Death Stranding 2 PC Launch on March 19 | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Arrival on the beach: Death Stranding 2 heads to PC on March 19, 2026

A Kojima headline that actually tells you something — and fast. Kojima Productions has officially confirmed that Death Stranding 2: On the Beach will land on Windows on March 19, 2026, bringing Hideo Kojima’s sprawling, uncanny delivery simulator to PC with a slate of PC-first upgrades and the usual Kojima flourish. Pre-orders went live February 12, 2026 on Steam and the Epic Games Store, and the port is being handled by Nixxes Software.

Why this matters beyond another port

Death Stranding 2 already had a high-profile PS5 launch in 2025, but PC releases for Kojima projects have historically widened the audience and given players new ways to experience his cinematic design. This is one of the quicker turnarounds we’ve seen for a PlayStation-to-PC sequel — and it’s arriving with technical options that make the most sense for PC players: uncapped framerates, upscaling and frame-generation support (NVIDIA, AMD, Intel), plus extended ultrawide resolutions.

That combination makes this more than "the same game on another platform." For many players, it will be the definitive way to experience On the Beach: higher refresh rates, 32:9 super-ultrawide support, and PC audio options like Dolby/DTS/Windows Sonic can change pacing and immersion in both walks across burned landscapes and tense combat encounters.

What’s new for PC (and what to expect)

  • Release date: March 19, 2026 (Windows).
  • Pre-orders: Opened February 12, 2026 on Steam and Epic Games Store.
  • Port developer: Nixxes Software (Sony-owned studio known for PlayStation-to-PC ports).
  • Performance features:
    • Uncapped framerates for gameplay (cinematics locked at 60 FPS).
    • Support for NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel upscalers and FrameGen.
    • Ultrawide and super-ultrawide monitor support (21:9 and 32:9) — cutscenes included for 21:9 on PS5 and both 21:9/32:9 on PC.
  • Input & audio:
    • Full mouse + keyboard support and DualSense controller integration.
    • 3D audio support via Dolby Access, DTS Sound Unbound, or Windows Sonic for Headphones.
  • Cross-content and account features:
    • PlayStation account sign-in for trophies, friends list overlay, and exclusive backpack patches / PS-inspired suit.
  • New modes:
    • Kojima Productions promised "new modes and features" that will arrive on both PC and PS5 at launch; specifics will be revealed closer to release.

A quick look at the developer and port team

  • Kojima Productions continues to build its auteur brand around cinematic, narrative-driven, genre-bending games. Hideo Kojima remains the creative force and public face.
  • Nixxes Software is handling the PC build — they’ve become Sony’s primary studio for PC ports, with mixed public reception on some launches but a solid technical pedigree for enabling high-end PC features.

What this means for different players

  • PC enthusiasts with ultrawide monitors and high-refresh rigs will likely see the biggest improvements in visual and performance fidelity.
  • Players who prefer controllers or want PlayStation-connected features can still expect DualSense integration and PlayStation account rewards.
  • Fans who didn’t play the PS5 release now have a compelling reason to jump in without buying new hardware — and those who did may revisit the game to chase performance or cosmetic pre-order extras.

A few practical notes

  • Cinematics remain locked at 60 FPS, so expect buttery gameplay but cinematic sequences capped — a common design choice to preserve directors’ timing.
  • Pre-order incentives include cosmetic items (Quokka hologram, various skeletons) and a Digital Deluxe option with extra bonuses.
  • If you want the same PC experience as the reveal, check system requirements when Steam/Epic store pages go live; the PlayStation Blog announcement recommends upscaling and FrameGen-capable hardware for the best upgrades.

What to watch between now and March 19

  • Detailed system requirements and storefront pages (Steam / Epic).
  • Specifics on the promised new modes and features that will ship on both PC and PS5.
  • Early reviews and PC launch-day technical impressions, especially given Nixxes’ mixed history on past ports.

Key points to remember

  • Death Stranding 2: On the Beach arrives on PC March 19, 2026.
  • Major PC features: uncapped framerates, upscaling/frame generation, ultrawide support to 32:9, DualSense and mouse/keyboard, 3D audio.
  • Port by Nixxes Software; pre-orders opened February 12, 2026 with cosmetic bonuses.

My take

Kojima’s work is built to be experienced — and offering serious PC options makes sense for a game that trades on atmosphere, slow-burn tension, and environmental spectacle. The technical additions are the kind of polish that can transform player experience: ultrawide vistas, unlocked framerates while traversing the ruins of Australia, and FrameGen-assisted smoothing could make long deliveries feel elegant rather than sluggish. The real wildcard will be whether the new modes add meaningful replay value or simply extend the experience cosmetically. Either way, March 19 gives PC players a clear date to clear shelf space and maybe buy a better chair for those long walks across Timefall-scarred landscapes.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Leon Infected Again: Requiems Dark Return | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Leon’s Old Wounds, New Threats: What the Requiem State of Play Trailer Means for Resident Evil Fans

If there’s one thing Resident Evil does better than most long-running franchises, it’s knitting nostalgia into fresh dread — and Capcom’s latest State of Play trailer for Resident Evil: Requiem leans hard on that needle. The new footage gives us a clear, unnerving update: Leon S. Kennedy — the franchise’s perennial action hero — is once again showing signs of infection. That revelation lands like a gut-punch for fans who’ve followed Leon from rookie cop to grizzled veteran, and it raises some deliciously awful questions about how Capcom will balance legacy characters with a new protagonist and a creeping new horror.

