Sea Of Thieves’ Huge Anniversary Update Could Give The Game The New Life It Needs

When Sea of Thieves launched in March 2018, many people believed it was an enjoyable, beautiful experience that was just lacking some direction and was perhaps a little thin in the content department. I was one of those people: I found Sea of Thieves an exhilarating experience with friends and a peaceful one alone, but I often found myself with too little meaningful content to engage with.

Developer Rare has repeatedly updated the pirate game since launch, and it is now on the cusp of introducing a significant update that injects much-needed variety into the game. On April 30 the game will be patched with the Anniversary update, which includes a new narrative-driven questline called Tall Tales: Shores of Gold and an entirely new PvP mode named The Arena, all for free.

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The Arena is a competitive mode for five teams of four set in smaller, distinct areas. At the beginning of each 24-minute match, every team receives the same set of treasure maps. You must proceed to one of the X marks in order to retrieve chests, which can then be cashed in for Silver at a number of special ships.

Of course, other teams are competing for the same chests and cashing-in points, so you might find you run into some resistance on your travels. Killing other players or sinking their ships nets you a small amount of Silver, and respawns are active. Particular to The Arena is a new damage model for ships, which can now have their wheel, masts, and anchor destroyed–though these can be repaired with wood in the same way you would fix a hull.

Arena matches are frantic but fun, and Rare says they’re designed to satisfy players who don’t necessarily have time to dive into a whole run of classic Sea of Thieves–which is now being dubbed Adventure Mode. But more importantly, they unite players around a single, clear objective, providing more direction for those solo queuing or those lacking a microphone. This solves the issue Sea of Thieves always had where players would be pulling in different directions, shooting for different targets–even if they were part of the same team. You’d have one player wanting to complete a Merchants’ Alliance quest, another wanting to ambush other teams’ ship, and another simply jumping up and down and spinning on the spot. The Arena’s obvious objectives and condensed map do a lot to rid the game of these issues, since any individual not paying attention and working with their team will quickly find themselves sleeping with the fishes.

The Arena also has the potential to rid Adventure Mode of griefers and people who are of a more combative persuasion. I prefer my Sea of Thieves journeys to be relaxing, which made it irritating when another player–friend or foe–decided to engage in combat. If people who prefer to fight are busy in The Arena, hopefully the rest of the game world will become a more peaceful proposition. Or maybe I’m placing too much faith in the troublemaking scallywags.

Tall Tales, meanwhile, is a new questline for people who wanted more direction in Sea of Thieves’ classic Adventure Mode. It’s set in the game’s usual shared world–which will also gain a new island that Rare says is its biggest yet–and will see you complete a number of puzzles and riddles in the search for treasure. The mode includes new enemy types, items enchanted with new abilities, and a new faction named the Hunters’ Call who’ll buy fish and meat off you after you utilize new fishing and cooking mechanics. While those new mechanics are a little basic, they add a nice bit of flavor to otherwise plain sailing–unless you burn your fish, that is.

While Tall Tales: Shores of Gold is only a subtle change from the vanilla Sea of Thieves experience, the greater purpose it gives, the greater narrative strands it provides, and the more tangible targets it teases help motivate you to continue venturing out into the seas. You’re not simply completing quests in order to unlock more quests of a similar nature; there are more interesting activities to complete, such as escaping a locked room filling with water, and a more defined goal on the horizon in the questline’s next riddle. More important than the objectives and new mechanics, however, is the distinct feeling these new missions provide: it feels like you’re actually on a guided adventure, rather than just going from point A to point B. New voice lines–spoken for the first time by actual voice actors, rather than studio staff as was the case previously–are a large reason for this new flavor.

Nine tales make up the Shores of Gold expansion, but Rare says it will continue to support Sea of Thieves with more content in a similar vein going forward, and if things carry on improving along these lines, I’ll be diving back into Rare’s oceans for many months to come.

Respawn 900 Gaming Recliner Review

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When I think of a gaming chair, I think of a futuristic, carbon-fiber clad desk chair gliding effortlessly across the floor on a set of high-quality casters, and that’s what most high quality gaming chairs are these days. With designs based on the seats found in high-speed super cars, it’s part of the reason they’re called racing chairs: they look like they’re going fast even though they’re sitting still. Respawn has taken the design of the classic racing-style gaming chair and adapted it for the living room with its first “console gaming chair,” the recline-able Respawn 900 (See it on Amazon).

