270°

Remedy Entertainment signs a global development, license and distribution agreement with Tencent

Remedy Entertainment signs a global development, license and distribution agreement with Tencent for the co-operative multiplayer game codenamed Vanguard.

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darthv721267d ago (Edited 1267d ago )

...for the co-operative multiplayer game codenamed Vanguard.

The title alludes to something deeper but its just for one game. This deal could lead to others, but for now its just this one.

blacktiger1267d ago

Why a chinese company that is only demolishing America with a like disney and nba and many more,

TricksterArrow1267d ago

TBF, it seems that China is also demolishing Tencent (and other Chinese gaming companies). I guess being a private company going for major profits is against what the Chinese Communist Party stands for. Who'd know?

Moquiao1266d ago

The Chinese Communist Party only wants major profits to be distrubuted to themselves. Opressing the people and taking their money. It's been done since the age of man.

Vames1266d ago

@Moquiao

Not a smart comment. I am not a CCP sympathizer, but to say they are taking all the money for themselves is very short-sighted. China is one of the few communist nations on the planet populated by mostly so-called democracies. If the CCP fails to keep the population happy, then there will be cries since they do not have alternative political parties.

Bear in mind the CCP has brought hundreds of millions out of poverty and into the middle class in just 30-years. Yes, the CCP rules with an ironfist, but at the same time, they must tend to the needs of the people in order to hold on to power.

Whether we might like it or not, but the CCP has done more for its people than what American or European leaders have done for theirs. Its the sad truth, and it all comes at the expense of freedom. Democracies should be able to do better, but it's not happening. So ask yourself, who is actually taking money for themselves?

CantThinkOfAUsername1267d ago

Tencent got something every business drools over—money, loads of money.

2moda5gamer1267d ago

They just want to avoid any one company having more power than themselves, unlike the rest of the world. Tencent is unstoppable at this stage though, surely.

frostypants1267d ago (Edited 1267d ago )

Easy when you operate in a country that not only looks the other way when you steal IP, but encourages it. That's how Tencent built their brand: stealing smaller developers ideas to the point of plagiarism.

RedDevils1266d ago

They support monopoly in that shitty country.

babadivad1266d ago

@Red Devils

Not sure if you've been paying attention but they support Monopolies in the United States as well.

There are still laws on the books against them but none are enforced anymore. The corporate take over of America is complete.

No politician is elected without being in the pocket of one giant corporation or another.

+ Show (1) more replyLast reply 1266d ago
warriorcase1267d ago

Remedy are independent and work off deals for projects.
Tencent probably offered when others didn't or offered more.
Also, Remedy aren't American.

Eidolon1267d ago (Edited 1267d ago )

Cha-Ching

babadivad1265d ago

See what you did there.

-Foxtrot1267d ago

Tencent...ew

Remedy doing a multiplayer game...why

It'll probably not do that well and they'll realise their single player focused games offer more.

Snookies121267d ago

"It'll probably not do that well and they'll realise their single player focused games offer more."

Or die off because they didn't realize what people liked them for in the first place. Like some other developers who tried to cash in on things they had no business being a part of, because 'money'. It's like a moth to a flame. They should realize it kills them if they go for it, but they do anyway because it tempts them.

Profchaos1267d ago

Who knows rockstar and Bethesda were the biggest makers of string sp gamers now look at them GTA Online and fallout 76 money talks I guess

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310°

Marathon Development Update

Marathon was slated to launch on Sept. 23, 2025 across Xbox, PC, and PlayStation, but Bungie will share the new release date in the fall.

Jin_Sakai8h ago

Probably best just cancel it. The game has flop written all over it.

-Foxtrot11h ago

Yeah, you can delay it as much as you want but you ain’t gonna wash that stink off.

Killer2020UK9h ago

It will lessen though and possibly make all the difference if it launches in a state that rectified a lot of the issues people had with it. A LOT of ifs of course.

