Why Rainbow Six Siege Moved Away From Its Counter-Terrorism Narrative

Folks who have played Rainbow Six Siege since day one may remember that the game launched with a counter-terrorism narrative, one that has been largely phased out since February 2019. Developer Ubisoft Montreal did this to better parallel players’ experiences playing Siege.

“We started with a counter-terrorism narrative which transitioned into a more competitive and sportive fantasy in the context of a ‘military simulation’ in order to parallel the player experience,” narrative director Alex Lima told GameSpot.

Now Playing: How Rainbow Six Extraction Builds Off Siege’s DNA | Play For All 2021

“Moving forward, it’s important to extract key elements from both fantasies to establish our narrative identity. A story that can be both competitive and combative to maximize the heroic potential of our Operators. We need to get that recipe right. Siege isn’t going anywhere so we need to make sure the story is comprehensive and scalable.”

In a February 2019 blog post, Ubisoft Montreal detailed that, in Siege’s lore, Aurelia “Six” Arnot, commander of Team Rainbow, had left her post to accept a position within the US State Department. She picked her long-time advisor Harishva “Harry” Pandey as her replacement and he continued recruiting folks who would be valuable members of Team Rainbow while also starting an initiative to invite people who could act as valuable teachers to their fellow Operators.

And so going into Year 4, Season 1 in March 2019, Siege transitioned away from a story about Team Rainbow fighting terrorist group White Masks, and became a story about these Operators from all over the world training against each other in hardcore competitions that fans would watch. It’s sort of like a special forces Olympics.

“Siege isn’t a story-driven shooter, but having a strong universe is key to motivating the content,” Lima said. “From creating new characters to inventing the battle pass items, elite skins, etc., we try to abide by a mythology that’s respectful of the Operators, who they are, and what they can do.”

With this change in the narrative, Siege needed new villains, which Ubisoft Montreal has been slowly building towards over the past two years. That’s why so many of the new Operators added to the game since March 2019–Kali, Wamai, Ace, Aruni, and Year 6, Season 3’s new character Osa–all come from the same organization: Nighthaven. It’s a group that can stand in opposition to the core members of Team Rainbow.

“We’ve been sowing some seeds over the years when it comes to Nighthaven,” Lima said. “It’s hard to tell a story about competition or rivalry without characters who are a little more, shall we say…’morally suspect.’ We have a lot of Operators in Siege and you can’t create friction within a roster composed solely of ‘good guys.’ Since we’ve moved away from ‘real-world terrorism,’ we need the conflict to come from a different place. We have a rule on the narrative side which is ‘Operators first,’ so, in keeping with that rule the conflict needs to now come from the characters themselves. Nighthaven for us opens the door to this type of storytelling.”

Siege has explored one other narrative thread before (though more as a spin-off) during the Outbreak event, in which a falling meteor infected a town with the Chimera Parasite, transforming humans into alien-like zombie monsters. That narrative was continued in the Containment event and is the basis for the upcoming Rainbow Six Extraction. Though the two games share similarities, Ubisoft Montreal is confident Siege and Extraction won’t cannibalize each other’s audiences.

Rainbow Six Siege Year 6, Season 3 Crystal Guard is now live in the game’s PC test server. It introduces Osa, Siege’s first transgender Operator. She’s an attack Operator whose unique gadget is the Talon-8 Clear Shield, a deployable transparent bulletproof shield.

Though seeing Ubisoft Montreal continue to support Siege’s narrative and expand to be more inclusive to marginalized identities is good, Ubisoft leadership is in hot water following a slew of allegations. Ubisoft Singapore is currently under investigation by Singapore’s Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices following a Kotaku report that details toxic culture, sexual harassment, and racial pay disparity at the studio. These allegations come in the wake of several sexual misconduct accusations towards senior members of Ubisoft in 2020 as part of the #MeToo Movement.

In reaction to Ubisoft leadership’s unsatisfactory response to these allegations in both 2020 and 2021, almost 1,000 Ubisoft employees signed an internal letter to leadership this past July, in which employees simultaneously called out Ubisoft for giving its known abusers copious amounts of second chances and praised Activision Blizzard workers for organizing a huge walkout to protest the misogyny and sexism that allegedly facilitates its “frat boy” culture.

