, computers, and inspectable items.
  • Fixed month names so they display correctly on save game UI.
  • Fixed the Options menu scroll position not to resetting when quitting the Options menu with the start button on controller.

Audio and haptics

  • Re-tuned haptics on the “key events” such as weapon firing and reloading, using the Light Shift mechanic, burning off Source Points and using the flashlight.
  • Added audio to the ancient computers in the Bright Falls Sheriff Station.
  • Added audio for impacts when the Espresso Express hits the player. Don’t try it please. Coffee World is in enough trouble as it is.
  • Cassette eject sound added to Mr. Drippy.
  • Added TV static audio to the Nursing Home TV Safe Haven location.
  • Fixed an issue where the TV tape selection in the Writer’s Room was not triggering any sound effects.
  • Fixed an issue in RE08 Summoning where a Tank enemy weapon played the wrong weapon audio.
  • Multiple fixes for the Nursery Rhymes audio.
  • Improved the audio quality for crouching footsteps.
  • Improved the audio performance during the RE08 Summoning mission across all platforms.

Visuals

  • General visual polish.
  • Fixed an issue where an enemy became partially invisible when seriously wounded.
  • Fixed the vegetation not always reacting to explosions in a cool way.
  • The wind has picked up in Coffee World.
  • Made the basement of the Valhalla Nursing Home more atmospheric, with a lot of added dust.
  • Turned off Safe Haven indicator during the Scratch fight in the parking lot.
  • Improved waterproofing of the Elderwood Lodge. It should not rain indoors anymore.
  • Fixed the Hunting Knife being scaled up when Alan picked it up.
  • Fixed missing lighting on some narrative items.
  • Improved the quality of shadows in various off the beaten path locations in the forest.
  • Fixed lighting pop-in in some locations.
  • Fixed some abrupt color grading changes in Watery.
  • Reduced shimmering around windows inside Suomi Hall in Watery.
  • Reduced shimmering inside the Elderwood Lodge in Bright Falls.
  • Lighting improvements in off the beaten path areas in Watery.
  • Fixed Alan’s wild shirt glitching in some cinematic sequences where Alan is sitting down.
  • Improved animations for Saga’s scare reactions while running.
  • Fixed some animations restarting when toggling the flashlight.
  • Fixed the player character so they use arms as expected while running just after picking up items.

General

  • The SDR brightness setting now affects UI and 2D videos correctly.
  • Fixed maximum display luminance being outdated in Brightness calibration menu.
  • [PC] You can now tweak the FOV (Field of view) in the UI.
  • [PC] Improved DLSS Frame Generation stability for Alt-Tab.
  • [PC] Resolution is clamped correctly to the maximum supported resolution.
  • [PC] Made the warning message about there not being enough physical memory and allow the game still to start a lot more serious.
  • [PC] Mouse button icons now correctly reflect the Windows primary button setting in the UI [PC].
  • [Xbox Series] Fixed a threading issue that could lead to rare crashes.
  • Subtitle fixes.

Performance (aka the Northlight flex section)

  • [PlayStation 5] Fixed the random stuttering during perfect dodge slow-motion moves.
  • [PC] Changing the graphics settings is now
 snappier.
  • [PC] Optimized shadow map rendering saving up to 0.3ms in the Dark Place.
  • [Xbox Series] Optimized point and spotlight culling, shaving off 0.3ms in locations where lights are aplenty.
  • [PlayStation 5] Optimized UI rendering when there are a lot of UI elements on screen, such as when the Inventory is visible, resulting in smoother performance.
  • Optimized character controller code for improved CPU performance, saving up to 1ms – 2ms in locations with dense geometry.
  • Lighting optimizations inside the Overlap in RE01 Invitation saving 1ms – 1.2ms for smoother performance.
  • Lighting optimizations around the Valhalla Nursing Home during RE05 Old Gods saving 0.3ms – 0.4ms.
  • The good kind of lighting and fog optimizations around Watery that didn’t result in downgrading the visuals.
  • Slightly optimized texture memory usage. Slightly.