Why this trailer matters right now

  • The trailer debuted during Sony’s State of Play and highlights several story beats tying Requiem back to Raccoon City and the T‑Virus fallout. (psu.com)
  • A close-up in the trailer shows bruise-like marks and necrotic discoloration on Leon’s hands and neck — visual cues that strongly imply a lingering or resurgent infection tied to the Raccoon City incident. Multiple outlets and fans have paused and analyzed that moment. (nintendowire.com)
  • The footage also teases a returning face from RE2-era lore (widely read as Sherry Birkin) and resurrects classic monster vibes — including creatures that resemble early-stage Lickers — giving the game a mix of character callbacks and creature design callbacks. (gamesradar.com)

If you’ve kept an eye on Requiem’s breadcrumbs — leaks, PlayStation Store art slips, and producer comments — the trailer reads as both confirmation and escalation: Leon is present, he’s deteriorating, and Capcom is intentionally threading the old world into this new mystery. (pcgamer.com)

Setting the scene: where Requiem sits in the timeline

  • Requiem takes place roughly 30 years after the Raccoon City disaster (the 1998 bombing), placing returning characters like Leon in their mid-to-late 50s and in a world shaped by decades of Umbrella fallout. (ew.com)
  • The game follows Grace Ashcroft — introduced as an FBI analyst with family ties back to previous Outbreak-era events — and alternates sections that emphasize classic survival horror (Grace) and more combat-forward encounters (Leon). The trailer underscores that duality. (ew.com)

Notable moments from the trailer

  • Leon removes a glove to reveal dark, bruise-like marks and a steadily worsening condition; a voice on the radio urges urgency, implying a ticking-clock prognosis. Fans and press interpret this as a syndrome tied to residual T‑Virus mutation. (techtimes.com)
  • A glimpse of a blonde figure with a familiar silhouette and voice hints at Sherry Birkin’s return — an emotional through-line for players who remember her arc across multiple entries. Capcom hasn’t formally confirmed, but the trailer’s cues push that reading. (nintendowire.com)
  • Monster design callbacks: shots in the trailer show creatures that evoke early Licker concepts and other mutated forms, suggesting Capcom is mining classic assets and unused concept art to enrich the horror. (gamesradar.com)

What this could mean for Leon’s story (theories and honest bets)

  • Slow-burn infection angle: the trailer explicitly references “residual T‑Virus” behavior in files fans have frozen-frame–analyzed. This suggests the story may explore long-term consequences of early exposure rather than a sudden new bite — a tragic arc for Leon that ties him thematically to the franchise’s legacy of contagion. (techtimes.com)
  • Redemption or sacrifice beats: narratively, a veteran hero with a terminal, fast-progressing condition is a classic device to raise stakes and force hard choices. Expect scenes that put Leon’s experience and agency in tension with Grace’s investigation. (psu.com)
  • Aging as narrative fuel: Capcom has been playing with returning characters before (cameos and playable sections in recent RE titles). Leon’s deterioration could be a way to keep him integral while allowing the new protagonist — and the series’ horror beats — to take center stage. (pcgamer.com)

What I’m watching for on release day

  • How the game explains the mechanics of Leon’s infection (medical files? a lost vaccine? a new strain?). The trailer hints at in-game documentation that may be used to pace exposition. (techtimes.com)
  • Whether Leon remains playable through the story or if his sections are limited; marketing and leaked artwork hinted at a significant role, but Capcom has said not to over-expect cameos. Gameplay structure will determine whether Leon’s arc feels earned. (pcgamer.com)
  • How the game balances old monsters and new threats — are Licker-esque enemies fan service or central to the game’s horror framework? Early footage suggests they’ll be more than eye candy. (gamesradar.com)

Quick takeaways

  • Leon’s infection is real and visually signaled in the State of Play trailer; it looks deliberate and story‑heavy rather than incidental. (techtimes.com)
  • Requiem leans on Raccoon City nostalgia (RPD, classic creature types, returning characters) while introducing a new protagonist to anchor the horror. (psu.com)
  • Capcom appears to be mixing fan service with fresh narrative stakes: legacy characters return with consequences, not just cameos. (pcgamer.com)

My take

This trailer does something smart: it makes you ache for Leon. By showing him vulnerable and compromised rather than simply digging up the same heroic beats, Requiem promises a tonal shift toward regret, inevitability, and the moral gray of living with a past you can’t fully outrun. If Capcom follows through — using Leon’s condition to deepen the plot rather than as a mere twist — Requiem could be the franchise’s best act of legacy-building since the remakes. If they don’t, there’s a risk the emotional setup will feel cheapened by action beats or cameo overload.

