Limited Run Games 2021 Showcase: How To Watch

This summer is littered with gaming events, sure to be filled with new announcements, surprises, and updates. For anyone looking to know what limited-edition physical games they can get their hands on, the Limited Run Games 2021 showcase will be taking place on Monday, June 14, at 1 PM PT/4 PM ET. Limited Run Games has said that the hour-long showcase will feature 25 announcements, including new games, physical editions of cult classics, and reissues of classic titles.

Limited Run Games 2021 Start Time

Limited Run Games’ “#LRG3 2021” goes live Monday, June 14, at 1 PM PT/4 PM ET. The show, produced by Mega64, promises 25 physical game announcements in an hour-long presentation. During the 2020 show the company announced physical versions of Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon 2, Katana Zero, To The Moon, and many more, so expect a variety of titles to be announced during the showcase.

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How To Watch Limited Run Games 2021 Showcase

Limited Run Games 2021 showcase will be available on the company’s official Twitch page.

What To Expect

In past showcases, Limited Run Games have announced a number of indie titles and older classics getting physical editions. Typically, most games are announced for PS4 and Switch–of the roughly 30 games announced in 2020, only 3 weren’t available on either PS4 or Switch–but it could be possible to see PS5 games this year since the console is now officially out.

On the May 2 episode of the Xbox Expansion Pass podcast, Limited Run Games founders Douglas Bogart and Josh Fairhurst said that the company has officially partnered with Xbox and plans to make announcements soon, so there could be Xbox games at the show as well.

On Twitter, the company also gave an update about some of the titles it has already announced but haven’t released, like Katana Zero and Night In The Woods, so it seems like the showcase will be reserved for new announcements.

The Limited Run Games live stream comes shortly after Summer Game Fest on June 10 and the Xbox and Bethesda Game Showcase on June 13. GameSpot will be live streaming all of the games events and showcases during June as part of Play for All 2021, raising money for AbleGamers, which focuses on helping people with disabilities play games and improving accessibility in games.

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Mass Effect 3 Dev Exposes Never-Discovered Easter Egg

With the release of Mass Effect: Legendary Edition in May, the sci-fi series has been garnering a lot of renewed attention, including from developers who worked on the original game. For example, a designer who worked on Mass Effect 3’s 2012 release recently unveiled an Easter egg that he put in the game that had never been discovered.

Cinematic designer Richard Boisvert posted on Reddit in May about the secret and gave some guidance to players who were interested in seeing it for themselves in the remasters. It’s a cool little homage to a Mars rover, probably Opportunity, near the beginning of Mass Effect 3’s Mars mission. If you follow a specific route, you can find a rover that’ll drive over to you and give you a little nod.

Image of rover Easter egg courtesy of Reddit user Tuskin38.
Image of rover Easter egg courtesy of Reddit user Tuskin38.

Boisvert himself believed that no one had ever even seen the rover, but that part isn’t exactly true. As pointed out by Kotaku, the rover itself had been spotted last year–but no one had ever figured out how to trigger its action.

While this is obviously just a cool gesture to NASA’s Mars rover program, it’s actually not that far-fetched that the little vehicles will still be around on Mars even as far in the future as 2186, when the game takes place. If no one removes them, they likely will still exist in some degraded form as monuments to past space exploration. Of course, it’s impossible for it to actually be functional in 2186. Opportunity no longer works, while Curiosity and Perseverance will continue on for the next few years.

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GameSpot Play For All 2021 Schedule: Livestreams, Exclusives, And Much More

Play For All is back for 2021. And while we’ll be covering all of the summer happenings, including E3 and the assorted showcase events coming up, we’ll also have two days in June where we’ll be livestreaming a ton of content centered around the hottest upcoming games.

While we’re not ready to reveal our full schedule just yet, we can tell you that we’ll be broadcasting E3 on June 14-15, followed by our own live show June 16-17. These will be home to interviews with AAA developers, exclusive gameplay reveals and trailers, announcements, and much more. We’ll also be getting started with a one-hour kickoff show on June 4 at 9 AM PT / 12 PM ET where we’ll preview Play For All, E3, and all of the surrounding events. We can’t wait to show you what we have in store.

Our streams will be available on GameSpot.com, Twitch, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter. We’ll be updating this story with a more detailed schedule as we draw closer to the event, but you can get an overview of what we can share now. Be sure to also check out our E3 2021 schedule post for a more detailed rundown on the official publisher events.

