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  • Battlefield 6 server queue – can you beat the first day blues?

    Battlefield 6 server queue – can you beat the first day blues?


    Battlefield 6 Key Art

    Well, who would have thought it? Huge server queue problems as Battlefield 6 launches its Early Access Open Beta, and the numbers are only going to get bigger by the time the rest of the world gets to join in in a couple of days.

    Hopefully, by then, EA and Battlefield Studios will have added a bit more capacity, and the clamor to be first on board may have waned a little, but right now, for many, Battlefield 6’s first trial run is unplayable.

    Images are scattered around X of players having 150,000 plus players ahead of them in line, and even when you get into the game, matchmaking is falling apart due to the volume of players.

    Just under an hour ago, the official Battlefield account posted:

    “A quick note about queues and Early Access / Open Beta.

    Since this is Battlefield’s biggest Open Beta ever, we’re putting in the work to ensure that players have the best possible experience and servers remain stable.

    To support this, we will use queues to protect the player experience but expect this impact to be minimal.

    You may encounter this during high peak moments, such as the start of servers going live. The team is working constantly to reduce any queue that takes place.

    Thank you for your continued excitement and patience. We’ll see you on the Battlefield!!

    That last line may be a little hopeful for many, and it will be minutes away before the self-righteous start demanding that the beta time be extended, but this is a good first sign for the revamped Battlefield.

    Better this in many ways than being able to jump right in and squad up with a load of bots.

    How to beat the Battlefield 6 queues

    For now, all you can do is wait it out. EA will doubtless be pushing extra resources in the direction of the game, and, much like trying to buy tickets for any big gig these days, people will soon get bored of waiting and drop out of the queue, causing it to drop more quickly.

    We are confident that when you do eventually get in, it will be worth the wait.

    We’ll see you on the Battlefield – probably.

    Battlefield 6 open beta details

    If you want to find out more about when Battlefield 6 will be running its beta tests, all the information you need is right here.


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  • Starcraft inspired Stormgate reaches big 1.0 milestone, launches first campaign

    Starcraft inspired Stormgate reaches big 1.0 milestone, launches first campaign


    I’ve heard a lot of good things about Stormgate, despite its rocky start in early access. The free-to-play RTS not only comes from a studio helmed by ex-Starcraft devs, but it has a science fantasy universe and worldbuilding assisted by Blizzard legend Chris Metzen, as well as some sick looking graphics. I’m usually the kind of person who waits for a game to leave early access before I take the plunge, so luckily for me, Stormgate is hitting 1.0 today. Even better, you can play its much-anticipated debut campaign right now.

    A spiritual successor to Starcraft 2, Stormgate showed all the promise of being one of the best RTS games when it launched into early access last year. Although there’s been plenty of kinks that have needed to be smoothed out, the game has seen a lot of improvements, and even more are set to arrive with this new 1.0 launch.

    The 1.0 update also comes with a whole host of fixes, tweaks, and a balance update for all three factions: the human Vanguard, the demonic Infernal Host, and the angelic Celestial Armada. The latter also receives a complete revamp, with a massive mechanical overhaul arriving in 1.0 for the heavenly cohort.

    The demonic Infernal Host faction

    That’s not all. From today, players can experience Stormgate’s debut paid campaign, Ashes of Earth – a 12-mission affair that focuses on the Vanguard, packed with a narrative that’ll kick Stormgate’s universe into a higher gear. Three missions will be available for free for all players, alongside Stormgate’s lineup of free game modes.

    The campaign launch will be aided by the game’s star-studded cast, including videogame favorite Matthew Mercer and Marvel’s Shang-Chi (and my favorite from Kim’s Convenience Store) Simu Liu. There will also be new unlockable pets and 36 all-new Steam achievements. If Simu Liu is not enough to convince you to play Stormgate, then the Fuzzy Moth definitely should. I mean, just look at this cute little guy.