Either way, whether you come for the scares or the callbacks, the trailer proves Capcom isn’t content with safe nostalgia: they’re trying to complicate it.

Final thoughts

Resident Evil: Requiem’s State of Play trailer strikes a careful balance: it gives fans the warmth of return while adding an uncomfortable chill. Leon’s infection turns a familiar face into a story question — and that’s exactly the kind of slow-burn horror the series has been flirting with again. February 27, 2026 (the game’s release date) suddenly feels like it can’t arrive soon enough. (psu.com)

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Copen Speedruns Into Gunvolt 3 CONNECT iX | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A surprise speedrun: Copen zips into Azure Striker Gunvolt 3 with CONNECT iX

There’s a small, electrifying update buzzing through the Gunvolt community this week: Inti Creates has pushed a free update to Azure Striker Gunvolt Trilogy Enhanced that injects a fresh, high-octane mode into Azure Striker Gunvolt 3. Called “CONNECT iX,” it hands players control of Copen — the rival-turned-standout from the Luminous Avenger iX subseries — and turns Gunvolt 3 into a compact speedrun playground built for chaining movement, scoring, and personal bests.

Why this matters beyond a new costume

On paper, it’s a single new mode. In practice, CONNECT iX does a lot of heavy lifting:

  • It bridges two branches of Inti Creates’ action catalog (the main Gunvolt numbered series and the iX spin-offs) in a playable, mechanical way.
  • It reframes Gunvolt 3’s stages as speedrun courses, highlighting movement tech and risk/reward scoring rather than long-form story progression.
  • It gives fans of Copen — and players who like fast, precise platform-action — a distilled, replayable challenge without needing to jump to a different game.

If you’ve played any Gunvolt title, you know the series is about rhythm: dash, lock, chain, and keep momentum. CONNECT iX takes that rhythm and accelerates it.

What CONNECT iX actually does

Based on the patch notes and coverage:

  • CONNECT iX is a “Speedrun” mode added to Azure Striker Gunvolt 3 (accessible from the main menu).
  • You play as Copen from Luminous Avenger iX 2 across five stages and bosses, aiming for the highest score and fastest time. (gematsu.com)
  • Gameplay highlights:
    • Bullit Dash mobility lets Copen zip through the air and lock onto enemies rapidly.
    • Access to the seven EX Weapons (Lola’s special equipment) from iX 2 enables different strategies and loadouts.
    • An Overdrive mechanic triggers when Kudos (score) is high enough, powering Copen up and invoking Lola’s support via song. (gematsu.com)

These changes make CONNECT iX feel like a curated best-of: short runs, explosive movement, and a focus on optimizing routes and weapon use. It’s competitive-friendly without being punishing to newcomers who want to experiment.

A bit of context: where CONNECT iX fits in the trilogy

Azure Striker Gunvolt Trilogy Enhanced launched as a bundled, polished package of the three main Gunvolt games (Gunvolt 1, 2, and 3) with added quality-of-life, music, and library content — released digitally for Nintendo Switch and PS5 on July 24, 2025 (with PC presence via storefronts like Steam). This update continues the “Enhanced” ambition: keep the trilogy current, add modes that broaden playstyles, and reward fans with new reasons to return to familiar stages. (nintendolife.com)

Inti Creates has a history of cross-pollination between its franchises (guest characters, crossover tracks, spin-offs). CONNECT iX is a neat design move: rather than just dropping Copen in as a palette swap, the mode adapts his iX toolkit and movement into a distinct scoring loop inside Gunvolt 3.

How players and speedrunners might react

  • Casual players: A fun, bite-sized diversion. Five-stage runs = quick sessions, perfect for practicing movement and learning Copen’s feel without committing to a full campaign.
  • Completionists: New leaderboards and high-score chasing will add another layer to platinuming or completion runs.
  • Speedrunners: CONNECT iX’s short-run structure is tailor-made for route optimization and leaderboard competition. Expect communities to form new categories or integrate these runs into existing Gunvolt speedrun sets.

Because the mode leans on iX-specific tools (Bullit Dash, EX Weapons, Overdrive), mastering it will also teach transferable skills for other iX-related content and fan-made challenges.

What this update says about Inti Creates’ approach

  • Iterative value: Inti Creates continues to support the Trilogy Enhanced edition post-launch, not just with balance tweaks but with meaningful content that changes how the games are played.
  • Franchise cohesion: Bringing Copen into Gunvolt 3 winks at long-term fans while remaining approachable to newcomers.
  • Community-first design: Short, score-driven modes encourage replayability and social competition, which helps sustain interest long after the initial release window.