Activision Finally Pulls Back the Curtain on Call of Duty Skill-Based Matchmaking — and It’s Going Nowhere

For years, skill-based matchmaking (SBMM) has been the hottest of topics within the Call of Duty community, with some proclaiming it ruins the experience, others saying quite the opposite. High-skilled Call of Duty players often bemoan SBMM for chucking them into what they call “sweaty” lobbies full of similarly high-skilled players. All the while, Activision has remained silent on how exactly Call of Duty’s SBMM actually works — until now.

In a blog post, which is “starting the conversation about matchmaking in Call of Duty”, Activision pulled back the curtain on SBMM for the first time, and gave players plenty to chew on.

According to Activision, Call of Duty does consider skill (or more specifically player performance) as a component of matchmaking, but skill is not the “dominant” variable. Top of the tree, Activision said, is connection. “Ping is King”, the blog post reads. “Connection is the most critical and heavily weighted factor in the matchmaking process.”

Second is time to match (“we all want to spend time playing the game rather than waiting for matches to start”), and joint third are playlist diversity, recent maps and modes, skill/performance, input device, platform, and whether you have voice chat on or off.

“These factors have resulted in a process that we believe provides the best player experience and creates a stronger community for Call of Duty worldwide,” Activision said.

There are some fascinating insights in here for veteran Call of Duty players. Activision says that for Modern Warfare 3’s Rustment playlist (maps Rust and Shipment in rotation), players often leave lobbies and/or matches early on, hoping to requeue into Shipment instead. This creates a vacant spot on a team during an early stage of the match, Activision explained. “As the matchmaking process may prioritize backfilling that spot, this could result in players perceiving that Rust is disproportionately selected over Shipment. TL;DR – trying to cherry-pick maps may have an unexpected result.

“Our goal is to ensure that players spend more time playing matches rather than waiting for them.”

Now, onto the detail everyone wanted. Skill is determined based on a player’s overall performance, Activision said. This includes kills, deaths, wins, losses, and more, as well as mode selection, and recent matches as an overall metric across all Multiplayer experiences. “This is a fluid measurement that’s consistently updating and reacting to your gameplay,” Activision explained. “Skill is not only a factor in matchmaking players against appropriate enemies, but also when finding teammates.”

Activision goes on to say skill in matchmaking means all players (regardless of skill level) are more likely to experience wins and losses more proportionately. “We use player performance to ensure that the disparity between the most skilled player in the lobby and the least skilled player in the lobby isn’t so vast that players feel their match is a waste of time.”

“Our data shows that when lower skill players are consistently on the losing end, they are likely to quit matches in progress or stop playing altogether,” Activision continued. “This has an effect on the player pool. A smaller player pool means wait times for matches increase and connections may not be as strong as they should be. This can compound over time to create a spiral effect. Eventually, when only high-skilled players remain because lower skilled players have quit out of frustration, the result is an ecosystem that is worse overall for everyone.

“Game data indicates that having some limitations on the disparity of skill across the players in a match makes for a healthier ecosystem. We also understand that many high skill players want more variety of experience, but often feel like they only get the ‘sweatiest’ of lobbies. We have heard this feedback clearly and will continue to test and actively explore ways to mitigate this concern.”

Activision then answered some community questions, busting the odd myth along the way. Time played is not a factor in matchmaking, for example. Matchmaking does not impact gameplay, such as hit registration, player visibility, aim assist, or damage. Money spent on microtransactions such as bundles and battle passes “does not in any way, shape or form, factor into matchmaking”. Partners and content creators don’t get special consideration in general matchmaking, either.

Activision then ruled out adding an opt-in/opt-out system for the matchmaking algorithm, saying its data suggests splitting the player base in that way would make for potentially longer wait times based on the type of matchmaking selected and matches with poor connections.

And then the big one: have you ever tested removing skill as a consideration from matchmaking?

“We have run tests over the years to determine if removing skill as a consideration from matchmaking makes sense,” Activision said. “We will continue to launch these tests periodically. To date, the data remains consistent with what we detailed above – players tend to quit matches or stop playing if they’re getting blown out, resulting in a negative overall experience for all players in the lobby and the general player population. We purposefully do not disclose when these tests occur because it may impact feedback or the data we see during these tests.”

But will Activision consider removing skill from matchmaking in specific general multiplayer game modes?

