Albion Online - The Final Beta 1st August

Posted By: GamerDating - July 27, 2016

Albion Online is a player driven, PVP dominated MMO with crafting, gathering, and full loot based around guilds and territory. Some call it a spiritual successor to early Ulitma Online, and it does not pull any punches. You can read our early impressions from last year here. The Final Beta for Albion Online will start 1st August for those early backers and founder packs. The Final Beta introduces 2 new worlds, 4 new biomes, core system

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Starbound - Leaving Orbit with Version 1.0

Posted By: GamerDating - July 25, 2016

Starbound has been in the making for a long 5 years and we at GamerDating backed the early announcement and followed its early access releases in waves. Starbound is a 2D action, adventure, sandbox builder. Similar to Terarria and even named as it's spiritual sucessor. Starbound has come from an almost carbon copy to a self standing title.  The latest version, the launch, the big version 1.0 introduces, stories, improved planet genera

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GamerDating Update - Introducing Free Explore and Fix Mix.

Posted By: GamerDating - July 19, 2016

With our latest GamerDating update, we have resolved a few bugs related to the design and have fixed those mailing issues to ensure you get matches reliably. Free Explore Want a few days to explore GamerDating? As a free member you can fill in your profile entirely, complete with photos and even get sent a few matches to see if those player 2's tick your boxes. We know it can take a little while to build up the courage to

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Nintendo Classic Mini: Nintendo Entertainment System

Posted By: GamerDating - July 19, 2016

We at GamerDating still have our NES consoles and we even have a N64 sitting in an office, so Classic Nintendo Systems are close to our hearts. Nintendo have announced a new console launching 11th November, aimed at bringing back the classics. Relive the 80s when the Nintendo Classic Mini: Nintendo Entertainment System launches in stores on 11th November. The classic NES is back in a familiar-yet-new form as a mini replica of Ninte

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Introducing Ana - New Overwatch Support Hero

Posted By: GamerDating - July 13, 2016

Overwatch's first new post-launch hero has officially been revealed after hints and teasers. Earlier this month we saw twitter hints of the weapon Ana Amari used, and now we've had the introduction video released and she looks awesome Ana Amari is a founding member of Overwatch and Pharah's mother, she takes the role of a support sniper who uses a Biotic Rifle to both heal teammates and deal ongoing damage to enemies from l

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Pokemon Go is Go!

Posted By: GamerDating - July 07, 2016

Pokemon Go has launched! Available to download on app stores in Australia and New Zealand and the US as it staggers its release across the rest of the World. Those not in released regions have been finding ways to get around the blocks, such as changing their account region to Australia on the IOS app store, and downloading the APK directly on Android. Pokémon GO Travel between the real world and the virtual world of Pok&eacu

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Xbox Play Anywhere Launches September 13th

Posted By: GamerDating - July 04, 2016

Microsoft announced its new feature at E3 bringing Windows 10 and Xbox together, a new initiative named the Xbox Play Anywhere. This means a single purchase will unlock the game across both platforms, and saves and achievements will be transferred across both versions. So no need to buy the game twice for both platforms anymore. It is planned to launch Xbox Play Anywhere on September 13th. Games listed in the Xbox Store wil

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System Shock Remake on Kickstarter

Posted By: GamerDating - June 30, 2016

System Shock was of the genre defining classic from 1994, System Shock was one of the first 3D games that took a methodical approach to exploration while revealing a story driven narrative through audio logs and messages scattered throughout the game world. It was a revolutionary step forward for the medium in a time when developers first began experimenting with interactive story telling. Personally.. I never beat the game but I did

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Star Citizen Alpha 2.4 Available - Persistent Universe

Posted By: GamerDating - June 27, 2016

Star Citizen Alpha 2.4 is now live which introduces the persistent universe, among other things. Star Citizen is from the mind of Chris Roberts, creator of Wing Commander and Freelancer, but the most interesting thing, the game has been 100% crowd funded to the amount of $116,763,216 at the time of this article. Star Citizen has promised to bring FPS, Persistent Universe, space fight, planet exploration, bases, a story mode and huge mm

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Destiny: Rise of Iron Announced

Posted By: GamerDating - June 23, 2016

Destiny: Rise of Iron is the next expansion to the Destiny universe. It features an all new cinematic story campaign set within The Plaguelands, a brand new location on Earth. Under the command of Lord Saladin you will face a new faction of Fallen Devils, the Splicers, while unravelling the mystery of the Iron Lords. Rise of Iron features new weapons, armor, and gear, as well as a new cooperative three-player Strike, a new mode and maps f

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Carrier Assault Update to Eve Valkyrie

Posted By: GamerDating - June 21, 2016

The first major free update for EVE: Valkyrie has landed with a new game mode, Carrier Assault, amongst the usual bug fixes, balance changes and a few new features. Eve Valkyrie is a VR Game where you battle various hardpoints, ships and assault the enemy. In addition to the awesome pve mode, it also boasts a competitive multiplayer and until now the enemy’s carrier has been off limits. An impenetrable flying fortress that could cut

