John Smedley Steps Down As CEO


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Daybreak Game Company has confirmed that John Smedley will be stepping down as president and chief executive officer, following a lengthy period of harassment from the cyber group Lizard Squad. A spokesperson from Daybreak confirmed to Venturebeat that Smedley will be relinquishing his role, although he will not be leaving the company entirely.

“I can confirm that John Smedley will be taking some time off from the company for the near-term and transitioning to a different role to be determined. Upon finalization of his plans, further communication will be provided.”

John Smedley made headlines earlier this month after one Lizard Squad member was convicted of over fifty thousand counts of cyber crime, only to see no jail time. After Smedley called out multiple members on Twitter, the group launched a multiple day DDOS attack on Daybreak’s servers as well as offering a $5000 reward for anyone who defaced the grave of Smedley’s father.

The office of CEO will be filled by current COO Russel Shanks.

(Source: Venturebeat)

Mechwarrior Online Introduces New Server


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Mechwarrior Online has continued its global expansion with servers now available for European gamers, situated out of Strassbourg. Pirhana Games has revealed that average ping times have dropped by an average of 50% with some areas seeing more than a 75% boost to latency. Servers will be available for Oceanic players next month.

“The MechWarrior Online community has always been competitive by nature given the fundamentals of the MechWarrior gameplay, and now that we’ve added European servers a huge portion of our player base that lives in that region can experience MechWarrior Online at the highest competitive level,” said Russ Bullock, president of developer and publisher of Piranha Games.

Mechwarrior Online is currently in the final phase of feature implementation.

(Source: Official website)

Trove Introduces Patron Program


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Trove players looking to pay for a bit more will be able to sign up for Patron, the MMO’s recurring subscription program. Patron costs $14.99 per month and comes with all of the perks listed above, and can be purchased in recurring subscription form as well as single-month packages.

Multi-month packages are up in packages of three, six, and twelve months.

(Source: Trion Worlds)

Glyph Sees Third Party Game Purge


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Glyph’s days as a platform for third party titles are over, as Trion Worlds has purged the store of all non-home-brewed games. Those who purchased third party single player games through Glyph will be able to access their content from here on forward, however the items will be removed from the store barring any further purchases. Furthermore, gamers also have the option to port their licenses over to Steam.

If you purchased any single player download games from Glyph, you should have received an email with an activation code for each game you purchased. If you did not receive this email, please . Once you have your keys, you’ll need to activate them on Steam.

(Source: Trion Worlds)

Adopt A Cat In RuneScape To Support World Wildlife Fund


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RuneScape players have another opportunity to donate to charity. Jagex has partnered with the World Wildlife Fund to spread awareness of endangered animals, specifically the endangered big cats. For the next two weeks, players are invited to take part in daily quizzes with exclusive title rewards and adopt a baby jaguar of their own.

Head to Burthorpe and talk to the Conservationist to get started. The Big Cats quiz will start twice hourly – on the hour and at half-past. Answer questions correctly to earn points, which can be used to adopt companions and unlock titles.

Furthermore, the conservationist NPC will also be accepting bond donations until August 17th, with at least £2.85 per bond going directly to the WWF.

(Source: RuneScape)

How Free Can You Be: RuneScape Revisited


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How Free Can You Be is a series of columns that I started back in 2013 that never went anywhere, so it’s a concept that I’ve been sitting on for some time. For the first entry, I’ll be looking at MMOs and how much of the game can be accessed without spending a dime. Most of these games, I imagine, will involve someone spending money at some point, but the end result is that you, the reader, will know how much content you can access without ever registering a credit card or buying a game card. For games with optional subscriptions, we’ll also talk about avoiding paying more than the flat monthly fee.

I picked RuneScape as the first game for this column because it has changed quite a bit since our 2013 coverage. The introduction of tradeable bonds has changed the dynamic by which players can purchase and enjoy RuneScape’s content, and I would be remiss if I continued the column and left the previous coverage inaccurate.

1. Membership

Membership in RuneScape is different than other MMOs because while the game is technically free, it is absolutely required to access a grand majority of the content. Members have access to more skills, better equipment, more quests, combat abilities, transportation, leveling methods, bank spaces, grand exchange slots, and activities, emotes, and more. While Jagex regularly insists that the free to play part of RuneScape is a complete experience in itself, it really serves as a taste of what membership has to offer.

This is where bonds come in. A bond is an item that is purchased from Jagex and then sold on the Grand Exchange to others for money. While this does mean that someone pays real money, it allows both free players and members to enjoy otherwise paid goods essentially on someone else’s dime. At the time of this publishing, bonds have stayed pretty still in the nine to ten million gold range, however prices can fluctuate up and down.

One bond is worth 14 days of membership without any downsides, so any player capable of making around five million gold per week as a member (which many players will tell you is not a difficult feat) will have little problem funding their membership. Given the cost of bonds, you’ll have to level up quite a bit in free to play before you are capable of making that kind of money as a member, be it through combat, skilling, or gathering goods and selling them. Gamers who are able to play the market and flip items will find making the required amount easier at lower levels.

2. Solomon’s Store

Solomon’s Store is RuneScape’s cash shop, and it operates on two currencies: Loyalty points and Runecoins. Solomon’s Store stocks everything from pets, extra bank space, cosmetic outfits, weapon overrides, emotes, animations, and more. The good side is that, with one or two exceptions, the items are permanent. While many items are available for purchase with loyalty points, some can only be bought through the use of Runecoins.

Loyalty points are accrued through consecutive months of membership, with the stipend increasing with each passing month. Runecoins on the other hand must be purchased with real money or by redeeming a bond, meaning real money must change hands at some point along the transaction. Bonds can be redeemed for 195 Runecoins, slightly less than $5 worth of the currency purchased for straight cash.

