Crucible, Amazon’s Free Shooter, Launches This Month

Amazon has announced that Crucible, its new free-to-play hero shooter, launches on May 20, and will ship with ten characters and three distinct game modes.

Crucible is a competitive game based around collecting Essence, which allows players to level up their characters and enhance their abilities. Team size and objectives depend on the game mode being played, which mix up both PvE and PvP gameplay.

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Modes available at launch are Heart of the Hives, Harvester Command, and Alpha Hunters. Heart of the Hives is a 4v4 mode in which both teams fight boss monsters called Hives, and gain hearts for killing them. The first team to capture three hearts wins the match, and so it’s a balance between killing the Hives and defeating the enemy team. It sounds a little like Destiny 2’s Gambit mode, which is no bad thing.

Harvester Command is an 8v8 mode that asks teams to capture and defend harvesters on the map that provide Essence for the holding team. The team that depletes their opponent’s resource pool is crowned the winner.

Finally, Alpha Hunters is Crucible’s answer to battle royale: eight duos go into the map and fight to be the last team standing.

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Before heading into any one of these game modes, players must choose a Hunter. There are ten of these characters to choose from, which developer Relentless Studios (one of the Amazon Games studios) says caters to every playstyle. Like a MOBA, your character starts afresh every match, but you have their full array of weapons and abilities from the moment the game starts. Collecting Essence allows you to upgrade your toolset, and the upgrades you get are assigned pre-match from a customisation menu.

Crucible will be available on PC via Steam from May 20. Amazon has made no mention of other platforms so far, so it is unclear if Relentless Studios plans to bring it to consoles.

Crucible’s May launch was previously confirmed by The New York Times, which reported that the game was originally due to land in April. The shooter is just one of Amazon Games’ larger portfolio, which also includes ambitious MMO New World.

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Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Entertainment Writer. You can follow him on Twitter

Save 50% on Adobe Premiere Elements 2020 Right Now

The barrier to entry for creating your own videos is lower than it’s ever been. Time was, you needed a dedicated camcorder and a pretty beefy computer with a few thousand dollars worth of professional-grade software. Not anymore. Right now, you can start editing your movies and videos for just $50 with this Adobe Premiere Elements 2020 deal.

Adobe Premiere Elements Deal

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This deal is only good for today, and is made better still when you enter in code ‘Adobedeal2’ at checkout, saving an additional $10. That brings the total cost of Adobe Premiere Elements 2020 to just $50, which is 50% off its regular price.

You get both a physical disc and a digital code, so it’s up to you which one you want to use to install your copy. It also works on both PC and Mac, so you don’t have to worry about compatibility issues. The one downside to this deal is it’s not currently in stock. You can still buy it, and for half-off I recommend it highly, but keep in mind it’s not going to appear on your doorstep right away.

Adobe Premiere Elements is a light-weight version of Adobe’s Premiere Pro software. It has everything you need to start editing your videos, and if you want to give your stuff a professional look without spending a ton of money, this is the best way to get it done. If you’re editing with some free software, that’s all well and good, but I recommend picking this up and taking your stuff to the next level.

If your looking for more digital ways to spend your free time, perhaps a little less constructively, check out Humble’s Star Wars day sale running through the end of this week.

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Seth Macy is IGN’s tech and commerce editor and just wants to be your friend. Find him on Twitter @sethmacy.

 

NASCAR Heat 5 Announced

704Games and publisher and publisher Motorsport Games have announced NASCAR Heat 5, the latest in the popular series of NASCAR racing games.

The latest NASCAR Heat features Chase Elliott on the cover and includes a career mode that lets you progress through the Xtreme Dirt, Gander Trucks, and Xfinity Series before reaching the NASCAR Cup Series. It includes 34 officially licensed race tracks, esports support, a new track-testing mode that lets you learn each course, and more.

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NASCAR Heat 5 will be available on July 10 for PS4, Xbox One, and PC and include split-screen local multiplayer and 40-player online races. A Gold Edition of NASCAR Heat 5 will launch on July 7.

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Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s Executive Editor of Previews. Follow him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan, catch him on Unlocked, and drop-ship him Taylor Ham sandwiches from New Jersey whenever possible.

Funimation Is Streaming More Classic Anime Series Soon

Funimation has teamed up with NIS America to add more new and classic anime series to its streaming library, including classic series Cardcaptor Sakura. Five new series will be streaming from May 5, while another 14 will be available soon.

Funimation’s anime streaming library already boasts over 700 titles, including shows like My Hero Academia, Dr Stone, and classics like Fruits Basket and One Piece.