    Cute fuzzy moth, alongside two other pets you can unlock

    There’s also an all-new Sigma Labs experimental hub, which allows you to playtest three player co-op modes and the Terrain Editor, which will open the doors to full community map-making and custom games support.

    That’s just the tip of the iceberg – you can check out the full 1.0 release notes on Steam here.

    YouTube Thumbnail

    Stormgate’s 1.0 update launches today, August 5. You can buy the new Ashes of Earth campaign for $24.99, or the Ultimate Edition bundle at $64.99, which includes all six purchasable heroes, the full Ashes of Earth campaign, an adorable chicken pet (not as cute as Fuzzy Moth though), and the Firestorm fog of war shader.

    If Stormgate doesn’t quite hit the spot for you, delve into other worlds with our guide to the best fantasy games. Or cut your teeth on these best strategy games to hone your skills.

    You can follow us on Google News for daily PC games news, reviews, and guides. We’ve also got a vibrant community Discord server, where you can chat about this story with members of the team and fellow readers.



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  • Three Ubisoft chiefs guilty as #MeToo finally bites the gaming industry in first big trial

    Three Ubisoft chiefs guilty as #MeToo finally bites the gaming industry in first big trial


    The Ubisoft office in Montreal

    Three former top executives at Ubisoft have each received a suspended prison sentence, handed down by a court in Paris, after “enabling a culture of sexual and psychological harassment in the workplace”.

    Between 2012 and 2020, the company’s office in Montreuii was rife with a toxic culture, leading to female employees enduring “pranks” such as being tied to a chair with tape, pushed into a lift and sent to a random floor, or being forced into doing handstands while wearing a skirt.

    One female member of staff told the court, “He was my superior and I was afraid of him. He made me do handstands. I did it to get it over with and get rid of him.”

    One worker, according to The Guardian, likened the office environment to a “boy’s club above the law,” where women were left to feel like pieces of meat.

    Former editorial vice-president Thomas François, 52, was found guilty of sexual harassment, psychological harassment, and attempted sexual assault. He was given a three-year suspended prison sentence and fined €30,000 (£26,000).

    Former chief creative officer Serge Hascoët, 59, was found guilty of psychological harassment and complicity in sexual harassment and given an 18-month suspended sentence and a fine of €45,000.

    He had earlier told the court he was unaware of any harassment, saying: “I have never wanted to harass anyone and I don’t think I have.”

    Former game director Guillaume Patrux, 41, was found guilty of psychological harassment and given a 12-month suspended sentence along with a fine of €10,000. He had denied all charges after being accused of threatening to carry out an office shooting and setting a co-worker’s beard alight.

    Has the gaming industry really changed?

    While these convictions stem back to events pre-COVID, and maybe companies are now forced to take their responsibilities to employees much more seriously, the level of abuse and harassment still directed towards female gamers and employees, especially online, has, if anything, multiplied.

    Check out any videos by popular female gamers and peruse the comments – it will take you under three seconds before you encounter the creepy, the sinister, and the misogynistic, far outweighing the positive.

    It’s depressing, and it needs to stop.


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  • Mecha Break first impressions – hands on with Steam’s new top game

    Mecha Break first impressions – hands on with Steam’s new top game


    The first few minutes of Mecha Break are mindblowing. I’m torn somewhere between not having a clue what’s going on as hints and tutorials are thrown at me with voiced lines that are a little too low to pick out and are drowned out by the battle and explosions happening all around, and a unique adrenelin rush at all the on-screen action.

    Somehow, I get through it. Somehow, I keep managing to destroy the cannon fodder thrown in my path, and yet somehow I feel as though I am a mighty mech hammering my left mouse button with no mercy and splintering giant robots into flying shards everywhere.

    In truth, perhaps the opening salvo of Mecha Break is just a mainly, almost on-rails opener that is slickly produced and wonderfully executed.

