Things We Love About Red Dead Redemption 2

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Mayans M.C. Season 1: The Best Sons of Anarchy Easter Eggs

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Battlefield V – Single-Player Review

Welcome, Battlefield fans! This year, we’ve broken up the review into its single-player and multiplayer components to give fans of each style of play a better idea of what’s up. This review covers only the single-player mode, with our multiplayer review and overall Battlefield V review coming soon.

All too often, the single-player campaign of a primarily multiplayer shooter is little more than a glorified tutorial. The Battlefield series has certainly been guilty of this in the past, but Battlefield V’s set of three two-hour campaigns definitely isn’t. Each has a fairly interesting story that guides you through a series of locations that are diverse and beautiful when they’re not being reduced to flaming rubble around you. I just would have loved if it made better use of Battlefield’s awesome set of tools to put us in the middle of a full-scale war more often.

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Full Metal Furies Review – Puzzle-Brawler

It’s difficult to define which exact genre Cellar Door Games’ Full Metal Furies belongs to. On a cursory glance, the co-op game appears to be no more than a well-structured brawler, and you’d be forgiven if you completed its 15-hour campaign thinking that’s all it is. However, if you dig a little deeper into the optional hidden content, there’s another five to seven hours of complex, multi-layered riddles to find. There’s a fascinating meta narrative interwoven into Full Metal Furies’ puzzles, and journeying to its end makes for a satisfying cooperative experience.

In Full Metal Furies, each player takes control of one of four adventurers. If played solo, the game puts you in control of two and you can switch between them at will. There’s Triss, the leader whose penchant for sassily drinking tea often leads to hilarious spit-takes; Meg, the lazy, nearsighted sniper with a poor sense of direction; Erin, the brainy tinkerer who desperately wants to be cool; and Alex, the air-headed soldier who wholeheartedly believes bashing in the skulls of the arrogant men she and her friends run into should be both a first and last resort to solving all their problems.

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Collectively known as the Furies, the four girls are on a quest to cross the monster-infested wasteland that humanity once called its home in order to find and destroy god-like entities known as the Titans. The sons and daughters of the mad tyrant Cronus, each of the four Titans desires a better world, and their conflicting ideologies as to how to bring about that dream have led to a war that threatens to destroy all life.

This seemingly straightforward battle between good and evil hides a surprising number of twists and turns. With every step forward, the Furies notice more signs that their efforts might be actually causing more problems than they’re solving. But the team keeps pushing onwards, hoping that in the long run, their efforts will have a positive effect on the world. The narrative plays out in a series of sprite-based conversations, both during and in between combat missions. For the most part, these are tongue-in-cheek skits–some even throw in the occasional pun or reference to the fact that this is all a video game–but a few also focus on Triss’ growth. Despite putting on airs, she struggles with the responsibilities of leadership and the morality of the Furies’ quest. Unfortunately, her teammates don’t receive the same treatment, and are fairly two-dimensional throughout the main campaign.

In combat, each of the four ladies handle and attack in their own way. For example, Meg can use a grappling hook to maneuver out of danger and snipe opponents from afar, while Triss can defend her teammates and herself with a near indestructible shield and also clear out enemies by screaming at the top of her lungs. Each of the girls fulfills a unique role seen in many other team-based brawlers–with Triss as the tank, Alex as the fighter, Meg as the archer/sniper, and Erin as the summoner.

Full Metal Furies supports couch co-op and online multiplayer. As of publishing this review, the Switch servers are fairly empty, but we did manage to test online play using two copies of the game and can confirm it works relatively smoothly. There were some brief stutters at the start of a few levels, but none of them negatively impacted gameplay. However, my game did completely crash at one point.

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It’s unfortunate the servers are so empty as playing with an incomplete team puts you at an immediate disadvantage. So unless you recruit some friends for couch co-op, you’re in for a fairly tough time. Even Erin and Meg are crucial, as Triss and Alex rely on their teammates’ supportive attacks to give them both time to recharge their special abilities. Button-mashing with the two melee fighters can be an effective strategy early on, but it will only get your team so far. Mid- and late-game enemies and bosses require a certain degree of tactical assessment, and chaining together each character’s abilities is the ideal path to success. For example, when confronted with a mob of jumping werewolves that are too quick for the slower fighters, your team might rely on Triss’ area-of-effect shout to stun a few, use Alex’s dive bomb jump to launch the weakened wolves into the air, and then have Meg shoot their leader out of the sky. All the while, Erin’s portable turret and her mid-range pistol can finish off the members of the pack not caught up in the combo.

