Eat Oreos, Get Halo Infinite DLC

Microsoft has partnered with one of the biggest food companies on the planet for a new campaign focused on Halo Infinite. If you’ve been to a grocery store recently, you might have noticed an assortment of Halo-branded sweet snacks, and this is the result of a new deal between Microsoft and Mondelez, the company that owns brands like Oreo, Cadbury, Sour Patch Kids, Nutter Butter, and more.

Packs of Mondelez snacks with Master Chief on the box will come with codes to unlock special content for Halo Infinite, like the Monarch multiplayer armor for Halo Infinite. In Canada, this promotion is called Snack On With Xbox and in the US it’s called Level Up Your Game.

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The fine print of the promo states that the Halo Infinite DLC included with the snacks will be available as a timed-exclusive for three months following the game’s release date in 2021. These promos are rolling out now presumably because the deal was in place before Halo Infinite’s delay to 2021.

Microsoft also said in its blog post that this campaign with Mondelez is just one of many for Halo Infinite. The company will release a follow-up blog post collecting all of these in the time ahead.

Halo Infinite was originally expected to release as a launch title for the Xbox Series X/S, but it was delayed to 2021 due in part to complications related to COVID-19. The game is also coming to Xbox One and PC, and it will feature a lot of explosion sounds.

Now Playing: Halo Infinite – Everything You Need To Know

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Sackboy: A Big Adventure–New Trailer Shows Abilities, Levels, And Enemies From PS5 Launch Game

Sackboy: A Big Adventure is coming to PS5 on launch day, and it’s looking like a strong candidate for a day one purchase for anyone looking for something more family friendly than Demon’s Souls. A new trailer released over the weekend shows that the game, which spins off from the LittleBigPlanet series, is looking pretty good, even without any level-building.

This is the “story trailer,” so we get a glimpse at Sackboy’s personality, as well as some of the cutscenes you’ll encounter throughout the game. The visual style replicates the feeling of a hand-crafted world (much like Media Molecule’s Tearaway), and the authenticity of the fuzz on Sackboy’s body is an indication of the level of realism the PS5 is capable of.

In the trailer we get a look at some new gameplay elements, as Sackboy dodges between obstacles, rolls through a level in a ball, and teleports around one level. You can check it out yourself in the video below.

Th game’s two-to-four player multiplayer is shown off in the trailer, too, as multiple players work together to traverse puzzles and platforming challenges towards the end. This has always been a big part of the LittleBigPlanet franchise, so it’s good to see multiplayer back here.

The game is also coming to PS4, if you don’t want to upgrade your PlayStation just yet. There’s a special edition available too, which you can check out in our preorder guide.

Sackboy: A Big Adventure releases on November 12, the same day that the PS5 starts its global rollout.

Now Playing: Sackboy: A Big Adventure – Story Gameplay Trailer

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Top New Games Releasing On Switch, PS4, Xbox One, And PC This Week — October 11-17, 2020

New Releases highlights some of the hottest video games launching each week, and this episode as a double-dose of trilogies: Torchlight 3 and Cook Serve Delicious 3 both launch soon. You can also drive a mini RC car in Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit or pilot a hover car in Cloudpunk. Finally, hockey fans can get their fix with NHL 21.

Torchlight 3 — October 13

Available on: PS4, Xbox One, PC

Once called Torchlight Frontiers, Torchlight 3 is leaving early access for its full release. You can choose from four different classes and explore randomly generated dungeons, where you’ll battle bad guys and collect all sorts of loot. Look for a Switch version later this year, too.

More Torchlight 3:

Cook! Serve! Delicious! 3?! — October 14

Available on: Xbox One, PC, Switch

Cook! Serve! Delicious! 3?!
Cook! Serve! Delicious! 3?!

The third game in the cooking series sees you driving all around the US as you serve hungry customers from your food truck. It’s a war-torn version of the country during the year 2042, however, so expect some tough moments in between food orders. You can cook up all sorts of food and drink with a friend in co-op as well.