    The first 25 minutes or so of Mecha Break are like living in a Gundam/Macross hybrid world being broadcast on kids’ Saturday morning TV in the 1980s, and it is absolutely glorious.

    It’s near 50 gig free download on Steam belies its true purpose in life, however, and that is to, immediately after the opening is done with, ram your face into an item shop filled with ludicrously priced skins and add-ons.

    The last time things felt this egregious was when Warhammer 40k Darktide launched with hardly any game but with a perfectly functioning item shop.

    Now, to be fair, Darktide was not a free-to-play game, so it deserved its flak, but being presented with a £48/$65 skin and mech bundle almost immediately is a bit in your face. There are plenty of other things to buy as well, bought with in-game currency and other opportunities to dump real money into. There is no way to tell yet how many people will pay for this stuff ultimately, and the publishers may well be hoping for whales to hoover it all up, but it all just feels a little, well, grubby.

    This is especially true as a lot of the purchases have a 7-day free trial, which sounds like a nice idea to try stuff out, but it’s unclear how many will actually not purchase and cancel during the free week.

    The two beta tests, which I didn’t actually play, were hugely lauded for the customization options for players. Many of the complaints on the Steam reviews where Mecha Break has a predictable Mixed rating bemoan that these have been whipped out or put behind a paywall.

    Yes, you can ignore all of this stuff, and there is a really fun game in there with face-paced mech-combat included, 6v6 PVP, and Arena mode where the first to eight kills wins. There’s even an extraction attempt with you versus both players and the environment.

    Mecha Break is a cool game….but….

    I also don’t really think you can compare this sort of cosmetic item dropping to something like DCS World, where, yes, the game is free and you have to purchase other aircraft and maps, but these you have to learn to fly and add to the gameplay. An overpriced skin is not that.

    I’m going to keep Mecha Break on my hard drive for a while yet and see how things develop. There are certainly enough people playing right now on Steam to confirm to me it’s a huge amount of fun. The payer drop-off numbers over the next seven days may be interesting. Whether the devs will take any of the initial critique on board may be significant for Mecha Break’s future successes.


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  • Sony really won’t be putting new first party games on PlayStation Plus day one any time soon

    Sony really won’t be putting new first party games on PlayStation Plus day one any time soon


    Sony is sticking to its guns, and won’t be releasing its first party games day one on its PlayStation Plus subscription service.

    Speaking with GameFile, vice president of global services at PlayStation Nick Maguire said the company was “not looking to put games in day and date” on PS Plus, and will instead stick with its current way of doing things.

    This is, of course, very different from Xbox, which often puts big first party releases such as Indiana Jones and the Great Circle and many more on Game Pass from the get go.

    FBC: Firebreak Preview – How Does It Play And Is It Good? Watch on YouTube

    Sony, meanwhile, has added some third party games like the excellent Blue Prince and Stray to PS Plus on the same day as their initial launch. But the likes of God of War Ragnarök and Horizon Forbidden West – both from Sony’s first party studios – weren’t added to the service until around a year after their initial release.

    “Our strategy of finding four or five independent day-and-date titles – and using that to complement our strategy of bringing games in when they’re 12, 18 months old or older – that balance for us is working really well across the platform,” Maguire continued, before adding:

    “If there were six or seven great opportunities, then we would go for them as well.”

    When asked if the company had considered the benefit of putting its own first party live-service titles on PS Plus, with Concord – the debut game from Sony’s FireWalk Studios, which was taken offline just two weeks after its PS5 and PC debut – being used as an example, Maguire declined to give a specific comment. The Sony exec did say, however, that PS Plus has “proven itself to be a great way to introduce new players to franchises” when they arrive on the service.

    “There’s always going to be a moment for any game where there’s the right time for it to go into Plus, when it’s ready to reach a wider audience or… to find new fans or new parts of our platform that it hasn’t already reached,” Maguire said.