Quick takeaways

  • CONNECT iX is a free speedrun mode in Azure Striker Gunvolt 3 that makes Copen playable across five fast stages. (gematsu.com)
  • The mode emphasizes aerial mobility (Bullit Dash), EX Weapon variety, and an Overdrive scoring mechanic tied to Kudos. (gematsu.com)
  • It’s a smart crossover that rewards both casual replay and competitive speedrunning, while reinforcing the Trilogy Enhanced package as a living product. (nintendolife.com)

My take

CONNECT iX is the kind of update that tells you a studio understands its audience: it’s quick to pick up, mechanically deep, and gives players a reason to reconvene around leaderboards and clips. It doesn’t rewrite the series’ identity, but it sharpens one of its most appealing facets — fluid, expressive movement — and packages that into a mode that’s both streamable and addictive. For anyone who loves action games where graceful movement meets scoring optimization, this is exactly the sort of bite-sized content that keeps a trilogy feeling fresh.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Destiny 2 Renegades trailer leaks early | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A leaked trailer, a livestream, and a whole lot of Star Wars vibes: Destiny 2’s Renegades gets an early reveal

The internet loves a good whoops — especially when it involves a high-profile game and a shiny trailer. Hours before Bungie planned to show the next big slice of Destiny 2, a Renegades launch trailer slipped into the wild as a YouTube ad. Suddenly Guardians everywhere got an unplanned first look at story cinematics, new characters, and ship designs that look like they borrowed a few pages from a galaxy far, far away.

This little leak matters more than a clickbait misstep. It gives us a peek not only at Bungie’s marketing timing but at the tone and direction of an expansion that is explicitly inspired by Star Wars. Here’s what stood out, why the leak stings and excites at once, and what it might mean for players and Bungie heading into Renegades’ December launch.

What this leak shows

  • The trailer surfaced as a YouTube advertisement, visible before Bungie’s scheduled developer livestream revealed the expansion properly.
  • Footage includes story cinematics, a new cast of characters tied to the Lawless Frontier setting, and ship/vehicle designs that lean heavily into Star Wars aesthetics — from lightsaber-like melee weapons to blaster-style guns and walker-like machines.
  • The spotlight in the clips is on a criminal-underworld angle: missions such as smuggling, bounty-hunting, and sabotage across frontier planets, plus a social hub called Tharsis Outpost. These elements were also highlighted in Bungie’s official Renegades materials, suggesting the leak matched what Bungie intended to reveal. (thegamepost.com)

Why the timing matters

  • Trailers are choreographed moments: reveals, livestreams, and publisher messaging are coordinated to build hype, control narrative, and protect surprises. A leak short-circuits that plan, forcing reaction tweets, rapid clarifications, and potentially spoiling big reveals for viewers who wanted the livestream experience.
  • For Bungie, which has had to rebuild trust after rocky updates earlier in the year, losing control of a primary reveal is awkward — but the footage itself serves the game’s marketing well if fans respond positively. Early footage often spreads fast and can either amplify interest or intensify scrutiny. (gamesradar.com)

The content itself: what Renegades looks like

  • Star Wars-inspired motifs are everywhere: blaster-style exotics, lightsaber-adjacent melee tools (the game describes new “Blaster” weapons and the Praxic Blade-like items), and frontier maps that echo Tatooine, Hoth, and Dagobah vibes. Bungie is leaning into the mash-up intentionally — Renegades is billed as “Star Wars–inspired” and themed with syndicate underworld gameplay. (press.bungie.com)
  • New gameplay hooks: a Lawless Frontier mode with high-risk contracts (smuggling, bounty hunting, sabotage), opt-in PvPvE Invasion mechanics, and a Notoriety system for reputation and loot — all pointing toward Guilty-pleasure, cinematic missions rather than a simple seasonal add-on. (press.bungie.com)

How the community might react

  • Nostalgia and skepticism in equal measure: players who enjoyed Destiny’s cinematic, loot-driven spin will likely be intrigued by the cinematic trailer and Star Wars nods. Others, still critical of certain monetization and balance choices from prior updates, will watch carefully for how much of the new content is gated or monetized. Early leaks accelerate that conversation and can make the first impressions last.
  • A leak can also fuel hype in a useful way. If the trailer wins hearts, Bungie still gets a viral marketing boost (albeit on someone else’s schedule). If fans react negatively, the company must respond fast during the scheduled livestream to reframe or clarify. Recent reporting shows Bungie has been juggling communication and roadmap expectations — Renegades launches at a sensitive moment. (gamesradar.com)

What Bungie’s official rollout still brings

  • Bungie’s livestreams and ViDocs usually add context: release cadence, new systems, balance notes, and exact launch dates. The planned developer livestream — which Bungie scheduled to debut the official Renegades launch trailer — remains the definitive source for details like pre-order bonuses, exact mechanics, and release timing (Renegades is slated to launch December 2, 2025). The livestream also typically lists platform support and edition differences. (bungie.net)

The marketing lesson inside a leak

  • Control what you can, respond fast to what you can’t. Leaks are part of modern entertainment marketing; the damage is often proportional to how well a publisher reacts. A prompt, transparent livestream with additional details and developer commentary can turn a leak into an amplified reveal rather than a smear.
  • For players, a leak is a preview — but not the full story. Cinematics tease tone and design; developer streams and patch notes reveal mechanical truth.

