The Embracer spiral continues as Insurgency- Sandstorm studio New World Interactive lays off employees-

Saber Interactive, a division of Embracer Group, has confirmed that it has laid off employees at its New World Interactive studio, the developer of Insurgency: Sandstorm.

Word of the layoffs first came as a rumor that New World Interactive was being closed outright, reported on Twitter by Nick Calandra of Second Wind. In a statement shared with PC Gamer, a Saber Interactive representative confirmed the layoffs but said the studio has not been closed.

“Saber can confirm there have been restructuring changes involving our New World Interactive subsidiary,” the rep said. “This reorganization has unfortunately resulted in layoffs at the studio. We are working to fill existing open roles within Saber with individuals affected by these changes wherever feasible and we will be providing severance packages to those employees impacted.”

Saber didn’t indicate how many employees have been laid off as a result of the studio changes, but the rep said work on Insurgency: Sandsto…

The FTC is banning fake reviews, false testimonials and all sorts of shady consumer deception with an ominous sounding ‘final rule’-

When it comes to deciding on your next purchase, be that PC hardware or otherwise, you’ll probably be leaning pretty heavily on reviews to make your decision. But it won’t come as too much of a surprise when I say that some reviews are less trustworthy than others, with obvious bot accounts, paid reviews and fake testimonials muddying the waters.

Now the FTC has announced what it’s calling a ‘final rule’, aimed at combating exactly that (via PC World). It’s been in the works since October 2022 and contains some pretty sweeping prohibitions on some of the biggest bugbears faced by consumers when searching through site reviews to find trustworthy content.

The final rule prohibits fake or false consumer reviews, consumer testimonials and celebrity testimonials, as well as prohibiting businesses from “providing compensation or other incentives conditioned on the writing of consumer reviews expressing a particular sentiment, either positive or negative.” It also bans reviews …

This classic 1970s text adventure now has Google AI graphics-

Zork was the first game made by the great Infocom, and one that would influence an entire genre. Inspired by the example of Colossal Cave Adventure, the first text adventure to gain any kind of widespread notice in the computer scene of the 1970s, Zork is a sprawling piece of interactive fiction, initially developed by four friends and coders at MIT on the PDP-10 computer. It was first released in 1977 for the PDP-10, before its original developers and other collaborators set up Infocom to polish, expand and release it as a commercial product for PCs.

The game was not only the launchpad for Infocom generally, but an entire genre. This wasn’t the first text adventure but its sophistication far surpassed what had come before (adventure used two word commands). The text parser was designed such that players could enter ‘natural’ language and the game would interpret these commands and act as a kind of narrator or dungeon master, explaining what happened and the current situation …

Diablo 4 has a two week-early ‘launch trailer’ set to a Billie Eilish song that is remarkably not ‘Bad Guy’-

As a man approaching the age of thirty, I endeavor not to have an opinion on pop sensation Billie Eilish—I leave that to people who use TikTok and debate whether TV shows are “based” or not. As a games journalist, however, I am required to have an opinion on Diablo 4 and its gameplay launch trailer, which features combat from the isometric action RPG set to Eilish’s “You Should See Me in a Crown.” This trailer is largely an object of mild confusion and fascination to me.

After some buildup, the beat drops with a Barbarian doing a “this is Sparta” kick to a rude dude, quickly cutting between explosive gameplay snippets in tune with the song. We get to peep all those cool class powers, and I remain a fan of the Druid’s bear form despite it being, apparently, un-bear-able for my colleague Chris Livingston in the first beta. We are also informed by the trailer that “Hell welcomes all”—a nice message of love and acceptance from the realm of metaphysical torment in a tim…

Elden Ring mod finally lets you wear Ranni as a demigod backpack like the true consort you are-

Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree raises the bar for “fashion souls” players who chase the RPG’s ultimate endgame: finding the cleanest fit possible. And by “raises the bar” I mean it establishes the concept—at least lore-wise—that you can just strap a demigod to you like you’re giving them a piggyback ride. The ultimate drip. Sadly, it isn’t possible to equip a demigod backpack in the game normally, so ApolloHoo has released a mod to fix that.

“Ranni’s Promised Consort Tarnished” isn’t the most descriptive title for a mod, but the images on the Nexus Mods page get the point across: You can wear everyone’s favorite moon witch on your back like Godfrey’s lion or a certain boss in the DLC. She doesn’t do anything special back there but if you’re a newlywed in new game+, you can think of it like a honeymoon in the Lands Between.

