Watch Dogs Legion, Which Lets You Control Many Different Characters, Is “Complex Almost Beyond Description”

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

One of the defining features of 2020’s Watch Dogs Legion is that you’re able to take control of basically anyone in the game’s version of London. Associate producer Shelley Johnson said in a new interview that the technical underpinnings of Legion are “complex almost beyond description.”

“This is probably one of the most ambitious games Ubi has ever imagined,” Johnson told Stevivor. “It was certainly from a management standpoint and a creative standpoint, the biggest challenge yet, certainly for me personally.”

Johnson told Gamecrate earlier this year that there is no limit to the number of different NPCs that players can assume control of in Legion. “One of the numbers that was floating around at one point was 9 million,” she said. “They’re procedurally generated characters. So we’ve spent four years building the technology to be able to deliver on this promise and that includes the ability to piece together this huge city of characters as far as animation, dialogue, census data, like all those bio pieces that you see when you profile somebody, faces, character kids, all of this comes together to produce a unique character every time.”

Johnson told Stevivor that it was an expensive, time-consuming process to make Legion a reality as it relates to the ambition under the hood. “[To] play as anyone, as a pillar–to really fulfil on the promise of that–it’s expensive,” she said. “This game is, in as far as challenge is concerned, complex almost beyond description.”

Testing a game like Legion sounds like a big challenge, and Johnson said it’s the first game from Ubisoft that reached the limits of what human testing was capable of. She added that, in the future, games with the complexity and scale of Legion may need to make use of AI to pick up “some of the heavy lifting.”

Watch Dogs Legion launches in March 2020 for PS4, Xbox One, and PC. Check out the video embedded above to learn more.

The Emmys 2019: Which Network Won The Most Awards?

Pokemon Go Just Had Its Best Month Since 2016

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

It’s been three years since Pokemon Go burst onto mobile devices, and while the days of seeing players stopping traffic to catch rare Pokemon may be over, the game continues to be a huge success. Last month in particular was a big one for the title; market research company SuperData reports it was Pokemon Go’s best month since 2016.

According to SuperData, Pokemon Go generated $176 million during August 2019. Not only did that mark “its highest point since peaking in 2016,” it also made Go the top-earning game for the month on mobile devices, dislodging the usual No. 1 title, Honour of Kings.

August is typically Pokemon Go’s strongest month of the year in terms of revenue, and SuperData attributes last month’s huge earnings in part to the numerous events Niantic held in the game. The developer has been gradually ramping up the cadence of in-game events occurring in Go; August alone saw the debut of both Shiny Rayquaza and Jirachi, the return of the Water Festival, a gift-giving event, and more.

It doesn’t appear Pokemon Go will be slowing down anytime soon. Between the rollout of the game’s Ultra Bonuses and the debut of Gen 5 Pokemon and the new Unova Stone, September was an equally busy month for the game in terms of events. Before the month ends, the Legendary Pokemon Giratina is also returning for another stint in Raid Battles.

Meanwhile, Pokemon Go’s next Community Day is set for Saturday, October 12. The event will take place early in the day–from 11 AM to 2 PM local time–and will feature the Gen 3 Ground Pokemon Trapinch. You’ll also be able to earn three times the usual amount of XP for catching Pokemon during October’s Community Day.

FIFA 20 Review Roundup

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

EA’s FIFA 20 is just a few days from its global September 27 launch on Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. As tree leaves begin to fall, so too do the reviews for FIFA 20. While our own review is still in-progress as we test out a few more features like Pro Clubs and Ultimate Team, several outlets have published reviews for EA’s annual sports title. Check below for a roundup of what some critics thought of the game and its new Volta mode, and head over to GameSpot’s sister site Metacritic for even more FIFA 20 reviews as they funnel in.

FIFA 20 marks the 27th entry in EA’s long-running football simulation franchise, which first launched in 1993 with FIFA International Soccer on a plethora of systems including the Sega Genesis and Super Nintendo Entertainment System. FIFA 20 sees the addition of Volta Football, a new mode that has a lot in common with FIFA Street. FIFA’s popular Pro Clubs has seen some changes for this year’s iteration as well, adding greater customization options and increasing the impact player weight and height.