Cloudpunk — October 15

Available on: PS4, Xbox One, Switch

Cloudpunk
Cloudpunk

Cloudpunk is already out on PC–check out our full review here–but this week it’s getting its console launch. The delivery game sees you exploring the futuristic city of Nivalis both on foot and behind the wheel of your hover car. The deeper you look, the more characters you’ll meet, and the more stories you’ll uncover.

More Cloudpunk Coverage:

NHL 21 — October 16

Available on: PS4, Xbox One

NHL 21

This year’s game is making big changes to career mode, with a custom pro you can guide through the American, Canadian, or European league. The multiplayer component, World of Chel, is getting a new progression system, letting you rank up separately for each of its four modes. World of Chel will operate seasonally, so you’ll rank up from square one with each new series.

More NHL 21 Coverage:

Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit — October 16

Available on: Switch

Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit

This ain’t your typical Mario Kart game: it turns your living room into a race track. By placing down a series of gates, you’ll create custom courses for the mini karts to race through. Expect the usual dose of blue shells and banana peels as you go.

More Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit Coverage:

October still has plenty more video games to come. Next week, New Releases will take a look at the horrifying Amnesia: Rebirth and the Alaskan adventure The Red Lantern.

Now Playing: Top New Games Out On Switch, PS4, Xbox One, And PC This Week — October 11-17, 2020

Halo Infinite — See How The Developers Recorded Huge Explosions

Microsoft has shared another very cool behind-the-scenes video for Halo Infinite that shows how the audio team captured sounds for the sci-fi shooter. This new video shows off how the developers recorded the game’s various explosion sounds, of which we expect there to be many in Halo Infinite.

A warning first: this video contains very loud sounds, and you’ll probably also want to listen with headphones or through a dedicated speaker to appreciate them better. The video runs for about 2 minutes and it showcases a multitude of different explosion sounds. They’re all a treat to watch, but my favorite is probably the underwater explosions that create a very unique sound with the initial bang and the ensuing waterfall cascade. Check it out below.

Halo Infinite was originally set to release in November as a launch title for the Xbox Series X/S. However, Microsoft delayed the game due in part to complications related to COVID-19.

The multiplayer element will be free, which is a big shakeup for the series. We still haven’t seen any multiplayer gameplay, but Microsoft just recently showed off a multiplayer skin that you can get by purchasing sweet snacks.

Despite what you might have read on the internet, Halo Infinite is not abandoning Xbox One or getting delayed again to 2022.

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Lord Of The Rings TV Show Passes Milestone After Filming Resumes

Amazon’s big-budget Lord of the Rings TV has resumed production in New Zealand, and the team is making good progress, it seems. Director JA Bayona posted to his Instagram story recently, sharing a photo of himself and various emojis pertaining to a fantasy show like Lord of the Rings. The news here is Bayona has now completed “more than half” of the weeks of shooting on the show.

“This is my face of having completed more than half the weeks of shooting. More tomorrow!” he said.

Bayona, who previously directed Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, was announced as the director of the first two episodes in the series, but whether or not his role has expanded due to COVID-19 is unclear. Whatever the case, the production is surely behind schedule given the impact of the virus. That being said, New Zealand just recently lifted all restrictions for Auckland, which is one of the sites where the Lord of the Rings show is being filmed.

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The timing of Bayona’s message is curious, given that it came within a day of the 21st anniversary of the start of filming on Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy back on October 11, 1999.

There is still no word on when Amazon’s Lord of the Rings TV show will premiere, but when it does, it will be exclusive to Amazon Prime. Amazon reportedly paid $250 million for the rights alone, and the negotiations included none other than Amazon founder and fantasy fan Jeff Bezos.

In addition to the TV show, one of Amazon’s game studios is developing a new Lord of the Rings MMO, though it’s not connected to TV show.

More recently, it was announced that Jackson’s Hobbit and Lord of the Rings trilogies are getting new 4K UHD releases in December, just in time for the holidays.

