Streets of Rage 4: New Screenshots Revealed

Streets of Rage 4 proved to be a very pleasant surprise when it was announced earlier this year. DotEmu’s sequel is being crafted by Wonder Boy: The Dragon’s Trap developer Lizardcube as well as Guard Crush Games, makers of Streets of Fury.

Of course, Axel and Blaze return as the player characters, and the original visual style has been retained but of course, modernized as a hand-drawn animated look. Take a look at six new screens that DotEmu sent along:

They also sent along a gif of a combat animation. Take a look!

Dig this new combat animation gif from Streets of Rage 4!

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Scientists Have Discovered a New Material Called Black Silver

Researchers in Singapore have engineered a new material called Black Silver, that has potential for applications such as solar energy conversion to biomolecule detectors, reported by Science Daily.

Black Silver is an inexpensive, nanomaterial that interacts with visible and infrared light and was developed by researchers at Singapore University of Design and Technology (SUTD).

The nanomaterial is created without using acids, which means it can easily be coated over other materials such as plastics, which can give those materials a new purpose.

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After Christmas Sales: 400GB microSD Card, Fast & Furious, 4K TV

Welcome to IGN’s Daily Deals, your source for the best deals on the stuff you actually want to buy. If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

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Gloomhaven for $107.88

This highly-rated, immense and involved board game is on sale right now at Amazon. This is a monster of a game, weighing 20 pounds and coming in a huge box to show all your friends how serious you are about board-gaming.

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2018: The Year MoviePass Changed How We See Movies

It’s a good time to be a movie exhibitor. In 2018, movie theater revenue broke records, thanks in large part of massive event films like Black Panther and Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom. Because of those major tent pole titles, along with many others, it’s expected that the year will end with theaters bringing in $11.8 billion domestically–besting the former record of $11.4 billion in 2016. However, while the films themselves are a hugely important driver of the current boom, there’s something else that deserves at least some of the credit: MoviePass.

The MoviePass subscription service relaunched in late 2017, allowing customers to see one movie a day, 365 days a year, all for only $9.99 per month. Chances are anyone who’s been to a movie theater knows just how insane that is. After all, in many US cities, you’d be hard pressed to see one movie for 10 bucks, let alone a year’s worth. Still, those behind MoviePass–which originally came onto the market in 2011 at a higher price and much less fanfare–believed profit would come because of the data they’d be collecting, which could be used in targeted marketing.

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Right from the beginning, it sounded too good to be true and, as we found out throughout 2018, it truly was. The implosion of the service was a sight to behold. In the meantime, though, the company managed to change the way we, the viewing audience, go to the movies. Suddenly, you didn’t have to be picky about what you were going to see because you were going to pay the same price regardless.

In many ways, it’s similar to what services like the Xbox Games Pass or GameFly does for those who want to experience a wider array of video games without dropping $60 every time they want to try something new. MoviePass allowed people to go outside of their movie comfort zone and try new things at the theater. And, for a period of time, it also allowed them to watch a film more than once.

Of course, the flame out that followed was nothing short of catastrophic. Between a shortage of cash and badly handled customer relations, MoviePass went through a series of rule and price changes, leaving many wondering exactly what they had signed up for. Then certain movies didn’t have tickets available and the service stopped working at some theaters, while tickets to specific films started adding a surcharge, making users pay more. When the company announced that it would curate which movies its customers could see, it also became increasingly difficult for users to cancel their subscription.

It’s at this point that many users realized just how bad the MoviePass experiment had gone. And it wasn’t just them.. A number of shareholders filed a class action lawsuit against the company, while a member of the board of directors criticized the company’s management in his resignation letter.

In the end, the service quickly became something of a pop cultural joke and faded into the background to regroup and come up with a way to exist without going even further into debt. In that time, though, other companies saw what MoviePass was doing and figured out their own way of doing things. Because, while MoviePass’ time in the sun may have been brief, a movie theater subscription service is a great idea. After all, that’s why even MoviePass is still trying to make a go of it, though it no longer offers the plan giving customers a movie ticket each day.

And while it may never again attain the heights it briefly held in 2018, at the very least MoviePass will be remembered for revolutionizing the way we see movies. Now let’s just hope the others that rose up during its free fall–AMC Stubs A-List and Sinemia, for example–don’t suffer the same fate

Batman’s Psyche Is Perfectly Mirrored in the Gotham of Arkham Knight

Stories do not happen in a vacuum. A story’s setting can be as much of a character as the actual characters inhabiting it, reflecting both them and the thematic elements of the plot. This is true of games, books, and movies—in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy, for instance, a great and mighty evil renders the land of Mordor into, quite literally, a festering, pulsating, and decaying wasteland that is inhabited by orcs and other beings who personify the very evil that corrupts the once bucolic realm of Mordor.

There’s perhaps no better representation of this than Batman: Arkham Knight. The character, layout, and visual starkness of Gotham City act as a malleable mirror to Batman’s psyche within the Arkham-verse. The story sunk its bat-fangs into me but Gotham, the city itself, is what truly stands out as both the home and the harbinger of the dichotomy of good/evil that brings the city to grimy, pulsating life.

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Free PC Game From GOG, But Hurry

A number of big video game sales are going on right now, including the Steam Winter Sale, PlayStation Holiday Sale, and Xbox Countdown Sale. But if you prefer getting games for free (and who doesn’t?), GOG has what you’re looking for. Between now and December 30, you can download the horror game Soma for PC, Mac, and Linux, totally free. While you’re there, GOG probably hopes you’ll check out its own winter sale, which runs through January 3.

Soma is a first-person game that takes place in an underwater research lab. As often happens in these sorts of games, you find yourself alone in the facility with no recollection of how you got there or what’s going on. Your job is to avoid being killed by what lurks in the shadows as you learn about the lab and make your way to safety.

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In GameSpot’s 9/10 Soma review, Richard Wakeling wrote, “I came in expecting something similar to Amnesia, just in a terrifying new location, but what I found is an intelligent game that forced me to think and contemplate ideas as only the best sci-fi is capable of doing. It may not stir the hordes of wailing YouTubers looking for the next best haunted house, but SOMA succeeds at crafting something much more meaningful in a genre that’s deserving of more than just simple jump scares.”

To get your free (and DRM-free) copy, all you need to do is hop over to GOG, sign in or create an account, and click the “Claim” button. Do that, and you’ll receive an email saying Soma has been added to your library. Easy peasy.

That’s not the only deal GOG has going right now; over 2,000 games are on sale for up to 90% off. And if you spend just $0.01 during the winter sale, you’ll receive a free copy of the 1996 strategy game Fantasy General (regularly $1.50). Spend $15, and you’ll get Everspace (normally $30) for free.

Black Mirror: Bandersnatch Is Part Video Game, Part Movie

This is a spoiler-free review of Black Mirror: Bandersnatch. You can stream the episode right now on Netflix.

Device Support: Available across most newer devices, including TVs, game consoles, web browsers, and Android and iOS devices running the latest version of the Netflix app. It’s not yet supported on Chromecast, Apple TV, and some legacy devices.

Black Mirror creator Charlie Brooker has a knack for telling stories where the darker side of technology is explored in unique and interesting ways: “Nosedive” examines the dangers of social media and its effect on society, while “The Entire History of You” explores the risks of having a memory implant that records everything you see and hear. Brooker’s tales are often humorous, thrilling, and downright frightening, but they are always observed through a passive lens, requiring nothing more from the audience than their attention.

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Fortnite Season 7 Week 4 – Launch 3 Different Fireworks Challenge

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