Venom’s 30th Anniversary Celebrated With Variant Covers

Marvel is celebrating Venom’s anniversary with special variant comic book covers.

Eddie Brock, who was transformed into super-powered anti-hero Venom, has been a Marvel staple for a long time. In preparation for Venom’s 30th anniversary, Marvel is introducing special variant covers to celebrate key moments from the character’s storied history. The first of the variants will hit comic shops on March 7, with the rest available before the month’s end.

The variant covers will feature art by artists such as Mark Bagley, Mike Perkins, Francesco Francavilla, Ron Lim, Inhyuk Lee, and many more. Here’s a look at some of the upcoming covers!

Here’s a full list of all the comics with variant covers, as well as the artists creating them:

Continue reading…

Metallica Frontman Cast As Cop Who Caught Ted Bundy

Metallica frontman James Hetfield has been cast as Officer Bob Hayward, the cop who caught serial killer Ted Bundy, in Voltage Pictures’ Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile.

While this is Hetfield’s first dramatic role, he’s worked with director Joe Berlinger before on the Metallica documentary Metallica: Some Kind of Monster. Berlinger also wrote the book Metallica: This Monster Lives.

Deadline reports that Hetfield will be playing Officer Bob Hayward in the thriller, the Utah trooper who arrested Bundy in 1975 after pulling him over and discovering burglary tools and pantyhose in Bundy’s Beetle.

Continue reading…

Hot Wheels Making Real-Life Rocket League RC Toy Set

Hot Wheels is teaming up with developer Psyonix to bring out a new Rocket League toy set this fall.

Called the Hot Wheels Rocket League RC Rivals Set, it will feature bluetooth-enabled Octane and Dominus cars players can control with smart devices. The set also features an arena complete with LCD scoreboards, and a ball with an IR device embedded to keep track of the score.

Additional details, and a release date, will be announced later this year. Check out the preview art below:

Hot Wheels is bringing the action of Rocket League to life! Hot Wheels is bringing the action of Rocket League to life!

Continue reading…

New AMD Driver Boosts Performance In PUBG, Fortnite, and Kingdom Come: Deliverance

AMD put out a new version of its Radeon Adrenalin software suite, and with this 18.2.2 update comes a driver that boosts performance in a few popular PC games. Two of the top battle royale games, PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds and Fortnite, are getting some extra frames per second on AMD cards. In addition, the newly released Kingdom Come: Deliverance gets proper support and improved framerates.

The benchmarks were performed by AMD internally and the results come out of a system consisting of an Intel Core i7-7700K CPU clocked at 4.2GHz and 16GB of DDR4-3000 RAM on the Windows 10 64-bit operating system. Tests were done with the RX 580 at 1080p and RX Vega 56 at 1440p, and comparisons were made between previous driver versions and the latest version 18.2.2. The following is a breakdown of the benchmark results.

Fortnite

Fortnite is getting a slight boost for AMD users; the new driver shows up to 3% faster performance on the RX Vega 56 video card compared to driver version 17.12.1 at 2560x1440p (1440p) and Epic graphics settings (jumping from an average of 63 FPS to 65 FPS). With the RX 580 at 1920×1080 (1080p) and Epic graphics settings, results show up to 6% faster performance using the new driver, going from a 72 FPS average to 76 FPS.

PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds

When looking at PUBG, the RX Vega 56 showed up to 5% faster performance using the 18.2.2 driver compared to version 17.12.1 at 2560x1440p (1440p) and High settings; the improvement was from 76 FPS to 80 FPS. In testing the RX 580 at 1920×1080 (1080p) and High settings, AMD indicates that you can see up to 7% faster performance with the new driver; results showed the average framerate go from 81 FPS to 87 FPS.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email [email protected]

New Pokemon Go Update Out Now, Here’s What It Does

Pokemon Go is celebrating Valentine’s Day this week with a higher chance of catching certain Pokemon and earning extra Stardust. Alongside this special holiday event, Pokemon Go also received a new update.

Update 0.91.2 on Android devices and 1.61.2 on iOS was released today, announced on developer Niantic’s Twitter account. It’s a small update, and the iOS and Google Play stores haven’t listed patch notes yet, but Niantic states that it focuses on fixing bugs.

Meanwhile, the big holiday event is happening from now until Thursday, February 15. It increases the chances of running into the Pokemon Luvdisc and Chansey, and it grants triple Stardust for each of those that you capture.

In other news, the next Pokemon Go Community Day event is coming up soon. It’ll take place on February 24 and, like the first Community Day in January, players will have a chance to capture a special Dratini that knows a move normal Dratinis don’t know.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email [email protected]

NBA Star LeBron James Producing House Party Remake

NBA star LeBron James is producing a a remake of the 1990 comedy House Party.

Variety reports James will be producing the project alongside his SpringHill Entertainment partner Maverick Carter. The script will be penned by Stephen Glover and Jamal Olorim, writers on FX’s Atlanta. The movie doesn’t have a director attached yet and a release has not been set.

The original House Party starred hip hop duo Kid ‘n Play, and follows a high-schooler throwing a house party while his parents are away on vacation. The rest of the cast includes Paul Anthony, Bowlegged Lou, B-Fine, Robin Harris, Martin Lawrence, Tisha Campbell, and A.J. Johnson

Continue reading…

Call of Duty: Sicario 2 Director to Helm Activision Movie

Activision Blizzard Studios’ Call of Duty movie may have found its director.