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After Gamescom, February 2022 Looks To Be A Busy Month For Game Releases

If there was one theme of Gamescom’s 2021 Opening Night Live ceremony, it was this: There sure are a lot of games coming out in February 2022.

Many of those games, like Horizon Forbidden West, The King of Fighters XV, and Sifu, were all originally slated to release in 2021, only to be delayed due to various reasons, chief among them the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused developers to adapt their workflow to working from home.

Now Playing: Saints Row Full Presentation | Gamescom ONL 2021

Now, all those games and more will be released within days of one another. It’s becoming an increasingly crowded few weeks, so much so that companies looking to release their latest and greatest titles might want to try and steer clear of it, as publisher Annapurna Interactive humorously pointed out on Twitter.

Leading the charge is The King of Fighters XV on February 17, which will feature 39 fighters to choose from, including the triumphant return of fan-favorite characters long dead in the storied fighting game franchise.

Just one day later comes Horizon Forbidden West, releasing for PlayStation 5 and PlayStation 4 on February 18, which will see heroine Aloy on a journey westward to stop a mysterious “red blight” that kills everything it touches.

Indie martial arts brawler Sifu, which has continued to turn heads but was recently delayed out of 2021, will now release February 22, 2022. It will share a release date with another heavy-hitting title in the form of Destiny 2’s upcoming expansion, The Witch Queen, which is poised to be one of the largest updates to Bungie’s shooter in years.

And, last but not least, February 25 will bring the return of the Saints Row franchise. This new reboot, simply titled Saints Row, looks to dial back some of the silliness the series became known for in more recent entries, while still offering the over-the-top, open-world action fans of the franchise have come to expect.

That’s a lot of games. Late January’s game lineup is nothing to scoff at either–both the highly anticipated Dark Souls follow-up Elden Ring and the Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild-inspired Pokemon Legends: Arceus release within a week of one another. Add in Rainbow Six: Extraction, the co-op focused spin-off of Rainbow Six Siege set to release sometime in January, and the first two months of 2022 will have something for just about every type of player.

Assuming that none of the games mentioned above suffer additional delays, that is. It’s possible even more games could be delayed into early next year, too, which would make the all-you-can-eat video game buffet of early 2022 even busier. Time will tell what additional games may be released early next year, but one thing is certain: Players should start saving their pennies, and clearing their schedules, now.

The Best Laptops and PCs for Back to School

No matter what grade you’re headed off to this fall — be it grade school, high school or college — a laptop is an essential tool for getting through studies. Schooling at home? Most schools now have web-based curriculum, class schedules and exams that even a Chromebook can handle. Headed off to campus? You’ll want a beefier laptop, but even a relatively low-powered portable PC is enough to get you through the school day.

Thankfully, you don’t need to spend a fortune to get a computer that’s more than powerful enough for classwork. The Lion’s Share of coursework is often web-based these days, and Google Docs or Microsoft Office is all you need for almost everything else. If you’re a student who’s footing the bill for a computer, you might want to stick to a budget laptop, but if mom and dad are buying it for you, it might be possible to get a beefier laptop — perhaps even one that can play some games when class is over.

But which laptop is best for you? That depends; are you in high school looking for an inexpensive way to take notes and complete online assignments, are you an avid gamer who needs more processing power, or are you headed into engineering or graphic design? We’ve got you covered regardless. Read on for a roundup of the best laptops for heading back to school.

HP Pavilion Laptop 14z-ec000

Best affordable laptop for students

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It’s certainly possible to spend less money on a laptop, but when you stray under $500, you’re often limited to Chromebooks and underpowered Windows computers that slow to a crawl when you open more than a handful of tabs in your web browser. The HP Pavilion 14t-dv000 pairs a relatively low price with a great set of features and performance. Powered by an 11th generation Intel Core i5 with an Intel Iris Xe graphics chipset and8GB of RAM, it is powerful enough for anything your coursework might ask of it.