If you’re eager to try out FIFA 20, a demo went live earlier this month for PS4 and Xbox One. The demo includes six playable teams–with Liverpool and Real Madrid among them–and the option to play matches between them in regular game modes or FIFA 20’s new Volta Football.

  • Game: FIFA 20
  • Platforms: Nintendo Switch, PC, PS4, Xbox One
  • Developer: EA Romania, Vancouver
  • Release date: September 27
  • Price: $60 USD / £48 GBP / $87 AUD

See FIFA 20 on Amazon

GameSpot — 8/10, In-Progress

“Flawed and iterative, but comforting, complete, and compelling, FIFA 20 is as frustrating and as essential as ever. The Journey and FIFA Street will continue to be missed, but Volta offers a genuinely different option for those who want to dip in and out across FIFA’s smorgasbord of game types, while Ultimate Team continues its route to world domination. It’s just a shame Career Mode continues to stagnate–even if EA has finally remembered it exists.” — Oscar Dayus [Full review]

Eurogamer — UnScored

“FIFA 20 is all these things but it’s also better than FIFA 19. I’ve already played loads of games against Eurogamer’s second-best FIFA player, Chris Tapsell, and I’ve had a great laugh. I’ve scored some screamers. I’ve lost to added time goals. We’ve leapt off the sofa at shocking refereeing decisions, missed open goals by Marcus Rashford and magic from Mason Mount. We’ve picked apart the game, worked out what’s changed, what’s better and what’s worse. We’ve had bloody good fun. And it’s all undermined by corporate greed and a stubborn refusal to do what’s right. A bit like real football, then.” — Wesley Yin-Poole [Full review]

GamesRadar+ — In-Progress

“Even so, we’ve reached the stage of this generation where I don’t believe EA can win over the FIFA community’s more vocal contingent. Battle lines are too entrenched and the more the series promotes itself as an eSports contest, the more its audience wants the RNG element–Sergio Aguero missing an open goal, AFC Wimbledon overcoming Arsenal–done away with. Ultimate Team remains a supremely moreish fantasy offering: when on song, the best mode in the entire sports genre. But it still isn’t one where the superior player always wins, and the likelihood of that changing anytime soon feels infinitesimal.” — Ben Wilson [Full review]

IGN — 7.8/10

“Volta is a significant addition to FIFA and while it doesn’t all hit the right notes, it’s a largely enjoyable way to play a wealth of content, including a story mode that’s more concise and engaging than The Journey. Elsewhere, improvements have been made to the core FIFA 20 experience, especially when it comes to defending, but overall controlling the ball feels less consistently fluid. For someone not attracted by the allure of Volta, the stilted pace, coupled with a neglect of offline modes such as Career, make it FIFA 20 an adequate but underwhelming entry into the series.” — Simon Cardy [Full review]

USGamer — 4/5

“FIFA 20 revives the old Street series with a new mode featuring futsal and outdoor soccer, but it’s the core gameplay that shines brightest this year, bringing down the pace in a way that feels nuanced and enjoyable. With additional updates to Career Mode and FIFA Ultimate Team, this year’s version is easy to recommend to lapsed fans and newcomers alike.” — Kat Bailey [Full review]

VG24/7 — 4/5

“Without much cosmetic polish to fall back on, FIFA 20 needed to bring something new to the table. Although the core gameplay isn’t mind-blowingly different, it’s still the best football game, and the addition of Volta is a whole new way to play.” — James Billcliffe [Full review]

VideoGamesChronicle — 4/5

“With the addition of Volta to the already numerous modes on offer, FIFA 20 may finally be the FIFA game where it’s impossible to play everything. Volta offers a fresh new way of playing the game, but the new reward-based Seasons in Ultimate Team means players invested in that will find it difficult to justify spending time playing Volta that could be spent in FUT earning more XP for their next reward. As long as you aren’t the type who needs to see and do everything, and are content with the idea of picking one or two modes and focusing most of your attention on those, FIFA 20 remains as high quality as ever.” — Chris Scullion [Full review]

What’s New To Netflix This Week: Movies, TV, And Originals

If you’ve run out of things to watch on Netflix, I envy you, as the streaming service has so much good content, and you need plenty of free time to get through it all. Well, there is plenty more headed to Netflix this week you may want to check out. Here are a couple of highlights.

