I'm a gamer. I grew up in and around one of the best cities anywhere, Austin, Tx. Head down if you like live music or games!
143901 stories
·
8 followers

"We can't back out now!" Onimusha: Way of the Sword developer laughs off concerns around 2026's packed September release window

1 Share

Onimusha: Way of the Sword is one of many, many games due to launch in the September/October 2026 period in 2026. As developers and publishers flee as far away from GTA 6 black hole as they possibly can, the resultant squeeze in the earlier (or later) months is resulting in a veritable feast of triple-A and indie games on the horizon.

Read more

Read the whole story
Jagmas
7 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Planned Xbox Layoffs Will Be “The Largest Single Layoff Event In Gaming History”

WGB
1 Share
George Broussard, co-founder of 3D Realms, claims Xbox may face significant layoffs soon, potentially exceeding 2,000 jobs. Despite his industry insight, the information remains unconfirmed and should be considered rumor until verified.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
10 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced details PS5 performance targets and features, with the Pro console getting extra love and 60 FPS across the board

1 Share

After a short wait, Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced is almost here. Its summer release date might feel strange looking at other recent entries in the series, but we all know the latter part of 2026 is abnormally busy. Plus... a pirate game is a perfect fit for early July, when you think about it.

Read more

Read the whole story
Jagmas
11 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

It's not just Sony, even Rockstar says GTA 6 "plays best on PS5," with Xbox omitted entirely from one new ad

1 Share

Rockstar has joined in on saying GTA 6 will be best on PS5, with no mention of Xbox at all in a new ad for the game.

Last week amid all the GTA 6 news coming out from Rockstar Games, Sony announced to the world that "GTA 6 plays best on PS5." And while there was never going to be a world where a console manufacturer says its version isn't the best, PlayStation didn't do an amazing job of backing up the claim. Instead of speaking about GTA 6's performance, it simply detailed that the game will support DualSense features – and no, with no specifics about the game, just the generic DualSense features we've had since 2020.

While it's probably safe to say it will be best on PlayStation in the absence of an Xbox Series X Pro or PC version at launch, it's clearly just another form of marketing to push those who are going to pick up a console when GTA 6 comes out.

Now though, in a Twitter post advertising pre-orders for the upcoming open-world game, Rockstar includes the "plays best on PS5" logo as part of its advertising graphic for the GTA 6 Ultimate Edition, urging players to pre-order the game digitally, since there won't be a proper physical release, as copies will be a code in a box.

Not only does this "plays best on PS5" tagline also now appear on the game's official site if you follow the link in that ad, but many fans have noticed that there was no mention of Xbox anywhere in the ad, either. The tweet ends with "Pre-Order Now on PlayStation 5," and the graphics included don't mention Microsoft's console.

While it's likely part of a marketing deal with Sony, some are shocked that "Rockstar Games didn't even acknowledge the existence of Xbox Series in this ad."

Obviously, the Xbox Series X and PS5 and close enough in specs that you'll likely have a good experience with the game either way. That is, unless you're willing to shell out $900 for the PS5 Pro, in which case, that's probably going to be the best way to play… until the PC version comes out.

And ultimately, who cares? A bit of a performance bump probably isn't worth shelling out for an entire new console, especially with the near-constant price increases as of late.

Despite Sony saying GTA 6 "plays best on PS5," Xbox reports "record orders" of Rockstar's new game.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
12 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

ESA bafflingly declares private Minecraft servers 'illegal' in Stop Killing Games hearing: 'We consider it piracy, we have lawsuits'

1 Share

In a remarkably strange statement at a recent California State Senate hearing over the Protect Our Games Act (AB 1921, California's Stop Killing Games-endorsed bill to compel publishers to provide ways to keep playing discontinued games), a representative of the Entertainment Software Association declared private servers for the likes of Minecraft and Call of Duty "illegal," adding that, so far as the ESA is concerned, "we consider it piracy."

The representative in question was Jennifer Gibbons, the ESA's vice president for state government affairs, and just to clear this up right away: what she said was nonsense. You can, literally right now, head over to the official Minecraft website and download a .jar file to let you run your own private server.

Gibbons was responding to a comment made by California state assemblymember Chris Ward—who introduced the bill—regarding the possibility of keeping games alive with private servers. "Minecraft is currently hosted by community servers, Call of Duty [has] community servers, so it's an option that is out there, in existence here today."

Gibbons cut in: "They're illegal. They are not in any way affiliated with Microsoft. Microsoft, for Minecraft, has gotten a lot of criticism because of those community servers not employing the same safety standards that Microsoft does on their Minecraft servers."

Asked by California state senator Caroline Menjivar as to whether this was "like the black market of videogames?" Gibbons responded "Yes. In fact, we consider it piracy. We have lawsuits, two pending lawsuits, against private servers right now, and the United States Trade Representative (USTR) in their Notorious Markets Reports on counterfeiting and piracy has named some of these big private servers as a notorious market." A notorious market refers to a market where intellectual property infringement is rife—think something like The Pirate Bay.

It is true that the USTR has named particular private servers in its Notorious Markets Reports in years gone by, but not for the simple fact of existing as private servers. To take an example, the 2018 report specifically cited Warmane and Firestorm Servers as examples of notorious markets—two sites which enabled people to play World of Warcraft without paying a subscription to Blizzard. Which is quite a bit different from the private Minecraft server you run with your pals, or a community server for an old COD that no one maintains anymore.

Regardless, the Protect Our Games Act did not make it out of this stage of the legislative process. With four aye votes, three noes, and four abstentions, it failed to accrue the majority of ayes necessary to pass. Nevertheless, it has been granted a reconsideration, so it's not the end.

We have reached out to the ESA for comment on this story, and will update if we hear back.

A Stop Killing Games campaign volunteer has already commented on the hearing's proceedings. In a post on Reddit, they wrote that the ESA's claims, both regarding the supposed illegality of private servers and others, were "designed to scare a busy legislator who does not have time to fact-check a well-dressed lobbyist in real time.

"It worked just well enough this round. It will not work when we are standing in the same room, with developers and players beside us, ready to answer every single claim as it happens. Next session, we come back with an in-person lobbying presence, the funding to do this properly, and a long list of organizations and developers signed on in support.

"We are not limiting this to California. We intend to introduce versions of this in other state legislatures, and we are seriously looking at the federal level. The ESA is about to learn what it is like to fight on many fronts at once."

2026 games: All the upcoming games
Best PC games: Our all-time favorites
Free PC games: Freebie fest
Best FPS games: Finest gunplay
Best RPGs: Grand adventures
Best co-op games: Better together



Read the whole story
Jagmas
13 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Koei Tecmo's next project is a new IP that's just been revealed… by the Japanese government

1 Share

Koei Tecmo, the Japanese publisher behind many popular action game series, is apparently working on a brand new project. Koei Tecmo publishes and develops Nioh, Dynasty Warriors, Ninja Gaiden, Dead or Alive and others.

Read more

Read the whole story
Jagmas
15 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories