Tuesday, 28 February 2017

Overwatch – what each item on Efi Oladele’s list could tell us about the identity of the next hero

Whatever’s the name of Efi Oladele’s next creation in Overwatch, we may have actually seen it before.

A new Overwatch rumours and speculation wave has kicked up recently after Doomfist’s gauntlet was stolen from the game’s Numbani map.

One day later, Efi Oladele, who Blizzard confirmed will play a part in the story of whoever the next hero is, wrote a a shopping list of sorts.

The list referenced some parts, supposedly being used to build the next hero. In Arekkz‘s video above, he rounds up all the known details so far in one video and goes on to extrapolate as to the next hero’s identity.

His theory is certainly interesting, and seems to line up with the information we have to a decent degree. That said, until Blizzard reveals more, we may be looking in the wrong place again. Blizzard certainly has lead us astray before with similar teases.


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Pokemon Go: how to choose your Eevee evolution – Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon or Umbreon

Pokemon Go players can evolve their Eevee into one of five creatures of their choosing using a particular nickname for each. Here’s how to do it with ease.

Pokemon Go players can force a captured Eeevee to evolve into one of five forms: Jolteon, Vaporeon and Flareon, and as of the big Gen 2 Pokemon Go update, Espeon and Umbreon, too.

It’s really easy to do, too. Firstly, if you feed an Eevee 25 Eevee Candy it will turn into one of the five Pokemon at random. But if you want to have more control over it you need to do the following. Catch yourself an Eevee in Pokemon Go – preferably five of them so you can get them all – and give each one a different nickname.

Here’s how to force each of the five Eevee evolutions:

  • Jolteon – evolve into lightning type by giving it the nickname Sparky
  • Vaporeon – give the nickname Rainer to evolve into a water type pokemon
  • Flareon – give the nickname Pyro to evolve it into a fire type
  • Espeon – evolve it into a psychic type by giving the nickname Sakura
  • Umbreon – give the nickname Tamao to create a dark type pokemon

Once you’ve done this you should quit out of the the app and reload it to make sure the change has saved. Pokemon Go’s servers are notoriously dodgy, so always double check big changes like this.

A few of these nicknames should sound familiar to Pokemon fans: the Eevee Brothers in the original anime were named Sparky, Rainer and Pyro. Naming your Eevee after one of these brothers causes it to evolve into their Eevee of choice. It’s said that this will only work for your first Eevee, but if that’s the case or not isn’t entirely clear. Either way, it’s a great trick for levelling up.

Need more Pokemon Go help?

You can see the Pokemon Go Gen 1 Eevee changes in action in the YouTube video above from skinzfan602, and the Gen 2 Eevee evolutions in the tweet below from Allissa.

Pokemon Go launched in July 2016 and immediately became one of the most successful apps of all time. The February 2017 Gen 2 update, which added two new Eevee evolutions among 80 Gen 2 Pokemon, is the first major roster expansion since day one.


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You can pay up to $300 for Middle-earth: Shadow of War – all the different editions and how much they cost

Are you willing to spend more than $60 on Middle-earth: Shadow of War? If the answer is yes, you’ll have three options to choose from.

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Along with the big reveal trailer for Middle-earth: Shadow of War which dropped yesterday, Warner Bros. also announced the different editions of the game that’ll be available at launch.

To start with, if you’re okay with with being very lavish here, you can spend $300/£200 on the game’s collector’s edition. Called Mithril Edition, this expensive item is available only through GameStop in the US and Amazon UK in the UK.

The Mithril Edition comes with a copy of the game’s gold edition (which we’ll outline below), a premium case with a magnetic Ring of Power, an exclusive Mithril War Chest, the official soundtrack on disc, a cloth map of Mordor, a collection of exclusive Lithographs, and a tribes sticker pack.

The main event here is a limited edition, 12″ Tar-Goroth Balrog vs. Carnan Drake statue.

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Moving on to more sensibly-priced options, we have the silver and gold editions. The silver edition includes these bonuses: Slaughter Tribe Nemesis Expansion, Outlaw Tribe Nemesis Expansion, and a Silver War Chest. This one is priced $80/£60.

Then there’s the more expensive gold edition which includes everything in the silver edition along with: The Blade of Galadriel story expansion, The Desolation of Mordor story expansion, and a Gold War Chest. This one will run you $100, £80.

It’s not clear what exactly is a War Chest, but we’re betting it unlocks some sort of in-game loot – though perhaps of a higher quality than what you’ll find out in the world.

As for Nemesis Expansions, these will each include “a new Orc tribe with new enemies, followers, missions, abilities, weapons, Fortress and wilderness updates, and a Mythic gear set.” Story expansions, on the other hand, introduce a new campaign, new playable characters and abilities, side missions, enemies, and allies.

All editions include a copy of the game, of course, but there’s also pre-order bonuses you can get by pre-purchasing any of them. These are the Legendary Champions War Party DLC, and the epic Sword of Dominion.

Middle-earth: Shadow of War is out August 22 on PC, PS4, and Xbox One.


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For Honor: Elimination and Skirmish multiplayer modes now have their own separate playlists

You’ll no longer how have to queue up for Elimination and Skirmish together in For Honor.

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For Honor has five multiplayer modes, but it does not offer five separate playlists. For this reason, you’ll find that certain game modes are grouped together.

You have the option to set a preference within each playlist before matchmaking starts, but that does not guarantee you’ll be thrown into a game playing the mode you like. At least for two of these modes, Elimination and Skirmish, developer Ubisoft Montreal is giving each their own playlist.

In a server-side update, the Deathmatch playlist was broken into two, one for Elimination and another for Skirmish. Although the modes are similar in that both offer deathmatch-style fights, Elimination does not allow you to respawn. Some argued this difference is big enough that players who like one may not like the other.

There’s also the fact that the map voting screen didn’t always highlight which of the two modes you were voting for.

The playlist breakout was a response to these complaints. Community manager Eric Pope said that thanks to the game’s healthy player numbers, this change was easy to make. However, things may not remain this way forever.

For Honor received a balance patch this week that introduced the first round of buffs and nerfs, and a brought back the beta’s Guardbreak system.


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How to find the Dark Souls Easter egg in Battlefield 1’s Rupture map

A Dark Souls-style bonfire await those who venture out of bounds in Battlefield 1.

Much of the content in Battlefield 1‘s upcoming expansion, They Shall Not Pass, is currently available in the game’s CTE for participants to test.

It’s thanks to this update that we got our first look at the new maps, a few of the weapons, and more. But there are actually a couple of hidden Easter eggs in there too for those perceptive few among us.

In the video above, Westie shows you how to get to the Dark Souls Easter egg on the map Rupture. There’s a sword stuck in a Dark Souls-style bonfire that you can pick up and use in the level.

The sword is located just past the out of bounds line near the C point on Conquest. If you pull it out, you can use it as a melee weapon and it stays with you until you die. Only one of these can be active at a time.

The sword functions the same way you expect the Cavalry sword would: a competent melee weapon. Sadly, it looks more like some of the swords available in Battlefield 1 than the ones you’ll find in Dark Souls.

Of course, there’s a chance the sword’s location will change come launch. The rest of the video features gameplay using the new Lebel 1886 rifle and Mle 1903 pistol.

This is not the first Easter egg the community managed to find in They Shall Not Pass maps, either. Most recently, what sounded like zombie growls were heard from behind a particular door on the map Fort de Vaux.


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Middle-earth: Shadow of War PC system requirements released, see them here

Way ahead of time, you can find out if your PC is ready for the war to come in Middle-earth: Shadow of War.

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The Middle-earth: Shadow of War official announcement yesterday may not have caught many off guard, but the the amount of details in the release certainly has.

We already have a release date, we’re getting a gameplay reveal next week, and now, we have the game’s minimum and recommended PC specs. The lists were published on the official Steam page alongside the reveal trailer.