Comments on the Nexus Mod page say it can be tricky to install. You need to unzip the folder, which can throw up errors (it did for me)…

Walton Goggins reveals that parts of the Fallout show were filmed at a diamond mine where ‘there’s still diamonds on the ground’-

Walton Goggins plays The Ghoul on the Fallout TV show, who over the course of the series becomes a memorable and conflicted link between the world as-was and as it is in the present day. It’s a fantastic performance, which will be no surprise to those who’ve followed Goggins’ career, and while basking in the aftermath of the show’s success the actor revealed a surprising detail about one of the locations.

Some of the outdoor scenes in Fallout were filmed in Namibia, on what is sometimes referred to as the Skeleton Coast, including in an actual diamond mine (thanks, GamesRadar+). A new photograph released by Amazon shows The Ghoul at this location, looking downcast and moody as is his wont, but Goggins says the real explanation is a little more base. 

“[Amazon] just posted some film stills,” writes Goggins on Instagram, “this is one of them. It looks like I’m trying to look cool and all… but I’m not. See we were filming in an abandoned Diamond mine in N…

The World Wide Web was released to the public 30 years ago. Feel old yet–

On April 30, 1993, CERN released the World Wide Web to the planet, free-of-charge.

The “collaborative information system” was used by the scientists at CERN, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, to communicate without delay across countries and continents, but deciding this tool was too useful to keep to themselves, the boffins over at CERN handed out the concept and code for everyone to use.

CERN wrote a letter on April 30 titled “Statement concerning CERN W3 software release into public domain,” (via The Register). It reads:

“The following CERN software is hereby put into the public domain:

  • W 3 basic (“line-mode”) client
  • W 3 basic server
  • W 3 library of common code.

“CERN relinquishes all intellectual property rights to this code, both source and binary form and permission is granted for anyone to use, duplicate, modify, and redistribute it.”

There’s a great interview with Walter Hoogland, former CERN directo…

Wordle hint and answer #600- Thursday, February 9-

Whether you just need a helpful clue to point you in the right direction, general tips to improve your daily Wordle, or desperately want someone to tell you the answer to the February 9 (600) puzzle before you lose your win streak, all the Wordle advice you could ever wish for is on this very page.

The greens came early today—well, most of them did. Towards the end, I had that one dreaded gap left to fill and more potentially winning letters left than I had guesses to use up. Thankfully blind luck brought me to the answer just in time.

Wordle hint

A Wordle hint for Thursday, February 9

Today’s word is the name for the area in a theatre the actors usually perform from, but it can also refer to a specific part of a long process too, amongst other things. Something that’s just begun might be described as being in the opening _____, for example. There are two vowels to find today. 

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Is there a double letter in tod…

While we wait for AMD’s conspicuously absent RX 7800 XT, here’s a simulated one-

AMD’s Radeon RX 7900 XT and RX 7900 XTX made their debut in December 2022. They’re high-end cards made with the most powerful RDNA 3 GPU: Navi 31. Flagship cards are always the first to release, and normally, the next GPU to be released would be one tier lower. Not this time, though.

The next card to be released was the Navi 33-based RX 7600, a full five months later than the RX 7900 cards. Where the heck are Navi 32-based RX 7800 cards? They remain conspicuously absent. There could be any number of reasons why. Maybe AMD isn’t happy with the performance, or the GPU needed a re-spin, or there was some unexpected errata. We’ll probably never know.

While we wait for Navi 32 cards, Igor’s Lab undertook an interesting experiment. He took AMD’s Radeon Pro W7800 graphics card, disabled half of its 32GB of memory and tweaked the power limits in order to simulate what to expect from a hypothetical RX 7800 XT.

Before looking at the results, it’s important to remember that t…

Payback, a Destiny spinoff that was not, in fact, Destiny 3, was cancelled two months before the latest mass layoffs at Bungie-

Two months before this week’s mass layoff of more than 200 staff at Bungie, “Payback,” the codename for a third-person perspective spinoff project set in the Destiny universe, was cancelled in order to prioritize development of the upcoming Marathon extraction shooter, according to a report from Bloomberg’s Jason Schreier.

According to the blog post from Bungie CEO Pete Parsons that announced the layoffs—which was apparently how some staff got the news—the studio’s second major downsizing in less than a year is the result of an “overly ambitious” management decision to initiate “several incubation projects,” which left Bungie’s development staff spread “too thin, too quickly.” One of those projects was Payback, a Destiny spinoff that Schreier’s sources said would “shake up the formula in major ways.”

Described as “a significant departure” that would borrow elements from Warframe and Genshin Impact, Payback traded Destiny’s first-person pe…