Resident Evil 8 Pirates Claim That Removing DRM Fixes PC Problems

While Resident Evil Village shines on PS5 and Xbox Series X, the PC version stumbles in a few areas – most notably with recurring stuttering issues in busier scenes. After cracking the game, pirates claim that the issue is being caused by Village’s own anti-piracy DRM.

DSO Gaming reports that the piracy group, EMPRESS, has discovered the issue that was causing issues in Resident Evil Village, claiming that Capcom’s own anti-tamper V3 and Denuvo V11 were the reason why the PC version was plagued with in-game stuttering.

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DSO Gaming states that it played over two hours of EMPRESS’ cracked version of the game and did not experience any stuttering while playing. This includes a section early in the game set in the catacombs of Castle Dimitrescu, which is known to cause widespread stuttering when killing enemies.

While this version of the game appears to offer a smoother experience, it is important to note that this is a pirated version of the game. There is currently no legal way to play a DRM-free version of Resident Evil Village on PC. While it’s not clear whether it’s Capcom or Denuvo’s DRM (or a combination of both) that could be causing the issues, Denuvo Anti-Tamper has long been accused of causing game performance issues.

We have reached out to Capcom for a statement.

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Taylor is the Associate Tech Editor at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Does Dead Space Need a Remake?

Few games hold up as well as Dead Space. Despite releasing 13 years ago, Visceral Games’ space horror shooter is still as intense and scary today as it was then. In fact, it’s shockingly good–you can get it right now on PC, Xbox One, and even Xbox Series X with Auto HDR, and it still controls exceedingly well, features some great shooting mechanics, and looks pretty great.

But most importantly, Dead Space can still scare the hell out of you, with a combination of great sound design, excellent jump scares, ridiculously gross monsters, and awesome set piece moments. Running atop of the Ishimura with Zero-Gravity boots, I’m looking at you.

F1 2021 Review

The world of F1 was set to be transformed this year, thanks to the prospect of radical new regulations and cars. However, like so many things during the pandemic, the changes were delayed until 2022 – leaving F1 in a 12-month holding pattern. The real-life 2021 season seemed poised to offer few surprises, but the reality is that this season has so far been the most interesting championship in years.

Funnily enough, it’s this backdrop that Codemasters has found itself competing against with its own fictional drama, introducing a fully-fledged story mode to F1 2021 for the first time in the series. The end result falls a little short of being as dramatic as the real thing, but it’s a well-executed and welcome new way to play that joins the series’ wide array of existing modes and makes for another excellent package – albeit one that needs a bit of extra content to bring it in line with the real-life 2021 season.

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Codemasters flirted with the concept of a story mode two years ago in F1 2019 with its brief, F2-themed intro and its curated set of late-race scenarios and first-person cutscenes. There, however, it was simply a short sequence of events bolted onto the beginning of the standard career experience. In F1 2021 the story is a standalone mode akin to The Journey from FIFA 17 to 19, or Fight Night Champion’s titular Champion Mode – although it’s never quite as sentimental as the former or as rousing as the latter.

Get to the Point

Dubbed Braking Point, F1 2021’s story focuses on a pair of very different drivers: rookie Aiden Jackson, a talented Brit who still has some key things to learn about the F1 paddock, and Casper Akkerman, a Dutch journeyman with an illustrious career that’s mostly behind him. Depending on your choice, Jackson and Akkerman will race for one of five selectable teams – Williams, Haas, Alfa Romeo, Alpha Tauri, and Racing Point (which becomes Aston Martin during the story). These fictional drivers will unseat the real-life drivers in your choice of team, but the rest of the grid will be made up of actual F1 stars from the 2020 and 2021 seasons – except for one. Another driver from one of the four remaining selectable teams will be replaced with Codemasters’ resident F1 reptile, Devon Butler, who returns from his brief appearance as the antagonist at the beginning of F1 2019 for a slightly bigger role this time around.

The smiling face of a man who has not been punched enough.

Beginning in F2 in 2019, Braking Point sees Jackson graduate to F1 for 2020, where he immediately clashes with old dog Akkerman after a careless on-track incident. The discord between the two is only exacerbated by Akkerman’s general saltiness at what he perceives as preferential treatment for Jackson, much to the chagrin of likable team liaison Brian Doyle (and much to the delight of the devious Devon Butler).