To cap off Play For All, we’ll be hosting a series of livestreams to help raise money for AbleGamers. You can look for those later in June–expect a variety of guests from throughout the games industry–but you can donate right now. Alongside all of our Play For All events, we’ll be covering all things E3, including previewing the various press conferences and delivering post-show analysis.

June 4

  • 9 AM PT — Play For All kickoff stream

June 5

  • 2 AM PT — Indie Live Expo
  • 8 AM PT — Guerrilla Collective Day 1

June 7-11

  • Netflix Geeked

June 9

  • 7 AM PT — Battlefield 6 reveal

June 10

  • 11 AM PT — Summer Game Fest Kickoff Live

June 11

  • 12 PM PT — Koch Media gaming event

June 12

  • 8 AM PT — Guerrilla Collective Day 2
  • 10 AM PT — Wholesome Direct
  • 12 PM PT — Ubisoft Forward
  • TBA — Devolver Digital

June 13

  • 10 AM PT — Xbox & Bethesda Games Showcase

June 14

  • 1 PM PT — Limited Run Games
  • 3 PM PT — Razer E3 keynote

June 16-17

  • TBA — Play For All livestreams

June 21-25

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Is Nintendo Going To Have An E3 Direct?

E3 is just around the corner in mid-June, and that’s led many fans to wonder if Nintendo is going to host a special Nintendo Direct to go along with the usual onslaught of gaming news. While Nintendo has foregone the usual blockbuster press conferences to focus on a pre-recorded Direct, we do know that Nintendo is going to be a part of the E3 event sometime between June 12 to 15.

That’s because unlike Sony, Nintendo is still an official partner of the ESA, meaning that it’s going to participate in the event proper, which runs during those dates. Again, we don’t know for sure that Nintendo will hold a Direct at all, but we know it’s going to do something in that time range, so keep your eyes peeled for it. You should be able to check out the hypothetical Direct right here at GameSpot, as well as Nintendo’s official social media channels on Twitch and YouTube.

Though Nintendo did not end up doing an E3 2020 Direct due to the impact of the coronavirus, the company’s E3 2019 Direct came on June 11, the first day of the conference. In terms of what to expect from the Direct, rumors and analysis have suggested that the company may announce a Switch Pro or some other new hardware revision of its successful console as the big headline. A recent report suggested that the Switch Pro could even be announced before E3 begins.

We may also see footage from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild 2, perhaps the most anticipated game for the Switch. For more on E3 2021, check out our official schedule and list of participants, as well as our guide to the games and announcements we really want to see this year.

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Mare of Easttown: Series Finale Review – “Sacrament”

Warning: Full spoilers for the Mare of Easttown finale follow…

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Mare of Easttown went out with an emotional thunderclap, making it one of the best and most gripping crime stories in recent memory. Not based on a book like Sharp Objects or Big Little Lies before it, Mare of Easttown had a lot riding on it heading into this finale, titled “Sacrament.” Fortunately, the series deftly blended the last remaining “whodunnit?” element with Mare’s therapeutic resurgence, giving us an ending that satisfies all the particular angles one might prioritize, be they clinical or rooted in character.

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Murder dramas can be one of the trickiest planes to land, especially if the resolution comes at the end of a season or series (and not just after one episode). But Mare of Easttown wisely knew, from the start, that the best way to frame their series was around the Kate Winslet’s flawed, embattled Mare, so that if viewers didn’t like the final twist, or if they were able to predict it one or two episodes ahead of time, they’d still be invested in the show and interested in watching it all play out. It’s all in the title, right? If you continue to care about Mare then it stands to reason you’ll be there, along for the ride, for whatever direction the series takes.

Creator/writer Brad Ingelsby incorporated how we think into the finale, and so “Sacrament” was able to embrace some of the time-honored tropes of the genre and coat them with an extra layer of heartache. There wasn’t going to be anyone in that Erin McMenamin picture, which was part of last week’s cliffhanger, that was going to completely spin our heads around. No one that made sense, anyhow. So the reveal that it had been John Ross who had an affair with Eric and not his brother, got tucked away rather neatly within the first 10 minutes. The rest of the finale was sprawling, time-wise. Smartly so. Over the course of eight months, John went to prison, Mare continued to see Richard, Frank and Faye got on good terms again, Mare and Frank made peace, Siobhan decided to go to Berkeley, and a slew of other maudlin characters got a nice sprinkling of closure.

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Of course, all this time we, as viewers, are waiting for the turn. John killing Erin didn’t make sense. Not just because it didn’t line up from a police standpoint — and Mare is shown having brief flashes of doubt over these months — but also because emotionally we knew there had to be more to it all. And most of us, presumedly, also knew where this turn was going to come from. And we dreaded it. That was the best part. The series was going to give us a murderer we didn’t want to believe was the murderer. And it was once again going to traumatize Julianne Nicholson’s Lori, whose entire family had already been ripped apart. 