My take

Seeing Renegades’ trailer early is a bittersweet treat. On one hand, the visuals and the Lawless Frontier setup look bold and cinematic, and the Star Wars-inspired touches are likely to pull in both Destiny and sci-fi fans. On the other hand, the moment underscores how tightly labeled expectations and communication matter right now for Bungie: they’ve got to answer lingering player concerns about monetization and long-term direction while delivering a fun, coherent expansion.

If Renegades nails gameplay loops (the contracts, Notoriety rewards, and the new Blaster archetype) and keeps progression and monetization fair, this early trailer could become a memorable hype moment. If not, the leak just gave fans a head start on criticism.

Final thoughts

Leaks will come. What matters is the product behind the footage and how Bungie uses its next livestream to connect the dots. Expect the official reveal to add context, specifics, and answers — and check patch notes when Renegades lands on December 2, 2025, to see how the promise lines up with play.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Tales of Berseria Remaster: Dark Revival | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Go with the FLOW: Why Tales of Berseria Remastered Is the Remaster We Didn’t Know We Needed

The announcement landed like a surprise spell: Bandai Namco has revealed Tales of Berseria Remastered for modern platforms, with a worldwide release set for February 27, 2026. If you were hoping the next remaster would be Xillia 2, well—so were a lot of fans—but Berseria’s turn feels both bold and smart. Let’s talk about why this darker, more emotionally raw entry is the perfect candidate to ride the current wave of Tales remasters.

Why this matters right now

  • Tales remasters have been rolling out as part of Bandai Namco’s effort to preserve and reintroduce classic entries to new hardware and audiences.
  • Series producer comments earlier in 2025 explain the remaster order isn’t strictly chronological — some titles are easier to bring back because source assets are available, while others require digging for missing code. That context explains why Berseria, originally released in 2016 (Western release 2017), makes sense as the next pick. (gamesradar.com)

A hook worth stealing from Velvet

Berseria stands apart in the Tales franchise for leaning into a darker tone and a protagonist driven by grief and vengeance: Velvet Crowe. That contrast—emotionally raw storytelling paired with the series’ signature fast-paced Liberation-LMBS combat—gives the remaster a strong narrative and mechanical hook. It’s not just nostalgia; it’s a chance to revisit a game that still holds up narratively and to experience its systems with modern conveniences.

What’s actually new in the remaster

  • Release date: February 27, 2026 (February 26 in Japan). Platforms: PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, and PC (Steam). Price: around $39.99 / £34.99 depending on region. (bandainamcoent.com)
  • Quality-of-life (QoL) additions confirmed:
    • Early access to the Grade Shop.
    • Destination/map icons to reduce aimless wandering.
    • Toggle encounters to skip random battles.
    • Inclusion of DLC from the original release (costumes, items, extras). (bandainamcoent.com)
  • Platform-specific expectations: Switch will likely be capped at 30 fps like other recent Switch ports, while PS5 and current-gen platforms may offer higher fidelity or performance options. Push Square’s coverage hints at 4K/60fps on PS5, though experience may vary by platform. (pushsquare.com)

What this decision signals about Bandai Namco’s remaster strategy

  • Pragmatism over chronology: The remaster project is driven by what’s technically feasible. Older titles with fragmented source data (especially entries originally on PS3 or earlier) are harder to restore. That’s why the release cadence can feel unpredictable. Expect more surprises rather than a straight chronological march. (gamesradar.com)
  • A mix of fan service and accessibility: Berseria is already available on PS4 and PC, but remastering it for current-gen consoles and Switch broadens the audience (and cleans up QoL for modern expectations). Bandai Namco is packaging nostalgia with convenience. (bandainamcoent.com)

Who wins (and who waits)

  • Winners:
    • Newcomers who’ve heard Berseria’s reputation but never played it on a modern platform.
    • Returning fans who want a cleaner, more convenient experience with DLC and QoL baked in.
  • Still waiting:
    • Fans hungry specifically for Xillia 2 or other PS3-era titles that have been teased but remain “in progress.” The remaster project’s technical realities mean those entries may take longer. (gamesradar.com)

Notes on performance and expectations

  • Don’t expect identical experiences across platforms. The Switch port historically trends toward conservative performance targets (30 fps) while PS5/Xbox may offer higher resolutions and smoother frame rates.
  • The remaster promises the usual QoL updates players now expect from modern JRPG releases—small changes that often have outsized impact on playability (maps, toggles, early access shops).