While time consuming, the ability to purchase and redeem bonds for Runecoins and membership makes it feasible to acquire anything from the Solomon Store given enough time. Unlike Marvel Heroes, for instance, with eternity splinters locked behind time gates, a player’s ability to fund themselves is entirely based on how fast the player can make money, making this more of a venture in ability rather than grind.

The other benefit is that those who have no problem paying the membership subscription but don’t want to pay into the cash shop can still obtain everything available from Solomon’s Store with skill and patience. Some items can only be purchased with loyalty points, meaning using bonds to buy Runecoins can only get you so far.

3. Treasure Hunter

Like Solomon’s Store and membership, Treasure Hunter (known as Squeal of Fortune) has been drastically altered by the ability to redeem bonds for keys. As with Solomon’s Store, one bond gives you approximately five dollars worth of keys, 15 in total. In addition, players receive a non-stacking daily stipend of keys that reset at midnight GMT, one for free players, two for members, and three for premiere club members. In addition, players can obtain keys randomly as drops and by completing quests or promotional activities.

What sets Treasure Hunter apart from Solomon’s General Store is that the rewards are completely luck based, making this RuneScape’s equivalent to a lockbox in other MMOs. As a free daily activity, it is handy for a few free bonuses here and there. As a method of acquiring items, as I’ve said in the past, it is a waste of both time and money. Jagex has ramped up the efforts to sell Treasure Hunter keys through limited time items that are only available for a few days. In some cases, Jagex has introduced tradeable rares through limited Treasure Hunter promotions.

So it is possible to obtain as many Treasure Hunter keys as you’d like without spending a dime, provided you’re willing to put the work into buying bonds.

4. Conclusion

Ultimately RuneScape is pretty friendly to free players. Those who are willing to put in the work to make money can subsidize their memberships off the backs of those willing to pony up the real money for RuneScape gold. I do get the feeling that the cost of bonds is rather low comparable to the ease with which a skilled player can make money, meaning that the community isn’t exactly falling over itself to buy bonds and gather up the items in the cash shop.

In regards to Treasure Hunter, buying bonds to redeem for keys is still a waste of time and money, but at least you can rest knowing it wasn’t your money being wasted.

Marvel Heroes Patch Introduces Major Bugs, Emergency Maintenance Coming


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Gazillion Entertainment launched the latest patch for Marvel Heroes, leaving a lot of broken pieces in its wake. Players are reporting latency issues, poor performance in certain areas, and an inability to get into the game at all. To top things off, some (including yours truly) are experiencing disconnections with the error “error saving characters, please contact support,” kicking them off of the server and losing approximately ten minutes of progression in the process.

There are a metric ton of errors being reported across the game and cash shop as part of the patch, and the general consensus among many is to just leave the game alone until Gazillion has a chance to fix it. Luckily, an emergency patch is set to go live in a few hours, at 10pm Pacific (1am Eastern).

We’re currently planning for the emergency patch to fix this issue and a few others for 10PM PDT tonight. Will keep you updated once I know for sure with an officiall announcement.

For those of you who were looking to get your Marvel Heroes fill tonight, well you can always brave it out and hope you don’t get hit by the ‘error saving characters’ bug. Just be aware that if you open up lockboxes and you get disconnected losing your progress, you’ll have to re-open them.

(Source: Marvel Heroes)

Warhammer 40K: Eternal Crusade Moves To Unreal 4 Engine


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Warhammer 40K: Eternal Crusade is speeding along in development, a process which should be faster thanks to a recent port to the latest Unreal Engine. Eternal Crusade will mark the first game developed by Behaviour Interactive using the engine.

“After evaluating our engine options we decided that Unreal Engine 4 and the team at Epic offered the type of support and the best toolset to make the Warhammer world come to life,” said Rémi Racine, Founder and CEO of Behaviour Interactive. “The sheer amount of productivity tools we get right out of the box have helped the game’s development progress significantly faster, allowing the team to ensure the highest quality at a rate we couldn’t have achieved before.”

More information on Eternal Crusade can be found through the official website.

(Source: Behavior Interactive Press Release)

Ant-Man Comes To Marvel Heroes


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Ahead of his debut in theaters, Marvel Heroes players can now acquire Scott Lang donning the Ant-Man suit to bust up villains. Gamers who pre-ordered Ant-Man received his default costume as well as one inspired by the upcoming film.

Though a brilliant electronics expert, Scott Lang had made his share of bad decisions. Having served time in prison for burglary, Scott would return to his life of crime in order to save his terminally ill daughter, Cassie. Stealing the Ant-Man suit from Hank Pym, Scott would use the suit to save Dr. Erica Sondheim, the only doctor capable of saving Cassie from her heart condition. Once he realized that Scott was only trying to do the right thing, Hank Pym not only let Scott keep the suit, but gave him his blessing as the brand new Ant-Man!

Check out Ant-Man’s release trailer below.

(Source: Marvel Heroes)

Runefest Tickets Available To Purchase, In-Game and With Cash


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Jagex has announced that tickets for Runefest 2015, the fan convention surrounding RuneScape as well as Jagex’s other products, are now available for purchase. Runefest takes place this year on Saturday October 3rd at London’s Tobacco Dock. Tickets cost £99 plus booking fees, and can also be paid with 35 RuneScape bonds.

Tickets will include entry to the event from between 10am and 11pm, a RuneFest goodie bag that includes an exclusive in-game item, access to all areas, and entrance to the RuneFest after-party. Similar to last year’s celebrations, Bonds can also be used to book accommodation, as well as flights to and from the UK.

October’s event will include special content reveals, Q&A panels, the “Golden Gnome” awards, and more. More information can be found on the official Facebook page.

(Source: Jagex press release)