The races in Braking Point vary from lights to flag events to mid-race situations, each with different challenges to achieve. You may be salvaging positions after some earlier misfortune, catching a certain car within a specific number of laps, or finishing ahead of a nominated team. All of these racing scenarios are weaved into the needs of the story itself, which plays out via both cutscenes and a series of phone calls.

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The cutscenes are well done, particularly considering they’re really unlike anything Codemasters’ F1 team have attempted before, and there’s a decent authenticity to the performances overall. It’s also cute seeing real F1 superstars popping up on the periphery of Jackson and Akkerman’s story.

Braking Point does take quite a while to build to any real crescendo, though, and once it does it wraps up rather rapidly. I was particularly surprised that I ultimately knew very little about Jackson by the end. If this is the launchpad for further stories tracking Jackson’s journey, and it definitely feels like it is, it’d be nice to know more about his backstory.

The obvious need to keep Braking Point all-ages appropriate also makes it feel a little blunted, especially when compared to Netflix’s infamously candid F1 docuseries Drive to Survive. For instance, there’s certainly nothing here as fiery as Grosjean’s heartstopping Bahrain crash, or as metaphorically fiery as Guenther Steiner’s door getting ‘fok smashed’.

The equally happy face of man whose office door is safe for another day.

Braking Point also ignores the COVID-19 crisis that had a huge impact on the 2020 and 2021 F1 seasons and includes races which never happened – which is a little incongruous if you dwell on it – but I did quite enjoy how it temporarily turns back the clock to revisit 2020’s car and driver combinations. Watching Ricciardo change from Renault to McLaren and Renault change from… Renault to Alpine reminded me a little of the multi-season nature of the fan favourite F1 Challenge ’99-’02 (known as F1 Career Challenge on consoles). Coincidentally enough, that was actually the last F1 game published by EA before this one.

Keep ‘Em Automated

Sadly, you can’t start the standard career modes a few seasons ago in the same way as Braking Point, but there have been a lot of other tweaks to these modes that I found welcome as a returning player of many years.

The ability to run quick, automated practice programs from a selection of tabs is a great addition, since they really had become quite a grind. It feels far, far better than skipping them outright, sacrificing the resource points, and diving straight into qualifying – which I’ve been tempted to do regularly over the last couple of years. I found the new option to leave the R&D to the AI useful also, even though the R&D system has had a nice facelift. Facility building can also be automated, but I stayed in charge of that to make sure the AI didn’t blow all my cash before I had a chance to lure Danny Ric to my team a few seasons in.

Building a fast car and letting Dan Ricciardo win a championship is officially my new hobby.

F1 2021 also introduces a new Expert setting that allows you to really fine-tune the career experience to suit the pace you want to play at. You can still toggle assists on and calibrate the AI to your own needs, but selecting the Expert environment opens up a raft of options, including the severity of mechanical faults you might suffer, the rate at which you and the AI teams accumulate resource points and cash, and how damage is calculated. You can accelerate your rise to the pinnacle of F1 or make it incredibly, incredibly hard; it’s up to you.

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Damage deserves an additional mention because it’s much more nuanced than ever before, which improves the racing by dialling up the consequences. Damage to your floor, barge boards, or side pods, for instance, will create drag and have a noticeable effect on your top speed. Tyre damage is more convincing, too; brush a wall too heavily and it’s possible for tyres to become completely delaminated, with the belt ripped from the sidewall.

While the novelty has worn off slightly after bursting onto the scene in F1 2020, My Team is still a brilliant mode, and Codemasters has done well to prune some the ageing cutscenes that clashed with the fact you’re actually the team owner (although there are still celebratory vignettes here that are at least five or six years old by now). The livery editing is very limited by modern standards, though, and it’d be great if sponsor decals only vanished from your car if you chose not to re-sign them. As it stands, every time sponsor contracts expire you still have to go and manually place their decals back on your car. It’s a weird annoyance considering everything else is so streamlined.

F1 2021 also introduces a pair of brand new two-player career modes, where you can link up with a friend to play as either rivals or teammates (Contracts mode allows both players to independently sign up with the team of their choice, whilst co-op mode ensures your friend automatically follows you wherever you sign). Co-op in particular feels like the online extension of how I found myself playing splitscreen when it was added back to the series last year. Splitscreen has returned but it’s separate from the two-player career modes, which are online-based.

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Handling feels broadly similar to F1 2020 though the cars feel a little more responsive when moving laterally and are on more of a knife’s edge when it comes to grabbing too much curb at the wrong moment. Bottom out on a curb, or simply unsettle the aero balance enough, and the rear will whip around quick smart, so F1 2021 demands an exact touch.

