Prime Video’s Batman: Caped Crusader premiered last weekend and while fans had polarizing thoughts, it’s still floating with a Metacritic score of 81. The DNA of Batman: The Animated Series is upfront with Bruce Timm being the showrunner, but is still very much its own show. However, with the heritage of Caped Crusader, Hamish Linklater understood he had to be his own Batman.
Talking to GameSpot during this year’s Comic-Con, the Midnight Mass star explained that the shadow cast by the late Kevin Conroy is a hard one to eclipse, so he embraced it instead.
“I came up on [Batman: The Animated Series] and his voice is, I guess, in my DNA. I mean, the vibrations, you know, if you believe in string theory, as I know [Minnie does], those vibrations, they never go away,” he explaine…
Epic Games confirmed that cross-play across PC storefronts is a requirement for all multiplayer games on the Epic Games Store.
The statement, shared with Eurogamer, reads: “Cross-play across all PC storefronts is a requirement of the Epic Games Store for all multiplayer games, ensuring that players and friends can play together wherever they purchase their games. Developers are free to choose any solutions that meet this requirement, including Epic Online Services, which may require a secondary installation to enable the Social Overlay (friends lists, cross-platform invites, etc) on PC.”
Columbia has announced a new entry in its line of Columbia Classics, a selection of films that get the 4K Blu-ray treatment and are packaged inside of a deluxe box set. For this release, Columbia has reached into its archive for its fifth volume, and this six-movie set will contain A Man For All Seasons, Little Women (2019), The Age of Innocence, Tootsie, On The Waterfront, and All the King’s Men. The collection launches October 1 and preorders are available now at Amazon.
The entire package is $216, but the price is worth it, considering just how much content you’re getting in the box. In addition to the six award-winning films in the set, there’ll also be over 20 hours of new and archival special features, commentary tracks, deleted scenes, making-of documentaries, and much more…
After years of refinement, crafting and survival games have developed a pretty effective formula: You’re dropped into a place where you gather sticks, you use the sticks to make an axe, the axe lets you cut down trees, and before long, you’re making a whole shelter and advancing up a tech tree and making more and more complex gear, mastering the wilderness around you.
Winter Burrow doesn’t stray from that formula–at least, not in its first 20 minutes. But while it feels very similar to other survival games, most notably Don’t Starve, it sets itself apart through its tone and approach. Winter Burrow applies a cozy aesthetic to its survival, combining the feeling of danger with a sense that what you’re building isn’t a shelter to keep you alive, but a home.
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