It features a 14-inch full HD display that can be upgraded into a touchscreen if you prefer to tap and swipe directly on the screen. This configuration has 256GB of storage which should be enough when paired with cloud storage, though you can upgrade it to as much as a terabyte. A fingerprint reader provides secure biometric security and it has a microSD card reader built in as well. Weighing just 3.4 pounds, it’s more than portable enough to go to class or study hall as needed.

HP Envy x360 15z-ee100

Best 2-in-1 convertible for students

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2-in-1 convertibles are the jack of all laptops, able to switch effortlessly between clamshell productivity mode and touchscreen tablet. HP’s Envy x360 is one of our very favorite convertibles — it has great performance, is reliable and can be had for a great price. This model starts with a price-conscious but performant AMD Ryzen 5 with 8GB RAM, though you can upgrade to a Ryzen 7 if you need a lot of power. It has a respectable 256GB storage (which you can double to 512GB for a small extra cost).

This is a laptop to consider if you want a large display; its 15.6-inch touchscreen is packed with a full HD 1920×1080 pixels. The basic configuration comes with a relatively dim 250 nits screen that’s hard to use outdoors in direct sunlight, but you can step up to a 400 nits version as well. Either way, the package includes a fingerprint reader for security, a stylus for drawing and note taking, and a built-in media card reader.

Dell Chromebook 3100

Best Chromebook for students

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If your computing needs are modest, you can save yourself a lot of money — not to mention Windows headaches — by going Chrome. There are a few superb contenders for best Chromebook, but Dell’s Chromebook 3100 is a winner thanks to its very attractive price. Even so, you get a 2-in-1 convertible form factor with an 11.6-inch 1366 x 768-pixel touchscreen display.

This all-day laptop has a 13-hour battery life between charges and weights in a savant 3.1 pounds, making it easy to carry around school all day long. There’s no shortage of ports and connections, with a USB, a USB-C and a Micro SD card reader. Perhaps the most important feature, though, is the Chromebook’s durability — with the ability to survive a 30-inch drop and water resistance from spills and other accidents, it can survive daily abuse from any student.

Samsung CB4 11.6″ Celeron

Best laptop for grade school students

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For better or worse, students in virtually every grade need access to a computer these days, but that doesn’t mean you need to get your middle-schooler a MacBook Air. Younger kids can generally get by just fine with a Chromebook because virtually all of their coursework is online, accessed via a browser. And a budget Chromebook is often all they need — like the Samsung CB4 11.6″ Celeron. We wouldn’t recommend this for a high schooler, but the Intel Celeron-powered laptop with 32GB of storage is enough muscle for grade school students.

It’s also an all-day laptop with over 10 hours of battery life, which is handy for younger users who aren’t diligent about keeping electronics charged during the day. It features a modest 11.6-inch display and, at less than 3 pounds, is easy for smaller hands to carry around. Even so, it’s rugged enough to stand up to daily use as well. The display isn’t a touchscreen, but it has a large touchpad below the full-size keyboard.

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14

Best laptop for engineering students

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Most students don’t need a powerhouse laptop, but there are a few exceptions. Engineers certainly need a computer that can blast through computationally intensive calculations, perform 3D renders and model the physical world for physically accurate simulations. By the same token, you don’t need to spend all the money on a laptop; a smart investment can get you the performance you need without breaking the bank.

Which brings us to the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14. This robust gaming laptop has the specs you’ll need for intensive coursework, like a Ryzen 9 4900HS with 24GB RAM and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Max Q GPU — ideal to drive applications like MATLAB and AutoCad. This laptop has a fast 120Hz 14-inch display which can enhance 3D render playback, and the one terabyte SSD offers a generous amount of storage for anything your Mechanics of Materials or Advanced Thermodynamics instructor throws at you. Despite all that power, it’s still an all-day laptop with about 10 hours of runtime and a modest 3.5-pound heft, and obviously, makes a solid gaming platform for when you’re done solving partial differential equations.

HP Envy 13t-ba100

Best laptops for college students

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The HP Envy 13 is one of the best all-around under-$1000 laptops, and so it’s well suited for college students who need their PC to do a little of everything. This system is powered by an 11th generation Intel Core i5 CPU with 8GB RAM and an Intel Iris Xe graphics chipset. That’s enough horsepower for typical productivity tasks, and it can handle some casual gaming as well.

