Xbox Game Pass Adds Hellblade On Xbox One

Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice, one of the best, most affecting games of 2017, is now free on Xbox One for people who have an Xbox Game Pass membership.

Those playing on Xbox One X can enjoy special features made possible by the console’s extra power, including better visuals, and High Framerate and High Resolution modes. High Framerate mode increases the frame rate to 60 FPS, while High Resolution makes the game run at the highest possible resolution instead of a dynamic resolution scaling.

Hellblade was developed by UK studio Ninja Theory, which Microsoft acquired earlier this year. It is also available on PlayStation 4 and PC.

Xbox Game Pass is Microsoft’s subscription service on Xbox One that lets you play titles from a catalog of more than 100 Xbox One and Xbox 360 games for $10 USD/month. New subscribers can sign up with an introductory offer of $1 USD for the first month.

More games are added to Xbox Game Pass on a regular basis. Mortal Kombat X, Pro Evolution Soccer 19, and Spintires: Mudrunner arrived earlier this month, while Ori and the Blind Forest (December 20) and Shadow Warrior 2 (December 20) are coming later this month. Additionally, the brand-new games Ashen and Below launched into Xbox Game Pass earlier this month.

All first-party Xbox games launch into Xbox Game Pass, which means subscribers will get Gears 5, Halo Infinite, and all other exclusives in the time to come at no extra cost.

Xbox Game Pass is currently only available on Xbox One, but Microsoft is bringing it to PC in the future. On a longer timeline, the company wants to have Xbox Game Pass on “every device.”

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Glitch Spawns Infinite Waluigis

A wild new Super Smash Bros. Ultimate glitch has been discovered, and it really is a sight to behold. As shown off by Master0fHyrule on YouTube, the glitch spawns an apparently infinite number of Waluigi Assist Trophies, which makes the game descend into some kind of purple nightmare.

You can try to trigger the glitch for yourself by getting two Isabelle characters on a stage and, at the same time, deploy the fishing rod on a Waluigi Assist Trophy. If you do this correctly, and maybe get a little lucky, one of the Isabelles will continue to use the Assist Trophy again and again and again, until presumably the end of time. This apparently works with not only the Waluigi Assist Trophy, but numerous others as well. Take a look at the video below to see it in action. The infinite Assist Trophy glitch was apparently discovered by TheAfrowJow, and you can watch their video on the glitch here on YouTube.

Waluigi is not a playable character in Smash Bros. Ultimate, but Nintendo is aware of the groundswell of interest in putting him in the game. Whether or not that ever happens remains to be seen, however.

Smash Bros. Ultimate launched earlier this month, and it enjoyed a record-breaking start in Japan where it had the highest launch sales in the history of the Smash series in Japan. Sales figures for the United States and other parts of the world haven’t been announced.

The game has a massive character roster, and it’s getting more fighters with post-launch character expansions–including Piranha Plant and Persona 5‘s Joker. We have our own list of characters we want to see.

In our Super Smash Bros. Ultimate review, Edmond Tran gave the game a 9/10, writing, “An inconsistent online mode and situational downers don’t stop Super Smash Bros. Ultimate from shining as a flexible multiplayer game that can be as freewheeling or as firm as you want it to be.”

Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse – Easter Eggs, References & End Credits Scene Explained!

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Never Alone – Opening Minutes Gameplay

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Disney’s Lady & The Tramp Movie Uses Real Dogs Who Eat Spaghetti And Kiss Somehow

One of Disney’s next live-action remakes of an animated classic, Lady & The Tramp, filmed at least some of its scene with actual dogs, it has been confirmed. Why is this notable? The first trailer for Disney’s new Lion King movie billed the film as being “live-action,” but those aren’t real lions or elephants you’re seeing, but instead very visually stunning CG creatures. For Lady & The Tramp, however, Disney used real dogs–at least for a part of the process.

Actor Thomas Mann, who plays Jim Dear in the new Disney movie, confirmed to Collider that real, tail-wagging dogs were used on set for the new Lady & The Tramp.

“The dogs were there. We shot with the dogs, every day,” he explained. “They were on set and they weren’t even trained. They found these dogs and started training them about three months before. They just wanted to find the perfect dogs. The main dog’s name was Rose, who played Lady. It was crazy because they didn’t know they were working, so they would run off in the middle of a take, and then come back over. You have to be extra patient because you have to be good every time for when they are good once. It was a lot of fun. It was so cute, every day, to just have a bunch of dogs to play with. It made the job a lot less stressful.”

One of the most memorable scenes from the 1955 original was when the two main dogs shared a bowl of spaghetti and kissed. Apparently the movie-makers recreated this with the real dogs for the remake.

“Who doesn’t want to see two real dogs kiss over a plate of spaghetti? That is the main draw for me. You get the charisma of real dogs in there,” Mann said.

What’s unclear at this stage is how much post-production effort will go into the new Lady & The Tramp specifically for the dogs. Presumably there will be significant visual effects to help make their speaking sequences and other cues look more believable.