“We have considered this in the past and we will continue to examine if this idea makes sense as part of an experimental playlist or in specific modes. We have nothing to announce on that front today.”

So, that’s that, you’d imagine. Clearly, Activision will not ditch SBMM for Call of Duty, no matter what the community thinks. But at least players now have an understanding of Activision’s thinking, whether they agree with it or not.

There’s more to come, too. Activision said its technology team is developing a Ping and Matchmaking white paper for those inclined to get into the more granular information about Call of Duty matchmaking.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Palworld Dev Warns Against Fake Mobile Phone Games Imitating Palworld

The developer of Palworld has warned people against downloading fake mobile phone games that look like they’re Palworld.

In a tweet, Palworld developer Pocketpair said “there is no Palworld application for phones”, after noticing apps using names and product images from Palworld had popped up on the App Store and Google Play.

“They are not affiliated with our company in any way,” the statement continued. “We have reported this issue to Apple, which operates the App Store, and Google, which operates Google Play. Please be aware that downloading these apps may lead to the leakage of personal information stored on your smartphone or to fraud.”

It’s perhaps unsurprising to see fake Palworld mobile apps appear given the enormous sales success of the original, which launched in early access form on PC via Steam and on Xbox to the tune of eight million sales in just six days.

But Palworld is also one of the most controversial video game releases in recent memory. Developer Pocketpair has said its staff have received death threats amid PokĂ©mon “rip-off” claims, which it has denied. Nintendo has moved quickly to remove an eye-catching PokĂ©mon mod, and then The Pokemon Company issued a statement, saying: “We intend to investigate and take appropriate measures to address any acts that infringe on intellectual property rights related to PokĂ©mon.” IGN asked lawyers whether Nintendo could successfully sue.

Meanwhile, Palworld continues to blow up on Steam, where it became the second most-played game in the platform’s history. If you’re playing, be sure to check out IGN’s interactive Palworld map.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Warner Bros. Gifts Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League Deluxe Edition Owners $20 of In-Game Currency

Warner Bros. has gifted Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League Deluxe Edition owners $20 of in-game currency as a make-good for server issues that rendered the always-online game unplayable for periods during launch.

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League arrived on January 30, 2024 for those who paid $100 for the Deluxe Edition, granting customers a three days’ head start over everyone else.

But the early launch had issues, including a bizarre bug that automatically completed Suicide Squad for some and forced the game offline for more than six hours. Additional downtime prevented players from logging on before the servers stabilized, but not before disgruntled customers complained about not getting their money’s worth.

Now, Warner Bros. has sent affected customers an in-game message about the gift. “Thank you for being one of our first console players during early access of Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League,” the message reads, per a post from X/Twitter user @JayShockblast. “We recognize that you’ve been patient with us during our initial launch server updates and we’d like to show our appreciation for your patience with a special gift of 2000 LuthorCoins. Thank you again!”

2000 LutherCoins cost $20, and will get you a couple of standard in-game skins or a single deluxe or legendary skin.

The furore over Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League’s launch issues have renewed calls for the promised offline mode to be added to the game as soon as possible. With Suicide Squad launching for standard edition owners on February 2, all eyes on are on the servers to see if they hold firm, or render the game unplayable once again.

This week, IGN reported that Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League isn’t the late Kevin Conroy’s final Batman performance, as previously suspected. Conroy, of course, is beloved for his performance as Batman both in The Animated Series and Rocksteady’s Arkham series of video games. With that in mind, controversy arose in regards to one of his scenes in Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. We won’t spoil the specific details (you can learn more here), but one scene had many fans feeling that it was an unceremonious goodbye to Conroy’s time as Batman.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Persona 3: Reload Removes an Infamously Transphobic Line of Dialogue

Warning: The below story contains a potential spoiler for Persona 3 and Persona 3: Reload.

The Persona series has long had issues with gay and trans panic, but Persona 3: Reload at least removes the transphobia from one scene in particular.

The Persona 3 scene in question had the party trying to hit on women at the beach, with Akihiko, Junpei, and the protagonist approaching a character referred to as “Beautiful Lady.” After some back-and-forth, Akihiko points out a bit of facial hair on her chin, to which Beautiful Lady responds, “I-I missed a spot?!” Junpei then exclaims “she’s a he?!”