HP has equipped this laptop with all the essentials. There’s a solid 11 hours of battery life, so it’ll get through a whole day on the go around campus. Data is secure thanks to a built-in fingerprint reader and you get a good assortment of ports, as well such as USB and USB-C — plus Wi-Fi 6 compatibility. There’s even an SD card slot for transferring images from a camera or other mobile device. And if you need more power than what HP offers in the base model, there are a ton of ways to upgrade, including faster processors, a larger SSD for storage and even a 4K display.

MacBook Air

Best Mac for students

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Not everyone needs a Mac, and you can get the same overall performance for less with a Windows PC. But if you’re committed to the Mac OS, then the MacBook Air is a great compromise. It’s an incredible piece of hardware — especially the new M1-equipped model — at a good, sub-$1000 price point. The laptop has Apple’s own M1 CPU, of course, along with a 13-inch Retina display, modest 256GB SSD and all-day battery life that can get you as much as 18 hours on a single charge.

There are a few compromises, not the least of which is a measly two USB-C ports for connectivity. But a desktop USB hub can easily give you more connections if you need it, and the real appeal here is the super efficient M1 chipset that makes everything on the MacBook air feel fast. If you’re an iOS user, the Continuity feature that makes your phone, tablet and laptop all seem to work together seamlessly just more icing on the cake.

Apple MacBook Pro 13

Best laptop for graphic design and film students

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As crazy as this sounds to some people, you simply don’t need a speedy, high-performance computer for the vast majority of tasks anymore. But there are exceptions. If you’re pursuing the a degree in the arts — particularly in film production or graphic design — then you need all the horsepower you can get your hands on. There are great laptops on the WIndows side — check out an HP ZBook for example — but the Apple MacBook Pro is the undisputed top choice for most graphics and film pros. Not only is it fast enough to get the job done, but it runs the software that everyone in the industry uses. It’s the smart choice.

The new MacBook Pro runs the Apple M1, which puts 8 CPU cores, 8 GPU cores and 16 Neural Engine cores on the job. The 13-inch Retina display has a wide color gamut and True Tone color calibration, and the keyboard is the radically redesigned Magic Keyboard which most users love, especially compared to the older, much despised butterfly design. There are a slew of upgrade options available, but even this basic model is plenty for most students.

ASUS TUF Gaming Laptop

Best gaming laptop for students

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If you’re on a budget, the top priority is just getting the essentials out of a laptop to accomplish your schoolwork. But if you have a little extra cash available and have a hankering for gaming, then a gaming rig like the ASUS TUF Gaming Laptop can kill two birds with one stone. It’s clearlyu powerful enough for any computing task, up to and including engineering work or graphic design. But it’s also a superb gaming laptop thanks to the fast Intel Core i7-11370H CPU with 16GB RAM and the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 graphics chipset.

The GeForce RTX 3060 drives a 16.6-inch full HD (1920×1080-pixel) display at a speedy 144Hz, which effectively smooths out fast-paced animation. You also get a backlit keyboard (sorry, it’s not per-key programmable) and a solid all-day battery life that exceeds 10 hours. Unfortunately, weighing in at 5.7 pounds, it’s a bit heavy to carry around to class.

Acer Swift 3

Best lightweight, highly portable laptop for students

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Suppose your top priority is a lightweight laptop you can effortlessly carry around from class to class and keep with you all day long. It would probably look a lot like the Acer Swift 3. This laptop weighs a mere 2.6 pounds — one of the lightest Windows laptops around, and just 0.63 inches thick. Despite the ultralight form factor, it’s got horsepower where you need it. Powered by an Intel Core i7 with 8GB RAM and an Intel Iris Xe graphics chipset, it is as powerful as many bigger and heavier laptops.

Complementing the GPU is a 13.5-inch VertiView 2K display — that’s 2256 x 1504 pixels with a 3:2 aspect ratio. That’s a somewhat unusual aspect ratio, but the display is crisp and beautiful, and bright enough to be usable even outdoors. And not only is the laptop easy to tote around, but the battery is more than all day — at 14 hours of runtime, it’s very nearly a two-day battery.