F1 2021 features no classic cars for the first time in many years so I won’t argue it’s the best-sounding F1 game to date without any V8s on deck. To be fair, however, there definitely has been some work on the sound this year, and the noticeably more prominent transmission whine adds a fine extra layer to the richness of the car audio.

I do think it is the best-looking F1 game to date, however, and the enhancements here are across the board. The cars look excellent (particularly when carrying subtle racing damage), character models are much improved, and trackside detail is the most granular I’ve seen. Off-track surfaces like grass have received a big leap in fidelity.

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On the topic of tracks, F1 2021 is missing several tracks it needed to be able to accurately simulate the 2021 season from the get-go. That said, Imola, Portimao, and the new Jeddah street circuit are reportedly coming free at some point this year. That the real sport can pivot faster than the video game is an unfortunate reality of game development, but F1 2021 currently falls some distance short of being able to properly represent this year’s season.

FIFA 22’s Next-Gen Upgrade Comes at a Hefty Cost

Unlike last year’s game, FIFA 22’s next-gen upgrade will only be offered to those who purchase the (much more expensive) Ultimate Edition of the game.

Eurogamer spotted the information in a new Dual Entitlement FAQ listed on EA’s website, where it outlines players’ eligibility for the next-gen upgrade. “Dual Entitlement is only available with the purchase of the FIFA 22 Ultimate Edition,” it reads on the site. “The Standard Edition of FIFA 22 does not include Dual Entitlement.”

Therefore, in order to qualify for the free upgrade, players must shell out $99.99 USD/£89.99 for the Ultimate Edition of the game rather than $59.99 USD/£59.99 for the Standard Edition. This also means that if someone purchases FIFA 22’s Standard Edition on PS4 and later upgrades to PS5, they would then need to purchase the PS5 version of the game to play.

This marks a different strategy to last year’s game, when Dual Entitlement was offered to owners of all versions of FIFA 21 on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. In that instance, a next-gen version of FIFA 21 was available at no additional cost if someone purchased a PS5 or Xbox Series X/Xbox Series S at a later date.

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Coupled with the fact that many players haven’t been able to buy next-gen consoles in the last year due to consistent shortages that could continue into 2022, it’s unlikely to be a decision that goes down well with fans.

If you’re an EA Play member, you’ll score an automatic 10% discount against FIFA 22, which means the Ultimate Edition drops down to $89.99/£80.99. Fans who pre-order the Ultimate Edition by August 11 will also receive an untradeable FUT Heroes player item from December 1. To boot, this edition includes up to four days Early Access, FIFA points, and more.

EA announced that FIFA 22 will be released on October 1, 2021, and that Paris Saint-Germain’s striker Kylian Mbappé will be its cover star. A gameplay video was also shared with fans to highlight FIFA 22’s new HyperMotion Technology, which promises to deliver “the most realistic, fluid and responsive football experience for next-gen consoles and Stadia.”

FIFA 22 will be available on PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, PC via Origin and Steam, and Google Stadia. FIFA 22 Legacy Edition will be released for Nintendo Switch owners.

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Adele Ankers is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.

Fortnite Week 6 Alien Artifact Locations

New Alien Artifacts are on their way with Fortnite Week 6. The latest batch of Alien Artifacts will go live on Thursday, July 15 at 7 AM PT / 10 AM ET. This week brings another set of five Artifacts to find spread across the island of Apollo. Here’s our complete guide to help guide you through grabbing all of this week’s Alien Artifacts.

Week 6 Alien Artifacts

With five new Alien Artifact locations to seek out in Week 6, you can once again collect a total of 20 Alien Aritfacts to spend on Kymera (four Artifacts within each canister), the tier one Battle Pass character for Fortnite Season 7. The Artifacts are tucked away pretty well as usual, but this map guide should have you grabbing them all with ease. You can find the Week 6 Alien Artifacts:

  • In the shed south of Lockie’s Lighthouse
  • Among some alien trees south of Steamy Stacks
  • In the small shed full of hay in the west of Corny Complex
  • At the snowy mountaintop camp east of Catty Corner, inside a small building
  • In the ground floor of Orelia’s island ruins

Kymera, the Tier 1 Battle Pass alien character, can be customized across a variety of features, including armor color, skin color, armor underglow, eye color, head shape, and more. Each category of Kymera’s features includes a tiered list of options ranging from two to 17 Alien Artifacts per item, including a full set of free options which act as the default Kymera style. To unlock the most expensive item in any category, you’ll need to first unlock all the others before it in the same category.

