General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


Newegg Daily Deals: Windows 10 Pro 64-Bit, Toshiba 2TB HDD, and More!

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 10:27 AM PST

Windows 10 Pro Newegg

Top Deal:

If you're sitting on a Windows 7 or Windows 8/8.1 license, congrats, your path to Windows 10 is free. For everyone else, you have to pay to play, but why pay full price? You don't have to if you take advantage of today's top deal -- it's for Windows 10 Pro 64-Bit (OEM) for $120 with $3 shipping (normally $140 - use coupon code: [EMCKNNK22]). It includes everything found in the Home version, plus extras like Domain Join, device encryption, remote desktop, and a few other tidbits.

Other Deals:

LG 21.5-inch 5ms HDMI Widescreen LED Backlight LCD Monitor IPS for $100 with free shipping (normally $130)

Lenovo Laptop Intel Core i7 6500U (2.50 GHz) 8 GB Memory 1 TB HDD AMD Radeon R7 M360 15.6-inch FHD IPS Win 10 for $700 with free shipping (normally $720)

Toshiba 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5-inch Desktop Internal Hard Drive for $65 with free shipping (normally $75 - use coupon code: [ESCKNNK26])

MSI GeForce GTX 960 4GB 128-Bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 HDCP Ready SLI Support ATX Video Card for $200 with free shipping (normally $230; additional $20 Mail-in rebate; Free Heroes of the Storm Kaijo Diablo Bundle w/ purchase, limited offer)

Valve Hit with Lawsuit Demanding Right to Resell Steam Games

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 10:18 AM PST

Who owns the game?

Steam Controller

French consumer group UFC-Que Choisir has filed a lawsuit against Valve demanding that it alter its policy to allow for the resale and transfer of PC games on Steam, the company's digital platform.

The ban on the resale of games through Steam is one of a dozen clauses the association says is unfair and illegal, though it's the biggest and perhaps most controversial one.

According to a translated version of UFC-Que Choisir's announcement, the transfer and resale of legally acquired games on Steam is a matter of "common sense." Just as users can legally sell a purchased game on CD or DVD, they should be able to do the same in digital form, the group argues.

"This gap between the physical and digital world is incomprehensible," the group argues. Valve's policy is also made "all the more surprising [since] no court decision prohibits the resale on the second hand market games bought online and that the European Court has even explicitly stated the principle to the possible resale of software that, remember, are an integral part of a video game."

The group is referencing a 2012 decision from the European Court of Justice involving Oracle. In that case, a judge ruled that reselling software on disc was no different than reselling a digitally distributed version.

"From an economic point of view, the sale of a computer program on CD-ROM or DVD and the sale of a program by downloading from the Internet are similar," the judge said. "The on-line transmission method is the functional equivalent of the supply of a material medium."

Nevertheless, Valve was able to successfully defend its practice of prohibiting game resales and transfers when a German group sued the company in 2014.

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Microsoft's Drops Ban Hammer on Man-in-the-Middle Adware

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 09:49 AM PST

Rule changes

Microsoft Sign

Microsoft has put the word out to developers that ad injection software that uses any of a variety of man-in-the-middle (MiTM) techniques -- injection by proxy, changing DNS settings, network layer manipulation, and so forth -- will run afoul of its updated adware rules.

"We're updating our Adware objective criteria to require that programs that create advertisements in browsers must only use the browsers' supported extensibility model for installation, execution, disabling, and removal," Microsoft stated in a blog post. "The choice and control belong to the users, and we are determined to protect that."

Microsoft has other concerns that extend beyond ensuring users have full choice and control over their browsing experience. Namely, Microsoft points out that MiTM techniques pose potential security risks to customers by introducing another vector of attack. A real-world example is malvertising, which is when a hacker distributes malicious code onto a system through compromised ads and webpages.

"Also, many of these methods also alter advanced settings and controls that the majority of users will not be able to discover, change, or control," Microsoft added.

The new rules are likely a reaction to recent incidents like Lenovo's Superfish fiasco, which involved PCs pre-loaded with adware. Programs like Superfish use a root certificate to serve up sponsored content, but they also leave users vulnerable to MiTM attacks and eavesdropping.

Effective March 31, 2016, programs that act in a similar manner will be considered malware by Microsoft. The new requirement to use a browser's "supported extensibility model" basically means that future iterations must come in the form of add-ons, which would make it much easier for users to detect and, if desired, disable/uninstall.

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Aqua Computer Now Sells a Spacer for Delidded Intel Skylake CPUs

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 09:09 AM PST

It's a shim, not a sham

Skylake Spacer

Aqua Computer, a German PC parts vendor, is doing Skylake CPU owners a solid by offering a relatively low cost spacer to help with the installation of heavy heat sinks.

It's essentially a shim, not unlike the ones that were popular for AMD CPUs back in the day (as in, 10+ years ago), though only extreme overclockers need apply. The €6.99 (~$7.66 in U.S. currency) spacer is intended for Skylake CPUs that have had their integrated heatspreaders (IHS) removed.

"For increased cooling performance, there is a trend to remove the heatspreader from Intel Skylake CPUs. This has some negative effects on the secure installation of the CPUs," Aqua Computers explains. "One related problem is that the brittle silicon die is not protected against tilted mounting of the CPU cooler - due to this fact edges of the die can easily be broken. The same can happen during transportation of the system."

As was recently discovered, Intel is using a thinner substrate for its Skylake processors compared to previous generation CPUs like Haswell. According to Intel, they're still rated for 50 pounds of static pressure for mounting coolers, same as Haswell, but there have been reports of bent Skylake chips when installing certain coolers. We saw this firsthand.

The spacer offered by Aqua Computers isn't a solution for unaltered Skylake CPUs, but if you're planning to pry the IHS off, say, a $420 Core i7-6700K, a cheap spacer is definitely worth consideration (credit goes to Legit Reviews for stumbling upon this).

Aqua Computers says its spacer is CNC laser machined from stainless spring steel sheets. They're then sanded down, the final result of which is a shim that's about 1/100mm lower than the CPU die.

If it's something you can use, you can order one here.

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Samsung Gear VR Review

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 12:00 AM PST

At a glance

Gear VR (+) A lot of varied content; social VR adds a sense of presence; resolution is surprisingly good; only $100!
Fear VR (-) Overheats and drain's phone's battery life; some motion sickness present depending on experience; can get heavy and cause eye strain after a while

Competent virtual reality on the go

We've been dreaming about virtual reality for years, but up until now, those dreams have been pretty well disappointed. While we'll have to wait a bit for the release of the crème de la crème of modern VR —Oculus Rift and HTC Vive—you can get a good taste of it now with Samsung's Gear VR.

Made in partnership with Oculus VR, the Gear VR is essentially a headset attachment for modern Samsung phones, with support for the Note 5 and S6 series devices. We tested ours with Samsung's Edge 6 Edge, which is one of the lighter options. It's also a pretty good phone for VR with its 557 PPI screen. While the headset is made mostly of plastic, inside are optics that magnify and refocus your eyes on your phone's screen. The phone locks into place via a Micro USB connector, and there's some foam padding surrounding the face plate. The Gear VR also has an IPD adjuster, to accommodate for varying pupil distances (everyone's is different), and a volume rocker. You secure the headset via a horizontal strap that wraps around the back of your head, and there's an optional strap that goes straight down the top-middle of your head. Once you lock your phone in place, it automatically engages VR mode and you can navigate menus using the headset's physical back button and 4-way directional touchpad on the right. But perhaps the niftiest feature of the Gear VR is that it retails for $100, which is a steal if you have a compatible Samsung phone.

If you have a compatible Samsung phone, you have to get this.
If you have a compatible Samsung phone, you have to get this.