Variety reports Sicario 2: Soldado director Stefano Sollima is in talks with the studio to helm the film adaptation of the video game franchise. A release date for the movie has not been set yet as it’s currently without a distributor and writer.

Activision Blizzard Studios’ presidents Stacey Sher and Nick van Dyk are producing alongside Activision Blizzard chief executive Bobby Kotick. Though plot details for the Call of Duty film are being kept under wraps, Sher and van Dyk plan are planning a Marvel-style Call of Duty movie universe.

Continue reading…

Devil May Cry Will Be Free For Twitch Prime Subscribers Later This Month

Devil May Cry HD Collection is launching soon on PS4, Xbox One, and PC, and today it got a new trailer. But DMC fans still have something to look forward to before it is released: later this month, you can check out the first Devil May Cry game on PC for free through Twitch Prime.

Capcom announced on its blog recently that all subscribers of Amazon/Twitch Prime can snag the freebie starting on February 27. After claiming it, you’ll be able to download the full game through the Twitch desktop app.

Devil May Cry originally launched back in 2001 for PS2, so some players may find it a bit dated. But it’s still cool to see where the series began, especially if your first exposure to the series was the reboot, DmC: Devil May Cry, which was released in 2013. Previous Twitch Prime free games have sometimes been free for only a few days, so be sure to jump on this promotion when it goes live. It’s free to anyone with a Twitch Prime membership, which comes with an Amazon Prime subscription.

The Devil May Cry HD Collection, meanwhile, launches on March 13 for PS4, Xbox One, and PC. It includes remastered versions of the first three games in the series, all of which run at 60 frames per second. You can check out the new trailer for the collection in the embed above.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email [email protected]

Video Games With “Predatory” Loot Boxes Could Be Banned For Minors In Hawaii

Lawmakers in Hawaii have put forth a pair of bills that, if enacted, would limit the sale of video games with “gambling mechanisms” to minors and require that loot box odds be disclosed. The bills were introduced into Hawaii’s legislature recently by Democrat Chris Lee, who you may remember was the politician who called out Star Wars: Battlefront II for being “predatory.”

The first bill is HB2686. It states that video game publishers have recently begun to use “predatory mechanisms” in their games that are “designed to exploit human psychology to compel players to keep spending money in the same way casino games are designed.” It goes on to say that things like loot boxes–which are popular and prevalent in games today–are similar to slot machines because they let users pay money for a chance at winning something.

“One common variety of this type of predatory mechanism, known as a loot box, can present the same psychology, addictive, and financial risks as gambling,” reads a line from the bill. The document goes on to note that digital stores exist where players can sell the items they acquired through loot boxes and other “gambling-like mechanisms.” In turn, this gives players the ability to “effectively cash out their winnings,” as they might in a casino, the author wrote.

HB2686 goes on to reference the World Health Organisation’s recent announcement that “gaming disorder” is a real mental condition that requires more clinical research. “Mental health experts have raised particular concern about the exposure of youth and young adults to gambling-like mechanisms, which can affect cognitive development and lead to addiction, and to which youth and young adults are particularly vulnerable,” reads a line from the bill.

This bill’s main focus is to prohibit the sale of video games that include a “system of further purchasing, including randomised reward or a virtual item that can be redeemed to directly or indirectly receive a randomised reward,” to people under the age of 21.

The other bill, HB2727, includes much of the same text as HB2686, but it goes further to say that video games with loot boxes should be required to making “certain disclosure[s]” about the odds that players will receive a certain item. More, specifically, this disclosure must be featured “prominently” at the time of purchase and in the game itself when loot boxes appear. If this bill becomes a law, Hawaii’s Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs, potentially in conjunction with a third-party, may conduct audits on video games sold in Hawaii to ensure that accurate probability rates are disclosed clearly and transparently.

Both bills note that it is not uncommon for video games to get frequent updates after release. However, HB2727 states that “no video game publisher shall at any time modify a game to contain or otherwise permit the inclusion of additional content for which the game was not appropriately labeled at the time of original sale.”

In the United States and most other parts of the world, video games generally do not disclose things like loot box odds, though regulators in China recently started enforcing this.

Bear in mind that these bills, if they become law, would only apply to games and gamers in Hawaii, whose population is only around 1.4 million. That being said, lawmakers from other states, such as Washington, have also put forth bills with similar language. Lee told GameSpot in an interview that it will be a combined effort to enact the kind of change he wants to see. Already, Lee tells us that he has seen bipartisan support for these efforts. More significantly, he said other elected officials across the country, including US Senators and members of Congress, have reached out to voice their support.

Battlefront II sold many millions of copies, but it failed to meet EA’s sales expectations, a failure that the publisher attributed in part to the controversy over the game’s use of mictrotransactions. Just before the game’s public launch, EA removed all microtransactions from the game, but they are coming back soon.

If the new bills introduced in Hawaii and Washington, as well as other parts of the country and world, become law, it could significantly impact the world’s biggest publishers such as EA, Activision, Take-Two, and others. Just recently, we learned that Activision Blizzard made $4 billion from microtransactions in 2017, while Ubisoft makes lots of money from add-on content as well. Not all of this money comes from loot boxes or what Lee and others might call “predatory” mechanics, but a portion does. So it stands to reason that these companies, and organisations that represent them in Washington–such as the ESA–would want to protect their interests. This is all to say, this is a story that we don’t imagine will fade away anytime soon, but will rather pick up steam and debate in the days, weeks, and months ahead.

We will have more from our interview with Lee in the days ahead. Keep checking back with GameSpot for the latest.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email [email protected]