All Fortnite Week 6 Alien Artifacts
All Fortnite Week 6 Alien Artifacts

That’s why collecting all Fortnite Alien Artifacts each week is so important if you’re hoping to unlock the full range of features. Unlike past customizable Battle Pass cosmetics like Chapter 2 Season 2’s Maya or Chapter 2 Season 3’s ‘Brella, Kymera can be restyled whenever you feel like it. There’s no permanent locking-in of his look. You could even make multiple Kymera characters for different presets. It’s like amassing an alien army for your loadouts. But you have to get Alien Artifacts during the week in which they debut, as they’re replaced the following week with new ones.

You’re unlikely to grab all Alien Artifacts in one round since they’re spread out–though you could with a UFO and a little Storm luck. But don’t worry, so long as you get them all before they disappear next week, you’ll be all set. You can even earn extra Alien Aritfacts each week by playing in teams of two or more and opening Cosmic Chests.

If you need more rewards this week, you can preview the forthcoming Week 6 challenges, or bear witness to the LeBron James skin and his associated King’s Bling Quests.

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Trivium Frontman Matt Heafy Joins Gaming Charity Focused On Mental Health For Soldiers

Matt Heafy, the frontman of the metal band Trivium who is active in the gaming community, has joined the board of directors for the gaming-themed military charity Stack Up.

The charity’s mission is to support military veterans with mental health campaigns to help reduce the number of veteran suicides. Heafy is connected closely with the military, as his father is a US Marine Corp veteran and Heafy himself was born on a military base.

Heafy is active on Twitch; his “Kiichichaos” channel has more than 225,000 followers and he treats his viewers to streams with live guitar performances and gaming. Before this official partnership with Stack Up, he raised thousands for the charity.

“Now a member of the Stack Up board, Heafy will help guide Stack Up as it continues its mission to support veterans and active duty military with the therapeutic benefits of gaming,” reads a line from Stack Up’s news release.

This includes the Supply Crate packages filled with gaming items that are sent to soldiers around the world, as well as the Stack Up Overwatch Program that provides soldiers with resources for mental health.

“I was born in Iwakuni, Japan, in a Marine Corps military base hospital. My father is a Marine and my mother is from Hiroshima, Japan. My dad’s side of the family has multi-generations long lineages in all services and branches of the military,” Heafy said. “Thanks to my father’s service in the USMC, I exist. Stack Up’s emphasis on wanting to help people’s mental well-being, while creating a place in which fellow active service and veteran military–US and allied–can come together and celebrate what connects them, is a mission that resounded with me at my core.”

Stack Up CEO and founder Stephen Machuga said he’s been a longtime fan of Trivium and he feels floored to be able to work with Heafy in this way. “It’s bananas; the potential feels endless right now,” he said.

As for Trivium, the band is no stranger to video games. Its song, “Shattering the Skies Above,” was featured on the God of War: Blood & Metal soundtrack to promote God of War 3.

Trivium just released a new single, “In the Court of the Dragon,” along with a short film.

Take Home The Most Powerful Train Simulator With The Trainz Railroad Simulator

From first-person shooters and survival horror to sports titles and puzzle games, there’s a wide range of game genres out there with something for just about everyone. One of the most niche and successful game genres is the simulation genre. Ever since flight simulators came out, people have flocked to playing simulation games that can put them in control of some of the most powerful and impressive machines humans have ever created. And as technology gets better, the simulation game experience becomes increasingly true to reality. That’s never been more true than with The Trainz Railroad Simulator Platinum Edition Bundle , available now for only $30, on sale from $279 (that’s a savings of 89%).

This game is everything you have ever wanted (and maybe never even knew you’ve wanted)from a train simulator. Rated 4.5/5 stars by verified purchasers, The Trainz Railroad Simulator features ultra-realistic graphics that deliver stunning landscapes. Players can take full control of a variety of steam-, diesel-, and electric-powered locomotives and pilot them through nine distinct routes and across hundreds of miles of tracks. But the simulator doesn’t stop there; players can also establish their own railroads and manage dozens of trains under AI control.

Whether you’re an absolute train nut or just enjoy creating and spending time in novel worlds, the Trainz Railroad Simulator Platinum Edition Bundle has something for the train lover in all of us. Typically listed for $279, it’s now on sale for 89% off at just $30.