What does the Gear VR feel like? Inside the headset, you have access to roughly an 80–90 degree field of view, which seems a little more narrow in comparison to the Oculus Rift, by about 10 degrees or so. Within this view, you can look around with the help of the headset's accelerometer and gyroscope. Tracking is pretty much 1:1. When VR experiences are done well, the headset is able to trick your brain into believing that your body is somewhere it is not. Of course, the experience isn't perfect. With the S6 Edge's 1440x2560-resolution screen, the "screen door effect" wasn't bad, but you can still make out some of the pixels if you try. Also, sometimes the headset will be disoriented and will get out of whack. The view will go off axis, but by holding down the back button, you can bring up the menu to reorient the screen to the direction that you're looking. This whole process can take a few up seconds with loading times, so we would have appreciated a one-touch button that did this more quickly. We also wish there was a separate button for the headset's Passthrough Mode, which is a mode that enables you to see the real-life environment around you using the phone's camera. As implemented now, it's much faster to simply lift up the headset to look at your surroundings than to go through the menus to enable it.

We were pleasantly surprised by how many apps there were at launch. There's a wide variety of content, ranging from games to movies and beyond, and there's tons of free content. While most games are compatible with the headset's simple swipe gestures, you can also pair a Bluetooth controller to the device. In terms of games, most of them have you using your head to look at targets in a shooting gallery. This can quickly start to feel shallow and tiring. Because Gear VR is running on Android, it inherits the platform's cheap quality games. And because it's running off a phone, don't expect Crysis-level graphics. There are some fun VR games at the moment, however. Land's End makes you feel like you're a floating wizard in a fantastical land trying to solve puzzles. In Omega Agent, you feel like you're floating through a city using a jetpack. Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes is a great asymmetrically designed game in which one player wearing the Gear VR has to defuse a bomb while other players have to flip through a manual to help them figure out how to do it. There's also an arcade app that, as the name implies, throws you into a virtual arcade and allows you to play old-school games from Sega, Midway, and Bandai Namco. 

Even if you aren't interested in games, the Gear VR has a bunch of other experiences to sift through. There are a ton of 360-degree photos from all around the globe to view, a healthy dose of 360-degree videos to watch (including all the 360 videos on Youtube), and you can even watch 2D movies in a 3D environment. There's essentially a movie theater app that allows you to watch any movie you have on your phone in various three-dimensionally fleshed-out environments that include the aforementioned movie theater; you can even watch movies on the moon. Netflix also has a VR app that allows you to watch your favorite content in a virtual cozy cabin. It seems kind of silly to watch Netflix this way, but it works surprisingly well. Virtual tourism is another big component of Gear VR and there's a healthy amount of 360-degree videos to watch that take you scuba diving with sharks or ringside at a fight. You can also watch Paul McCartney perform live in 360 degrees, or check out a futuristic-themed Muse music video that allows you to see something new every time you view it. Surprisingly enough, perhaps the most compelling aspect of Gear VR is the social app. Here, you choose an avatar and can sit in a virtual theater and watch live Twitch streams or online videos with strangers from across the globe. We virtually met people from Australia and Europe and legitimately felt like we were in the same room with them. Because Gear VR has a gyroscope, it can also track head movements, and coupled with the directional audio, it really feels like you're looking at someone and talking with them. There is a certain sense of "presence" there, and it's pretty trippy.

VR can take you to virtual worlds...
VR can take you to virtual worlds...