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E3 Round Up 2016

Posted By: GamerDating - June 15, 2016

This year E3 has hit us with some top games, announcements, hype and pure gaming excitement. We've been watching and loving the trailers and we've done a round up of the top trailers this year.  As E3 has been packed with trailers and announcements we have plucked out some of the best and also provided a link below of a full list of all trailers. Battlefield 1 Gameplay  We Happy Few Dishonored 2 

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Homeworld Remastered Collection - V2.0

Posted By: GamerDating - June 08, 2016

Homeworld Remastered Collection, containing the legendary space RTSs turned instant classics, is now available (Steam and GoG) Homeworld brought real-time strategy into actual 3D, creating a truly free-form tactical experience across battlefields vast in every dimension. It did so in a way that's not just manageable, but overwhelmingly fun! This engrossing space opera chronicles the struggles of an alien race, the Kushan, locked in a vicio

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Blizzard Drop The Ban Hammer - Overwatch

Posted By: GamerDating - June 02, 2016

Overwatch has been received as one of the best FPS games of all time scoring multiple top marks and achieving 92 on metacritic. It is all over the internet, gamers are flocking to this fresh mutliplayer game and loving it. Overwatch just has that appeal, and I'm not sure why. With all good games come cheaters, those who have aimbots, wallhacks, autohits and various other programs to give the unfair advantage. Hacking can ruin online g

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PAYDAY 2: Update 100

Posted By: GamerDating - May 30, 2016

Update 100 is here and Overkill software have released a video where they talk about update 100 for PAYDAY 2 that is going live on Thursday.  In short... THEY OWN PAYDAY 2 AGAIN. The PAYDAY franchise is ours again and to celebrate it, we’re giving away a community grenade, the skills tree and we’re making the black market free for everyone going forward. Check out the video above for more details. 

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Overwatch: Next Big FPS

Posted By: GamerDating - May 17, 2016

Overwatch is the latest IP to come from Blizzard in 15 years. In Overwatch, you control one of several heroes in competitive 6-person team shooting matches. Battle over objectives, take down the other team, and achieve victory. Before you begin a game of Overwatch, you’ll need to choose a hero to play. Players choose out of 21 hero characters, each with their own unique abilities and role classes, Maybe controlling

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Batman: Arkham Knight Now Available With Our 4 Month Subscription!

Posted By: GamerDating - May 10, 2016

Batman™: Arkham Knight kicked off on PC with some serious backlash with complaints over performance and bugs, but now, just under a year later the updates and patches have completely blown that away and Batman: Arkham Knight plays like it should have on launch. But don't take our word from it, check out Steams new Review system, where they seperate overall reviews and recent, which demonstrates as recent it has achieved a very positive

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Grey Goo Now Available in Our 4 Month Package

Posted By: GamerDating - May 05, 2016

Grey Goo is a real-time strategy (RTS) game that sticks to the traditional RTS design. Grey Goo had an initial poor reception at launch but was quickly adjusted to deliver a solid and rewarding campaign. In Feburary this year the launch of the "Descent of Shroud" added another fourth race which you can pick up for free. Four unique factions deliver 4 styles of play: THE BETA fight for their home and place in the unive

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Blizzard Finally Responds to Vanilla WoW Demands

Posted By: GamerDating - April 26, 2016

On 10th April 2016, Nostalrius, a private WoW Legacy server went dark after Blizzard threatened legal action. Nostalrius Begins PvP, Nostalrius Begins PvE & Nostalrius TBC and all related servers will be definitively shutdown at 23:00 server time on the 10th of April 2016 Nostalrius was a server running the original version of World of Warcraft from 2004, free of charge, It’s was Vanilla WoW’s most popular private server

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Monaco: What's Yours Is Mine Available in 2 Month Subscription!

Posted By: GamerDating - April 26, 2016

Monaco: What's Yours Is Mine is a single player or co-op heist game. We love coop games, and a fun game like this would be the perfect game date. You get to play a heist expert:   The Locksmith: Blue-collar infiltration expert The Lookout: She can see and hear everything... a natural leader The Pickpocket: A hobo with a monkey and a penchant for crime The Cleaner: A silent psychopath... Jack The Ripper in pink Th

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Ori and the Will of the Wisps Review

Posted By: Ryan - March 20, 2020

Game

It has beauty, it has grace, it will punch you in the face.

 

Ori and the Will of the Wisps is a charming, if mildly unforgiving, follow-up to Ori and the Blind Forest. I never played the first game much, metroidvanias aren’t usually my thing, but I continued to be intrigued by the art style and that intrigue led me to try out the sequel at launch on the Xbox One X, here is our Ori and the Will of the Wisps review.

Vibrant colours and a clearly defined palette help to distinguish all of the game's many areas from each other, as well as distinguishing a unique art style. The almost complete lack of spot colouring (specifically white) meant that it was a rare occasion indeed when I lost track of Ori among everything else on screen. Speaking of such, there were instances where foreground elements obscured my view of what was going on for few moments and only a handful where all of the on-screen particle effects taxed my ability to keep up with what was going on, although I do admit to having a problem with being easily overstimulated visually.