Price subject to change

This content is from our partner StackCommerce. GameSpot may get a share of the revenue if you buy anything featured on our site.

Matt Damon Discusses Turning Down Avatar And Missing Out On $100 Million-Plus

Oscar winner Matt Damon had a chance to star in James Cameron’s Avatar and receive 10% of the film’s profits, but he turned it down to stick with the Jason Bourne series instead. Speaking to reporters at the Cannes Film Festival to promote his new movie, Stillwater, Damon said he will be remembered as the actor who gave up the most money.

“I was offered a little movie called Avatar, James Cameron offered me 10% of it,” he said, as reported by Deadline. “I will go down in history… you will never meet an actor who turned down more money.”

Avatar earned more than $2.8 billion at the box office, and remains the highest-grossing movie worldwide in history. It was briefly overtaken by Avengers: Endgame, but reclaimed the crown when it was re-released earlier this year. Both franchises are owned by Disney.

Avatar is estimated to have made $1.2 billion in profit before its release in China, so Damon would have been sitting pretty with at least $100 million in cash.

Damon explained that he said no to Avatar because he was filming the Jason Bourne movies at the time and wanted to make the “moral” decision to stay on that path instead of jumping ship.

Cameron would go on to cast Australian actor Sam Worthington in the lead role of Avatar, though whether or not he was offered the same 10% is unknown. Worthington is set to reprise his role in the upcoming Avatar sequels.

Cameron was also looking at Chris Evans and Channing Tatum for the role of Jake Sully in Avatar before casting Worthington, the director told Empire. “I really liked Channing’s appeal. I liked Chris’ appeal. They were both great guys. But Sam had a quality of voice and a quality of intensity. Everybody did about the same on all the material through the script, except for the final speech where he stands up and says, ‘This is our land, ride now, go as fast as the wind can carry you,'” Cameron recalled. “That whole thing. I would have followed him into battle. And I wouldn’t have followed the other guys. They’ve since gone onto fantastic careers and all that, but Sam was ready. He was ready.”

Damon plays a Trump supporter who goes to France to save his daughter in the new movie Stillwater, which is directed by Oscar winner Tom McCarthy (Spotlight) and premieres in theaters on July 30.

Fortnite Season 7 Week 6 Challenges

Fortnite Week 6 challenges are coming up fast. The Legendary Quests will go live on Wednesday, July 14 at 7 AM PT / 10 AM ET, while the Epic Quests will follow a day later at the same time. Players will once again be taking orders from Doctor Slone, leader of the Imagined Order, as she seeks to thwart the alien invasion. That means your first challenge of the week will be to get to a payphone and receive your covert mission. As for the full list of Fortnite Week 6 challenges, read on.

Fortnite Week 6 Legendary Quests

  • Get Slone’s orders from a payphone (1) – 15,000 XP
  • Place prepper supplies in Hayseed’s Farm (1) – 45,000 XP
  • Deal damage to opponents in farms (25) – 30,000 XP
  • Use an Inflate-a-Bull (1) – 30,000 XP
  • Place cow decoys in farms (3) – 30,000 XP
  • Damage an alien-driven saucer (25) – 30,000 XP

Fortnite Week 6 Epic Quests

  • Collect gold bars (500) – 30,000 XP
  • Spend gold bars (500) – 30,000 XP
  • Destroy equipment on top of Abductors (3) – 30,000 XP
  • Open chests or ammo boxes in low-gravity areas (3) – 30,000 XP
  • Deploy alien nanites anywhere other than Holly Hatchery (3) – 30,000 XP
  • Destroy alien trees (5) – 30,000 XP

As has been the case each week in Season 7, the Legendary Quests are more story-driven than past seasons. That also means they include one-off objectives that even the most seasoned players can’t have mastered before, so we’ll be updating this guide hub with specific solutions to those challenges very soon and ahead of the quests going live.

Some of them you should already know how to do anyway, such as damage an alien-driven saucer, which you can do by going to any invaded location–where its name is written in purple on your map. Those spots change with each round but are always home to UFOs being piloted by AI aliens, or “trespassers.” Getting Slone’s orders from a payphone can once more be any payphone, and you can find these at all bus stops or, if you’d like one specific spot, on the western edge of Misty Meadows. To deal damage to opponents at farms, simply drop at Farmer Steel’s (now Hayseed’s) farm or at Corny Complex. Damage within those limits will apply.