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This is why the end worked so well. It tore us along with the characters. And Nicholson’s performance is the one people should be talking about in the wake of Mare. Winslet is obviously a force, but Nicholson had to get reduced to rubble here, and the final moments, which were about love and forgiveness, resonated louder and harder than any action sequence or chase scene. Mare holding Lori, who’d collapsed in Mare’s arms almost like a crying toddler desperately in need of sleep, was true televisual beauty.

Back in the review of the Mare of Easttown premiere, I mentioned Easttown as an entire community in need of therapy. It’s not only telling that Mare’s life, and interpersonal relationships, began to steadily improve with her sessions during the months flown over in the finale, but also how the way she buried herself in work was a stealthy cry for help. Her therapist mentioned her work as being a distraction for her, from having to face her grief about Kevin, but when you note how her job was to force the truth out into the light, how it was to make people give up their secrets in a town built brick by brick on sad people taking shadowy truths to their graves (which Lori was prepared to do), you could see it as a subconscious act of rebellion against the long-standing Easttown credo of burying feelings.

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Even though we may never see what comes next, you get the feeling that Lori’s life will become better. And, yes, Ryan’s too. All with time. Because…just imagine the two of them going forward carrying this dark secret. Their lives would unravel and dissolve. Ryan would grow into a husk of a human. As much as Lori screamed at Mare, and cursed her name, you could see the difference in her after Ryan was arrested. And as scared as Ryan was (that scene when he ran into his home and said to Lori “She knows! She Knows!” was spine-chilling), you know he desperately wanted it to be over. Before Ryan was caught, Lori was in a daze. Caring for young D.J., she was cold, distant, and barely present. Afterward, visiting Ryan with D.J. and Moira, they all seemed lighter, less burdened, and more loving. A powerful example of truth setting people free, even if it means actual loss of physical freedom.

Also — and it would have made no sense if they’d gone this direction — having Guy Pierce not only not be the killer but also not turn out to be an utter s*** in some manner, was a nice way to brighten up Mare’s life. As Red Herrings go, there’s nothing shadier than a professor who bounces from town to town, one temp teaching gig to another (and then also having that character played by a semi-famous face). Add to that the fact that Richard also sort of vanished from the past few episodes. But Richard was allowed to remain a peripheral “good” in Mare’s life, just on the outskirts, reminding her that there are other futures to consider. 

Summer Game Fest 2021: How To Watch The Kickoff Live Stream

This summer is stacked with gaming live streams and events, including the return of Geoff Keighley’s Summer Game Fest. Keighley’s Summer Game Fest will start with Kickoff Live, taking place on June 10 at 11 AM PT/2 PM ET. The show will contain over a dozen world premieres and reveals, in addition to a performance by Weezer. Check below for the embedded video of the upcoming showcase.

Summer Game Fest Kickoff Live Start Time

The Summer Game Fest Kickoff Live stream goes live on Thursday, June 10, at 11 AM PT/2 PM ET. Hosted by Keighley himself, the show promises appearances from around 20 new games, in addition to updates from live service titles, he told GameSpot. This live show serves as the focal point of Summer Games Fest, with Keighley passing the baton to individual publishers afterward. The event has partnered with a ton of companies, including 2K, EA, Ubisoft, Xbox, PlayStation, and many more.

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How To Watch Summer Game Fest Kickoff Live

The stream will be embedded above when it’s available and Kickoff Live will also be available on The Game Awards’ official YouTube and Twitch channels. The stream will also be available on GameSpot when it’s live.

What To Expect

Summer Game Fest Kickoff Live promises world premieres, first looks, announcements, and more. Based on the announcements in Keighley’s Game Awards there should be plenty of announcements big and small. The list of partners includes nearly every company in the gaming industry, so announcements could come from anyone. Microsoft has had a strong relationship with Keighley, showing the Xbox Series X for the first time at The Game Awards in 2019 and teasing the next Perfect Dark last year. A reveal or tease from Microsoft could be used to promote the joint Xbox and Bethesda Games Showcase on June 13.

Devolver Digital has teased that it will reveal four new games during Summer Game Fest, although it isn’t clear if that will be during Kickoff Live or just during its own stream.

Summer Game Fest and E3 aren’t the only summer gaming events with the Guerrilla Collective event taking place on June 5 and 8, Electronic Arts hosting EA Play Live on July 22, and Gamescom 2021’s all-digital show slated for August.