RaidenBlack7h ago

If you really gotta play ... play the better extraction shooter this year : ARC Raiders

ZeekQuattro11h ago

Delaying the inevitable. Bungie hoping the negative publicity will blow over. 🙄

darthv7210h ago

They can't cancel it until a themed controller has been released first... like concord.

ZeekQuattro7h ago

I anxiously wait for that and a Marathon Secret Level episode.

GamingManiac3h ago

$10 says it'll have the stolen artwork on it lolol

dveio10h ago

If they were absolutely certain about the quality of Marathon, then they had not delayed it just now.

So they've basically just confirmed what everyone, well, a lot of people saw: Marathon is not ready yet, still no soul to be seen.

Tacoboto9h ago

"Doubling down on the Marathon Universe"

They're doubling down on soul, thank goodness this feedback illuminated that for them...

RaidenBlack7h ago

and N4G was littered with comments like : Marathon looks really good, maybe you're a hater and the likes blah blah ... especially under articles which compared it with Arc Raiders ....

9h ago
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80°

Inside the ‘Dragon Age’ Debacle That Gutted EA’s BioWare Studio

The latest game in BioWare’s fantasy role-playing series went through ten years of development turmoil

In early November, on the eve of the crucial holiday shopping season, staffers at the video-game studio BioWare were feeling optimistic. After an excruciating development cycle, they had finally released their latest game, Dragon Age: The Veilguard, and the early reception was largely positive. The role-playing game was topping sales charts on Steam, and solid, if not spectacular, reviews were rolling in.

HyperMoused5d ago

Its easy they called the die hard fans people in their nerd caves who will buy anything and then went woke to reach modern audiences....insulting the nerds in their caves along the way showing utter contempt for their fan base. very hapy it failed and any company who insults their fan base and treat their customers with contempt and insults, in future, i also hope fail.

neutralgamer19925d ago

It’s disappointing but not surprising to see what's happening with Dragon Age: The Veilguard and the broader situation at BioWare. The layoffs are tragic — no one wants to see talented developers lose their jobs. But when studios repeatedly create games that alienate their own fanbase, outcomes like this become unfortunately predictable.

There’s a pattern we’re seeing far too often: beloved franchises are revived, only to be reshaped into something almost unrecognizable. Changes are made that no one asked for, often at the expense of what originally made these games special. Then, when long-time fans express concern or lose interest, they’re told, “This game might not be for you.” But when those same fans heed that advice and don’t buy the game, suddenly they're labeled as toxic, sexist, bigoted, or worse.

Let’s be clear: the overwhelming majority of gamers have no issue with diversity, LGBTQ+ representation, or strong female leads. In fact, some of the most iconic characters in gaming — like Aloy, Ellie, or FemShep — are proof that inclusivity and excellent storytelling can and do go hand in hand. The issue arises when diversity feels performative, forced, or disconnected from the narrative — when characters or themes are inserted not to serve the story, but to satisfy a corporate DEI checklist. Audiences can tell the difference.

When studios chase approval from a vocal minority that often doesn’t even buy games — while simultaneously dismissing loyal fans who actually do — they risk not just the success of individual titles, but the health of their entire studio. Telling your core customers “don’t buy it if you don’t like it” is not a viable business strategy. Because guess what? Many of us won’t. And when the game fails commercially, blaming those very fans for not supporting it is both unfair and self-defeating.

Gamers aren’t asking for less diversity or less progress. We’re asking for better writing, thoughtful character development, and a respect for the franchises we’ve supported for decades. When you give people great games that speak to them — whether they’re old fans or new players — they will show up. But if you keep making games for people who don’t play them, don’t be surprised when those who do stop showing up

Armaggedon4d ago

I thought the writing and character development were fine. Sometimes things just dont resonate with people.

90°

Report: Just Cause 5 Was in Development at Sumo Digital, But Got Cancelled

Recent evidence we discovered indicates that the next game in the Just Cause series may have been canceled, potentially two years ago.

RaidenBlack7d ago

NOooooooooooooooooooooo....... ..............

mkis0076d ago

Well if it went back to being more like 3 I would have liked it. 4 was crap.