What this means for the Tales series’ future

Berseria’s remaster reinforces a twofold thesis: first, there’s still appetite for well-crafted JRPGs from the 2010s; second, the technical messiness behind older projects will shape which games get love first. Expect Bandai Namco to keep balancing fan demand, technical feasibility, and commercial sense. For fans, that means celebrating the wins (Berseria) while exercising patience for the trickier restorations (certain PS3-era gems).

A few quick takeaways

  • Tales of Berseria Remastered launches February 27, 2026 for PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, and PC. Price around $39.99 in North America. (bandainamcoent.com)
  • The remaster includes QoL improvements (map icons, encounter toggles), DLC, and early Grade Shop access. (bandainamcoent.com)
  • Bandai Namco’s remaster roadmap is influenced by source-code availability and technical feasibility, which explains the non-linear release order. (gamesradar.com)

Final thoughts

If you’re a Tales fan, Berseria’s remaster is a nice bridge between the old and the new: fidelity upgrades, modern conveniences, and a story that still bites. If you were holding out for Xillia 2, keep your faith—Bandai Namco has said it’s “still in progress” elsewhere—but don’t let that keep you from enjoying what’s next. Velvet’s path is one of vengeance and catharsis; playing Berseria Remastered might just remind us why the series’ emotional swings and combat FLOW are worth preserving.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Vote Now: Rank Nintendos Top 100 Games | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Which Nintendo Games Deserve the Throne? Your Vote Matters

Nintendo has been shaping childhoods — and adult obsessions — for decades. The problem, of course, is that “best” is a messy, affectionate argument: do you reward innovation, influence, nostalgia, or pure, timeless fun? IGN and Nintendo Life have partnered to try to pin that slippery title down by ranking the 100 best Nintendo games of all time — and the fun part is, readers get to weigh in and help shape a separate, user-curated list.

Why this ranking matters

  • Lists like these become reference points. They affect retrospectives, collector interest, and even how future generations discover classics.
  • Nintendo’s library spans consoles, handhelds, and decades — including third-party games that are now practically synonymous with Nintendo hardware.
  • Bringing editorial voices (IGN + Nintendo Life) together with reader votes creates a snapshot of both critical and community taste — and where they diverge.

What’s happening and when

  • IGN and Nintendo Life will reveal their editorial-ranked “100 Best Nintendo Games of All Time” across the week of November 10–14, 2025, publishing 20 picks per day until a single Number One is crowned. (nintendolife.com)
  • Before the full editorial list goes live, IGN is running a Faceoff-style campaign that lets readers pit games against one another and cast votes to build a reader-driven ranking. Nintendo Life points readers toward that IGN face-off for the community result. (nintendolife.com)

What to expect on the list

  • Heavy hitters are almost guaranteed: Zelda, Mario, Metroid, and Mario Kart entries routinely dominate community and editorial best-of lists. Titles like Ocarina of Time, Breath of the Wild, Super Mario World, Super Metroid, and Tears of the Kingdom will be strong contenders given their enduring critical standing and cultural impact. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • The collaboration explicitly includes third-party titles that are Nintendo exclusives or inseparable from Nintendo platforms, which means classics from Rare, Square, and other longtime partners could climb higher than in some Nintendo-only rankings. (nintendolife.com)
  • Expect conversation-starters: underrated gems, surprising placements, and the inevitable debates about how to weigh influence vs. nostalgia vs. playability in 2025’s context.

Why reader votes can shift the conversation

  • Editorial lists reflect a curated perspective — often balancing historical significance, innovation, and craft. Reader lists show what communities actually played, loved, and returned to.
  • A passionate niche of fans can push a cult classic up the ranks; conversely, mainstream blockbusters might dominate editorial lists but be checked by readers who prize personal attachment or niche innovation.
  • The Faceoff model (pairwise voting) tends to surface both consensus favorites and polarizing picks, making the reader list a lively counterpoint to the editorial ranking. (tech.yahoo.com)

Games I’d watch for interesting placements

  • The usual suspects: The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time; Super Mario World; The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. These frequently sit near the summit on historic “best of” lists. (en.wikipedia.org)
  • Hidden pushes: Niche or regionally beloved titles can bubble up when dedicated communities mobilize — think cult classics that inspired devotion but not always mainstream praise.
  • Third-party standouts: Games that, while not developed by Nintendo, feel like Nintendo because of timing, platform identity, or creative synergy — they could shake up the top 100. (nintendolife.com)

A few things to keep in mind when voting

  • Timeframe and scope: This ranking considers games released on Nintendo consoles and handhelds across eras — from the NES and Game Boy to Switch and Switch 2 — so balance your nostalgia with an eye for historical impact.
  • Personal taste vs. legacy: Do you vote for the game that changed an entire genre, or the one you personally replay every year? Both are valid; the resulting lists will reflect that tension.
  • The voting method: Faceoff/pairwise formats favor games that can consistently win head-to-head matchups; a polarizing masterpiece might lose to a broadly loved but less daring title.