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Will Captain America Finally Lift Thor’s Hammer in Avengers: Endgame?

“Chekhov’s gun” is a storytelling rule that says if a gun shows up, then it should eventually be used, otherwise it shouldn’t be in the story. Which means, if you set something up, be sure to pay it off. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, there’s one setup in particular involving the mighty Mjolnir that promised a monumental payoff, but it never happened.

Let’s call this a case of “Chekhov’s hammer.”

The Case of Chekhov’s Hammer

In Avengers: Age of Ultron, Steve Rogers is able to lift Thor’s hammer just a smidge. The others tried with all their strength to no avail, but when Cap makes the unliftable hammer budge, Thor reacts with a hilarious look of concerned disbelief. But by the end of the movie, Cap never picks up the hammer to, you know, smash robots. We got the setup, so where was the pay off?

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Big Savings on Apple Watch Series 4 and 3

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Anyone who’s been tempted to buy an Apple Watch will want to take a peek at the deals Walmart is currently offering. Right now, you can save a heap of money on Apple Watch Series 4 and Series 3 (the latest and previous iterations). Some of the discounts are only available on refurbished models, but they’ve been inspected and cleaned to be like new. Regardless, this is a good opportunity to get an Apple Watch without breaking the bank.

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Scientists Have Revealed the First Photo of a Black Hole

Scientists and researchers working as part of the Event Horizon Telescope project have revealed the very first photograph ever taken of a black hole.

The photograph depicts a ring of light surrounding a shadow, which researchers at EHT explain is caused by “gravitational bending and capture of light by the event horizon”.

“We have taken the first picture of a black hole,” said EHT project director Sheperd S. Doeleman of the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard & Smithsonian. “This is an extraordinary scientific feat accomplished by a team of more than 200 researchers.”

Black hole photograph Credit: Event Horizon Telescope

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Smash Bros., Donkey Kong Tropical Freeze, and More Great Switch Game Deals

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Good news: if you held off picking up Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, your patience has been rewarded. Smash, and a slew of other big-time Nintendo Switch games, are just under $50 right now.

If you haven’t gotten yourself a Switch yet, there are some amazing Nintendo Switch deals going on right now, including one of the best Switch deals we’ve ever seen and the return of the special edition Pokemon: Let’s Go Pikachu Switch bundle.

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Apex Legends’ Quitter Penalty Was Accidentally Made Live by Respawn

Apex Legends recently had a Quitter Penalty feature added to the game which would penalize those who left games early in succession, but it turns out this was not supposed to go live and Respawn has no “ETA for if or when this would come out for real.”

As reported by Game Informer, this feature was accidentally included in a recent patch and would give players a five-minute cooldown between matches if they were found to have quit mid-match for three or more times in a row.

This penalty would not apply to players who quit without a full squad or for those who have already been eliminated. The focus of this would be for those who are constantly quitting and leaving their teammates in a tough spot.

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Secret Message in Borderlands 3 Art Teases the Return of the Destroyer

The Borderlands 3 Twitch page features the game’s box art, and fans that have taken a real close look at it have spotted a hidden Morse code message that raises questions about the Destroyer and the first vault hunter.

One such fan, YouTuber Joltzdude139, decided to decode the dots and dashes barely visible in the artwork on the Twitch channel‘s offline screen.

Placed on either side of the Psycho, the first message reads, “Where is the first vault hunter?” The message on the right of the image reads, “Who is the Destroyer?”

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Mark Hamill Believes Star Wars Fatigue is a Real Possibility

Mark Hamill has suggested that audiences may be experiencing ‘Star Wars fatigue’ in the wake of the numerous Star Wars projects coming out of Disney.

Talking to The Hollywood Reporter on the Awards Chatter Podcast, Hamill said: “I’m not gonna tell

how to run their business, but is there a possibility of ‘Star Wars fatigue’? Yeah, I think there is. I’ve experienced it, to a certain degree. But they never listen to my ideas anyway, so who needs ’em?”

The comment came as the podcast discussion covered the box-office underperformance of Solo: A Star Wars Story, which grossed almost $393 million worldwide, offering a slight return on the film’s $250 million budget and multimillion-dollar marketing campaign.

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