The new Lady & The Tramp features the voices of Tessa Thompson and Justin Theroux in the title roles, with Janelle Monae, Benedict Wong, Kiersey Clemons, and Ashley Jensen also appearing in the film. It’s directed by The Lego Ninjago Movie director Charlie Bean. No release date has been set yet.

It’s just the latest remake from Disney. The film giant has already released reboots of Cinderella, The Jungle Book, and Beauty and the Beast. In addition to Lady & The Tramp and The Lion King, some of Disney’s other upcoming remakes include Dumbo, Mulan, Aladdin, and Pinocchio, among others.

Best Games Of 2018: Tetris Effect

Over the next few days, we will reveal what we believe are the 10 best games of 2018, organized by release date. Then on December 19, we will reveal which of the nominees gets to take home the coveted title of GameSpot’s Game of the Year. So be sure to come back then for the big announcement, and in the meantime, follow along with all of our other end-of-the-year coverage collected in our Best of 2018 hub.

Tetris is time-tested, ubiquitous, and as a result, it’s usually taken for granted. Developer Enhance Inc. is here to remind us all that Tetris is a game worthy of our appreciation in 2018, and more importantly, that it has plenty of untapped potential.

In simple terms, Tetris Effect is a rhythm-game tinged version of the classic puzzle game. You aren’t forced to act in time with the music, but every time you flip a tetromino or complete a line, the game will produce a sound at the nearest-neighbor beat. So even though you aren’t intentionally filling in the notes of a song, you do contribute to the music. With enough experience you may find yourself trying to play along, however, acting out and flipping puzzle pieces just to hear the rapid fire instrumentation and appreciate your mastery of the game’s pacing and demands. This of course happens simultaneously as you race to clear lines, consequently harmonizing Tetris Effect’s two halves.

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The moving soundtrack encompasses a wide range of musical styles that may be unusual to your ears but are nonetheless infectious. The procession of one rhythm or orchestra to another is handcrafted to make you feel something different from level to level, and the push and pull of it all is unquestionably effective. Some stages help you relax and experience momentary bliss, while others drive you so hard and fast that you practically need to catch your breath before jumping into the next challenge.

Inspiring moments like these are great in isolation; when experienced for prolonged periods of time, playing stage after stage in the game’s Journey mode, they accumulate into something greater. To succeed at Tetris Effects’ later levels requires almost subconscious planning and execution, where thinking too hard may cause unintentional obsession with misleading opportunities. It sounds almost counterintuitive, the idea that you should think less to achieve more, but that’s exactly what Tetris Effect is trying to draw out of you, and exactly why you should give yourself up to the feelings it tries to instill.

It’s an unforgettable experience that marks a new chapter for one of the medium’s most familiar and beloved properties, and when people talk about Tetris from now on, Tetris Effect will undoubtedly be used to reference the original game’s timeless appeal.

We often think of VR games as means to travel to new worlds or embody fictional characters. Tetris Effect leverages the inherent immersion that comes from shutting yourself off from the outside world to induce synaesthesia, combining sight and sound into a seamless composite. Until you’ve experienced it for yourself, it’s difficult to understand just how powerful this effect can be, but it’s the secret sauce that makes you good at the game. All it takes to locate that mindset is a little persistence and an open mind. The more you can isolate your senses, the better, so you should absolutely play Tetris Effect with PSVR if you have the option.

Tetris Effect is unquestionably the prettiest version of Tetris there is and it uses that aspect of its personality to enhance the core draw of the puzzle game within, making it easier for you to find that unspeakable bond between mind and game. It’s an unforgettable experience that marks a new chapter for one of the medium’s most familiar and beloved properties, and when people talk about Tetris from now on, Tetris Effect will undoubtedly be used to reference the original game’s timeless appeal.

Best Games Of 2018: Red Dead Redemption 2

Over the next few days, we will reveal what we believe are the 10 best games of 2018, organized by release date. Then on December 19, we will reveal which of the nominees gets to take home the coveted title of GameSpot’s Game of the Year. So be sure to come back then for the big announcement, and in the meantime, follow along with all of our other end-of-the-year coverage collected in our Best of 2018 hub.

Red Dead Redemption 2 is a lot of things–methodical in its pacing, ambitious in nearly every department, overwhelming in its scope–but most of all, it is contradictory. Its open world presents you with any number of outlaw activities to take on, but its story is a series of largely linear missions where there is no freedom of choice. The world is expansive and seemingly never-ending, but getting from place to place is a slow, laborious process. But those contradictions work in tandem to develop Red Dead 2’s narrative on a deeper level, and it’s thanks to those opposing ideas that we gained such an intense connection to its characters and world.