What this says about Nintendo’s legacy

This collaboration isn’t just a countdown — it’s a cultural audit. Nintendo’s catalog is diverse: arcade-inspired pick-ups, sprawling RPGs, inventive platformers, and social multiplayer staples. A combined editorial-and-reader snapshot captures more facets of that legacy than either side alone.

Final thoughts

Rankings are arguments as much as they are lists. They invite debate, nostalgia trips, and fresh appreciation for overlooked work. Whether you vote to defend a childhood favorite, champion an underdog, or argue that a revolutionary title deserves the crown, this joint IGN/Nintendo Life effort will create a lively record of what Nintendo means to players in 2025. Expect spirited takes, surprising upsets, and plenty of “How is that above X?!” moments — and that’s the whole point.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Hyrule Warriors Plans Two Free Updates | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment already thinking ahead — two free updates are coming

The moment you boot up a new Zelda game you start imagining what else could be added: fresh characters, cheeky costumes, new challenges to sink time into. Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment barely landed on Nintendo Switch 2 (released November 6, 2025) and the developer has already teased two free updates. That’s the kind of post-launch roadmap that keeps a community buzzing — and it says a lot about how Nintendo and Koei Tecmo want this Zelda Musou to live and grow.

Why this matters (and why it feels smart)

  • Hyrule Warriors is built on momentum. The series thrives on roster expansions, extra modes and community longevity — free updates are an obvious way to encourage more players to jump back in.
  • The switch (no pun intended) to Switch 2 hardware and the game’s canonical ties to Tears of the Kingdom mean this title isn’t just another spin-off: it’s a narrative and technical statement. Supporting it post-launch keeps the narrative hooks fresh and gives developers room to refine multiplayer and mission balance.
  • A day-one patch already fixed a few progress-blocking bugs and added a quality-of-life shortcut (version 1.0.1, released November 5, 2025). Announcing future free updates this early signals confidence and a desire to maintain goodwill with fans.

What we know so far

  • The game launched on Nintendo Switch 2 on November 6, 2025. Nintendo’s official page confirms the release and core features such as split-screen co-op and GameShare. (See Sources.)
  • Nintendo Life and other outlets picked up a message from the official Zelda Musou social account indicating Koei Tecmo’s AAA Games Studio is planning two free updates to “allow fans to enjoy the experience for even longer.” Details about what those updates will include have not yet been revealed. (See Sources.)
  • A day-one patch (version 1.0.1) addressed a few critical issues — split-screen Korok progression bug, a freeze when quitting certain time-rewind battles, GameShare progression problems — and added a convenienced Y-button shortcut to Aside Quests on the map. That patch shipped November 5, 2025. (See Sources.)
  • Community chatter (Reddit, Twitter, fan sites) is already full of hopes: new playable characters (Sonia, Twinrova), costumes, additional missions, challenge modes, and QoL changes. Those are reasonable expectations given the series’ history, but nothing official beyond “two free updates” has been announced.

What the free updates might realistically include

  • New playable characters or costumes
    • Historically, Hyrule Warriors entries often add characters post-launch (both free and paid). Given the game’s large cast and Musou DNA, additional characters are the easiest way to extend longevity.
  • Extra missions/modes
    • Additional challenge maps, rogue-lite arenas, or rotating events keep players returning without massive narrative work.
  • Quality-of-life fixes and balancing
    • Expect more performance tweaks, coop fixes (split-screen is 30fps currently), accessibility options, and mission balancing.
  • Free cosmetic content or weapons
    • Linking save data (Age of Calamity, Tears of the Kingdom) already unlocked bonus weapons — more free unlockables would follow that precedent.

These are not promises — they’re educated guesses based on the studio’s pattern, what’s already been patched, and what fans typically ask for.

Why two free updates — a developer perspective

  • Community retention: Two formal updates are a clear signal to current and potential players that the live service isn’t dead on arrival. It turns a launch weekend into a launch season.
  • Staged development: Releasing content in waves lets the team react to player feedback and telemetry, addressing balance issues and tailoring forthcoming content to what players actually enjoy.
  • Marketing runway: Teasing upcoming free content also gives Nintendo and the developer a reason to re-engage media and influencers a few weeks or months after launch — useful during a crowded holiday season.

What I’m watching next

  • Exact contents, release windows, and whether any additional paid DLC/seasons are announced after the free updates.
  • How split-screen co-op evolves: the 30fps note in co-op was a common critique in early coverage — a performance patch could be a major goodwill move.
  • Which characters the devs prioritize: canonical cast members from Tears of the Kingdom or surprising returns from Age of Calamity-era lore would each send different messages about the game’s long-term direction.

Early impressions, shaped by the roadmap

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment launches with the confidence of a team that expects to iterate. A solid day-one patch and the promise of two free updates suggest this is meant to be more than a quick cash-in. For fans of Musou combat and Zelda lore, that’s exciting: it implies developer commitment to polish, add value, and keep the game relevant beyond launch week.

