Samurai Shodown Adding Shiro Tokisada Amakusa DLC Alongside Steam Release In June

SNK will release the Steam version of its feudal fighting game Samurai Shodown on June 14, the developer announced. Originally a timed exclusive on the Epic Games Store, the Steam version will launch alongside the multi-platform release of Season Pass 3 DLC character Shiro Tokisada Amakusa.

Originally a boss character in the original 1993 game, Amakusa appeared in multiple other games in the series and fights his opponents by attacking them with a gem of power. Amakusa is the third Season Pass 3 character to have been revealed, after Cham Cham and Hibiki Takane. One more character still needs to join the roster, but this brawler will be a guest fighter from Arc System Works’ Guilty Gear series.

Now Playing: Samurai Shodown – Official Season 3 Character Reveal Trailer

Released on Xbox One and PS4 back in 2019, Samurai Shodown earned positive reviews for its easy-to-learn gameplay mechanics and strategic combat. Earlier this year, an Xbox Series X|S version of the game added 120fps gameplay and Smart Delivery transfer options.

“It captures what made the original fun and unique, but also at a time when high-damage, high-stakes fighters like this are a rarity, making its combat feel both fresh and familiar,” critic Heidi Kemps wrote in their Samurai Shodown review. “Its accessibility and easy-to-grasp gameplay belie a lot of strategic depth that makes for very intense, bloody struggles. While the single-player experience is a bit lacking, it doesn’t drag down the whole significantly–Samurai Shodown is a fighting experience well worth taking up the sword for.”

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Mario Golf: Super Rush Trailer Shows Off New Modes Like Speed And Battle Golf

A new trailer for Nintendo’s next big Switch game, Mario Golf: Super Rush, has arrived. The overview trailer shows off what fans can expect when the game debuts on June 25, and it seems the game has a lot to offer across multiple new modes, new swing systems, and more.

Players will need to study the wind and terrain, among other factors, before swinging the club. The swing mechanics in Super Rush are simple and intuitive, Nintendo said, allowing you to adjust your power and spin, among other factors. There are also “curve” shots in the game that you can use to avoid obstacles like rocks and trees. The video also touches on the motion controls that you can use by swinging the Joy-Con like a golf club–this control setup is optional, but it could be a fun approach for people who want a more authentic experience.

There are 16 different characters in the game, and each has their own strengths like increased power or more control. The video also touches on some of the ways you can play together with friends with local multiplayer and online support.

As for the courses, these range from the more lifelike ones to fantastical courses that have lava and other Mushroom Kingdom objects and items to get around.

The Super Rush video also touches on the new game mode–Speed Golf. In this mode, all players tee off together and then race to the next shot with the aim of getting the ball in the cup in the fastest possible time. Players will collect items on the course to boost their stamina, and each character has a unique speed boost they can trigger to zip ahead of opponents or to bash them and delay their own progress. Speed Golf also has special shots that can be activated to do things like wipe out other balls in their path.

Super Rush has another new mode called Battle Golf. There are nine holes on this massive course and players can take on whichever one they want–the first to capture three wins the match. Another new mode is Golf Adventure, which allows you to take your Mii and take part in various challenges–like shooting a ball into a big honeypot–to learn the ropes. The Golf Adventure mode also has boss battles where you fire off balls at enemies. Players get XP for their efforts in Golf Adventure, which they can then allocate to different elements like speed, stamina, power, and so on.

Super Rush launches on June 25; preorders for Super Rush are open now.

It’s a good time to be a fan of golf video games, as EA is reviving its PGA Tour series with The Masters featured in the game, while 2K Sports has signed Tiger Woods to a deal for its own line of PGA Tour games.

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Russell Crowe’s New Movie Involves A Very, Very High Stakes Game Of Poker

Oscar-winning actor Russell Crowe has signed on for a new movie called Poker Face. It’s not about Lady Gaga. Crowe plays a tech billionaire named Jake who gets involved in an extremely high stakes game of poker.

Gary Fleder is signed on to direct from a screenplay by Stephen M. Coates.

In the movie, Jake brings together his childhood friends at his Miami mansion under the guise of a high stakes game of poker–but it’s a lot more than that.

“Those friends have a love hate relationship with the host, a master game-player/planner, and he has concocted an elaborate scheme designed to bring a certain justice to all of them,” reads a line from the movie’s description, as relayed by Deadline. “However, Jake finds himself re-thinking his strategy when his Miami mansion is overtaken by a dangerous home invader whose previous jobs have all ended in murder and arson.”

