Xbox Celebrates Summer of Arcade Anniversary with Sale
Added: 02.07.2018 19:45 | 1206 views | 0 comments
 Microsoft is offering slashed prices on some classic games from the program's past.
| Nintendo and Microsoft Share Cross-Play High-Five in Minecraft
Added: 02.07.2018 19:44 | 1584 views | 0 comments
 Nintendo has just released a video highlighting Nintendo Switch and Xbox One Cross-Play, and PlayStation is notably missing.
| Schoolyard Arguments Find Resolution In Jump Force
Added: 02.07.2018 19:38 | 1653 views | 0 comments
As part of Microsoft’s massive E3 conference, Phil Spencer introduced a fighting game from Bandai Namco as a way of communicating Microsoft’s commitment to Japanese games. The trailer showed Dragon Ball’s Goku and Freeza, the titular character of Naruto, and Luffy from One Piece all fighting each other in realistic modern environments. Bandai Namco introduced the world to Jump Force, a 3D fighting game celebrating manga magazine Shonen Jump’s 50th anniversary.
The story of the game is that our world – that is to say, the real world – is colliding with the world, or worlds, of various Jump series. Unlike previous Jump crossover games, Jump Force is intended to have a story mode explaining why the various heroes and villains are clashing, though Bandai Namco would not tell us the reason quite yet. They only hinted that it would involve the machinations of Light and the Shinigami Ryuk, who were seen observing the fights from the top of a building at the end of the reveal trailer.
The fights take place, at least from what we were shown, in real-world locations. At E3, the only two levels shown were New York City and the Matterhorn, rendered with fairly realistic graphics. There weren’t any citizens fleeing from Naruto’s Kyuubi super or Freeza’s finger lasers, which is good, because that might have been a bit too much to take in.
The actual gameplay of Jump Force is not dissimilar to 3D fighting games already associated with the respective series. Mashing buttons will often get you exactly what you want to happen, usually a disappearing act as you dart across the arena and use your opponent as a volleyball. Holding a shoulder button and combining it with attacks gets you special moves like Goku’s Kamehameha, Luffy’s Gum Gum Pistol, or Naruto’s Rasengan. In that respect, the ease of execution is very similar to Smash Bros. more than, say, Dragon Ball Budokai or Naruto Ultimate Ninja Storm.
The combat at the moment, however, is a little slow and unvaried. Characters all move at about the same speed and seem to have a lot of the same combos, making them feel extremely similar outside of their special moves. Mobility doesn’t seem that different between One Piece’s Zorro and Dragon Ball’s Goku, giving the possibly intentional impression that the game is designed to simply be picked up and played for anyone with any favorite character.
Bandai Namco wouldn’t give up the roster for the game, but hinted that there more than a few surprise characters that fans wouldn’t think of. While fighting ability and popularity are important factors, being able to please fans of more niche series is also a major goal for the development team.
Jump Force is scheduled to release in 2019 on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC.
| Forza Horizon 4 is now available for digital pre-order on Xbox One and Windows 10
Added: 02.07.2018 19:33 | 1042 views | 0 comments
 Forza Horizon 4, the fourth installment of Microsoft's popular racing video game, is now available for digital pre-order and pre-download for Xbox One and Windows 10. Forza Horizon 4 arrives globally on October 2!
In Forza Horizon 4, players will be able to experience a shared open world where... Learn more on XBOX ONE HQ!
| Microsoft News on iOS, Android... and on Windows 10 Mobile. Of course.
Added: 02.07.2018 19:08 | 1694 views | 0 comments
 This is news from Microsoft itself, though it's a bit of stuff and nonsense in terms of branding and partnerships at the end of the day. Still, with all the 'iOS & Android' prose in the original story, I wanted to emphasise that the 'new' Microsoft News is also just as much part of Windows 10 Mobile, even if it's not called out explicitly. Because... of course. It's Windows 10.
From:
allaboutwindowsphone.com
| Facebook and Windows Phone 8.1 now (almost) a no-go
Added: 02.07.2018 19:08 | 1427 views | 0 comments
 Facebook's authentication changes have now finally stopped the old (2014?) official client for Windows Phone 8.1 from being able to log in, as anyone with an older Lumia should be able to verify. With the platform itself now not supported by Microsoft, such major service/client failures are not surprising. What is surprising is that finding alternative means of logging into Facebook are also not easy. Though, as ever, I do have a solution for AAWP readers still clinging to Windows Phone 8.1!
From:
allaboutwindowsphone.com
| Xbox Game Pass gets some crackers in July
Added: 02.07.2018 19:05 | 1686 views | 0 comments
 Microsoft has announced some more games coming to Xbox Game Pass - and it's a tidy list of titles. At E3, Microsoft announced Fallout 4, The Division and The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited would come to Microsoft's Netflix-style subscription service. Also coming in July are Warhammer: Vermintide 2, DiRT 4 and Zombie Army Trilogy.
| Tunic hides instruction manual pages for the game you're playing in the game you're playing
Added: 02.07.2018 19:05 | 1530 views | 0 comments
 You'd be forgiven for missing Tunic's appearance during Microsoft's E3 2018 media briefing, sandwiched as it was between reveals for mega blockbusters such as Halo and Gears of War. But this indie game, which one developer has spent over three years crafting, is certainly worth a closer look - and it's got one unique mechanic in particular I think is super cool. At first glance, Tunic looks like Zelda viewed from an isometric perspective, except instead of playing as a young elf-like boy you play as a fox. There's more to the game than that, of course, but the influence of Nintendo's early Zelda games cannot be denied here. I mean, it's called Tunic, after all.
| Eurogamer's best of E3 2018
Added: 02.07.2018 19:05 | 1122 views | 0 comments
 In all honesty, we weren't expecting much from E3 this year. Ahead of time, it bore all the hallmarks of an E3 the year before people start talking about new consoles. With the platform holders manoeuvring behind the scenes and the biggest games in development quietly readjusting their schedules as production managers try to suss out the logistics of going cross-gen or even fully next-gen, the big press conferences become exercises in misdirection. We knew Sony would have nothing new, we suspected Microsoft would have little and we knew Nintendo was focused on Smash Bros. and Pokémon. And yet still, E3 2018 delivered. We can partly in owning up to the next generation of consoles, and its brisk showcase stuffed to bursting with colourful and enticing games. It certainly set the tone, and the reliably straight-talking CD Projekt followed up with a cheeky admission that Cyberpunk 2077 was due out on the current-gen consoles "", which was refreshing, even if it did take the fun of out the old "which of these games is actually next-gen" guessing game. (It was that one.) Perhaps we had also forgotten the great thing about the late period of a console generation - it usually means lots of good games. Most of the big publishers turned up with something genuinely and uncynically great in their line-up, there was hardly a loot box in sight, and there were only a couple of hastily tacked-on battle royale modes. Well done everyone.
| Microsoft Sued Over Sea of Thieves, Halo 5 Engine - IGN Daily Fix
Added: 02.07.2018 19:02 | 1523 views | 0 comments
 Infinity War Twitter reactions, Jumanji sequel gets an ambitious date and Microsoft gets sued.
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