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‘Animal Kingdom’ Star Ben Robson & ‘Candyman’ Actress Heidi  Engerman Join Netflix’s ‘Ransom Canyon’ Season 2

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EXCLUSIVE: Ben Robson (Animal Kingdom) and Heidi Engerman (Candyman) have joined season two of Netflix’s Ransom Canyon as recurring guest stars in multiple episodes. Filming is underway on season two of the romantic Western drama starring Josh Duhamel and Minka Kelly. The show revolves around three Texas Hill Country ranching family dynasties locked in a contest […]

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Jagmas
1 hour ago
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Round Rock, Texas
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Final Fantasy 7 Remake On Switch 2 And Xbox Has New Options To Make The Game Much, Much Easier

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Cloud grabs his sword on his back.

The upcoming ports on Switch 2 and Xbox feature an easy mode that has me wondering what the point of playing the game even is

The post <i>Final Fantasy 7 Remake</i> On Switch 2 And Xbox Has New Options To Make The Game Much, Much Easier appeared first on Kotaku.

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Jagmas
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Round Rock, Texas
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Jump Space, the co-op spaceship crew-'em-up we warned you was fun, just launched in early access and it's already turning heads

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I see you, weary Silksonger. You are tired of brutal bossfights and backtracking. You have a fierce need to chill with your buds, and if it happens to be in space, you'd be down with that. I assume, anyway, that's the general demographic propelling Jump Space to the top sellers list on Steam, where it's rapidly amassing players on its first day in early access.

While I'm writing this, SteamDB records a 24-hour peak of 15,558 players for the co-op space adventuring game, and that's just a few hours after it went live. It's not the hundreds of thousands of players recorded by Silksong or Borderlands 4, but early user reviews are positive.

"Initial impression is great," says one of the top reviews on Steam so far, written by user Iblysi. "The performance is top notch … You jump with a ship in space. 10/10 would jump again."

When PC Gamer Senior Editor Christopher Livingston tried Jump Space (formerly known as Jump Ship) earlier this year, he praised it for capturing some of that Sea of Thieves magic in a very different package. You crew a ship with up to three friends, playing whack-a-mole with spontaneous fires and manning the guns as necessary, but there's no PvP aspect and you're going on astronautical missions rather than treasure hunts.

You can also upgrade and customize your ship a bit, nabbing spare parts to kit it out with the best add-ons, and get into on-foot gunfights as you explore alien planets. Its inspirations are no secret, but developer Keepsake Games is up-front about that on the Steam page: "We love co-op games, and we love space. Jump Space is our attempt to make both work together."

It's good to see cooperative hangout games going from strength to strength. Between new whoppers like Peak, Borderlands 4, and REPO, as well as smaller-scale hits like Mage Arena and Abyssus, it's hard to imagine a better time for players with a friend group comprised of exactly four people.

The new Dying Light game is pretty good too and also supports four-player co-op. (Plus it runs a bit better than Borderlands 4.) But if the final frontier is what's calling to you, Jump Space is in early access on Steam and seems to be worth a try.

2025 games: This year's upcoming releases
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



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Jagmas
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Xbox prices hiked again in US amid Trump tariff chaos

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For the second time in six months, Microsoft is raising prices on Xbox hardware in the United States. New prices on Xbox Series X and Series S consoles will go into effect on Oct. 3, the company announced Friday, "due to changes in the macroeconomic environment."



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Rupiani's Classic Chicago Cheese Pizza 3 Pack

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Get iconic deep-dish cheese pizzas from Chicago delivered straight to your door.

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Jagmas
3 hours ago
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You Like Your Controls Inverted Because Of Science--And Your Brain

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If you're like me, one of the first things you do when booting up a game is checking out the options in the Settings menu. From audio to subtitles, brightness to performance, you're fine-tuning the particulars to ensure the game is playing just right for you. Maybe during this, you're also changing your controller settings from "normal" to "inverted," and if you've ever wondered why you do that, well, science may have an answer for you.

In a new scientific paper reported on by The Guardian (via Eurogamer), Dr. Jennifer Corbett and Dr. Jaap Munneke at Brunel University London have sought to study the neuroscience behind a player's choice of "normal" or "inverted" controls. Titled "Why axis inversion? Optimising interactions between users, interfaces, and visual displays in 3D environments," the duo discovered that there are a variety of factors that go into your decision of opting for a particular controller setting in games, and it seems to primarily revolve around how your brain perceives objects in 3D spaces.

Initiated during lockdown and published this month, Corbett and Munneke concluded in the study that "personal experiences, favourite games, different genres, age, consoles, which way you scroll with a mouse … all of these things could potentially be involved" in why you choose to invert your controls in-game or not.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

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Jagmas
3 hours ago
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