Sunday on the Day 0 Update...
Studio Liverpool may be no more, but many of its alumni have recently reorganized under the R8 Games banner. Now, thanks to Kickstarter, R8 is preparing to launch Wipeout’s spiritual successor, Formula Fusion. The Day 0 hosts, meanwhile, are wont to look at things in a “big picture” sense, and can’t help thinking that this is just the latest development in a “new game industry” being constructed right in front of our eyes. What’s old is truly new again.
Regardless of what corners of gaming you might come from, there’s no question that the BBC’s upcoming documentary, Game Changer, is a snapshot of one of the industry’s most controversial and contentious chapters: Rockstar Games’ Grand Theft Auto franchise vs professional offendee Jack Thompson. Game Changer’s historical value notwithstanding, someone directly related to the events depicted in the film is now taking legal action to try and prevent its launch...but it’s not who, or why, you would think.
Nintendo made waves a couple weeks ago by announcing the return of the Nintendo World Championships, following a 25-year layoff, in the lead-up to E3 2015. Now that we know the details of the scope of the event, particularly the very limited availability of qualifiers (in all of eight US cities), it is apparent in hindsight that those waves probably should have remained ripples. Is there anywhere relevant this could now lead to, or will it go down in the history books as the insulting publicity stunt it now looks to be?
The Day 0 Update reported three weeks ago that Final Fantasy XV director Hajime Tabata had taken criticism of the game’s demo, Episode Duscae, to heart, and even went so far as to declare his intentions of patching the demo if such an update would get the okay from Sony and Microsoft. Now, both parties have given Tabata and his team the go-ahead, and Tabata himself has stated that we’ll have our update sometime between now and E3. Just how much can possibly change from what we played back in March, though?
NHL 15 was one of the most divisive games of last year, with a woefully-incomplete eighth-generation version robbing its genuinely-outstanding seventh-generation counterpart of virtually all of the attention it deserved, making last year appear an abject failure for EA’s most celebrated sports franchise. This year, Sean Ramjagsingh and his team are coming out with all guns blazing, full disclosure proving from the get-go that NHL 16 will not be a repeat of the previous year. The crew takes a look on the show at the list of features that made it.
All this and much more, Sunday on your podcast aggregator of choice and SmashPad Channel!