Sacred 3 to launch on August 26 in North America, first gameplay trailer introduces fast-paced Hack ‘n’ Slash action
Larkspur, Calif. – March 19, 2014 – Publisher Deep Silver pulled back the curtain on the upcoming and anticipated Sacred 3 today, revealing the first eye-popping gameplay footage for the arcade Hack ‘n’ Slash title. The trailer introduces a selection of unique character classes that will be available giving fans a glimpse of the fast-paced co-op action against countless enemies. The newest installment of the classic Sacred series will be available on August 26 in North America for the Xbox 360 games and entertainment system from Microsoft and the PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system as well as Windows PC.
At launch, Sacred 3 will include the Malakhim class as well as the unforgettable Underworld Story DLC. In Underworld, players have to forge their way to the top of a mysterious tower where they have to confront the Black Seraphim, a notorious rival from Sacred 2.
Sacred 3 features classic arcade Hack ‘n’ Slash action centered around drop in, drop out cooperative multiplayer for both offline (2 players) and online (4 players) play. The game brings back fan-favorite characters such as the Seraphim, Ancarian, Khukuhru and the Safiri, as well as introduces a new character, Malakhim. Each character class features its own unique skills and weapons which can be upgraded to match the player’s very own combat style. As they master the art of war, players will fight their way through enemy hordes and try to outshine their fellow companions on their way to become the greatest hero of all. The inclusion of mission stats and online leaderboards will continue to drive competition both locally and online. Victory Is Ours. Glory is Mine.
Deep Silver develops and publishes interactive games for all platforms, seeking to deliver top-quality products that provide immersive game experiences driven by the desires of the gaming community. The company has published more than 200 games worldwide since 2003, including the best-selling zombie action Dead Island™ franchise, the critically-acclaimed Metro™: Last Light and the smash hit action adventure Saints Row IV™. Deep Silver is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Koch Media, GmbH, and includes the renowned development studio Deep Silver Volition, based in Champaign, IL. For more information, please visit www.deepsilver.com or follow us on twitter at @deepsilver.
Devolver Digital has had quite a bit of success recently with Shadow Warriorand Defence Technica, and with Vlambeer’s Luftrausers they can add yet another game to their list of good calls.
The game can trace its origin to 2011 and the product of a two day game jam- Luftrauser. Put on the backburner whilst the creators completed other projects, the game was eventually brought back to the table for further development by the Vlambeer team in 2012.
Built from the ground up but taking the ideas of the original Flash game, Luftrausers is a 2D dogfighting game that sees players take to the skies in a Rauser fighter jet customised with their choice of engine, weapon, and body. There’s no chance of victory, with the focus on taking out as many enemy planes and ships as possible before exploding in a fiery ball of death (or a nuclear skull of doom, depending on your loadout).
Gameplay
Luftrausers is a non-stop, exhilarating joy ride with one simple objective: blow sh*t up. Chain kills to get a point multiplier bonus and keep going until your plane is blown to pieces. There are objectives to complete that unlock new parts and raise your level, allowing for an ever increasing variety of play styles. Weapons run from the standard machine gun, right through homing missiles, cannons, and laser beams. Engines can be super nimble, well rounded or propelled by bullets.
The variety on offer is huge. Want to ram into enemy fighters without taking damage? That’s possible. Want to avoid the skies entirely and spend every run bobbing in and out of the ocean, blasting ships when you come up for air? Sure. Go ahead. No matter if you’re after speed, endurance, power or a laser beam, every set up is fun to play, and unlocking new parts to test out and combine is a joy. Each Rauser looks, feels, and handles differently, and they even have individual names so that you can get way more attached than you should to ‘The Pig’ (I moved on eventually).
The gameplay is kept frantic by having the assault come from air and sea, with multiple enemy types constantly mixing up attack patterns and formations so that each new run feels like a different struggle. You may be swamped by nimble fighters in one run, bombarded by battleships in the next. Part of the fun, and indeed the satisfaction, comes from learning how to deal with anything the game throws at you.