What to look for in a laptop for school or studies

As we’ve already indicated, for most studies you don’t need a high-performance laptop. With a few notable exceptions (such as an engineering or graphic design program), you will never see any noticeable benefit from having an Intel Core i7, for example. Instead, as long as you have enough horsepower to keep a bunch of browser tabs open at once, the most important feature for schoolwork is often sheer battery life so you can make it through an entire school day without having to plug into the wall. If you expect to use the laptop in the actual classroom or lecture hall — or you want to work in the library or study hall — then light weight and portability are important as well.

It’s worth pointing out that you generally can’t equip a student with an iPad or Android tablet, because those devices are often incompatible with some online tools employed by some school systems. But for younger students, like grade schoolers, Chromebooks are often just fine. For high school and above, an Intel Core i5 or AMD Ryzen 5-class laptop is an ideal compromise between performance and price.

And in general, you probably don’t need a lot of on-board storage. These days, students can generally use cloud storage like OneDrive, Dropbox or Google Drive for classwork and other documents, minimizing the need for a substantial hard drive. Only if you’re working in a specialty field of study like film production, 3D modeling, graphic design or engineering will you need a beefier laptop with more horsepower and a significant amount of storage.

Get A Year Of NordVPN For Under $60

For protecting your online presence, one of your best options is NordVPN . With a subscription to NordVPN, you can ensure that your connection to the internet is secure. You can get a one-year membership for the discounted rate of $59 for a limited time. Rated 5/5 stars on PC Mag and CNET, NordVPN is as acclaimed as VPNs come.

Your activity won’t be recorded, meaning your frantic health-related searches won’t lead to weeks of ads that just make you more anxious. Plus, you can bypass content restrictions: A lot of websites, such as Netflix and other streaming platforms, use location tracking to limit what you’re able to watch if you’re in a certain place. That’s because of licensing agreements that companies sign to restrict specific shows or movies from certain markets. NordVPN allows you to get past that by giving you 3,521 server locations in 61 countries that you can log onto. And you can do that from any place, public or private connections alike, with the security provided through the double encrypted double data SSL-based 2048-bit encryption.

You can get a one-year subscription to NordVPN at the discounted price of $60 . You’ll feel better about your time online before you know it, especially once you stop getting so many annoying tracking ads.

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Best Buy Restock Of Nvidia RTX 30 GPU Graphics Cards Coming Thursday

est Buy has announced a major restock of Nvidia’s RTX 30 GPU graphics cards coming Thursday, August 26–aka tomorrow–for those looking to supercharge their PC gaming rigs.

The retailer posted information about the restock on its website. Multiple stories will be receiving more Nvidia cards overnight, making them available for purchase tomorrow morning. Best Buy says that store employees will begin handing out tickets for the cards at 7:30AM local time, and anyone who has a ticket will be able to purchase a card.

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“With this launch, we want you to have the best experience possible,” the website reads, also noting that the cards will only be available “in select stores.” The website also offers the ability to search for local Best Buy locations in your area that will have cards available for purchase. There is no specific word on which models Best Buy will have, nor how many of each model will be made available.

Nvidia first launched the RTX 30 GPU graphics cards in September 2020 with the 3080, followed by the 3090. Subsequent models include the 3060, 3060 Ti, 3070, 3070 Ti, and the 3080 Ti. If you’re still not sure which RTX 30 series card is right for you, check out our reviews for the RTX 3080, RTX 3070, and RTX 3080 Ti.

Marvel’s XCOM Won’t Let You Romance Iron Man, You’ll Just Be ‘Very, Very, Very Close Friends’ – Gamescom 2021

When Marvel’s Midnight Suns was revealed today, one of the featured elements was the Abbey — a home base where you can carve out time to hang out with your favorite superheroes.

The mechanic bears more than a little resemblance to the one found in Persona. First, you choose a character that you want to spend time with, be it Wolverine or Captain Marvel; then you need to choose the right activity, like playing video games. Doing so will raise player-created Hunter’s relationship with the hero in question.

But don’t get any ideas about the Hunter falling in love with, say, Ghost Rider, creative director Jake Solomon tells IGN in a new interview. You will just be “very, very, very good friends,” emphasis on the “very.”