My take

Two free updates is a smart, community-oriented move. It buys trust and gives the developers room to respond to player feedback — from performance to roster wishes. Whether those updates bring playable fan-favorites, new modes, or just polish, the pledge alone makes the game feel like the start of a living project rather than a finished product shipped and forgotten. If you’re on the fence, the roadmap is reason enough to consider picking it up now or keeping an eye on what’s announced next.

Further reading

  • For official launch details and features, see Nintendo’s announcement.
  • For coverage of the free-updates tease and the day-one patch, see the reporting linked below.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Contraband’s Retro UI Reveals 1970s Heist | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A peek at what might have been: Contraband’s unearthed UI and 70s style

A burst of nostalgia hit the gaming world this week when a set of screenshots for Avalanche Studios’ cancelled Xbox-exclusive, Contraband, leaked from a former developer portfolio. The images don’t show gameplay, but they do something almost as powerful: they reveal the tone, the intent, and a bold visual identity that made this one of the more intriguing “what if?” projects of the last console generation.

The shots — uncovered and shared by sites including MP1st — lean hard into a stylized 1970s heist vibe: grainy poster art, warm neon, big typography and character cards that read like pulp magazine spreads. For a game described internally as a four-player co-op smuggler’s playground, the UI alone was selling mood and promise.

Why these screenshots matter

  • They turn rumor into texture. For years Contraband existed mostly as an announcement and a concept. Seeing UI and menu flows makes the project feel tangible.
  • They show deliberate design choices rather than placeholders. The rank system (Hustler → Bandit → Smuggler → Baron), lobby layout and “Downtown” map card point to a structured live-service design with progression and social hooks.
  • They remind us how much of a game’s personality comes from presentation. Even without playable footage, a UI can communicate genre, pacing and atmosphere.

The story so far

  • Contraband was revealed during Xbox and Bethesda showcases as a co-op, open-world smuggler title from Avalanche Studios — the studio behind Just Cause and Mad Max. It was positioned as an Xbox console exclusive and planned as an online-focused, live-service experience. (gamesradar.com)
  • After years of limited public updates, Microsoft ultimately shelved the project amid broader restructuring in Xbox publishing and a wave of studio-level changes. The cancellation and related studio reductions were widely reported in 2025. (gamesradar.com)
  • The newly surfaced images were traced to a UI artist’s portfolio and republished by outlets such as MP1st. They include matchmaking/lobby screens, character cards, rank tiers and a poster-like “Downtown” map illustration — all polished, stylized UI work rather than raw gameplay captures. MP1st also noted some of the character art might have been placeholder illustrations or assets shared elsewhere, and coverage has been cautious about over-interpreting concept UI as final in-game visuals. (mp1st.com)

What the art direction tells us about design intent

  • Tone first: The UI reads like a selling point. If you can evoke a cinematic 70s crime scene through typography, color and composition, you can steer player expectation before they even enter a mission.
  • Social and progression-focused: The lobby and rank screens imply a repeat-play loop built around small squads and escalating criminal prestige — classic live-service scaffolding with a period twist.
  • World as spectacle: The “Downtown” card and blurred hub background hint that Avalanche wanted the city itself to be character — a neon, nocturnal playground for smuggling runs and car chases.

The broader context: cancellations and industry shifts

The Contraband cancellation didn’t happen in isolation. Xbox’s 2024–2025 restructuring led to several high-profile project cancellations and studio reshuffles. That environment makes it harder for ambitious, risky new IPs to survive long, especially online-first projects that require long-term investment. The leaked UI images now act as artifacts from a project that represented both creative ambition and commercial uncertainty. (gamesradar.com)

A few caveats about leaked images

  • Early art and UI aren’t the same as final features. Design often changes through production; menus and rank names could have evolved had development continued.
  • Some visuals may be placeholders. MP1st and other outlets have noted that some character art seen in the images might have been reused or sourced from other portfolios, which complicates claims about final in-game character designs. Treat these images as a snapshot of direction, not a blueprint for the shipped game. (mp1st.com)

What fans and designers can take away

  • Design sells concept. Contraband’s leaked UI is a reminder that a strong, coherent UI and visual identity can make a title feel real even without playtests or trailers.
  • Cancellation doesn’t erase craft. The work of designers, artists and UX specialists survives in portfolios, lessons and — sometimes — community imagination.
  • Live-service projects need long-term commitment. The images show the plan for engagement loops and progression; without the deep pockets and patience required by the model, even interesting concepts risk being shelved.

My take

These screenshots are bittersweet: exciting because they show a team pursuing a distinct, stylish identity for a co-op crime title, and sad because they probably represent one of the last glimpses into a project that won’t reach players. For the industry, the moment underscores how creative ambition and corporate risk assessment collide — and how the cultural artifacts of cancelled projects can still inspire fans and designers alike.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.