Luftrausers is relentless, constantly throwing enemy after enemy at you until the screen is more bullet than sky. The only way to repair damage to your plane is to stop firing, so you have to make the call whether to shoot and take out the bomber that’s dogging you or turn tail and run in the hope that a brief moment of respite can get your plane back to full strength. Moments of triumph are always within grasp, whether it’s a perfect parabolic bombing run that takes out multiple enemy ships or a simple aerial maneuver that slips your craft neatly between two streams of deadly battleship fire.
Although the reward of new parts dries up fairly quickly, the gameplay is more than enough on it’s own to drive an addiction, and it is incredibly easy to zone in on Luftrausers to the point that little else matters but the next run. The possibility of new thrills and moments of chaos or genius is more than enough to make dying the briefest of inconveniences, and you can be up and running again within seconds – I needed a reason to stop.
Audio & Visuals
Luftrausers is the sort of game that you want to clear the room for. Remove fellow residents who are not interested, turn up the speakers and let the energy of the soundtrack blast your ears whilst enemy planes fall from the sky. It’s loud and it’s exciting, and likely to be punctuated with a perpetual chorus of swearing and whooping. The soundtrack was created by Finnish DJ Jukio ‘KOZILEK’ Kallio, and well, just have a listen to the main theme. Pairing that track with the gameplay makes for one hell of a good time. And here’s the kicker- there are 125 variations of that theme, one for each of the possible combinations of plane parts.
Next to the awesome soundtrack the visual side of Luftrausers can seem a little unremarkable,old school as it is. But don’t let the 2D pixel style fool you, because every plane looks different, and the game can handle a ton of bullets and enemies on screen at once; things can get very intense and the simplicity of the artwork allows it all to go down easy. The cartoon characters on the menus are a nice touch that break things up and hint at a world beyond the chaos, some crazy team of scientists and generals that just keeps on going no matter how ridiculous it is to put one plane up against an endless horde.
Overall
Luftrausers is a mesmerising package that is an absolute joy to play. A fantastic slice of arcade insanity, it takes some very simple concepts and knits them together perfectly, topping the whole thing off with an electro cherry on top. It demands constant attention but in return makes you feel like an aerial god. I’ve yet to play anything else this year that comes close to having the same immediate impact as Luftrausers: grab it and have a ball.
Capsule Computers review guidelines can be found here.
Cormac McCarthy’s novels have been the source material for some great films, No Country for Old Men and The Road being the most recent examples. The Counselor is his first original film screenplay, and it was quickly picked up by the production company behind the screen adaptation of The Road, with Ridley Scott directing. The cast is laden with Hollywood heavyweights, from current man of the moment Michael Fassbender to No Country for Old Men star Javier Bardem.
Story
Michael Fassbender is the titular Counselor, a rich and successful lawyer who has just proposed to his girlfriend Laura (Penelope Cruz). He seems to have been a good boy for most of his time, not falling into the pitfalls of drug abuse and corruption usually associated with his position of power. His friend and business partner however, has had no such qualms. Reiner (Javier Bardem giving more oddly coiffed oddity) has tried and failed to involve the Counselor in drug trafficking, instead settling on building nightclubs with him. Reiner lives with his pouty, sociopath girlfriend Melkina (Cameron Diaz), who owns a couple of cheetahs and knows a bit more about the drug trade than Reiner wants to let on.
And then, The Counselor decides to do a deal. Just one: but a big one that puts him on the radar of the Mexican cartels (presumably he has to pay for the enormous diamond he’s just put on Laura’s two dimensional finger).
Reiner doesn’t like the sound of it, and tries to convince his friend to back out. When he persists Reiner sends him off to see middle man Westray (Brad Pitt), who also goes to great lengths to turn Fassbender away from the deal, describing in detail just how the cartels deal with people who cross them. Despite all of the warnings the Counselor carries on, so of course things swiftly head south. The septic tank truck carrying the cocaine across the border is hijacked, leaving the Counselor in a bit of a tight spot.
Despite the drugs and the sex and the numerous and varied decapitations, the Counselor isn’t an exciting or a tense film, and it’s certainly not sexy. The vast majority of it is spent watching characters have rambling conversations, then someone dies horribly and it all begins again.