In a separate interview, Solomon characterized it as “math” and “decidedly not romantic.” However, it will be as “deep as friendships go.” Cap and Bucky deep? We’ll see just have to see.

“The idea is that by the time you maximize your friendship with these characters, you are as close to them as anybody else in the Marvel universe. But yeah, not romantic,” Solomon says. “[T]rust me, if I could romance Blade, I would But yes, it’s more a case of these are very well-defined characters. So instead it’s deep, deep friendship.”

Marvel’s Midnight Suns will seek to adapt Marvel’s characters within Firaxis’ popular XCOM formula, which it revived back in 2012. The Abbey will be a key component, with the heroes you invest time into having the potential to unlock special powers that can “change the battlefield” along with a unique costume.

Midnight Suns will be a fast-paced tactics game that seeks to flip the traditional XCOM formula. Instead of soldiers facing overwhelming odds, it will feature powerful superheroes, necessitating major changes to the overall gameplay. We’ll get to see what that will entail for ourselves when Midnight Suns’ gameplay debuts exclusively on IGN on September 1.

Overall, Marvel has offered Firaxis Games a relatively free hand in how it has shaped Midnight Suns’ depiction of the Marvel universe. While Marvel is “pretty involved” in the creative process, they haven’t mandated any of the story elements, Solomon says. Marvel was even amenable to a customizable character despite the obvious difficulty of being able to create a unique hero who could stand next to Iron Man and seem like an equal.

Ultimately, Midnight Suns will seek to adapt the original early ’90s story, which put the spotlight on Marvel’s supernatural heroes.

“For us, it’s fun to take the established characters and pull them into the dark side of Marvel,” Solomon says.

Marvel’s Midnight Suns is under development for PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. It is slated to arrive in March 2022. For more news and info on Gamescom 2021, check out our Gamescom 2021 hub.

Death Stranding: Director’s Cut Shows Off Its New Items, Features, and Missions (Including a Jetpack)

Death Stranding: Director’s Cut has shown off multiple new items and missions – and also a jetpack.

Shown off during Gamescom’s Opening Night Live, an extended trailer showed off multiple new features. New items include thrusters for your jetpack that allow you glide, a cargo catapult that allows you to fire cargo to faraway areas, and a Buddy Bot that can now carry Sam. A new weapon training area includes high score chasing events and virtual combat encounters. Boss battles can also be revisited and refought via your Private Room area, and leaderboards have been introduced.

More music and customisation options have also been added, and jump ramps have also been added that allow you to perform tricks on a bike. The previously announced racetrack addition also got a new introduction.

New delivery missions have also been added, including a stealth-based facility that looks very much like a Metal Gear level (with appropriate music). We also got a curious teaser for what looks like an underwater area, with a potentially dangerous whale.

Death Stranding: Director’s Cut is coming in September, bringing everything from performance upgrades, updated combat, and new items to deploy, with Kojima Productions also promising that it will expand on the social strand system. In fact, it’s adding enough new material for the first time that even its creator doesn’t really agree with the title ‘Director’s Cut’.

Joe Skrebels is IGN’s Executive Editor of News. Follow him on Twitter. Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

Sifu Will Launch February 22 For PlayStation, PC

Developer Sloclap has revealed that Sifu is now scheduled to launch on February 22, 2022. Yes, that means you can technically write the date as 22/02/2022. Everyone give a slow clap to Sloclap for its cleverness.

Sloclap also revealed a new trailer for Sifu at Gamescom Opening Night Live. The trailer shows off additional gameplay for the upcoming action game, revealing several cool-looking combos across Sifu’s diverse environments.

Now Playing: Sifu Gameplay Trailer | Gamescom ONL 2021

The trailer also gives us another look at Sifu’s aging mechanic, one of the defining features of the game. In Sifu, you play as a warrior who grows more skilled with every death, but this comes at the cost of your youth. Die enough times and you’ll become a highly skilled master fighter, but you’ll inch ever closer to just dying forever.

