Summoners War RELOADED: A Massive Update is Coming to Summoners War: Sky Arena

Summoners War RELOADED: A Massive Update is Coming to Summoners War: Sky Arena

Fans of Com2uS’ tactical fantasy RPG hit, Summoners War, know that after celebrating nine years of success, Com2uS has no intention of slowing down. From amazing anniversary rewards for players, to in-game events and even an Assassin’s Creed collaboration, Summoners War has given players plenty of reasons to return to the world they love. With their latest showcase on June 23rd for Summoners War RELOADED, they’ve announced another massive set of updates! Read on for all of the latest news.

Dungeons, Artifacts, and Monsters!

There was a lot of content announced at Summoners War RELOADED showcase. New players will have hours and hours of content to discover, while returning summoners will have more than enough to keep them engaged.

Spiritual Realm, a new Cairos Dungeon, has been added. This new dungeon has difficulty settings that are comparable to the existing Cairos Dungeons, but will drop Fight, Enhance, Accuracy, Determination, and Tolerance runes that were previously dropped only in the rift world. It will also drop the newly added Seal Runes, the second set of runes. For existing Giant Dungeons, the Abyss Floors have been added. Existing dungeons have been changed from 12 floors to 10 floors, and two new floors will be added. Abyss floors are seasonal, and do not allow for multiple monsters. Six star runes are returning to the 10th floors of dungeons, while new rune sets will only be dropped on the Abyss floors. You can dive into Necropolis in July, Spiritual Realm in August, the Steel Fortress in September, and the Punisher’s Crypt in December.

Meet the two new monsters joining the fray: the Indra and the Asura! Today, we’re highlighting the Wind Indra and Water Asura which are just two of the ten variations joining the fray! The Wind Indra is a 5-star that specializes in wind and lightning attacks that debuff enemies while the Water Asura is a 4-Star that gradually increases their attack power every time they strike an enemy. If you liked reading about them, just know that both monsters will be coming in every single attribute! That means you can expect to see things like a Light Asura or a Dark Indra as well. For more info, you can check out all skills and specs of the new monsters in-game!

Two new sets of runes have been added with various effects and ways to impact gameplay. The Intangible Rune allows players to complete a rune set by filling one empty slot, allowing players to have the full effects of a complete rune set. While it won’t replace several runes in a single set, it’s still a powerful tool if used wisely.

What’s New?

Com2uS has proven to be a team that not only listens to their community, but also acts on the feedback they get. They’ve heard the feedback and are doing away with many of the inefficient and outdated systems that have run their course over the last nine years. Instead, they’ve improved and simplified these systems.

Seasoned players will notice the rearrangement of the in-game item acquiring area – this feature simplifies the process so players can focus on farming, rather than constant dungeon switching. Rune enhancement has also been simplified, letting players acquire nat6 runes through Rune Combination, rather than just from farming!

Yet another improvement is the update made to their battle systems. They’ve added an additional turn and unified the attack gauge conditions. Before, some combat situations would result in a player getting an additional turn deferred. Now, with this improvement, they’ve ensured that all skills resulting in an additional turn, will be the same across the board. They’re also updating how the “Absorption” effect in the attack gauge is handled. Currently, if the gauge was absorbed by whatever percent, it would go up that amount regardless of the remaining attack gauge. Now, even if a monster only has ten percent of their health remaining, a player using the absorption effect to steal fifty percent health, will still get that full amount. A few other changes are that “Crushing Hits,” an attribute advantage attack, have been removed. They’ve also rearranged the effect of the Despair rune set with a multi-hit skill!

Other Highlights From the Showcase

In addition to the game features mentioned, one notable highlight from last weekend’s showcase includes the announcement of the fanart event winners celebrating the 9th anniversary of Summoners War. Grand Prize winners are receiving special edition art books signed by the artists behind Summoners War!

Com2uS also held an extensive Q&A time with key members of the team addressing the most pressing questions from players. The team dedicated a significant portion of their time during the presentation to hear and address feedback from their fanbase. It seems to be one of the reasons Summoners War continues to have an active community nine years after its initial launch!

With new dungeons, new monsters, new features directly added based on player feedback, and a ton of other additions, Summoners War fans have a lot of content to explore. If you’re searching for a new tactical RPG to dive into, or a lifelong summoner looking for a new adventure, Summoners War: Sky Arena has you covered!

Poll: What’s Your Game Of The Year Of 2023 So Far?

Tears of the Switch-dom?