GameSpot will be live streaming all of the games events and showcases as part of Play for All 2021 during June, raising money for AbleGamers, which focuses on helping people with disabilities play games and improving accessibility in games.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

Tell Me Why Is Free So Players Can Support Trans And Queer Communities Directly

Episodic adventure game Tell Me Why is free on Xbox platforms, Windows 10, and Steam for the entire month of June to celebrate Pride Month, and developer Dontnod has a few recommendations on where players can instead spend the money they may have spent on Dontnod’s game to more directly help transgender and queer communities.

In a blog post, the developers made clear their reasons for making Tell Me Why free.

Now Playing: Tell Me Why Cinematic Trailer | Xbox Games Showcase 2020

“Our intention in making Tell Me Why free for June 2021 is both to allow even more people to access the game and to encourage our players to spend their money in places that will directly affect trans and queer communities,” the post reads.

The developers go on to list a number of ways players can support LGBTQIA+ communities, ranging from donating to a charity, giving aid to a trans or queer person in need directly, or financially supporting games and interactive fiction from trans or queer creators, such as Happy Ray Games’ Ikenfell. Dontnod points out that even for those who can’t support with money, they can still be an advocate for trans and queer rights by promoting works by trans and queer creators and by learning about contributions made by LGBTQIA+ people throughout world history.

One of Tell Me Why’s main characters, Tyler Ronan, is trans, and is voiced by trans voice actor August Black. The game was the first major title to feature a main, playable trans character. Dontnod worked closely with the LGBTQIA+ media group GLAAD to ensure the depiction of the game’s trans and queer characters were respectful and and authentic.

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Mission Impossible Director Open To Take On James Bond

Prolific Mission: Impossible writer-director Christopher McQuarrie has let the world know he would be open to explore helping steer the post-Daniel Craig era of James Bond. When asked on Twitter about a ScreenRant article fancasting McQuarrie into the franchise, the director coyly replied: “I have never been a hard guy to find.”

The only hitch? McQuarrie has something of a full plate at the moment. He has both Mission: Impossibles 7 and 8 on the immediate horizon, which will no longer shoot back-to-back and therefore take further time away more unpredictably. It’s also going to be quite a while before anyone knows how Daniel Craig’s final James Bond adventure, No Time to Die, will be received after finally coming out on October 8. It was originally slated for April 2020, but was pushed back repeatedly due to the pandemic.

Regardless, a fresh approach to the storied and stylish action-espionage franchise is to be expected. Amazon recently purchased MGM for $8.45 billion, meaning at the highest levels there is a staggering amount of new blood governing the super-spy franchise. Star Craig has already been hard at work rebranding himself as a surprisingly adept straight-face comic foil for the expansive casts in the burgeoning Knives Out franchise, which may in some butterfly effect provide inspiration for an unexpected twist for Bond. In the past, McQuarrie has expressed an interest and floated several general ideas about the possibilities lighter tone for Bond might yield.

Video game developer and publisher IO Interactive is currently making Project 007, a “wholly original Bond story” that will also function as an origin story for Bond. The company is popular for its Hitman games, featuring a ruthless assassin with a knack for disguises and creative kills–so expect something fun and interesting to come of it.

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Taylor Swift Joins Already-Huge Cast Of David O. Russell’s New Movie

David O. Russell’s next movie has added yet another big name to its cast. According to Collider, music superstar Taylor Swift will appear in the film, adding to its already impressive cast.

Swift has appeared in movies before, as she had parts in The Lorax, Valentine’s Day, The Giver, and Cats most recently.

She joins a cast for the film that includes Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, Rami Malek, John David Washington, and more. You can see the full list of the cast so far below.

The project remains largely a mystery, as no plot details have been divulged so far. What we do know is that it’s an original idea that the five-time Oscar nominee Russell came up with.

Cast For David O. Russell’s New Movie:

  • Christian Bale
  • Margot Robbie
  • John David Washington
  • Rami Malek
  • Robert De Niro
  • Mike Myers
  • Chris Rock
  • Anya Taylor-Joy
  • Timothy Olyphant
  • Michael Shannon
  • Zoe Saldana
  • Andrea Riseborough
  • Matthias Schoenaerts
  • Alessandro Nivola

Russell also directed The Fighter, Silver Linings Playbook, and American Hustle. He was at one point attached to direct the Uncharted movie before he left the project. The new movie will be his first since 2015’s Joy, which starred Jennifer Lawrence.