The dialogue is very slightly changed in Persona 3 Portable (the character is named “Pretty Lady” instead of “Beautiful Lady”), but still includes the same trans panic.

As first reported by Kotaku and verified by IGN, however, Persona 3: Reload changes the dialogue quite a bit. The end result is the same – the party running away from the woman – but instead of it being due to her being trans, it’s because she’s actually a conspiracy theorist trying to sell them sunscreen.

In the new scene, the conversation starts to go awry after “Pretty Lady” tells them, “You know that sun in the sky isn’t real, right? That’s an artificial sun that got sent into space back into the 1980s.”

Her character name then changes to “Delusional Lady” as she tells them that “normal sunscreen doesn’t” work” against that fake sun, and tries to sell them “special” sunscreen for 300,000 yen. The gang figures out this character is a little off, and scurry. The scene’s still a little odd, but the transphobic aspect, at least, is gone in this new version.

This isn’t the first time Altus has made a change based on homophobic or transphobic content in the Persona series. In 2020, Altus changed certain scenes in Persona 5 that were considered offensive and homophobic by fans for the Western release of Persona 5 Royal.

For more on Persona 3: Reload, check out our review, where Michael Higham gave the remake a 9/10. With a stellar visual overhaul and countless small but impactful changes, Persona 3 Reload tells a timeless story of tragedy and hope with sharp emotional sincerity,” Higham wrote.

Alex Stedman is a Senior News Editor with IGN, overseeing entertainment reporting. When she’s not writing or editing, you can find her reading fantasy novels or playing Dungeons & Dragons.

EA CEO Suggests an EA Sports Metaverse Is in the Works: ‘Watch This Space’

Though wild speculation around metaverses has calmed somewhat in the last year, the idea is far from dead, with a number of companies still hard at work trying to find ways to integrate all their properties into one massive, interconnected space. The latest to discuss these ideas is Electronic Arts, with CEO Andrew Wilson responding to a question during today’s earnings call about a potential EA Sports metaverse with what sounds a heck of a lot like a concrete plan to make one in the near future.

During the Q&A portion, Wilson was asked if he had ever thought about “taking all of your siloed sport communities and thinking about a way to bring them all together” to “just sort of create, for lack of a better word, a metaverse?”

To this, Wilson gave a lengthy response outlining a whole lot of reasons why a publisher like EA might consider doing exactly that. He began by reiterating the enormity of the EA player community: over 700 million players, about half of which interact with the sports catalog in some way. EA Sports itself is, per Wilson, “one of the most recognizable and recognized sports brands.” And the upcoming generations Z and Alpha, he continued, often use EA Sports as an entry point to a love of sports in general.

“What we know to be true right now is our players spend on average about 90 minutes a session inside one of our games. They then leave that game experience where they’ve been deeply connected with their core friend unit, then they go and talk about that experience on another platform, then they go and create content about that experience on yet another platform, then finally they go and watch that content on another platform. We do believe we have a meaningful opportunity over the coming years to harness the power of that community both inside and outside of our games, which is really the third pillar of our core strategy, and will be led by our EA Sports brand.”

Wilson then reiterated that while he had nothing to announce today, EA sees “an incredible opportunity” in all these interconnected relationships between EA Sports’ popularity, how players behave within it and outside of it, and how it can interact with other experiences. “So best I can say is: watch this space,” he concluded.

While speculation on the metaverse has cooled in the last year, Wilson’s strategy seems far more tactical and focused than some of the more grandiose metaverse propostions floated by companies like Epic and Meta in the past. And his remarks are unshocking in light of the company’s continued EA Sports success. In today’s earnings report, EA reported net bookings of $2.37 billion and net revenue of $1.945 billion for the quarter ending on December 31, 2023, largely driven by EA Sports FC outperforming expectations with 7% year-over-year growth. Madden also remains a moneymaker, bringing in 5% year-over-year net bookings growth. And that doesn’t even get into its other properties: NHL, UFC, F1, PGA Tour, WRC, and the long-awaited EA Sports College Football. With its live services now consisting of 73% of EA’s business, it’s no surprise that EA would want to find ways to capitalize on that power, especially now that it’s proven it doesn’t need the FIFA name attached to succeed.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.