In case you missed it, we’re already in July, and that means it’s time to reflect on the first half of the year and talk about the best games of 2023 so far.

Now, dear readers, you might be thinking “but wait, isn’t it Zelda?” and to that we say “we’re not restricted to just one game”. While the latest Legend of Zelda will certainly come up, 2023 has been a banner year for all sorts of titles on the Switch.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Review: Everdream Valley – A Cute Yet Clunky Farm Sim That Tries To Till Differently

Things that go ‘baa’ in the night.

Farming games are well-tilled territory. It’s near-impossible to play a new one without comparing it to the many predecessors on Switch. Everdream Valley knows this, and uses it to both its benefit and detriment.

Released on PC and PlayStation last month from newbie developer Mooneaters and publisher Untold Tales, this debut squeezes its way onto the Switch’s crowded farming sim market (farmers market?). The game does a lot differently; unfortunately, we found those differences didn’t necessarily make for a better farm sim experience. But, depending on how you play other farm sims, your (horse) mileage may vary.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Nintendo “Currently Have No Specifics To Share” About Other Legacy Platforms For Switch Online

Sorry, GameCube fans.

Nintendo’s Switch Online service added Game Boy games in February this year, but there are obviously requests for even more platforms, so is there a chance of other legacy systems being added?

According to the company’s president Shuntaro Furukawa, Nintendo “currently have no specifics to share”. He responded with this classic line when asked about the possibility of “other platforms” like the 3DS software library joining one of the subscription tiers in the future.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Gollum Publisher Daedalic Entertainment Shuts Down Development Projects

Will focus exclusively on the publishing side of the business.

Although The Lord of the Rings: Gollum is still meant to be coming to the Nintendo Switch at some point later this year, Daedalic Entertainment has now announced it will be shutting down its internal development teams to focus on publishing.

Unfortunately, as part of this company restructuring, 25 employees have been affected. Daedalic will support these same individuals in finding new opportunities within its network. This “new beginning” also brings the development of Daedalic’s other Lord of the Rings game to a halt.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Nintendo Has Apparently Retired Its Gulf War Game Boy

It’s going back to Redmond.

Nintendo was known in its earlier years of video game development for its durable and long-lasting hardware, but one system that trumped all was the legendary Game Boy. In fact, there’s one famous Game Boy as you might recall that was damaged in a bombing during the Gulf War and still works!

In an update, the Game Boy has apparently been retired from active duty. ‘VGArtandTidbits’ on Twitter asked one of the Nintendo New York Store employees about it “after not seeing it on display for a while” and was informed the famous handheld had been returned to Nintendo’s headquarters in Redmond Washington.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Will Xbox Win the FTC Trial? We Asked the Experts

If Microsoft could make a video game that was as successful and beloved by gamers as Call of Duty, it wouldn’t have been in court in late June. That’s the core of the issue, according to economists, the San Francisco judge, and onlookers who await the judge’s decision with baited breath.

“We wouldn’t be here if Microsoft had created Call of Duty,” Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley said to lawyers representing Microsoft and the FTC. The law wants people to make their own creative video game smash hits, rather than purchasing them, according to the judge last Thursday.

Corley is poised to make a decision within two weeks on whether Microsoft can acquire Activision Blizzard for nearly $70 billion. Most experts IGN spoke to think that Microsoft is likely to win its case against the Federal Trade Commission, though a vocal minority disagree. The FTC and Microsoft declined to comment.

Much of the FTC’s case hinges on Call of Duty, or “a shooter video game,” as the judge put it, and that Microsoft did not make a video game that shot its way to success by itself but is looking to buy one.

Florian Ederer, associate professor of economics at the Yale School of Management, explained to IGN that a key point in antitrust law is that “nobody can really say that you are doing anything bad if you’re the one that organically grew into a dominant player.”

“If you just make amazing games that then give you a very dominant market position, that’s not illegal. That’s perfectly fine,” Ederer said. Sony’s God of War was brought up in court as an example of organic success.

Corley pushed the FTC on the possibility that some other game developer could come out with something better, if Microsoft bought up Call of Duty. She said: “I’m trying to figure out why the emphasis is so much on ‘Call of Duty.’ Isn’t there an argument that will force someone to come up with another good annual game? After all, Mr. Kotick started from essentially nothing, but he was able to do it, right?”

The FTC responded that Call of Duty was particularly successful – or as some have described it, “a unicorn.”

