Black Desert Online Launches Today


Black Desert officially hits Xbox One today, says developer Pearl Abyss.

The base game can be purchased for $9.99 USD and contains instant access, with higher editions at $29.99 (standard), $49.99 (Deluxe), and $99.99 (Ultimate). The full release starts with a 55 level cap. Pearl Abyss also announced the Black Desert Partners Program, which looks to build meaning relationships with content creators.

“Launching Black Desert on Xbox One has been a long development journey and we’re so thankful for the support of the Xbox community along the way”, said Robin Jung, Chief Executive Officer at Pearl Abyss. “Through the community’s feedback and continued interest in Black Desert over the course of the past two years and multiple betas, we’re happy to be able to launch the game today and look forward to adding additional content in the near future.”

Black Desert Final Open Beta Date Revealed


Pearl Abyss has announced the final beta for Black Desert, the open-world fantasy action MMORPG coming to Xbox One. The final open beta will run from February 14 to February 17, offering the last chance for players to take in the environments, quests, and action combat before the game launches on March 4. On Xbox.

Those who hit level 30 during the beta will be rewarded with a Calpheon chubby dog for launch. Everyone else can pass the time by watching the trailer below.

Black Desert Hits Xbox One March 4, Pre-Orders Available


Black Desert Online is officially available for pre-order on Xbox One ahead with developer Pearl Abyss revealing that the title will launch on March 4. Owners who pick up a founder’s package will be able to access the game early, with Ultimate Edition buyers gaining access on March 1. Ultimate edition copies grant the most in-game rewards and exclusive items, including pets, horse armor, costumes, currency, and more.

Black Desert Online Available January 7 For Pre-Order


Pearl Abyss today announced that Black Desert Online will be available for pre-order on the Microsoft Store starting January 7, 2019. Following the success of the game on PC with more than ten million registered users, Black Desert on Xbox will feature a new story, remastered graphics and audio, as well as 4k HDR, and an optimized user interface for consoles and controllers.

While you wait, check out the Black Desert E3 2018 trailer below. Black Desert Online is currently available on Steam for $10.

[Not Massive] Steam Users Are Angry Over Early Tomb Raider Discounts


Shadow of the Tomb Raider is currently on sale and customers aren’t happy.

The third and final installment in the latest Tomb Raider reboot series, Shadow of the Tomb Raider launched on PC on September 14 to pretty favorable reviews and Steam numbers. This week, the game was discounted 34% off on October 16, 47% off for the Croft edition bundle that contains extra DLC. Since the sale began, the game has been bombed by negative reviews citing the game’s sale price. So why the issue?

Normally sales would be a great thing, but early adopters are not happy about Shadow of the Tomb Raider going on such a deep discount a month after launch and not even during a heavy sale period for Steam. More specifically, many of the negative reviews appear to be coming out of China where players are expressing frustration between two major topics: That the game is going on sale so soon after launch and of long wait times to import the game into China adding to the fact that the game is on sale so soon after many received their copies. In short, people feel burned that Square Enix discounted the game so heavily and so quickly after launch.

It seems more than likely that Square Enix is offering this deal because sales from Shadow of the Tomb Raider have been far less than anticipated. Back in September, Eurogamer noted that Shadow’s physical sales in the UK were down 70% from 2013’s Tomb Raider reboot, a more troubling idea considering that Tomb Raider initially launched just on the Xbox and this time around launched on all three major systems (PS4, Xbox One, PC) simultaneously. It also doesn’t help that Shadow cost about $100 million to make. Not a good sign.

Oddly enough, Amazon has the Playstation 4 edition of Shadow of the Tomb Raider on sale for $44.95, a 25% discount, while the Xbox version is only 5% off at $57. I guess we know which version sold better.

We fully expect Square Enix to comment on Shadow’s sales as the company has been pretty forthcoming about its opinions in the past.