    This month, Remedy’s multiplayer Control spin-off FBC: Firebreak was available to all those on PlayStation Plus’ Extra and Premium tiers day one. However, even when included on a subscription service, some live-service games still flop. Square Enix‘s Foamstars, for example, failed to set the world alight despite being part of the PS Plus catalogue.

    Concord official image showing Star Child and other characters in a montage ahead of teal, white and black background
    Would Concord have faired better if it had released on PS Plus? | Image credit: Sony Interactive Entertainment

    Today’s comments echo what the exec stated back in 2023, when Maguire said putting games on to Sony’s subscription service “a bit later in the life cycle” is working for the company. Therefore, this will “continue to be [its] strategy moving forward,” Maguire said at the time.

    Earlier this month, meanwhile, Sony president Hideaki Nishino stated the company is open to adjusting the price of PlayStation Plus in the future, as it aims to “maximise profitability”.



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  • Who, if anyone, opens 1NT strong (15-17) in first and second positions and weak (12-14) in late position?


    As dealer, I would be afraid to open 1NT with 12-14 for fear that one of my two opponents might clobber me with a strong (15-17) 1NT hand.

    If all pass to me in later positions, at least one of my opponents does not have an opening hand, and in fourth position neither has such. With a balanced 13 in last position, I figure that the other three hands each have 7-11 points, and even if partner has the weakest of the three remaining hands, we’re no worse off than even (13+7=20).

    If I had a good five card major, I’d open one of the major. But suppose by distribution is 2-3-4-4, that is skewed to the minors. A bid of a minor would invite opposing overcalls in the majors, while 1NT forces the next bid to come at the 2 level.

    Does anyone (of note in the bridge world) bid a weak 1Nt in late position and a strong 1NT in early position?



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  • Nier’s 2B is coming to The First Descendant, and is exactly what you think it is

    Nier’s 2B is coming to The First Descendant, and is exactly what you think it is



    Even if you’ve never touched a Nier game, I’d wager that you know exactly who 2B is. The iconic android has made myriad appearances in other games since Platinum released Nier: Automata in 2017, and the studio is showing absolutely no signs of slowing down. She’s already in Final Fantasy 14, Fall Guys, PUBG, Rainbow Six Siege, and a rhythm game excellently titled D4DJ Groovy Mix. Now, 2B is coming to The First Descendant.

    I’ll admit, I’m not entirely surprised to know that 2B is on her way to The First Descendant. Nier: Automata is the perfect fit for Nexon’s live-service looter shooter – it felt like it was just a matter of time. Still, the free Steam game has quite an event on the way, as Nexon details at TFD’s Pax East panel.

    “The community has been requesting this IP continuously, and we believe that it will match well with The First Descendant,” TFD producer Beomjun Lee says. “Although we’ve only shown some key images today, we will be sharing more details with a trailer showcasing our collaboration.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNdje4dwrD0

    “Unfortunately, the Nier: Automata collaboration will focus on decorations as we are in the process of solidifying the substance of our game. We decided to invest more in the content of Season 3 rather than other content related to the collaboration. However, in addition to the 2B and A2 outfits, we have prepared a damaged version of 2B with no skirt, with other motions and decorations as well.”

    Lee assures that it’ll be just a few months before the Nier: Automata collaboration comes to The First Descendant, even if Season 3 is more of a priority. As for The First Descendant’s next major overhaul, director Minseok Joo recently admitted in an open letter that “there’s not much to do” in the game right now.

    Nexon does have a plan for the game’s future, though. Instead of focusing on smaller updates, the team is putting almost all of its effort into Season 3, to make it “stronger and more complete.”

    We also have all the biggest upcoming PC games to keep an eye on in 2025. Otherwise, check out the best free PC games you can play today.

    You can follow us on Google News for daily PC games news, reviews, and guides. We’ve also got a vibrant community Discord server, where you can chat about this story with members of the team and fellow readers.



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