nightdive
Nightdive's 'The Thing' remaster is available right now
Nightdive Studios, the developer behind remasters of Star Wars: Dark Forces and System Shock 2, have surprise-launched a remaster of 2002 cult-hit The Thing. The upgraded game is available now for PC, Xbox One and Series X/S, PlayStation 4 and 5, Nintendo Switch, and to stream through NVIDIA GeForce Now. Originally developed by Computer Artworks, The Thing is a third-person shooter that acts a direct sequel to John Carpenter's 1984 film The Thing, following a United States Special Forces team that's sent into the film's arctic base to investigate what happened there. Outside the source material, the game is best known for its trust, fear, and infection systems. How you play can impact whether in-game characters trust you, think you're The Thing or turn into The Thing themselves.
System Shock review – you versus a murderous AI in revived sci-fi horror classic
Originally released in 1994, System Shock is best known through the games it inspired. Its blend of first-person shooting, sci-fi roleplay, and survival horror made it a touchstone for Deus Ex, BioShock, Dead Space and Prey. But it never enjoyed the success of its descendants; it lives in the shadow of its children. The greatest accomplishment a remake could achieve, then, would be to afford System Shock the credit it deserves. Nightdive Studios' remake does this, but not in ways you might expect.
This week in games: Overwatch adds a new robot-tank, Ubisoft offends Bolivia, and more
We can roughly divide the year into two halves: September through February is the "Release" bit, and March through August the "Hype" bit. Sure, there are exceptions--games get released all year long at this point. The Game Developer's Conference, which took place this week in San Francisco and where we start to see news about the year's most-anticipated games. Another solid Humble Bundle this week, this time focused on the Arma series. The tiers are a bit complicated but basically $1 gets you the original Arma, beating the average gets you Arma 2, and paying $15 or more gets you Arma 3. If you're looking for a hellishly complicated but ultra-rewarding military sim, Arma's a damn good choice--or if you just want to play the original DayZ, before it fell into Early Access hell.
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