The new additions coming to the service on May 5 are:

  • Toradora!
  • Cardcaptor Sakura
  • Love Live! School Idol Project (Season 2)
  • Love Live! The School Idol Project Movie
  • Nagi-Asu: A Lull in the Sea

Other NIS America titles that will be arriving “soon” to Funimation’s streaming library include:

  • Arakawa Under the Bridge (Season 1 & 2)
  • bunny drop
  • Chronicles of the Going Home Club
  • Daily Lives of High School Boys
  • The Eccentric Family (Season 1)
  • Genshiken Second Generation
  • Ghastly Prince Enma Burning Up
  • Ground Control to Psychoelectric Girl
  • Hanasaku Iroha – Blossoms for Tomorrow –
  • Hanasaku Iroha: Home Sweet Home (Movie)
  • If Her Flag Breaks
  • kimi ni todoke -From Me to You- (Seasons 1 & 2)
  • PandoraHearts
  • YURUYURI (Seasons 1 & 2)

Funimation is stepping up its game while most of the world stays in COVID-19-related lockdown, having also announced an online summer anime convention in the last few days.

Now Playing: 8 Must-See Anime To Watch For Spring 2020

World Of Tanks “Road To Berlin” Mode Is Now Live, Offering New PvE Combat Scenarios

World of Tanks has a new mode live now, and it’ll be available until May 18. It’s called Road to Berlin, and it’s a player vs. enemy mode that will let players choose between five different units to combat their enemies. Each unit features a unique set of combat boosts (like the ability to call in airstrikes or special shells), and you can play it in teams of five.

The battles in this mode each consist of five sequences, called Battle Missions, which will feature different objectives that need to be completed to progress. There’s a brand new map to play on–Berlin–and three others to move through. The Berlin map will not be available until May 9, which is the 75th anniversary of the ceasefire that ended World War II.

You can learn more about this mode in the trailer below.

Players will be able to unlock numerous rewards by playing this mode, including bounty equipment and a medal, while players who complete everything will be able to unlock the IS-2 Shielded tank.

World of Tanks is nine years old now, but it’s still going strong. Last year, well before Fortnite’s huge Travis Scott concert, World of Tanks hosted a performance by The Offspring.

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

Funimation Reveals Online Anime Convention, FunimationCon

Funimation has announced it will hold its first ever anime convention, FunimationCon, this year–and due to COVID-19, it will be entirely online.

While a lot of big events have moved online due to the pandemic, this is Funimation’s debut event. The anime distribution company has been a mainstay at some of the biggest anime conventions in the USA, including Anime Expo.

FunimationCon will be held on July 3-4, the weekend that Anime Expo would have fallen on this year if it hadn’t been cancelled. “With so many anime events being canceled this year, we’re jumping in to fill the gap with a new way for fans to come together and enjoy some great content and experiences,” said Colin Decker, General Manager of Funimation.

The festival will be free, featuring all the things you’d expect to see at an anime convention–albeit in a different format–including “panels, cosplay meetups, forums, and more”. Like any good anime con, it’s likely we can expect virtual appearances from special guests from the anime and cosplay worlds. However, only fans in North America will be able to participate in the online con.

All the details for the upcoming event will be shared on FunimationCon.com in the coming weeks.

Now Playing: The Best Cosplay At Anime Expo 2019

Rick And Morty Writers Discuss The Latest Brain-Breaking Episode

The latest Rick And Morty episode, Never Ricking Morty, premiered to a great reception from fans and critics alike, with meta jokes getting turned up to ten. As it turns out, the episode wasn’t originally conceived to be so meta–rather that was a side effect of trying to come up with an anthology episode that didn’t suck. Minor spoilers ahead for Never Ricking Morty.

Dan Harmon explains that the episode came about through aiming to solve one of the biggest problems with anthology episodes. “Who wants to watch stories when you know that they don’t matter?” Harmon asks.

The structure of the episode came from adding real stakes to the story while still keeping the format of an anthology episode. “We started having ‘fun’, in quotes, with meta-structural stuff,” Harmon explains, while writer Jeff Loveness just says that “the train broke me.”

The Inside the Episode video explains a little about the conception of the episode, but don’t expect it to help you understand the actual contents. In fact Harmon and Loveness spend a good portion of the video discussing a particularly gross yet evocative phrase that comes up multiple times in Never Ricking Morty. We’ll let you experience that one for yourself in the video below.

Space Force: First Trailer For Netflix’s Comedy Starring Steve Carell Is Coming Very Soon

Space Force, Steve Carell’s next big Netflix show, premieres later this month, but the network hasn’t released a trailer yet. That’s about to change very soon, as Netflix has confirmed that the first Space Force trailer will drop on May 5.

Netflix has also released a new piece of key art for the show, depicting Carell’s character wearing a uniform that is basically camouflage for the moon. The poster also reads, “Space will never see us coming.”

The workplace comedy focuses on the people who have been charged with creating a new branch of the US military, the Space Force. The show is seemingly based on the real-world US Space Force that was established in 2019 to protect US and allied interests in space.

In addition to Carell, Space Force stars John Malkovich, Ben Schwartz, Diana Silvers, and Tawny Newsome. There are 10 episodes in Season 1, all of which will be available to stream from May 29.

The show was created by Greg Daniels, who is known for adapting the UK version of The Office for US audiences to much success and acclaim. For more on what’s new on Netflix in May, check out GameSpot’s video above.