The UI, such as it is, is a minimalist wonder. Health and energy are displayed at the bottom of the screen in an easy to read manner, the abilities assigned to shortcuts are displayed between the two, and your money-equivalent flashes up when you collect it but fades from view when not needed, allowing you to fully lose yourself in the aforementioned painting-like backgrounds. All of this is set to a wonderful, extremely emotive score. Seriously, this is a game where the OST is better than the moment-to-moment gameplay and you owe it to yourself to check out the music if nothing else.

 

I kept getting lost in the background art. Hopefully, you can see why.

 

Obviously, graphics and audio aren’t everything when it comes to gaming and no review is complete without actually mentioning the gameplay itself. As I opened with, Ori and the Will of the Wisps is a metroidvania-style game with all that that entails: platforming, backtracking, puzzle-solving and combat. The map itself felt big without being too big and easily the standout feature for me was the ease of movement. I’m a sucker for games which just feel good to move around in and, even from the start, Ori was fluid and responsive to control.

I should re-iterate I was playing with a controller but there is enough care put into the rest of the game that I imagine keyboard controls to feel equally as fluid.

For this entry into the series, Ori is no longer alone. A large cast of supporting characters have been added, each one lovingly designed and animated. Whilst most belong to a cat-like species called the Moki, there is enough variety that remembering who wants which item for a side-quest doesn’t become a problem. There are a decent amount of side-quests, from rebuilding a village to a game-long trade-quest, each of which brings a different part of the world to life in the two or three text boxes that scroll through the start and the end of the quest. At their core though, all of these quests boil down to ‘ go and find something for me’, albeit pointing you in shadowed corners of the gorgeous map.

 

They aren’t asking for much, are they?

 

On top of the amazing movement, the game boasts an impressive amount of customisation in the form of many upgradable ‘shards’ which can be equipped through one of the game’s three (gorgeous) menus. You start out being able to equip only three, but can increase this capacity through optional combat arenas, and each modifies your playstyle in some way: for example, one offers reduced damage whilst another (which feels almost mandatory) offers a triple jump. At no point did I feel like I was forced into a certain loadout though.

 

This brings me onto combat and puzzle-solving. I played through on Easy for the first time. I’m not familiar with the genre and I wanted to complete the entire game without getting frustrated, but I did go back and play the opening hours on Normal and I’ll tell you now, after the halfway point Easy is VERY easy. If you’ve found many of the health and energy upgrades you’ll be able to tank boss fights (all of which are pleasantly varied) easily and the only real dangers will be instant-kill areas (although the game does tell you when your timer is running out and it is about to kill you). Normal is a nice challenge requiring some thought about in-combat movement and attack choices (sword, hammer, bow etc.) and is how I will play the game for any future playthroughs.

 

A beautiful game for this Ori sequel

 

The puzzles themselves were… okay. At no point did I feel like I couldn’t complete one, but several times it seemed possible to solve a puzzle in a variety of ways only to realise that I had been overthinking it because the game hadn’t taught me, or wasn’t even hinting at, the actual solution. Several times the breakable wall textures changed, or I was called upon to use one specific ability to interact with objects with no real clue as to which ability it was short of trying everything.

It was during some of the platforming puzzles where I got most frustrated as the fluid controls proved themselves to be too loose and led to me having to complete the lengthy puzzle set-up over and over again. Also, be warned that the latter half of the game has many, MANY spike pits that it is VERY difficult to leave if you happen to end up in them.

 

Some of the early game puzzles, like this one, are classics. Later ones are not.



These two things, long reset times for puzzles and inescapable spike pits, are my main niggles. Sure, I encountered some bugs and glitches, but what game launches without them these days? Nothing I encountered was game breaking, mostly confined to visual problems with animations and, on one occasion, an extended hitbox on a climbable object, with the most annoying thing being the lag when opening the map after I’d filled in a lot of it. Nothing here is problematic though and those things I did find were mild annoyances at worst and nothing really to complain about.

You can even get a plushie now

What I did like, in terms of polish, was the option to leave the escape sequences that Ori and the Blind Forest was famous for. These are prolonged chase segments of tight platforming that, if you slow down too much, will kill you and send you back to the start. I never felt the need to abandon the challenge, but I appreciated the option to back out and return later after exploring the map a bit more.

That’s really the nub of the problem here for me. I think the game is pretty well priced at £24.99 on Windows and Xbox One, and there is enough content to bring me back for more (mostly to try out different shard combinations) but I would dearly hope that by the time I come back to it those minor annoyances are ironed out because taken as a whole they did detract from the game.

 

You can also grab this beautiful art on Xbox Pass if you are that way inclined.

 

This is a game where the art style, soundtrack and (largely) well-written narrative set-up an atmosphere of wistful melancholy but where the puzzles/environmental design, challenging combat (on Normal and with nothing at the start of the game, at least) and brutal escape sequences yank you out of that and replace it with a teeth-grinding frustration.

If you want a largely enjoyable, 10–15-hour game that is both a visual and auditory treat, I would say check this out; but be wary of the obscure/missing environmental clues and tedious puzzle design.

Ori and the Will of the Wisps release date was 11 March 2020, so you can get playing now on Switch, Steam or Xbox.

 

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