Combat in Sifu seems to be inspired by Sloclap’s previous game, Absolver, which heavily focuses on a mixture of martial arts and melee weapons within enclosed spaces. If the trailers are anything to go on, this encourages you to use the environment to your advantage–you could shove someone so that they trip over a discarded bottle, for example.

In GameSpot’s Absolver review, Richard Wakeling wrote, “There’s a significant challenge involved in learning Absolver’s combat intricacies, but it’s the kind of struggle that rarely frustrates. Defeat is part and parcel of the experience, but your demise always teaches you something new that you can take with you into the next battle–and Absolver’s deep, nuanced combat always finds ways of enticing you back for one more fight.”

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Saints Row Reboot Is All About Building Something New

Saints Row has had quite a journey from an off-brand Grand Theft Auto to a pure silly spectacle, as its parody grew more and more outrageous with each passing entry. By the time the story wrapped up, the 3rd Street Saints crew had become the President of the United States and staff, gained superpowers, fought aliens, watched the Earth explode, took over the universe, and met a time-kidnapped Jane Austin. The question hanging over the series since has been: How the hell do you follow that?

The answer is, you don’t.

Now Playing: Saints Row Cinematic Trailer | Gamescom ONL 2021

The new Saints Row, announced at Gamescom as part of the Opening Night Live event, is a total reboot for the series–not just in setting and characters but in tone. While it looks primed to carry forward the same playfully zany spirit as its predecessors, the new game–simply called Saints Row–is clearly taking a step back and allowing developer Volition some breathing room without having to constantly top itself with ever-expanding wacky hijinks.

The tagline of the new Saints Row is “Self Made,” a reference to the new story direction in this entry. Instead of experienced gang members, you’re a spunky set of wannabe crooks in the fictional southwest city of Santo Ileso. The main story revolves around building up your gang from nothing, establishing dominance among the other Santo Ileso gangs, and generally building up your criminal empire. These are young punks with something to prove, and Volition says they decided to make their own “criminal startup” after feeling pushed around by the world. This is a distinct continuity that doesn’t fit anywhere into the story of the others–Johnny Gat isn’t off doing his own thing in Stilwater while your gang takes root in Santo Ileso–but Volition did note that fans can expect a handful of Easter eggs.

Saints Row also sports an entirely new engine, as the studio acknowledges that the older entries were definitely games of their time. While the studio isn’t talking about the current-gen versions yet, it did hint that it will be talking about the features unique to those platforms soon.

One thing that hasn’t changed is “the Boss.” The create-a-character protagonist has been the mainstay of the Saints Row series, offering a great deal of flexibility in who you want to spend your time playing as. You’ll have the customization options to make your Boss look the way you want them to look, but in the marketing so far the Boss has been a young woman of color with a shock of brightly-dyed hair. Her misfit companions are set characters–Neenah, Kevin, and Eli–and the foursome trade quips and wisecracks like a fast-moving action-comedy. To that end, Volition says it was inspired by movies like Baby Driver and Hobbs & Shaw.

Your rival gangs add some color and personality to the world with different specialties. One favors big, wild arsenals to overpower the competition, while another wears helmets like an EDM artist. As you take over turf and suppress the gangs, you’ll be able to determine how you want to build up your own gang, leaning into different illicit activities like drug-running out of a fast food chain a la Breaking Bad, stealing cars, or dealing illegal arms.

Though it’s toned down, Volition says it is still aiming to make it an identifiable Saints Row experience. The presentation teased the return of the Insurance Fraud minigame, in which players rack up cash by intentionally jumping in front of moving vehicles and ragdolling around the street, bouncing between cars. The studio also teased that you can get up to mischief in multiplayer with a “pranking” mechanic in co-op, but didn’t go into further detail. Co-op works similarly to how it did in past games, letting you play alongside a partner Boss throughout the entire game.

And of course, as an open-world game, you’ll need to get from place to place quickly. That usually will mean driving cars around the city, but you have a few other options. For one, you can upgrade any vehicle to go off-road, so if you want to take a garbage truck out to the desert and spin donuts, knock yourself out. More significantly, you’ll have access to more unconventional modes of transportation like wingsuits, VTOLs, and hoverboards. It’s not super-speed, but it’ll do in a pinch.