On Tuesday, American Horror Story: Apocalypse arrives, and you can watch last season of FX’s horror series again and again while you wait around for new episodes of AHS: 1984–airing on Wednesday nights. While there aren’t any connections between the two seasons, Apocalypse is one of the better seasons from recent memory and connects the first and third season of the long-running horror anthology series. It’s a bit of a wild ride though, jumping through different time periods and following some very different characters, so strap yourself in.

There is a new Netflix original film arriving on Friday called In the Shadow of the Moon. In this sci-fi movie, a Philadelphia detective hunts down a female serial killer who ends up dying the first time they meet. Almost a decade later, she reappears and begins to kill again. How is this happening and why? The upcoming film is directed by Jim Mickle (Stake Land) and stars Boyd Holbrook (Logan) and Cleopatra Coleman (The Last Man on Earth).

Below, you’ll find all the movies, TV shows, and originals arriving on Netflix this week. For more streaming service news, find out what’s coming to Hulu and Amazon Prime Video for September.

New to Netflix this week

Monday, September 23

  • Team Kaylie — NETFLIX FAMILY

Tuesday, September 24

  • American Horror Story: Apocalypse
  • Jeff Dunham: Beside Himself — NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Wednesday, September 25

  • Abstract: The Art of Design: Season 2 — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Birders — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • El recluso — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Furie
  • Glitch: Season 3 — NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Thursday, September 26

  • Explained: Season 2 — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • The Grandmaster

Friday, September 27

  • Bard of Blood — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Dragons: Rescue Riders — NETFLIX FAMILY
  • El marginal: Season 3 — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • In the Shadow of the Moon — NETFLIX FILM
  • Locked Up: Season 4
  • The Politician — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Skylines — NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Sturgill Simpson Presents Sound & Fury — NETFLIX ANIME
  • Vis a vis: Season 4 — NETFLIX ORIGINAL

The Surge 2 Review

Sequels are a tricky business. The best of them not only manage to recapture what people enjoyed about the original, but also find ways to enhance them while effectively introducing new ideas. On the flip-side, there are plenty of instances where, despite a few new good ideas and generally high quality, the sequel doesn’t create quite as much of an impression. The Surge 2 fits snugly into the latter category: this return to the sci-fi Souls-like action game realm hacks and slashes just as hard – harder, in some cases – but falls just short of recapturing the same dismembering joy.

On paper, The Surge 2 does exactly what it should in order to achieve the goals of a sequel: it’s retained a lot of what worked in the first game, and throws in a few solid system updates and quality-of-life improvements aimed at making a better version of the original. However, there are some environmental design and storytelling decisions that eliminate some of the original’s charm and cause the story to trip over its own feet.

Continue reading…

Buy 2, Get 1 Free On Movies Including Avengers Endgame, John Wick

The products discussed here were independently chosen by our editors. GameSpot may get a share of the revenue if you buy anything featured on our site.

Film and TV buffs, music lovers, and book worms will be a fan of Target’s latest weekly promotion: a limited-time buy two, get one free offer on select movies, shows, books, and albums. The promotion includes some of this year’s biggest film releases, so now’s a great time to pick up any of these films on Blu-ray for yourself or as an early Christmas gift.

Quite a few Marvel movies are available as part of the offer, including the blockbuster that brought Phase 3 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe to an epic close: Avengers Endgame. If you’re a fan of the John Wick movies, all three films are eligible for the deal, so you could grab all three and get one of them for free. Another great option is Detective Pikachu, the first live-action Pokemon film (and a very good one at that, if you have any kind of nostalgia for the Pokemon series). There’s also Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, which won an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature of 2018. And while this falls more into the TV show category, Avatar: The Last Airbender The Complete Series is also part of this promotion and you should definitely buy it.

We’ve included more of the best film options from the sale below–check out the full list of entertainment deals, including TV shows, books and music, at Target. Prices will vary based on whether you go for the DVD, Blu-ray, or 4K UHD version; when you click through, you’ll be able to see all the options available.