That's not to say that the Gear VR is without flaws, however. The biggest issue here is motion sickness. It's better than the Oculus Rift development kit 2, but if the experience isn't well optimized, chances are you're going to get a little dizzy and/or motion sick. Your mileage will vary, of course. We suspect that its 60Hz refresh rate has something to do with it, as Oculus has stated in the past that 90Hz and above is what's comfortable for most people. We also suspect that a lack of a positional camera doesn't help, since the headset doesn't accommodate for when you lean in or around objects. In our experience, dizziness occurs when your eyes don't line up with what your brain expects to see. Gear VR does try to mitigate this issue by providing comfortability ratings for each app. Another gripe we had with Gear VR is that it quickly drains the phone's battery and tends to overheat the device. There were times when games would judder or crash as a result. While you can't really mitigate the heat issue, you can charge the device while using it. Another obstacle that Gear VR faces is that many VR apps take up a lot of space, so your phone can quickly fill up with VR programs. Some 360-degree videos try to deal with this by using compression, but the end results are generally blurry. The screen also tended to fog up when we had it on a little too tight, and we encountered several audio incompatibilities using a Bluetooth headset. To top it off, the Gear VR can cause some eye strain and be a bit heavy after extended use, even though the headset itself only weighs .62 pounds. Add to that the weight of the phone coupled with experiences that force you to constantly look up, and it can cause fatigue.

Despite these problems, however, if you have a capable Samsung phone, getting the Gear VR is a no-brainer at $100. There's a decent amount of content already and we're confident it will only continue to increase. The big question is whether people who are currently content with their non-Samsung smartphones should jump aboard. Unless you're a die-hard VR enthusiast, we'd suggest holding off until gen two. Hopefully by then it will have a faster refresh rate, wider FOV, and perhaps some integrated speakers. This additional time will also allow the Oculus store to make some UI improvements and bolster its library. If you have a compatible phone and are at all interested in VR, though, gear up for a good time!

MMORPG News

MMORPG News


Fallout 4: From Left Field - 'Addiction' Cited in New Lawsuit

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 07:27 AM PST

Russian Times is reporting that a Fallout 4 player is suing Bethesda for ~$7,000 USD and claims that he did not "know the game would become so addictive". According to the news story, the Siberian man lost his job, wife and many friends as he cites in legal documents associated with the claim.

TERA: Takin' to the High Seas in the Dreadnaught Survival Video

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 07:20 AM PST

A pair of new dungeons have landed in the game that came as part of last week's TERA update focused on the new Brawler class. In a brand new video, En Masse Entertainment gives players a few tips about surviving the Dreadnaught dungeon.

Xsyon: Prelude: Subscription Drops as New B2P Option Goes Live

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 07:17 AM PST

Xsyon is officially now a 'buy to play' game with the drop of the monthly subscription as the primary revenue model. Players can now pick up a copy of the game for $29.99 and play forever on Steam.

Albion Online: Festive Activities Land in Game

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 07:13 AM PST

Albion Online players are definitely in the holiday spirit with the arrival of Christmas in the game. Players can look forward to seeing Christmas decorations in town, tossing snowballs at folks, or go on a hunt for Uncle Frost. Hint: He can be found in the Keeper dungeons and rewards a hat for successfully taking him down.

TERA: After Korean Version Loses Publisher, Nexon Steps In

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 07:06 AM PST

Several months ago, Hangame, publisher of TERA in Korea, announced that it would stop operations on all MMOs as it moved all game publication efforts to mobile games. As a result of the announcement, TERA in Korea was left without a publisher. Yesterday, developer Bluehole Studios announced that Nexon would be taking over publication duties beginning in January, an announcement that comes with a few prizes for players.

Crowfall: The Artcraft School of Integrity

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 02:22 PM PST

Red Thomas took a recent trip to Austin and spoke with Art Craft Entertainment top men Gordon Walton and Todd Coleman about their game Crowfall. Testing is underway, and Red had questions about what's next for the team.

General: The Daily Quest - What Do You Want for MMO Christmas?

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 09:08 PM PST

As we all prepare to take the weekend off (don't worry, we have loads of features prepped through Friday), it's time for a little exercise in wishful thinking. If you could have any one thing in the MMO world, from a new game to an old game, or anything in between, what would it be?