If you just make amazing games that then give you a very dominant market position, that’s not illegal. That’s perfectly fine

According to a June survey of 1,000 PC and console gamers by investment bank Jefferies, 38% surveyed wanted to play Call of Duty, followed by Fortnite (29%) and Minecraft (29%). The majority (31%) were looking forward to the upcoming Call of Duty title the most, followed by Spider-Man 2, a PlayStation exclusive, at 28%.

Xbox’s counter-argument: Call of Duty was not a unicorn.

Microsoft’s economist Dr. Liz Bailey argued on the stand this week that Call of Duty was not unique, that the FTC’s economist’s market definition was too narrow and didn’t align with reality, and that if the merger goes through, Activision games will become available on more platforms. Bailey analyzed the market and said that Nintendo was a competitor to PlayStation and Xbox.

It’s in Microsoft’s favor to argue that the market is larger, so that the company is seen as less monopolistic, while it’s in the FTC’s favor to argue that the market is smaller.

Most analysts IGN interviewed agreed that the judge was likely to rule in Microsoft’s favor, and that a different outcome would take them by surprise.

“Everybody knows that the FTC at the moment is very, very, very aggressive,” Ederer said. “Most people expect the FTC not to be successful here.”

Under the Biden administration, the FTC has been more proactive, including suing Amazon in June for allegedly tricking customers into signing up for Amazon Prime.

“The Federal Trade Commission isn’t bringing cases because they are easy to win,” said Lee Hepner, legal counsel at anti-monopoly advocacy group the American Economic Liberties Project. “They are bringing cases that anticipate new frontiers of corporate dominance. Microsoft’s ambition is to create a monopoly in the fastest growing sector of the entertainment industry, at a price that is 70 times the size of Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram.”

Not everything has gone Microsoft’s way. The United Kingdom blocked the merger in April, citing cloud gaming as the reason. The FTC continued this line of argument during the hearing, saying that if consoles became obsolete in the future, they’d be replaced by the cloud, where Microsoft holds the advantage.

The FTC also had some evidence on its side: in particular, two emails from Matt Booty, the head of Xbox Games Studios, from 2019 and 2021.

In 2019, Booty wrote to Xbox’s chief financial officer Tim Stuart that Microsoft could “spend Sony out of business.”

“Content is the one moat that we have,” Booty wrote in response to emails that were redacted from public view. He said that in ten years, the company would look back and say, it would have been worth spending $2 or $3 billion in 2020 to stay ahead of the competition.

Microsoft spokesperson David Cuddy responded in a statement last Monday: “This email is three and a half years old and predates the announcement of our acquisition by 25 months. It refers to industry trends we never pursued and is unrelated to the acquisition.”

In a 2021 email, Booty wrote that there was “no effing way” that Xbox was going to put its original games on competitors’ streaming or subscription service.

What’s next for the Xbox FTC case

During a tense moment in court, the FTC and Microsoft argued in closing remarks and the judge gave an indication of her thinking.

“The merger is permanent, Judge,” FTC lawyer James Weingarten said repeatedly on Thursday, before he launched into an argument about how the deal would hurt Sony.

Corley interrupted him. “It’s not the harm to Sony we care about, it’s the harm to consumers,” she said, before calling for a break.

The FTC versus Microsoft hearing is only the first step in what could be a long, drawn-out process, depending on how the judge rules.

If the FTC loses the hearing, it could immediately appeal the judge’s decision and file to stop the court order. It could also choose to continue its case against Microsoft, even if the merger is completed.

As for Activision Blizzard, it will be paid a $3 billion break-up fee if the deal fails, and if it’s completed, Activision CEO Bobby Kotick stands to earn roughly $400 million.

The deal has a July 18 deadline. Microsoft and Activision could potentially renegotiate if the judge rules against them. We have been avidly covering the trial and will keep a close eye on the judge’s decision.

Shannon Liao is a video games journalist who was formerly a staff writer at the Washington Post, CNN and The Verge. You can follow her on Twitter at @Shannon_Liao and on Substack at shannonliao.substack.com

Trepang2 review: It’s an indie F.E.A.R.

Here’s a move I pull in most gunfights in Trepang2: slidekick into an enemy, grab them out of mid-air, briefly hold them in front of me as a human shield, only to pull the pin on their vest’s grenade and hurl them into a group of their pals, who do try to scatter before this meaty bomb bursts but sadly forget that they also need to avoid me and my chunky shotgun. Often this is all in slow-motion. Trepang2 is unashamedly aiming to be a new F.E.A.R. and does a pretty great job of it for a game made by a core team of only four people (plus external artists and such). Give me a shotgun, a slidekick, and slo-mo, and I’m happy.

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