Dirt 5 Xbox Series X 4K Gameplay – Ice Drifting And Rally Racing

Dirt 5 is the next entry in the rally racing series and takes on a more arcade-sim hybrid style, which you can see here in our gameplay of it running on the Xbox Series X. We show off a few different race types from Dirt 5’s career mode, such as Icebreaker, Ultracross, and Land Rush. The career mode offers several styles of racing that require different types of vehicles as you progress through it. A podcasting duo also tells the story of your driver while in menus as you jump from one race to the next and build your reputation.

One thing to note is that this is a preview build and driver AI has not been properly tweaked yet. I was able to take first place in each race fairly easily with difficulty set to Very Hard, but we expect that to be tuned properly by the time it launches.

Dirt 5 has two enhancement options on the Xbox Series X. What you see in the video above is Image Quality mode, which prioritizes visuals and appears to be able to hit 60 FPS most of the time. However, there were some frame drops when dirt, snow, and other particle effects kicked up on screen. Frame Rate mode, of course, brings down visual quality to hit higher FPS more consistently–Dirt 5 is also one of the games that takes advantage of next-gen’s 120FPS capabilities.

More coverage of the next-gen consoles is on the way, but for now, enjoy Dirt 5 gameplay on the Xbox Series X or check out my earlier hands-on Xbox Series X preview.

Fear the Walking Dead Season 6 Premiere Review

Warning: Full spoilers for Fear the Walking Dead’s Season 6 premiere follow…

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Fear the Walking Dead opened its sixth season strong with a violent, hyper-focused Morgan “rebirth” story that got our crossover champ back in the (literal) saddle – and with a whole new look, purpose, and weapon.

Fear’s Season 5 experiment with mostly keeping its large ragtag ensemble apart (for narrative, but maybe also budgetary, reasons) and delivering character-specific episodes had both its ups and downs. The episodes were usually pretty good due to the spotlight, but the season, as a whole, suffered under the fragmentation.

Of course, story-wise, ensemble-wise, Fear is a far cry from what it was when it started. Heck, it even feels distant from what it was two years ago. Maybe that’s this show’s ultimate trick: to constantly shift and morph while The Walking Dead stays resolute in its stasis. Regardless, when talking about either show, we know Morgan Jones has been through it. The guy has experienced everything. He lost his family, he went full-blown mad, he tried to be a pacifist, he tried to be a terminator, and then he literally Forest Gump-ran from Virginia to Texas to start over with a new batch of bozos. My point is, it takes some special care to give us a Morgan adventure we kind of haven’t seen already.

“The End Is the Beginning” — where the title comes from some suspicious dudes tagging a large nuclear sub (and who are possibly after its payload key) — has its flaws, in that it only answers one of the character cliffhangers from the Season 5 finale (though, admittedly, the most important one), but it winds up putting Morgan through a solid pressure-cooker adventure that heals him, refreshes him, and sets him out as sort of a ghost of his previous identity. He’s finally found a place where he can bring everyone. One that’s safe and off the (and every) map. Now he just has to go rescue them all, while also handling Ginny. “Morgan Jones is dead,” he eerily tells her over the radio, “and you’re dealing with someone else now.”

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The bulk of “The End Is the Beginning” was about getting Morgan’s head right after failing fairly hard at the end of last season. How do you get this guy back on the “we’re not doing careful, we’re doing right” track that was the crux of the videos he and his team sent out all across Texas. Well, you do it by showing him how that message affected other people. One person, who we never even see (which is sort of cool), saves Morgan’s life after Ginny shoots him. Of course, the now-bearded Mr. Jones is still very much at death’s door, some time later, when the episode starts and walkers barely give him a second glance, but the point is that some altruistic citizen saved his bacon.

Then there’s Isaac, played by Michael Abbott Jr, who’s a former ranger in Ginny’s outfit who Morgan meets out on the road. Yup, he’s a previous villain whose heart opened wide after watching one of Morgan’s VHS tapes. Isaac, who’s oh-so-briefly an antagonist here, just wants to get back to his pregnant wife and sees Morgan, with his gangrene smell, as way past some walkers. And it turns out, the very sweaty Isaac is very sweaty for a good reason. He’s already been bit by the time he finds Morgan and just wants to be there for his wife. He’s a good single-episode character to have, as his story gives Morgan hope, perspective, and the motivation to “power up” and fight off walkers with one good arm. Also, Morgan made the decision to fight through those walkers so that Isaac didn’t have to take two more days to go around them before he knew Isaac was dying, so that was a nice touch.

Oh, but Isaac wasn’t the only new face this episode. Demetrius Grosse (The Rookie, Westworld) infused this premiere with some delicious villain vibes as a bounty hunter named Emile. Using a dog that can apparently track someone’s scent for an unheard of distance, Emile, like the It in It Follows, is guaranteed to find whoever he’s after. With a cowboy hat, an appreciation of beans, a vicious axe, and a love collecting dead heads we haven’t seen since The Governor, Emile was a pure pleasure to watch. Plus, mini arc-wise, Morgan went from willfully sparing Emile (by shooting him in the arm) to willfully ending him (with the swing of an axe). Now we’ve got a Morgan (donning Emile’s hat and trading in his staff for the axe) dead set on rescuing his friends and a pregnant Grace.

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Fear The Walking Dead Season 6 Premiere Fails To Fix Its Big Problem

When Lennie James’ character Morgan moved from The Walking Dead to Fear the Walking Dead, it essentially rebooted the show. Most of what was left of the Clarke family was dispatched of, and a slew of new characters to support Morgan were introduced. Whether or not you enjoy this new version of Fear the Walking Dead, it’s hard to ignore the fact that it’s a 100% different series.

Warning: The following contains spoilers for the Season 6 premiere episode of Fear the Walking Dead, titled “The End is the Beginning.” If you haven’t watched it yet, stop reading now.

Unfortunately for that show, this new series is far less interesting than what came before it. There’s no disputing the fact that Season 1 of Fear the Walking Dead was a very rough start. The show hadn’t figured out what it was going to be at that point and was on rocky ground, following a family from Los Angeles as the world crumbled around them. However, in the two seasons that followed, Fear became the better of the (at the time) two The Walking Dead shows. While the mothership series became less and less interesting–and continues to do so–Fear felt like a breath of fresh air.

At the heart of the series was Madison Clark (Kim Dickens), a strong female survivor that was, essentially, the Rick Grimes of this piece of The Walking Dead’s universe. She was fierce, she was dangerous, and she was loyal to her people. And then she was killed off without warning.

It began with the introduction of Morgan at the beginning of Season 4. With new showrunners Ian Goldberg and Andrew Chambliss taking over the series, it veered in a wildly new direction. By the halfway point in that season, Madison was dead, along with her son Nick, who was killed off a few episodes earlier. All that remains of the first seasons of the show are Madison’s daughter Alicia (Alycia Debnam-Carey), Nick’s girlfriend Luciana (Danay García), and Strand (Colman Domingo), a friend of Madison’s who was made after the apocalypse.

Since her death, Fear the Walking Dead has completely shifted over to becoming the Morgan show. While that was clearly the intention, fans of Fear the Walking Dead in the form it used to take can’t help but feeling left behind. This isn’t the series they signed up for.

Then, in the Season 5 finale, it looked like the show recognized the odd turn it had taken and was looking to correct the course. Morgan was shot and left for dead, leading many to think he wasn’t long for this world. A trailer for Season 6 released at San Diego Comic-Con revealed that while Morgan may not be dead yet, something was very wrong.

Now you’ve seen the Season 6 premiere and there is, indeed, something wrong. What’s wrong is that essentially nothing has happened to Morgan, other than the fact that he’s traded his walking stick for an ax. In the episode, Morgan is traced by a vicious ax-wielding bounty hunter and at one point seems to give up. After all, he’s lived a hard life and can’t seem to get a win.

If you’ve watched The Walking Dead at all, though, you should know that at this point Morgan is pretty much invincible. So, naturally, the episode ends with the bounty hunter beheaded. Morgan claims his ax and tells the villainous Virginia (Colby Minifie)–via walkie talkie–that the Morgan she knew is no more. He’s something else now.

While Season 6 of Fear the Walking Dead will see episodes that center on other survivors from the series, given that they were all separated at the end of Season 5, there’s a major problem facing the series. Fear the Walking Dead is unwilling to let Morgan go, even as the character weighs the show down.

It’s an unfortunate turn, as it also tarnishes the character’s legacy. Morgan was a fascinating character to trace on The Walking Dead. From meeting Rick Grimes while his son was still alive, to the mentally disturbed man encountered seasons later, to the full-fledged member of the group, his trajectory throughout the series was among the most heartbreaking of anyone.

Now, though, he’s overexposed and simply not that interesting–regardless of how badly Fear wants him to be the focal point.

The biggest problem with the Season 10 finale episode of the Walking Dead is that the stakes felt so low. With fans knowing the series is ending in Season 11, it seems impossible that any meaningful character will meet their end before then.

That’s the same problem Fear faces, but specifically with Morgan. He’s essentially been shown to be unkillable at this point. Even when shot in the chest and left to the zombies, he manages to walk away stronger and more determined. It’s hard to get invested in a character like that, especially when you realize all of the characters that had to be sacrificed to give him the spotlight.

Here’s hoping that there is an interesting future ahead for Fear the Walking Dead–and even for Morgan. He can still be salvaged, but it’s going to take some work to humanize him again. Show us that Morgan is flesh and bone, just like the rest of the show’s characters.

Until then, it’s hard to get excited about what’s to come.

The Outer Worlds Finally Comes To Steam This Month

The Outer Worlds is finally coming to Steam. The game, which launched on PC through the Epic Games Store and Xbox Game Pass in October 2019, will soon be available through Valve’s storefront–it will release for Steam on October 24.

(This is the Obsidian-developed RPG, not the space-faring Outer Wilds; you’d be forgiven for confusing the two, especially since both launched on Epic rather than Steam.)

The game, which recently released its first expansion, is available through Xbox Game Pass for Xbox One too, and can be purchased on PS4 and Switch. Developer Obsidian has since been bought by Microsoft, so future installments in the series could be Xbox and PC exclusive.

We were big fans of The Outer Worlds, giving it a 9/10 and naming it one of the best games of 2019.

Obsidian followed The Outer Worlds with something very different–Grounded, now available in Early Access. It’s a multiplayer title full of giant spiders and terrifying birds. The studio is also working on Avowed, a new RPG for Xbox Series X.

Now Playing: The Outer Worlds | Best Games Of 2019

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Sonic The Hedgehog 2 Is Free On Steam Right Now, Grab It While You Can

Sonic the Hedgehog 2 is a beloved classic, a game that cemented Sonic as a major series. And now, if you’ve never played it before, you can get the game for free–it’s currently discounted by 100% on Steam.

The game is totally free until October 19, meaning that you have a full week to pick up Sonic the Hedgehog 2 and keep it forever. This is the Sonic game that first introduced Tails, Sonic’s twin-tailed fox friend, with the two teaming up to defeat Dr. Robotnik yet again.

The game is free to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Sega, which was founded in 1960 to manufacture slot machines. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 originally released in 1992 for the Sega Genesis. This free copy is, essentially, a port of the original, so don’t expect any remixing on par with Sonic Mania.

There’s a huge Sega sale happening on Steam right now to celebrate the anniversary; check out all the bargains here.

The game scored an 8/10 in GameSpot’s 2007 review of the Xbox 360 version.

Now Playing: James Marsden And Ben Schwartz Take Our Sonic The Hedgehog Trivia Challenge

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