Buy two, get one free: Best film deals

What Sony Game Do You Hope to See At State of Play? The IGN Community Answered

With Sony’s State of Play presentation coming tomorrow, all minds are wondering what hotly anticipated games we’ll see. While we already know that Naughty Dog’s The Last of Us Part 2 will be there, and that we definitely aren’t getting any PlayStation 5 news, there’s still lots to wonder about. We asked IGN fans what they most hoped would show up at State of Play, and 17,134 of you answered.

So what game beat out the rest? Let’s break it down.

Screen Shot 2019-09-23 at 4.30.47 PM

Continue reading…

Game Release Dates Of October 2019: PS4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, PC

With September about to end, you might be wondering about October’s biggest releases. Seeing as the fall release season is in full swing, next month is packed with just as many big new games from the industry’s most noteworthy franchises. You can expect games like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Breakpoint, and Luigi’s Mansion 3.

Amid all these big names are new expansions, indie games, and re-releases. You might want to spend another 100+ hours The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt or Overwatch with their respective Nintendo Switch ports. Of course, the long-awaited Kickstarted indie action-RPG Indivisible might suit your fancy just as well. WWE 2K20 is making the rounds in October with tons of wrestlers to choose. But if you’re big into Destiny 2, then all these other games may mean nothing to you since you’re more keen to play the Shadowkeep expansion for the rest of the year. And since the free-to-play New Light version of the game is coming out on the same day, newcomers can jump in with fewer obstacles than before.

It’s safe to say that there are plenty of games coming in October, and if you’re all about knowing when each one is releasing, then you’re in the right place. We’ve rounded up all the biggest releases of October 2019 below. For a look at all the other big games still to come this year, be sure to check out our complete list of game release dates in 2019.

Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Breakpoint (PS4, Xbox One, PC) — October 4

As the sequel to 2017’s Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands, Ghostpoint is taking a different approach to the series’ established formula. Aside from a darker tone, it places a greater emphasis on survival, gathering loot, and class-based tactical shooting. You explore the New Zealand-Inspired fictional island of Aurora as Ghosts operative Lieutenant Colonel “Nomad,” as they take on missions to eliminate a rogue military contractor known as Skell Technology.

Further Reading:

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (PS4, Xbox One, PC) — October 25

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is a soft reboot to the tenured first-person shooter franchise. Across both single-player and multiplayer, the focus this time is on tactical shooting and decision-making. Though, you can still expect the fast-paced competitive thrills the series is known builds its name on. Other notable features in Modern Warfare include cross-platform multiplayer, the return of killstreaks, an 100-player mode called Ground War, and more.

Further Reading:

Luigi’s Mansion 3 (Switch) — October 31

Nintendo fans will be pleased to know that Luigi’s Mansion 3 is releasing this month and on Halloween, no less! It once again stars Mario’s easily-frightened brother who’s on an adventure to rid the ghostly presence of a haunted hotel.

Further Reading:

Full October Release Schedule

Game Platform Release Date
Destiny 2: Shadowkeep (Expansion) PS4, Xbox One, PC October 1
Ghostbusters: The Video Game Remastered PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch October 4
Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Breakpoint PS4, Xbox One, PC October 4
The Alliance Alive HD Remastered PS4, Switch October 8
Concrete Genie PS4 October 8
Indivisible PS4, Xbox One, PC October 8
Trine 4: The Nightmare Prince PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch October 8
Yooka-Laylee and the Impossible Lair PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch October 8
Grid PS4, Xbox One, PC October 11
Overwatch: Legendary Edition Switch October 15
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – Complete Edition Switch October 15
Little Town Hero Switch October 16
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth Complete Edition Switch, PC October 18
Plants vs Zombies: Battle for Neighborville PS4, Xbox One, PC October 18
Ring Fit Adventure Switch October 18
WWE 2K20 PS4, Xbox One, PC October 22
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare PS4, Xbox One, PC October 25
MediEvil PS4 October 25
The Outer Worlds PS4, Xbox One, PC October 25
Disgaea 4 Complete+ PS4, Switch October 29
Resident Evil 5 Switch October 29
Resident Evil 6 Switch October 29
Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz HD PS4, Xbox One, Switch October 29
Vampyr Switch October 29
Yakuza 4 PS4 October 29
Atelier Ryza: Ever Darkness & the Secret Hideout PS4, Switch, PC October 31
Luigi’s Mansion 3 Switch October 31