In other news about Crowe–who won his Oscar for Gladiator–he’s signed on to play Zeus in the upcoming Thor: Love and Thunder. He’s just the latest Oscar-winner to join the cast, as Christian Bale is lined up to play the villain in the superhero blockbuster.

There is no word yet on who else will appear in Poker Face or when the movie will release.

Spiral Tops The Weekend Box Office With Tepid $8.7 Million Debut

As more cinemas begin reopening around the country, the last weekend of new releases were off to a slow start at the North American box office. Spiral: From the Book of Saw only managed to earn $8.7 million, well below the $10-$15 million it was originally projected to make. Interestingly, Spiral’s debut still makes for a sixth number one opening for a Saw movie, although this achievement comes amidst different circumstances, lukewarm reviews, and very little competition in its way due to the current coronavirus pandemic.

Spiral dethroned the newest Guy Ritchie action film Wrath of Man, as not even Jason Statham could hold onto the top spot for more than a single week. HBO Max’s western starring Angelina Jolie, Those Who Wish Me Dead, had a third-place debut and made $2.8 million, while anime powerhouse Demon Slayer: Mugen Train scored another $1.77 million in fourth place.

Now Playing: Spiral: From The Book Of Saw (2020) – Official Trailer

Rounding out the top five was Disney’s Raya and the Last Dragon, which held onto its fifth-place spot with another $1.7 million in the box office bank. After eleven weeks, the animated adventure currently has a domestic gross of $46 million.

Godzilla vs. Kong continued to have a kaiju-sized presence at cinemas, as its seventh week on the movie circuit saw it slip from fourth-place to sixth while grabbing $1.4 million worth of ticket sales.

Other new films over the weekend included the romance movie Finding You and the suspenseful thriller Profile, which opened in eighth and ninth place respectively.

Weekend Box Office Results – May 14-16

Rank Film Gross Theaters
1 Spiral $8.7 million 2811
2 Wrath of Man $3.7 million 3007
3 Those Who Wish Me Dead $2.8 million 3118
4 Demon Slayer: Mugen Train $1.77 million 1930
5 Raya and the Last Dragon $1.7 million 2285
6 Godzilla vs. Kong $1.46 million 2484
7 Mortal Kombat $1.32 million 2465
8 Finding You $954,297 1312
9 Profile $670,000 2033
10 Here Today $530,000 1200

AT&T Announces $43 Billion Deal To Spin Off WarnerMedia And Merge It With Discovery

AT&T has announced a massive deal to combine WarnerMedia’s entertainment, sports, and news businesses with Discovery to create what it’s calling a “premier, standalone global entertainment” company. AT&T’s WarnerMedia and Discovery were previously rivals.

Under the terms of the deal, which was announced Monday, AT&T is getting paid $43 billion. Discovery’s shareholders will own 29% of the newly formed company.

AT&T said in a press release that the deal will help create shareholder value in a number of ways and that, overall, the new company will reach revenue of $52 billion in 2023. The deal brings together the “strongest leadership teams, content creators, and high-quality series and film libraries in the media business,” AT&T said. This deal will also “accelerate” the rush to direct-to-consumer streaming, globally, AT&T said.

AT&T boss John Stankey said AT&T and Discovery have “complementary content strengths” that will only grow further thanks to this deal.

“It will support the fantastic growth and international launch of HBO Max with Discovery’s global footprint and create efficiencies which can be re-invested in producing more great content to give consumers what they want,” he said.

Discovery boss David Zaslav added, “These assets are better and more valuable together. It is super exciting to combine such historic brands, world class journalism and iconic franchises under one roof and unlock so much value and opportunity.”

“With a library of cherished IP, dynamite management teams and global expertise in every market in the world, we believe everyone wins.”

What impact, if any, this move will have on WarnerMedia brands like HBO Max, its movie division, and others, remains to be seen. AT&T also owns the Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment gaming division, but the press release had no details on what might happen as a result of this move. Keep checking back with GameSpot for the latest.

Snake Eyes Star Henry Golding on Revealing the Man Behind the Mask

As promised in the newly released first trailer, Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins does what no G.I. Joe movie has done before: show the adult Joe’s unmasked face and have him speak. Consider it then Snake Eyes Begins, as the story explores how this (so far unnamed) man became the silent, masked ninja fans of the G.I. Joe franchise have loved for four decades.