Like the Santo Ileso Saints, Volition is building something new, but it’s not entirely from scratch. The studio is clearly borrowing some tonal cues and mechanics from the existing franchise, and picking and choosing which parts to keep as it starts over. The result looks like Saints Row, but somewhere on the continuum between the crime drama Saints Row 2 and the more gonzo Saints Row: The Third. That may just be the sweet spot for making a whole new criminal empire.

Saints Row is coming February 25, 2022 to PS4, PS5, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X|S. For more, check out all the biggest announcements out of Gamescom.

Saints Row Reboot Dials the Crazy Back to Saints Row 3 Levels

That a new Saints Row game is in development isn’t a surprise. And after last week’s blatant tease, neither is the fact that it’s a total reboot of the decade-and-a-half-old open-world crime saga. I got a look at a gameplay demo of Volition’s freshly announced, co-op-enabled project, which is due out relatively soon on February 25, 2022 for PC as well as both current- and last-gen Xbox and PlayStation consoles. And speaking as someone whose favorite game in the series is Saints Row The Third, I was pleased to see that Volition seems to be aiming for a similar tone for the reboot, rather than the more GTA-clone feel of the first two and the over-the-top ridiculousness of the most recent two.

Saints Row recasts the purple-clad gang as a group of young friends in the southwest USA-inspired city of Santo Ileso who’ve seen their ambitions in life stifled, and so they bind together with the aim of not starting a mere street gang, but instead building an entire criminal empire. You’ll play The Boss, and you’ll be able to customize your avatar, just as you could in the previous games. This includes eight voice options. Rounding out your crew are Eli, the planner and financial guru in the group (more on this shortly); Nina, your ace driver/mechanic with a background in art history and anthropology; and Kevin, the people-pleasing DJ who’s also a thrill-seeker.

Yes, that means no Johnny Gat, no Pierce, etc. This is a new Saints Row – though Volition did hint at some Easter eggs that will call back to the original games, though we don’t yet know what form they’ll take.

One thing definitely returning, however, is the Insurance Fraud minigame activity. Volition chief creative officer Jim Boone said it wouldn’t be a Saints Row game without it, and said a few other fan-favorite activities would also come back, though he didn’t name-check any others.

It’s still very much an over-the-top, arcade-y crime sandbox.

Santo Ileso certainly feels fresh compared to Stilwater just on the back of its desert theme. Volition describes it as “one of” the largest cities it’s ever built, and it’ll feature nine unique districts – from El Dorado’s “grime meets glitz” to the Los Panteros gang’s home turf of Rancho Providencia – as well as the ability to buy plots of land and build specific fronts on them that will each unlock new gameplay opportunities.

This seems to be a big focus for Saints Row in addition to the usual driving and shooting, which, rest assured, there will be plenty of. The demo I saw showcased plenty of cars, motorcycles, helicopters, bulldozers, wingsuits, huge stunt jumps, off-road driving, and a ton more. Saints Row may be walking the series back from the crazy corner it had painted itself into, but it’s still very much an over-the-top, arcade-y crime sandbox. Volition cites John Wick, Baby Driver, and Hobbs & Shaw as its creative inspirations.

On the subject of gangs, three of them control the city: Los Panteros, who are the physically imposing melee combat enthusiasts; the Marshalls, a private military conglomerate that favors an abundance of tech; and the anarchistic Idols, who are motivated by fame and notoriety and tend to attack in huge numbers.

The entire campaign is playable in two-player co-op, though when directly asked whether or not the Saints Row reboot supports cross-play either across consoles or across generations (or both), Volition completely avoided the question, so I take that as a “no.”

If Saints Row turns out to essentially be a follow-up to Saints Row 3 with all-new characters in a whole new world, I’ll be plenty happy with that. But at the very least, it’s walking back from a “pure crazy” tone to a more grounded “over the top” tone, and I’m eager to see how that translates into the final game.

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s executive editor of previews and host of both IGN’s weekly Xbox show, Podcast Unlocked, as well as our monthly(-ish) interview show, IGN Unfiltered. He’s a North Jersey guy, so it’s “Taylor ham,” not “pork roll.” Debate it with him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan.