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Tag: Sega

This Month, Lost Judgment’s The Kaito Files Sees the Ex-Yakuza Strike Out on His Own

Arriving at the end of March, standalone expansion The Kaito Files sends Lost Judgment's ex-Yakuza bruiser on his own adventure.

The post This Month, Lost Judgment’s The Kaito Files Sees the Ex-Yakuza Strike Out on His Own appeared first on GameSpew.

Frontier Developments unveils F1 Manager 2022

F1 Manager 2022 Unveiled Frontier DevelopmentsDeveloper Frontier Developments has unveiled a new project. Titled F1 Manager 2022, it is an upcoming Formula 1 management game that will be fully licensed and feature real-world teams and drivers. Frontier signed the deal to develop this game in early 2020, with the first installment of the series coming this summer. This is the latest adventure for Frontier Developments, the developers behind Planet Zoo, Jurassic World Evolution, and Elite Dangerous. With Planet Zoo having management and simulation aspects, the Cambridge-based studio has plenty of experience in this field.   Formula 1 managing director Ross Brawn described F1 Manager 2022 as “a great opportunity for fans to put themselves in the shoes of a team principal.” Meanwhile, game director Andy Fletcher promises an experience that will be as “authentic as it is exciting.” Certainly, if it is managed well, this could fill a void in the market that Formula 1 fans have been hoping for. As for what...

Lost Judgment PS5, PS4 Expansion Adds Four Story Chapters

A new case.

Lost Judgment is about to find a four-chapter story expansion, as SEGA has announced the Kaito Files for release on PlayStation 5 and PS4 from 28th March. The pricey $29.99 add-on – which will be included with the Season Pass and, thus, the Ultimate Edition of the crime caper – will see you “play as the muscle of the Yagami Detective Agency, Masaharu Kaito, and take on a new case that ties up loose ends of his past”.

Read the full article on pushsquare.com

Lost Judgment The Kaito Files DLC Releasing on March 28

Lost Judgment‘s The Kaito Files DLC will release on Monday, March […]

The post Lost Judgment The Kaito Files DLC Releasing on March 28 appeared first on PlayStation LifeStyle.

Folder- And eShop Music-less Gaming Console Turns Five

There is an anniversary today. It's for a gaming console, and it's now been out for five years. I'm not going to say its name, because I don't want it to feel bad, but after five long years it still doesn't have some basic features I've literally been asking for since day one. (No, it's not a NeoGeo Color.)

I'm speaking, of course, about folders and eShop music. Hopefully that doesn't give too much away. (No, it's not a Nokia N-Gage.) Folders have been a standard feature on many systems going back more than a decade--Sony's PlayStation Vita had them in 2012, and I took a frankly embarrassing amount of pride in arranging my digital games into neat little pockets, where I could ignore them in favor of playing the system's surprisingly decent port of Mortal Kombat.

And yet, this other console, one that has now been sold to the general public for five years (no, it's not an Amstrad GX4000), offers no effective means for organizing your games. They all just kind of sit there on your home screen, unless you have too many games, and then they're dumped onto another screen that can only be arranged in a few ways, but not into folders that would allow me to keep better track of them. Sorry, Owlboy, maybe I'll play you one day when I scroll past the dozens of icons for things like TumbleSeed and Fast RMX.

Image blurred to hide the console's identity. Please don't squint or Enhance this image to determine what it is.

Then there's the buying experience. In the past, browsing the online store of this company's consoles was accompanied by a pleasant bit of music. There were various catchy tunes on two of the company's platforms, and the older system had a hit that led to one of the all-time great YouTube videos.

But there's this other system--the one turning five, which Google would have me believe is called a "wood" anniversary--that doesn't have music. (No, it's not a Sega 32X.) You just browse through game after game, again without a great sense of organization, hoping to find what you want as quickly as possible in order to escape this joyless, music-free void. Given how poorly the shop runs, maybe it's for the best that the console isn't trying to do anything more, but I'd happily let the rows of games load even more slowly if I could simply enjoy a bossa nova beat.

And so here I am, years after I first published a story asking for these features to be added, to make another plea. I don't want to call you out by name, because this is my favorite gaming console of all time. (No, it's not an Apple Bandai Pippin.) Let's just call you "Bintendo" and your system the "Snitch." Please, Bintendo, bring these features to the Snitch. I promise to even buy two copies of your next huge game, Breadth of the Mild 2. Make a great console greater.

(No, it's not the Epoch Cassette Vision.)

Review: Chocobo GP

Kweh kweh or meh meh? Man it’s been a long time since Chocobo Racing was relevant to the world at...

The post Review: Chocobo GP appeared first on Destructoid.

Wonder Boy Collection for PS4 and Switch is on the way

Break out your skateboard Following on from a previously spotted ESRB rating and a recent Amazon leak, ININ Games has...

The post Wonder Boy Collection for PS4 and Switch is on the way appeared first on Destructoid.

Soul Hackers 2 Will See You Save the World by Summoning Demons

25 years after the first Soul Hackers launched, the turn-based monster-bashing RPG is getting a new sequel.

The post Soul Hackers 2 Will See You Save the World by Summoning Demons appeared first on GameSpew.

Soul Hackers 2 Comes to PS5 and PS4 After Atlus Revives the Franchise

After teasing a revival of the Soul Hackers franchise with […]

The post Soul Hackers 2 Comes to PS5 and PS4 After Atlus Revives the Franchise appeared first on PlayStation LifeStyle.

Atlus announces new JRPG: Soul Hackers 2 launches on August 26

Soul Hackers 2 1The announcement of a sequel to an obscure, yet addicting, JRPG that originally released over 20 years ago is not what I was expecting to wake up to. But that’s what happened, and there are no complaints here. Soul Hackers 2 is an upcoming JRPG from Atlus and a sequel to the original Soul Hackers game that released on the Sega Saturn back in 1997. Now that the game is approaching its 25th anniversary, Atlus decided to dust off the IP and bring it to the modern age. Granted, this isn’t the first time Atlus has released a Soul Hackers game in the past decade. It ported the original Soul Hackers to the Nintendo 3DS in 2012, which was already a surprise. If you’re still wondering what Soul Hackers even is, it’s a spin-off of the expansive Megami Tensei franchise, a JRPG behemoth that includes beloved classics like Shin Megami Tensei and Persona. Soul Hackers drops the post-apocalyptic nature of some of these games and, instead, brings you into a cyberpunk world f...

Soul Hackers 2 brings a war against the Devil Summoners this summer

Thankfully I keep my soul safe behind firewalls and proxies Capcom wasn’t the only company with a countdown clock leading...

The post Soul Hackers 2 brings a war against the Devil Summoners this summer appeared first on Destructoid.

ERROR CODE 101: THE DIMENSIONS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMES

Introduction: With the advent of the FinTech revolution, technology and innovation have taken centre stage throughout the globe. Every business alike, ranging from multi-national companies [...]

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