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An Extended Super Mario Bros. Movie Cut Has Been Unearthed, 28 Years After Release

It’s been nearly three decades since the Super Mario Bros. movie arrived in theaters, with a tagline boldly proclaiming “This ain’t no game.” Now, after all of this time, an extended version of the film has been unearthed, restored, and released online for all to see.

This version of the film–dubbed “The Morton Jankel Cut” after co-directors Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel–has been released by The Super Mario Brothers Archive, a group of fans who celebrate the movie and have been involved in the special features on previous home releases of the film. They’ve teamed with film restorationist and filmmaker Garrett Gilchrist to present a version of the movie that has never been seen by anyone outside of the production team. Their hope is that this cut will resonate more with fans than the theatrical cut of the film, which was panned critically and flopped at the box office. You can watch it for yourself at the link above

Now Playing: Super Mario – Best Trailers From 1985-2021

For years, Super Mario Bros. has been looked down on because it doesn’t resemble the game it’s based on. Now, with the new cut, Gilchrist and the Super Mario Bros. Archive team hopes people will see why that’s the case. “It’s always going to be a controversial film,” Gilchrist told GameSpot. “The directors, Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel, thought they were making Max Headroom again. They wanted this cyberpunk dystopia. And I think they were pitching the movie more for teenagers, like a Star Wars film. Or even Roger Rabbit, which is a little bit adult in many ways and was obviously an inspiration for this film in some respects.”

He continued, “Which, if you think about it, your average adult back then didn’t give a damn about the Nintendo NES or Super Mario Bros. So of course, whoever was writing that film, or was directing that film, was going to come in and bring their own sensibility to it, beyond the film being about Mario and Luigi, who fight Koopa. That’s a given.”

That movie didn’t make it to theaters, though. Thankfully, however, an extended version of the film still existed in the form of an old VHS tape that belonged to producer Roland Joffé. Ryan Hoss and Steven Applebaum from The Super Mario Bros. Archive tried locating an extended version of the movie for years, before fellow fan and Super Mario Bros. Archive community member Ryan Parente got his hands on it.

Beyond a number of extended scenes that make up the new 20 minutes of footage that was previously unreleased, there are also some new scenes–including one in particular that reframes two characters in the film. “Iggy and Spike rap! They do a whole rap, which Fisher Stevens and Richard Edson wrote, about how they want to overthrow King Koopa,” Gilchrist said. “It’s stupid, and it’s great. They turn from these unthinking comic relief henchmen into anti-fascists in a couple of scenes. And then they rap about it. Iggy and Spike are introduced as very broad comic characters, which doesn’t always work. But there’s a lot more of them in this cut and you get to understand them a lot more. They grow and change as characters and I liked them a lot more than I thought I would.”

With the footage in hand, Gilchrist and the Super Mario Bros. Archive team started a two-year journey to get this new cut into the state it’s in now–which the filmmaker points out isn’t as polished as he’d like. To achieve this new version of the movie, Gilchrist got digitized transfers from that original VHS and the mass market VHS of the film sold in the ’90s, thanks to Skip Elsheimer from A/V Geeks. He also looked to the Blu-ray release and material from trailers and other rare VHS tapes. Interestingly enough, according to Gilchrist, the movie was released onto VHS in open matte 4:3 aspect ratio. The subsequent DVD and Blu-ray releases are in widescreen and lose some of the picture, compared to the VHS. Gilchrist thought the film worked in either version and stuck with the 4:3 ratio for this extended cut.

After a long time spent restoring the footage from the extended cut–along with the mass market VHS to make the two sources match–they arrived at this version of the film. “I think if you get on its wavelength there’s a lot to like there,” he said of the new cut. “I do think the workprint is a better film, and that this extended cut is a better film.”

Don’t go into this new version expecting a more faithful adaptation of the games, though. “It’s not the Mario movie that fans and kids were asking for, and it is kind of broad and dumbed-down, but as this bonkers cyberpunk fantasy aimed at thirteen-year-olds? It’s kind of cool and crazy that this film even exists,” Gilchrist said.

As for what happens next, that remains a mystery. Those involved would certainly still love to see this extended version of the movie released officially. What’s more, Gilchrist has learned of an international DVD release of the film in its original 4:3 aspect ratio, which means he may not be done with Super Mario Bros. just yet.

“I’ll probably try again,” he said. “But this might be the best way to experience the film, honestly. An all VHS cut that’s a little rough around the edges. Much like the film itself, it has a lot to offer if you’re in the right mood for it. Or maybe even if you’re not.”

You can find Gilchrist’s work online through Archive.org and Twitter. The Super Mario Bros. Archive team is also available on Twitter.

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