Cormac McCarthy’s screenplay is terrible, a fact that will be hard to swallow for anyone who has ever read his novels or seen their film adaptations. The tone is very similar to his other works and The Counselor does bear McCarthy’s trademark streak of brutality, but the dialogue is trying far too hard to be smart and even the actors seem to know it.
Fassbender, Bardem et al all turn in awkward and humorless performances, with Diaz in particular glaringly miscast. Her character Malkina does get more than her share of ridiculous moments, and by the end of the movie it is fairly apparent that Diaz has no idea what she’s saying. It’s a shame to see such a quality ensemble look so silly.
Speaking of ridiculous moments, if you’ve heard only one thing about this film, it’ll be that there’s a scene in it where Cameron Diaz has sex with a car. Indeed she does, and in addition to that, Melkina tries to seduce Penelope Cruz, then a priest, and in response to Bardem’s accusation that she is a cold person delivers the line, “the truth has no temperature”.
It’s not the only snort worthy line of dialogue in the Counselor, with Bardem delivering several cringe worthy speeches about the nature of women (they don’t seem to be creatures worthy of much praise in this movie), and plenty of clangers whenever sex is involved: “You are a glory”, says Michael Fassbender to Penelope Cruz, “Life is being in bed with you, everything else is just waiting”: The Counselor takes two of the most desirable stars in Hollywood , puts them in bed together and ends up with an awkward tussle underneath the sheets.
And it’s not just the main characters who suffer under the yoke of the screenplay. Little to no exposition is afforded, often leaving the identity of the minor characters a mystery. There’s a brilliant example of this sitting on The Counselor’s IMDb page, which attributes a quote to ” The man who is in a pool room talking to the counselor (at 1:51:48)”. Said man talks to the counselor for an entire scene, but we’re never told who he is or what he has to do with the story. Indeed the motivation of pretty much everyone in this film is a little hazy, but at least we know they can spout long lines of pretentious dialogue when called upon.
Audio & Visuals
Despite it’s shortcomings The Counselor is still a good looking movie, directed with the usual flair by Ridley Scott. We get both sides of the drug trafficking coin- the opulent, garish world of Reiner and Malkina and the dusty, violent reality of the people on the business end of their maneuvers. There are some moments of intense violence that really hit home in their brutality, one in particular demanding to be viewed through the fingers- the world of The Counselor is nothing if not grim. Given that the film is so dialogue heavy the musical score takes a bit of a back seat, but composer Daniel Pemberton provides some haunting, tense pieces that take cues from the numerous locations of the film.
Extras
There are no extras with the Digital HD release, so if you’re after any additional material then the physical releases of The Counselor are the way to go. The DVD has some ‘Viral Pieces” (deleted scenes), whilst the Blu-ray adds a making of clip, the trailer and tv spots, and an extended cut of the movie that adds another twenty three minutes to the two hour run time. The Digital HD release is also the extended cut version of the film.
Overall
When the details about this movie were first released excitement levels ran high – a bevvy of Hollywood’s biggest stars directed by Ridley Scott with a screenplay by Cormac McCarthy, what more could you ask for?
As it turns out big names are nothing in the face of a bad screenplay, and authors who produce fantastic novels are not necessarily going to make great screenwriters. Despite solid direction from Scott The Counselor is a tremendous waste of time for everyone involved, and will have the somewhat sad legacy of being “that one where Cameron Diaz humps a car”.
Capsule Computers review guidelines can be found here.
Any good Sydney resident, fan of baseball or fan of sports in general will know that this weekend marks the beginning of the Australian Major League Baseball Opening Series. The hype that surrounds bringing such a brilliant sporting event over to Australia has been immense and with that comes a celebratory “virtual” match between players of the Arizona Diamondbacks and players of the Los Angeles Dodgers held completely within the upcoming “MLB 14: The Show” title set to be released on all current Sony gaming systems. Hanley Ramirez and Yasiel Puig (L.A. Dodgers) went up against Brad Ziegler and Cliff Pennington (Arizona Diamondbacks) just the other day at the Sony offices in Sydney.
The MLB got to play the upcoming title before its release on both the PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita which served not only as a promotion for the upcoming Australian Major League Baseball events but for the game itself and I have to say, from the few pictures we’ve seen of the game…it’s looking brilliant.