505 Games Details No Man’s Sky Xbox One Launch


505 Games this week revealed the official launch date for No Man’s Sky on the Xbox One. The title will launch in North America on July 24 and in Europe on July 27 and will include a major update that will also hit the Playstation and PC versions of the game. Dubbed No Man’s Sky NEXT and revealed earlier this year, the update promises a full multiplayer experience.

“Multiplayer completely changes the No Man’s Sky experience; it’s emergent, fun and intense in ways we always wanted it to be. I’m so happy this is finally happening,” said Sean Murray, founder, Hello Games. “It is genuinely exciting to be able to fully realize the potential so many people could see in No Man’s Sky. This will be our biggest update yet and we’re pumped to be bringing Xbox players along on the journey with us now too.”

NEXT is a free update expected to launch simultaneously on all systems.

(Source: 505 Games Press Release)

No Man’s Sky Hits Xbox One This Year


Hello Games has officially announced the launch of No Man’s Sky on Xbox One as well as a massive update coming to PC and PS4 this year. Dubbed No Man’s Sky Next, the update will be free, however we do not have any information on what will be included with it in terms of new content. Hello Games has called it “an important next step on a longer journey for us and the community.”

“We are calling this No Man’s Sky NEXT because it is an important next step in a journey for No Man’s Sky, for Hello Games and for our devoted community,” said Sean Murray, founder at Hello Games. “Each update for No Man’s Sky has been more successful than the last; this was especially true of our last update Atlas Rises. It emboldens the team to push ourselves further. This journey is far from over, and it’s exciting to be working again on something you know will surprise people.”

The Xbox version of No Man’s Sky will be distributed by 505 Games who you may recognize from their publisher roles for games like the Sniper Elite series, Portal Knights, and Rocket League. A firm launch date has not been set.

(Source: Press Release)

PSA: Xbox Game Pass Is Available Now


The Xbox Game Pass doesn’t begin officially until June 1st, but Gold members can get their hands on the free 14 day trial right now. Boasting a Netflix-style subscription service, Xbox Game Pass costs $10 per month and grants access to a list of over 100 Xbox One and Xbox 360 (backwards compatible) titles. The service will operate similar to Netflix or Hulu, with games being added or taken away over time. While games are available on the service, you’ll be able to buy them at a discounted price and keep them once they are no longer part of the subscription.

When Xbox Game Pass launches, you can download and play a broad range of games in full fidelity on your Xbox One or Xbox One S console, including blockbusters like Halo 5: Guardians, NBA 2K16 and Payday 2; fun for the whole family in LEGO Batman, Banjo-Kazooie and Viva Pinata; retro and classic games like Mega Man Legacy Collection, Streets of Rage and Pac-Man Championship Edition; and of course, Xbox Game Pass has a number of great first-person and third-person shooter games, including all three titles in the amazing Bioshock franchise, Gears of War 1-3, Gears Ultimate, Perfect Dark Zero, Borderlands and more.

The list of games can be found here and includes big budget titles like Halo 5, Fable III, and everyone’s favorite: Farming Simulator ’15. Gold members should head on over to the store and choose the 14-day free trial option (it is a separate option from the 1-month subscription at the store page).

(Source: Major Nelson)

Path of Exile Announced For Xbox One


Xbox One owners hopeful that a console port of Path of Exile need wait no longer, as the folks at Grinding Gear Games have fulfilled your wishes. Set for launch later this year, the Xbox One version of Path of Exile will naturally contain some small changes, mostly to the way certain abilities are targeted as well as to the number of flasks that can be held. As a result, the two platforms will be segregated.

More information will be released in the coming weeks. GGG has not confirmed the possibility of Path of Exile coming to the Playstation 4.

(Source: Path of Exile)

MMOments: Star Trek Online On Xbox One


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Xbox, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the USS Aye. Its mission, to explore old worlds and relive episodes of a video game that’s kinda like episodes of a tv show. To infinity and beyond.

