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!
138967 stories
·
8 followers

Tabletop Simulator announces a free 2.0 update that includes a UI overhaul and a marketplace for paid mods

1 Share

Tabletop Simulator developer Berserk Games has announced big changes coming this year, with "a series of major updates that we will be releasing for free with the goal of modernizing Tabletop Simulator and setting up the platform for success over the coming decade and beyond."

Version 2.0 of the popular virtual tabletop will include a significant overhaul of the interface, making it easier to play and more Steam Deck-friendly. We'll be able to switch between a "Play Mode" that is "designed to streamline gameplay and make the playing experience less cluttered and confusing" and an "Edit Mode" for "creators and power users who want expansive control over their creative process."

So far, so good. It's also hard to quibble with promises to improve the performance, graphics, online stability, and VR support. Some players aren't so impressed by the promise to implement a Creator Marketplace for user-generated content, which is to say: paid mods.

While you can buy DLC to play games like Zombicide in Tabletop Simulator, the Steam Workshop is where the real action is. It's full of unofficial mods recreating games like Uno and Settlers of Catan, as well as resources like D&D miniatures, all of which are available for free. The addition of a Creator Marketplace will, Berserk Games says, "expand the library of available Tabletop Simulator content without interfering with existing free Steam Workshop submissions."

Not everyone believes that promise, which is why the Steam comments are the way Steam comments usually are, and on the subreddit there's a doompost declaring that Tabletop Simulator is enshittifying into a Roblox-style marketplace. If modders are encouraged to monetize their work, the hypothesis goes, it'll draw the litigious attention of more board game publishers and that'll be it for unlicensed mods that let us play Advanced Heroquest or whatever. Sounds a bit cynical to me, but so does about 90% of what people post to Reddit.

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
7 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

MMO Year in Review: New World ghosted (October 2025)

1 Share
We’re continuing our tour back through 2025, one month at a time, in MassivelyOP’s MMO Year in Review today. October was at one point shaping up to be a great month for the MMORPG industry, as we anticipated Guild Wars 2’s Visions of Eternity launch, the kick-off of the Elder Scrolls Online’s Writhing Wall event, […]
Read the whole story
Jagmas
10 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

42 New Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror Books Releasing in January

1 Share
Happy New Year, and happy new books!

Read the whole story
Jagmas
17 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

The 20 most anticipated new anime of 2026

1 Share

Looking forward, 2026’s anime roster is already stacked. A slew of exciting announcements at Shueisha’s Jump Festa heightened anticipation, but there’s so much more. Here are 20 titles worth looking forward to, in order of release. Expect lesser-known debuts, high-stakes sequels, and beloved returning franchises. No matter what you’re partial to, you’re going to be spoiled for choice.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
17 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Dispatch sold over 3 million copies in 2025, and only around five percent of players beat the game without romancing anyone

1 Share

Interactive superhero show Dispatch was a critical success, receiving a healthy 89% in PC Gamer's review, and now we've learned it was a commercial success, too, selling over 3 million copies in 2025.

That figure comes from an animated infographic AdHoc Studio posted on Bluesky earlier today, which is festooned with all sorts of stats (fair warning, it spoils some choices you'll be faced with in-game). According to the studio, players answered 727 million calls, dispatched over 1 billion heroes, and watched an estimated 23 million hours of gameplay on YouTube and Twitch.

💾 Clocking out on 2025🎆 HAPPY NEW YEAR! 🎆

— @adhocstudio.com (@adhocstudio.com.bsky.social) 2026-01-01T19:03:22.790Z

That's all well and good, but I'm here for the funny tidbits—like how only around 164,000 players got through the game without falling for anyone. Nearly 2 million players romanced Invisigal and another million romanced Blazer, so maybe Baldur's Gate had the right idea with how, erm, eager its cast was to win the player's heart over. Videogame romance remains popular as ever, regardless of what you might hear elsewhere.

Funnily enough, Dispatch itself was almost even saucier than it turned out to be, with "some sex scenes" cut during development. In the end, I'm just glad it came out at all and did so well, given the arduous road its creators took getting it out the door.

This all reminds me that I need to play Dispatch myself before long. It seems like a worthy revival of the sort of interactive adventure game Telltale was king of back in its heyday, and as Fraser mentioned in his above review, it has "rizz for days." That's the sort of endorsement I can get behind!

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
17 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

The ‘Stranger Things’ Finale Stuck The Landing

1 Share

Stranger Things season 5 was starting to go off the rails, but the two hour series finale was excellent, and a perfect send-off for the show.

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