Below we’ve got just a few pictures of the stars having a ball playing around with “MLB 14: The Show”, you’ll be able to see them just under this article. The Australian Major League Baseball Opening Series starts this weekend at the SCG (Sydney Cricket Ground) and for those of you who are more fans of the virtual world rather than the real one; the game comes out for the PlayStation 4 on the 8th of May with the PlayStation 3 and Vita version becoming available on the 3rd of April. For any more information on the game head to the official site by Clicking Here.
At long last SimCity fans are finally getting what they have wanted from the very beginning, an offline option for the game. That’s right after its disastrous launch over a year ago the game will finally receive the offline mode that fans have begged for.
SimCity was of course famously released with an online only option that left many players unable to play the game and frequently disconnected which resulted in the game being interrupted. These were just a few of the problems that faced players with the baffling online only game.
Thankfully EA has now officially confirmed the game can be played without a continued internet connection. Be sure to let us know what you think of this news is in the comments section below. Is it too little too late or are you excited by this announcement?
The expected sequel to the Fate spin-off Fate/kaleid liner Prisma Illya has been sighted in a trailer posted on Kadokawa Anime’s YouTube channel. Check it out below!
The light-hearted alternate series follows Illyasviel von Einzbern as a school girl instead of Berserker’s Master as in Fate/Stay Night. After happening upon Kaleido Stick Ruby she becomes a magical girl tasked with capturing Servant cards.
The video promises a longer version of the trailer on April 13 next month. Fate/kaleid liner Prisma Illya 2wei! anime is set to air in July this year. A spin-off isn’t the only thing fans have to look forward to in 2014, with ufotable’s long-awaited Fate/Stay Night adaptation expected in Fall later this year.
The time has come and now Microsoft has announced that the final chapter in the “Untold Stories of Los Perdidos” downloadable content for Dead Rising 3 has been released. It is now available through the Xbox One Marketplace at a $9.99 price tag or free for anyone who actually purchased the game’s season pass.
This piece of DLC, called ‘The Last Agent’ follows Brad Park who is a ZDC agent who discovers the truth behind the zombie outbreak in Los Perdidos and you can check out the trailer below to see what type of weapons and content will be available in this DLC.
Today Konami has released Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes in North America but at least while European gamers have a few more days to wait they will be able to check out the game’s launch trailer which can be found below.
As for the game itself, Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes serves as a prologue to The Phantom Pain and depending on how you purchase the game you may pay a different price. A physical copy of the game for either the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation 3, or Xbox 360 will run you $30 while a digital copy for next-gen consoles is pried at $30 but the digital version on older consoles is only $20.
It looks like fans of the Hyperdimension Neptunia series won’t have to rely on the Vita remakes of the original games for much longer as Compile Heart has announced two brand new games for the series during a stage event held in Akihabara called Game no Dengeki Kanshasai 2014.
According to Dengeki Online the first title is Chou Jigen Action Neptune U which may be an action game and appears to be quite some time off, while the second is Hyperdimension Neptunia VII, which likely means V II, and it is set to be released sometime this year though the company did not say what platform it would be released on. Considering the whole series has been released on Sony platforms so far, it is a fair bet that one of their consoles will be home to the game where it appears the goddesses might fall to the dark side. More details about these games are meant to be revealed on the April 10th issue of Dengeki PlayStation.
Today Viz Media has announced that they have just updated their digital line-up of manga for the month of March and with this update comes two new digital releases. You may remember that Viz had acquired the license for Food Wars!: Shokugeki no Soma and were planning on releasing the title in print in August, well it is currently available digitally and also available today is the first volume of Phantom Thief Jeanne which was released physically a earlier in the month. Both Phantom Thief Jeanne and Food Wars!: Shokugeki no Soma cost $6.99 per digital volume.
Later in this month the shojo drama Tail of the Moon Prequel: The Other Hanzou will be released on March 25th digitally and Viz has also acquired two license rescues in the form of Chibi Vampire and D.N. Angel, both of which will be released digitally on March 25th under their Viz Select line-up. Currently it is unknown if Viz is planning on releasing a physical version of either Chibi Vampire or D.N. Angel at the moment but for now each digital volume will cost $4.99.