Detroit: Become Human launches exclusively on PS4 this May
As if April wasn't packed enough with two PS4 exclusives, Quantic Dream's latest is set to launch just before the silly season of E3.
As if April wasn't packed enough with two PS4 exclusives, Quantic Dream's latest is set to launch just before the silly season of E3.
Looking for something new to pop into your favourite console or download to your PC? Here's the full list of what month of March has in store for you in 2018.
When a group of teenagers in a small town start experiencing blackouts (some of them for ages), they band together. When one of them goes missing, it’s up to them to gather evidence, investigate and document everything they can to find out the town’s secret, convince the adults that something’s afoot and find their lost comrade. If that sounds a bit like Stranger things or IT to you, then that’s good – because those are some of the properties where it got its inspiration.
Dragon Ball FighterZ is so good at that character design, that you probably haven’t even noticed the stages that you battle on. Stages which are lush, vibrant and reduced to ashes by the end of a bout. From the World Tournament arena to the broken ruins of a future ravaged by destruction, every battleground in Dragon Ball FighterZ is a glorious homage to the history of the franchise. There’s life in them there hills, especially in the Namek levels available to fight on.
You’re walking down the streets of a Japanese red light district. Minding your own business, possibly thinking of grabbing a drink when all of a sudden a random group of ruffians demands that your face becomes best friends with their knuckles. In any other sandbox game, such an encounter would be a sloppy fight of note. Basic, sluggish fisticuffs, right? Not in Yakuza 6: The Song of Life.
It’s pretty much a new (old) Duke Nukem, without the Duke Nukem licence, which now belongs to Gearbox Software.
Crytek CEO Cevat Yerli is leaving the company, years after unpaid salaries and financial issues brought the once popular engine and games developement studio to its knees.
PlayStation Plus is getting a poster month in March, but it's also hiding a drastic change coming to the service in less than a year.
A spooky European village. Properly scary castle mania. Vampires. Werewolves! The only thing more frightening, is a glimpse at your empty bank account when it comes to deciding whether or not you can grab Resident Evil Village this month. Capcom's successor to its long-running survival-horror franchise is finally out, and if you've read our review then you know the game is a winner on multiple levels.
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