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Arthur Morgan’s story is not unlike John Marston’s story; in Red Dead Redemption, John was working to escape his old life of crime and find a better life for himself and his family. In the prequel, Arthur is torn between two versions of himself: the better man he wants to be and the flawed man he is. This is represented by an honor scale that shifts depending on your actions, like greeting passersby politely or looting an innocent corpse. But in practice, no matter how you’re trying to play, you’ll always find yourself doing something you didn’t want to do. If you’re trying to be honorable, you’ll inevitably end up doing a homicide-required story mission that tanks your honor score. If you’re aiming to be a true outlaw, you’ll have to avoid donating to your camp–and miss out on important upgrades, including one that unlocks partial fast travel–if you don’t want to gain honor points.

The feeling of inevitability is exacerbated by the tension only a prequel can bring: knowing how the story ultimately ends. Over 50 or so hours, you’re forging relationships with people who you know won’t make it to the events of Red Dead Redemption. Something hopeful becomes bittersweet, and in turn, sad events take on an optimistic light. There’s something beautiful in knowing there’s nothing you can do to save someone or avoid the tragic outcome–but that you have choices all the same. Your decisions might not change the ending much, but the give and take of trying and failing makes each step on your journey feel like your own.

It can be frustrating, in an open world game, to be forced into actions you didn’t want to take. Red Dead 2 gives you a ton of choices but very few outcomes; there’s often nothing you can do to change how a story mission ends. It can feel like you’re fighting against the game, but that’s why it’s brilliant. Your weariness and your frustration are also Arthur’s, and that gives you a greater understanding into the inner turmoil he experiences throughout the story. Those feelings draw you into him, his relationships, and his world, and that’s a connection that’s hard to shake when it’s all over. Of everything about Red Dead Redemption 2, from its responsive, living world to its most meticulous details, that is its greatest achievement.

New To Netflix This Week: Movies, TV, And Originals (US)

It’s the holiday season, which makes it the perfect time for cozying up by the fireplace with some cocoa and watching streaming shows until you fall asleep and wake up wondering where you are. Netflix has tons of new options this week, particularly chock full of original films and shows.

As of December 16, you can watch The Theory of Everything and Springsteen on Broadway. Starting on December 18, Netflix will have the manga-inspired animated series Baki, the Ellen DeGeneres stand-up special Relatable, and part 5 of Terrace House: Opening New Doors. All are listed as Netflix Originals.

Then on December 21, a veritable smorgasboard of new options opens up. Some highlights include the documentary anthology 7 Days Out, the thriller Bird Box, and documentaries Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski and Tales by Light. Fans of anime have a few reasons to get excited too: the new series 3Below: Tales of Arcadia, Last Hope Part 2, and Sirius the Jaeger.

This is the last very busy week of the year, since Netflix’s release docket is lighter over the holiday weeks of Christmas and New Year’s. Plus, keep in mind that a few movies and series are leaving this week too–notably Moana, Food Inc., and Spotlight–so you should catch them while you can. Check out our full wrap-up of the month for more details, and read up on our recommendations if you need a little more direction.

12/18/18

  • Baki– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Ellen DeGeneres: Relatable– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Terrace House: Opening New Doors: Part 5– NETFLIX ORIGINAL

12/21/18

  • 3Below: Tales of Arcadia– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • 7 Days Out– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Back With the Ex– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Bad Seeds– NETFLIX FILM
  • Bird Box– NETFLIX FILM
  • Derry Girls– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Diablero– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Greenleaf: Season 3
  • LAST HOPE: Part 2– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Perfume– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Sirius the Jaeger– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski — NETFLIX FILM
  • Tales by Light: Season 3– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • The Casketeers– NETFLIX ORIGINAL
  • Wolf (BÖRÜ)– NETFLIX ORIGINAL

Epic Sued Over Fortnite Again, And It’s Once More About A Dance

The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’s Alfonso Ribeiro, who starred as the show’s Carlton, is suing Epic Games. Ribeiro’s law firm said the the actor is accusing the studio of stealing his dance–commonly referred to by fans of the show as the Carlton dance–for the “Fresh” emote in Fortnite.

According to TMZ, Ribeiro is currently in the process of filing for the copyright for the dance. This announcement comes on the heels of another lawsuit filed against Epic. Terrance Ferguson accused Epic of stealing his Milly Rock dance for Fortnite’s “Swipe It” emote, an act he describes as a pattern the studio has for “exploiting African-American talent in particular in Fortnite by copying their dances and movements.” Ribeiro is mentioned as another example of this in Ferguson’s lawsuit.

Epic has seen several legal disputes when it comes to Fortnite. PUBG Corp., the creators of PlayerUnknown Battlegrounds, sued Epic over a concern “that Fortnite may be replicating the experience for which PUBG is known.” However, the lawsuit was ultimately dropped. Epic hasn’t always been on the receiving end of a lawsuit either. The studio sued a QA tester who leaked Fortnite Season 4 secrets, as well as a few streamers for advertising Fortnite cheats.

When it comes to outside the court room, Epic has been enjoying the growing success of Fortnite–which is the number one searched game on Google in 2018. After finding success with cross-platform play on Fortnite between Xbox One, PS4, Switch, PC, and mobile devices, Epic Games is sharing its technology with other developers looking to do the same. The studio also launched its own PC game store that offers an enticing alternative to Steam.