Combat in Full Metal Furies is constantly evolving, with new enemy types appearing almost every third level. It keeps the game from descending into a grindfest of similar foes, while leaving room for you to experiment with new strategies on enemies you’ve encountered before. Sections of certain levels can get brutal, resulting in dozens of game over screens. But checkpoints are numerous, cutscenes you’ve seen are skippable, and it’s typically very clear which careless mistake resulted in the failed mission. If anything, the game’s combat seems content to really only punish those who play with less than four people, which presents an interesting way of making the game easier or more difficult for yourself at any point in the game. If things are still too hard with a full team of four, or you can’t scrounge up a full team but don’t want to make the game more difficult, there’s an easier Story Mode too.

Despite being labeled as a brawler, only about half of Full Metal Furies is regulated to combat. The other half is a series of interlacing puzzles and riddles, and it’s here where the co-op nature of Full Metal Furies truly shines.

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None of the puzzles or riddles in Full Metal Furies are obvious to find, and the game doesn’t teach you how to solve them either. It’s completely dependent on the player to be curious enough to wonder if the symbol-covered stones hidden throughout about two dozen of the game’s levels are more than meets the eye. Finding the stones themselves is a challenge, and once discovered, each stone’s riddle is typically even tricker to figure out.

Eventually, the main campaign reveals that solving these riddles is necessary for gaining access to the game’s final area and true ending. The riddles grow more meta as you discover additional stones, some even requiring you to do things outside of the main game, such as watching a YouTube video for a clue or adjusting the game’s accessibility settings to perceive colors and sound in a new way. Teaming up with friends to overcome a challenging boss fight is fun, but the most satisfying moments in Full Metal Furies are when you have a eureka moment and are able to figure out the next piece of the overarching mystery. Several of the solutions to certain puzzles and riddles rely on a particular Furies’ unique skill as well–some answers even require multiple Furies or the full roster of four–so every player gets to enjoy being a part of the process of figuring something out at some point. Completing this game is very much a team effort, and it successfully makes sure no single player feels left out or useless.

So yes, Full Metal Furies is primarily a brawler, and a good one that promotes teamwork instead of button-mashing. But it’s also a very hard puzzle game, one that challenges you to perceive each level, as well as the game’s mechanics and characters, in new ways. It’s a shame most of the Furies are so two-dimensional throughout the main campaign–especially Meg, who’s arguably the most lovable of the bunch–but the story is consistently witty with its humor and an absolute joy to watch unfold. And while coming up with strategies to handle new enemies and piecing together the clues for each puzzle is fairly difficult at times, it’s a rewarding and deeply satisfying challenge.

Where Is Xur Today? Destiny 2 Xur’s Location & Exotics Guide (Nov. 9-13)

Destiny 2 players are still hoping for a new Exotic in Thunderlord, which is presumed to be the reward for the on-going, multi-week murder-mystery quest that started at the end of the Festival of the Lost. But if waiting three weeks to get your hands on a new Exotic is just too long, you can rely on Xur, the weird merchant and servant of The Nine who pops up each weekend. As always, he has a handful Exotics to sell you in exchange for Legendary Shards. Here’s where to find him and what he’s selling right now.

This week, you’ll find Xur on Io. Spawn in at the Giant’s Scar landing zone and hop on your sparrow, then head straight through the Cabal base into the drilling area beyond. Head for the northwest corner of the area and look for a cave near some Taken enemies. Inside and to the right is Xur, creeping in the darkness.

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His lineup of Exotics, as per usual, includes one weapon and one piece of armor for each of the three classes from the Year One collection. The weapon is The Prospector, a grenade launcher you can hold down the trigger to fire in full-auto mode. When you release the trigger, you can detonate all your launched grenades at once–and they stick to surfaces and set things on fire, too.

  • The Prospector (Exotic grenade launcher) — 29 Legendary Shards
  • Winter’s Guile (Exotic Warlock gauntlets) — 23 Legendary Shards
  • Ophidia Spathe (Exotic Hunter chest armor) — 23 Legendary Shards
  • Aeon Safe (Exotic Titan gauntlets) — 23 Legendary Shards

Alongside the direct-purchase items above, Xur has the Fated Engram. This is guaranteed to decrypt into a Year One Exotic you don’t already own, making it a good way to fill out your collection if you find Xur’s offerings lacking–provided you can afford it.