Henry Golding, the actor playing the Joe behind the mask, told IGN during a one-on-one Zoom call last week that Snake Eyes will pay homage to different elements of the character’s history across multiple media. As seen in the trailer, Golding’s Snake Eyes wields not only swords but an Uzi submachine gun at one point, a nod to the character’s 1980s comic book roots. “Paying homage to all eras of any IP is so important because you would not be where you are without it,” Golding said, citing the participation of Snake Eyes creator and G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero comics author Larry Hama as one of the movie’s Executive Producers.

“Having Larry Hama onboard as Exec Producer gave us the ability to have that creative license, to work with him and come up with something that he would be proud of,” Golding said, adding that Hama told him “he was restricted in the way that he could tell the story in some respects [when he was writing the original comics]. And so, he had to bend to the societal norms of this character has to be of this [ethnic] descent,” said Golding, a Malaysian-British actor, acknowledging the alteration of the traditionally white character to be of Asian descent. “For Larry now it’s just like, man, we can get away with so much now. And so, building a true backstory that new fans and old fans can get on board with was so important for us.”

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In the original Marvel comics, what Snake Eyes looked like without his mask was generally only hinted at with either flashbacks to his wartime experiences or shadowy glimpses of his life after his vocal cords were permanently damaged and his face disfigured in an explosion. Larry Hama eventually fully revealed Snake Eyes’ face in G.I. Joe #94. Now, Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins will give us an entire movie and backstory featuring an unmasked and verbal Snake Eyes. But with any story that attempts to explain such an enigmatic character, there’s the risk of demystifying them too much. Golding sees this creative choice as integral to “giving complexity to such an iconic character.”

“Let’s just say he wasn’t born with a mask. There’s always a beginning,” Golding said. “And the importance for giving complexity to such an iconic character, I think drove us to be able to allow him to express himself because I don’t think we were able to see that in the comic books. We weren’t able to understand the hardships that got him to be who he is, the decisions that were made, the hurdles that had to be overcome, the wrong, the right. And we see all of that within this, [film] because perhaps he isn’t the best of guys in the beginning, perhaps his motivations aren’t true. But what he goes through with the Arashikage [Clan] perhaps puts him back on the right track.”

Snake Eyes the movie actually begins in Los Angeles, a surprising storytelling choice for a character known for his time training in Japan or living in solitude in the Sierra Nevada mountains. While he wouldn’t divulge the exact reasons why Snake Eyes is in L.A., he did acknowledge that it helps address why his character has an indistinct accent rather than an American one as some comics readers might expect him to have: “He’s moved around a tremendous amount, and I think it’s non-distinct in where he’s from, what his kind of background is. I don’t want to give away too much, but we see flashes of his life before. And so, we need to understand that this guy has been underground, this guy’s been around.”

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Golding added that the Robert Schwentke-directed movie will see Snake Eyes forge relationships with both Storm Shadow (Andrew Koji) and Scarlett (Samara Weaving), but that the character is a lone wolf with no attachments when the movie begins. “The only relationship that Snake Eyes, when we pick up with him, is his own. He is a complete loner. He’s been on his own for the majority of his life, up until the point where we pick them up in the movie. And so, his motivations, his goals are solely for himself,” Golding explained.

“He has to survive off his own back, and I think that’s the resilience of Snake Eyes. So he comes from this hardship, but with the proper guidance, the proper training, and the proper motivations. So he always goes back to the word of like, what are your motivations in life? What were the motivations for Snake Eyes in the beginning of the movie? What are they in the middle of the movie? And then what do we see them become at the end of the movie? That’s the story. That’s what [we] want to know. What did he do to become who he is? I think that’s the joy of this film. We really get to be able to kind of focus in on the important aspects.”

Golding also said Snake Eyes will live up to the “G.I. Joe Origins” part of its title as the movie explores “the relationships that blossom through his journey to Japan, through learning about the Joes.”

“I can definitely say Scarlett acts as the agent between the Arashikage and the Joes, and there is a preexisting relationship between the two. Cobra plays a fairly large part in the bigger picture of this, of this movie, especially,“ Golding said. “You need an entire movie to be able to explain the complexities and the relationship between Cobra and GI Joe. This isn’t the movie it’s concentrating on … This movie concentrates on this one particular character, and of course the handful of others that are in close proximity to him, like Storm Shadow and the rest of the Arashikage. So I can’t thoroughly answer your question of the percentage, but know that it plays a huge part in this movie. And of course, this is the kickoff to the rest of the G.I. Joe universe. So if we didn’t leave more for you to yearn for, we wouldn’t be good storytellers.”

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Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins opens in theaters on July 23.