I’ve been taking a few days to play Star Trek Online and I love this game. Two things I have to disclose before I go forward: One, that I’ve been playing since a few days before the servers went live. Two, I have not played Star Trek Online on the PC literally since it was still a subscription game and virtually only the first three months (approximately). I will not be making comparisons to the PC version, but I may end up playing the PS4 version to see how it holds up technically. That being said, my last memories of Star Trek Online were of a game that launched as hot garbage. A bag of hot garbage that has, as many have told me, cooled off and actually fermented into some delicious kombucha.

It’s been six years since Star Trek Online originally launched, back when Atari was (allegedly) funneling money from Turbine Entertainment into Neverwinter, and I have to admit that I’ve softened up to the idea of the JJ Abrams style Star Trek Universe, one with tons of action and explosions. Star Trek Online takes place in the alternate timeline of the Star Trek Abrams movies, where the Federation and Klingon Empire have fallen into war while the Vulcan deal with the loss of their home world. As the two sides fight, adversaries like the Dominion and Borg become a greater threat. Let’s admit, the old days of the diplomatic Star Trek are mostly gone.

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The world presented in this game is grim and depressing, it hit me like a sack of bricks when I beamed onto a planet early on only to see the message “the Borg have already assimilated half of the colony.” You are not the James T. Kirk that would find a way to defeat a station of Klingon by beaming down, karate chopping their leader and bedding their women. Instead, you’re more like the James T. Kirk that would blow up the shields, beam down, and massacre everyone on board. I’m not making a political statement, just pointing out how war-torn this world is.

Gameplay is mostly split up between two modes: On foot and on ship. Ship combat is where the game gets pretty strategic, it’s a placement game where you and your opponent have four main angles of shield to wear down and eventually tear into their hull. Unfortunately you can’t pull of crazy maneuvers like in the TV show, but you do eventually gather quite an arsenal to take on enemy ships. One power, for instance, shuffles your shields while another makes your craft much more mobile for a short period of time. You have to balance out a good offense with a strong defense.

On foot, it’s all about flanking your enemy. For the most part, your six man away team can pretty much mow down anything so long as you keep them up to date on the latest guns and shields dropping into your inventory every twenty seconds. I’ve died once, maybe twice so far in ground combat and most of the time it was because of my own negligence.

For the most part, combat feels exactly how I would expect it to. You’re not on the Enterprise, a ship built mostly to deal with exploration and not necessarily combat. Your default ship is war-ready, meaning that while you can cut through small Klingon fighters like a knife through melted butter, you’re still going to have a rough time with higher tier enemies. One aspect of the original launch that I absolutely hated was the fact that you were already destroying Borg cubes en masse before the tutorial was even over. Yes, not even in the captain’s seat long enough for the replicator’s tea to cool down, and you’re already taking down the galaxy’s most deadly enemy.

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Now, the Borg cube appears and the game pretty much shouts that you have absolutely no chance of even putting a dent in this behemoth, even bringing in other Federation ships to prove it. This is ultimately what I love about Star Trek Online, every mission feels like a self-contained episode that could conceivably play on TV, all part of an overarching seasonal plot. The first season is all about the war with the Klingon, why it happened, and how you can work to stop it. The graphics are nothing to write home about, but the sounds and little details all come together to provide an experience that is quintessentially Star Trek.

The controls in Star Trek Online leave much to be desired, in that they are at least 50% worthless. On the ground, you can hold the left bumper to lock on with your weapon. This button is useless and, for the most part, doesn’t work. It either locks on to your allies, refuses to cycle between targets, or won’t lock on at all despite your enemy being right in the crosshair. The ship has the same problems, this time being activated with the right joystick. I’ve dumped use of these buttons altogether.

In addition, the interface to the game is just godawful, more than it should reasonably be. The game is highly inconsistent on whether or not prompts will display on screen or force you to hold A to interact with them, NPCs and planets require you to be in precisely the right position much of the time in order to interact with them, and menus are clunky to navigate. The game feels dated, and I feel like it’s going to put off some people who might otherwise enjoy it.

Still, Star Trek Online is in a position of better late than never coming to consoles. If you haven’t given this game a chance on PC, I highly recommend it on consoles.

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