Even if you can’t, the latest Destiny 2 update mercifully makes Exotic duplicates less likely to drop. The game now accounts for the Exotics you’ve got in your collection when a new one drops randomly in the world, which will decrease the chance of getting an Exotic you already own. Duplicates are still possible, but Bungie has also changed things so dupes are more likely to be armor than weapons, because armor pieces feature random perks, meaning there is a potential upside to finding something you already have.

The update has also increased the chances of unlocking a quest to get another Exotic: Malfeasance, a Taken-infused hand cannon. The quest line to track it down starts when a specific boss, the Primeval Ascendant Servitor, appears in Gambit matches. Bungie’s last update upped the rate at which the Servitor shows up in Gambit, which should hopefully mean more Malfeasances for more players.

Xur is here until the weekly reset on November 13, and he’ll only show up two more times before Destiny 2 closes Season 4 on November 27, according to a recent blog post. That means your Gambit and Crucible ranks will reset–but at least in the meantime, you’ll be able to jump into Iron Banner again starting on November 13 to try to complete your spiffy Iron Lord armor sets.

13 Underrated Horror Movies From The 2000s That Everyone Needs To See

Just as the advent of VHS in the 1980s meant that the market was flooded with dozens of cheaply made horror movies, so too was the 2000s marked by an avalanche of straight-to-DVD horror. This was a decade where big screen horror hits were scarce–the likes of Saw, Paranormal Activity, and FInal Destination were huge, but for the most part the best scary movies were low budget, independent, and sometimes not even released in theaters at all.

The movie that had the biggest influence on horror in the 2000s was actually released at the tail end of the previous decade, but its impact was immense. The Blair Witch Project was made on a small budget of $60,000 but grossed more than $248 million at the worldwide box office, and the found footage movie became the decade’s big horror craze. The advent of affordable digital filmmaking enabled literally anyone to make a horror movie, any deficiencies in sound and vision excused by the conventions of the format.

With many of the big names in horror–John Carpenter, David Cronenberg, Wes Craven–either semi-retired or moving away from the genre, new names started to emerge. The huge success of Saw helped James Wan begin his steady rise to the top tier of Hollywood blockbusters, while independent filmmakers such as Brad Anderson, Ti West, and Lucky McKee made scary, clever, and distinctive films that are among of the decade’s best. More than any other decade, the 2000s is packed with underrated and underseen gems that took horror into some fascinating places. So here’s 13 of the best that are worth revisiting or seeing for the first time.

What GTA 6 Can Learn From Red Dead 2

After roughly 80 hours, I finally rolled credits on Red Dead Redemption 2, and even with lots still left to do in that world, it’s hard not to look to the future. Rockstar has done some amazing things in their rendition of the Old West, and despite some of its faults, they’ve set a new bar for themselves as a studio. From the gorgeous environments to the world’s interactivity, there are plenty of new ideas and mechanics that would be great additions to the studio’s flagship franchise — but there are few smaller lessons that we think Red Dead’s older sibling could benefit from, too. Here are 8 things that GTA 6 can learn from Red Dead 2.

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Beautiful Boy Review

It’s hard to make a good film about drug addiction, because it’s hard to portray drug addiction honestly without turning your movie into a finger-wagging cautionary tale. Even the best films to tackle the subject sometimes carry a streak of the old Reefer Madness scare tactics, and Felix Van Groeningen’s Beautiful Boy, even though it features some truly incredible performances, is no exception.

Beautiful Boy tells the story of David Sheff (Steve Carell) and his teenage son Nic (Timotheé Chalamet), who becomes addicted to a series of dangerous drugs, including crystal meth and heroin. The way David saw it, their their lives were relatively perfect: they’re affluent, they have a loving household, and yet Nic’s seemingly conventional teen ennui led to one experimentation after another, and now he’s disappearing for days on end, and he’s an emotional train wreck whenever he does come home.

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The Best Black Friday 2018 Deals at Best Buy

If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

Best Buy dropped its Black Friday sales flyer, joining a growing list of retailers who’ve made their 2018 Black Friday sales known.  We also have predictions on what we expect from Black Friday 2018.

Best Buy is kicking off the shopping season by making some of its Black Friday 2018 deals live already. These deals run until Sunday, at which point Best Buy will wrap them up and put them on the shelf for another day.

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