An Inflate-a-Bull is a brand-new traversal item coming with this week’s 17.20 patch. Those details have not been revealed in full just yet, but we know from prior leaks that an Inflate-a-Bull will allow players to use a balloon (shaped like a cow) to float across the island at will, sort of like gliding with a chicken but with more air time. You won’t be able to shoot while inside an Inflate-a-Bull and you’ll be at risk of being shot down from opponents popping the cow balloon with bullets–so be careful!

You'll want to head back to Holly Hatchery for at least one Week 6 challenge.
You’ll want to head back to Holly Hatchery for at least one Week 6 challenge.

As for the Epic Quests, they are once again more familiar for frequent Fortnite flyers. Collecting and spending gold bars can both be done by interacting with NPCs across the island. You can also find smaller sums of gold bars by smashing beds, chairs, sofas, and washer/dryer machines whenever you see them. They each have a high spawn chance for dropping gold bars. If you want to spend 500 gold bars in one swift motion, you can visit Sunny at Believer Beach and select her offer to “tip the bus driver” a small tip, which will spend 500 gold bars instantly. Just be careful you don’t select the large tip option or you’ll be 4,000 gold bars lighter.

Abductors are coming back after a week away, so you’ll want to land on at least one and destroy some equipment on top of them. To open chests or ammo boxes in low-gravity areas, your best bet will be to head to Holly Hatchery and search within the deployed alien nanites. You can’t miss them. They’re the massive, gelatinous, fluorescent cubes spread across the town.

Cow decoys are another one-off challenge this week and we’ll have a guide on those for you very soon. To deploy alien nanites anywhere other than Holly Hatchery, you’ll first need to come upon the rare item. It’s said that they’re found more often around satellite stations or abductors, so try those places, and remember not to use them within the limits of Holly Hatchery or else they won’t tally toward your challenge completion.

The final Week 6 challenge is to destroy alien trees. Those are the purple trees spread all over the map. You can even see them from your map screen. Drop into any deep purple zone and you’ll find alien trees to destroy.

This is the full rundown of the Fortnite Week 6 challenges, but remember that Epic Quests can be beaten all season long. If you still need to finish up your Week 5 challenges, we have those too. You may also want to learn more about the incoming King’s Bling Quests, which herald the arrival of LeBron James.

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Warframe’s The New War Expansion To Be Shown Off At TennoCon This Week

The enduringly popular online multiplayer game Warframe is set to grow once again with a new expansion, The New War, and the game’s developers will show it off at the TennoCon event very soon. Digital Extremes will broadcast the gameplay reveal for The New War on July 17 as part of this year’s all-virtual TennoCon event.

The event begins Saturday, July 17 at 2 PM PT / 5 PM ET. Everyone who watches the event on Amazon’s Twitch service will get a free Prime Warframe for the game. Coinciding with TennoCon, Digital Extremes will also conduct an in-game Relay event where players can meet up to get a “sneak peek” of “exclusive new content.” Some developers from Digital Extremes will be in the game to mingle with as well, the studio said.

The New War was first announced back in 2018 during that year’s TennoCon event.

“It’s been a while since we first discussed this expansion with players. We truly hope Tenno will enjoy a day dedicated to them and the memorable experiences we’ve shared together in Warframe,” Digital Extremes executive Sheldon Carter said. “There’s plenty of new and exciting reveals to be made, but players will have to tune-in to TennoLive to find out more.”

Digital Extremes live operations and community director Rebecca Forward thanked fans for their patience, as the wait for The New War has been lengthy. “We are so excited to finally provide some answers and give everyone a small piece of what’s to come with The New War. We’re thankful for the patience of our players and we look forward to seeing their reactions to some of our big reveals in the chat,” Ford said.

Finally, Digital Extremes provided a rundown of the special content you can unlock for Warframe by watching the showcase:

  • Vastilok Gunblade Weapon
  • Awarded for watching thirty consecutive minutes between 12:30 PM ET – 5:00 PM ET

In-Game Relay Event Reward During TennoLive Segment

  • Tannukai Longsword Skin and Armor Set
  • Awarded at the end of the TennoLive in-game Relay event, must be present to qualify

Twitch and Steam Drop During TennoLive Segment

  • Loki Prime Warframe with Slot
  • Awarded for watching thirty consecutive minutes between 5:00 PM ET – 7:00 PM ET

Warframe is a free-to-play game available on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, as well as PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch. Digital Extremes is owned by Tencent, after that company acquired Leyou, a former chicken meat supplier based in Hong Kong.

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