ELOA: Elite Lord of Alliance: First Expansion, 'Part 1', Released

Posted: 22 Dec 2015 03:26 AM PST

Fans of Webzen's ELOA (Elite Lord of Alliance) will be happy to know that the first content expansion, interestingly named only "Part 1", has been released. Part 1 features an increased level cap, new areas and quests as well as a new dungeon called the Spider Cave.

Skyforge: Gift Key Giveaway!

Posted: 20 Dec 2015 05:57 PM PST

MMORPG.com has been given special gift keys for Skyforge, the sci-fi action MMORPG from My.com. These keys will give you 7 days premium, 10,000 threads, 10,000 credits and 7 days of Gravicycle usage! Get your key now while they last!

Pathfinder Online: Year-End Chat to Focus on Timeline & Investment News

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 03:53 PM PST

It has been a few months since we heard anything from Goblinworks regarding Pathfinder Online. The good news is that Pathfinder Online devs will be hosting a player chat on Tuesday, December 29th at 5:00 pm Pacific / 8:00 pm Eastern. The focus of the chat is to update players on the latest news regarding investment opportunities for the troubled project, a timeline for updates and other topics of interest to players.

World of Warcraft: What We've Learned About Legion So Far

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 04:21 AM PST

With the World of Warcraft: Legion alpha on hiatus until sometime in early 2016, it gives us a breather in order to assess the things we learned during the first part of testing. While much is known thanks to data-miners, it's often the experiential knowledge that is the most compelling and worthy of contemplation.

Lineage 2: EU Classic Server Launch Coming December 22nd

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 11:34 AM PST

Fans of hardcore Lineage II action will want to check out tomorrow's launch of the EU server. The launch on Tuesday will be for those players owning a founder's pack that comes with either 1- or 3-months of subscription time as well as other in-game perks. The L2 EU Classic server will open for everyone on December 29th.

Lord of the Rings Online: Pushing Forward to the Black Gates in 2016

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 11:27 AM PST

The latest 'roadmap' for Lord of the Rings Online that gives players a brief look ahead at what 2016 will bring to the game. Among other things, players can look forward to quality of life improvements, more Fellowship Challenges including, devs wrote, a 12-player raid, a level cap increase to 105 and new collections with an improved UI specifically for that purpose.

General: A Movie Came Out

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 12:57 AM PST

Sometimes I like to write about something that has little or nothing to do with videogames, and then explain why actually it's just like videogames. Sometimes I link a topic directly to a feature of MMOs, if I'm feeling especially smart.

Gigantic: Community Reddit Tackles Concerns & More

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 09:04 AM PST

The Gigantic team took to Reddit last week to answer community questions about the recent revelations of company layoffs and the delay of the game. Questions ranged from whether or not the presence of an NDA hurt Gigantic's visibility to new gameplay modes to a content release timeline.

Pillars of Eternity: The Road to Eternity Documentary Released

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 08:33 AM PST

Obsidian Entertainment and Paradox Interactive have released a new video documentary that details the development of Pillars of Eternity. The film features behind-the-scenes information about one of the year's most highly regarded RPGs. See what you think!

Life is Feudal: Catching Up with the Team - Insights Into Development

Posted: 19 Dec 2015 04:24 PM PST

We caught up with the Life is Feudal team to talk about the state of the game, where it's been and where it's headed as we steam into 2016. Find out what's in the works in our exclusive interview.

General: Tales of Berseria Headed to the Americas

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 07:38 AM PST

Namco-Bandai has announced that JRPG title, Tales of Berseria, will be headed to the Americas. The game will be made available for both the PlayStation 4 and PC via Steam.

General: God Eater Series Headed to the Americas

Posted: 21 Dec 2015 07:31 AM PST

Namco-Bandai has announced that it will be bringing its popular God Eater series to the Americas. Both God Eater Resurrection and God Eater 2 Rage Burst will be made available for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita and PC in the summer of 2016.

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