Now Playing: Best Shows And Movies To Stream For May 2020 – Netflix, Hulu, Shudder, Amazon Prime Video

This Incredible Social-Distance Fight Scene Features Scarlett Johansson, Florence Pugh, And More

It’s impossible right now to film traditional fight scenes, and both actors and stunt people are currently unable to perform their work. But actor and stuntwoman Zoe Bell (Once Upon A Time In Hollywood) has found a workaround, and has teamed up with several other women in the worlds of acting and stunts to put together a fun fight scene where all the participants are joining in from home.

The video, below, is made up of forty segments, with each woman being on the receiving end of the previous woman’s attack, before launching one of their own. Some play it fairly straight, flying backwards before kicking or punching in return; others have gone for a funnier approach, throwing puzzles, squirting water, or letting their children get a hit in.

Some huge names are featured, including Lucy Lawless, Thandie Newton, Cameron Diaz, Florence Pugh, and Scarlett Johansson. Cameron Diaz’s appearance is, in fact, her first on-screen “performance” since 2014–she retired following the release of Annie.

There’s plenty of movie Easter eggs and impressive stunt work to enjoy too. Look out for one actor reprising her famous villain role from a certain popular Quentin Tarantino film.

Many entertainers are finding new ways to work within the current COVID-19 pandemic–in fact, a social distancing show is in the works at Netflix, and Parks and Recreation fans were recently treated to a new special filmed from each cast member’s home.

Someday You’ll Return Review

How far would you go to get your lost daughter back? In Someday You’ll Return, you’ll undergo a desperate search of the Czech Republic’s Moravian forest – alone, on foot, and struggling to maintain a hold of your own sanity. Yet what will really test your resolve will be the stop-start stealth sections, half-baked game mechanics, and uneven puzzle design you’re forced to suffer along the way. This supernatural nature walk could have been a compelling cross between Firewatch and Silent Hill, but Someday You’ll Return lacks the sharp writing and engaging performances of the former, and can’t pull off the scares of the latter.

It certainly gets off to a decent start, though, and I enjoyed hiking around Someday You’ll Return’s woodland setting for the first few hours. The absence of objective markers on the HUD means that navigating between landmarks and campsites is entirely based around studying maps and observing the colour-coded trail markers in order to get from A to B, which felt true to my real life experiences of orienteering through nature.

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The downside of this realistic approach to Someday You’ll Return’s wayfinding is that it’s very easy to get lost, particularly when the environment becomes foggy, or day turns to night, or it just hasn’t been made clear where you’re supposed to be heading to next – all things that happen with some regularity. It’s not just Someday You’ll Return; it’s more like every other moment you’ll return – up and back the same paths and trails, past the same rock and tree assets, circling and zigzagging your way to where you hope you’re supposed to be going. Any tension and suspense built up by the plot is all too frequently dissipated by such monotonous retreading.

Missing Persons

Playing as increasingly distraught father Daniel, you’re on your own for large stretches of time in Someday You’ll Return, and much of the context for the events that unfold is provided through Daniel’s interactions with other characters on his phone or his constant monologuing. This is a bit of a shame, since the actor who plays Daniel has a more erratic method of delivery than a paperboy on a broken bike.

Still, the search for Daniel’s daughter Stela maintains a reasonable level of intrigue through to Someday You’ll Return’s conclusion, with countless notes, journal pages and other texts to find scattered throughout the world to gradually help you piece together what’s really going on. I particularly enjoyed the occasions these scraps of writing formed the basis of a puzzle, such as the scavenger hunt list found in a major campsite area which demanded that I carefully follow its detailed step-by-step instructions in order to uncover a series of hidden page fragments that assembled into an encoded message, before studying a cipher in order to solve it.

Unfortunately the bulk of Someday You’ll Return’s puzzles are not nearly as cerebral, and too often rely on point-and-click adventure-style pixel hunting or other genre cliches like lazily turning pipe valves to progress through. Considering its 15-hour length, Someday You’ll Return would likely have benefitted from having the bulk of its more basic brain teasers trimmed.

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It’s not just Stela who goes missing, but also a number of Someday You’ll Return’s game mechanics. A number of elements are introduced, used once or twice, and then largely forgotten. You can brew your own potions by scouring the landscape for various kinds of flowers and herbs, preparing them using a cutting board and mortar and pestle, and then following specific recipe steps. However, despite the fact that there’s always an abundance of plants to pick all across the map, only one or two out of a half-dozen of these potions are ever really necessary, and even then it’s only when their use is explicitly spelled out for you. For example,  you might need to brew the ‘Calm Mind’ potion to quell Daniel’s vertigo in order for him to cross a rope bridge between you and your destination, because that’s literally the only way for you to progress.

Daniel can also craft or repair items with his tool kit but, again, this is an ability that’s only ever called on in very specific and obvious circumstances – like when you’re presented with a ladder with missing rungs in the vicinity of a few pieces of rung-sized wood – which robs the construction gameplay of any sense of agency or invention.