You can find all the requirements below:

Minimum

  • OS: Windows 7 SP1 with Platform Update for Windows 7
  • Processor: Intel i5-2550K 3.4 GHz
  • Memory: 8GB RAM
  • Graphics: GeForce GTX 670, Radeon HD 7950
  • DirectX: Version 11
  • Network: Broadband Internet connection
  • Storage: 60GB available space

Recommended

  • OS: Windows 10 version 14393.102 or higher required
  • Processor: Intel Core i7-3770 3.4 GHz
  • Memory: 16GB RAM
  • Graphics: GeForce GTX 970, GeForce GTX 1060, Radeon R9 290X, or Radeon RX 480
  • DirectX: Version 11
  • Storage: 60GB available space

Middle-earth: Shadow of War is out August 22 on PC, PS4, and Xbox One.


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Horizon Zero Dawn guide: all quests, where to initiate them and how to get the best ending

Horizon Zero Dawn has plenty of content. Make sure you see and do everything before you initiate endgame. Spoilers, obviously.

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Horizon Zero Dawn has tens of hours of main quests, side quests and open world content to explore.

On this guide page, we’ll go over the flow of Horizon Zero Dawn’s critical path of main story quests, discuss the points of no return, get a bit spoiler-y talking about what you need to do before the game’s ending for best results, tell you where to kick off each side quest and errand we’ve found so far, go over weapon tutorial quests, and list the open world content you’ll find as you explore.

Obviously, this will include some Horizon Zero Dawn spoilers in terms of quest names, but we’ll be careful not to mention any story details as we go.

Horizon Zero Dawn: critical path main story quests

Below you’ll find are the quests listed as main story missions in Horizon Zero Dawn’s menu. Occasionally you’ll have more than one main quest available, and although you’ll notice that some of the main quests are of a much higher level than others, you can tackle them in whatever order seems best to you – up until the point of no return cut-offs, anyway. More on that shortly.

  • A Gift From The Past
  • Lessons of the Wild
  • The Point Of The Spear
  • Mother’s Heart
  • The Proving
  • The Womb of the Mountain
  • A Seeker at the Gates
  • The War-Chief’s Trail
  • Revenge of the Nora
  • The City of the Sun
  • The Field of the Fallen
  • Into The Borderlands
  • Maker’s End
  • The Grave-Hoard
  • The Sun Shall Fall
  • To Curse the Darkness
  • Deep Secrets of the Earth
  • The Terror of the Sun
  • The Heart of the Nora
  • The Mountain That Fell
  • The Looming Shadow
  • The Face of Extinction

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How to get the best ending and All Allies Joined trophy in Horizon Zero Dawn

Horizon Zero Dawn doesn’t really have multiple endings but if you complete all the major sidequests before completing the final mission, you’ll get a stack of extra dialogue and even a trophy – All Allies Joined.

Additionally, there are several dialogue scenes triggered along the critical path, and even at the end of certain sidequests, that vary considerably depending on what side quests you’ve completed up until that point.

That’s about all we can tell you without ruining things story-wise, but basically: it’s in your best interest to do every sidequest as soon as you can before progressing further down the critical path. The final point of no return occurs during the mission The Looming Shadow: do not proceed with this quest until you’re sure you’ve done everything you can.

When you have done everything you can do at this point, reap your reward by visiting the two optional objective sites listed in The Looming Shadow’s quest log. With that done, make a backup save just in case, and allow Aloy to go to bed. When you do so, the quest ends and you should receive your All Allies Joined trophy.

Here are the quests and side quests that seem to effect dialogue during The Looming Shadow and your chances of getting the trophy:

  • The War-Chief’s Trail and Revenge of the Nora (main quests)
  • The Field of the Fallen, Into the Borderlands and The Sun Shall Fall (main quests)
  • A Moment’s Peace (side quest)
  • Traitor’s Bounty and Queen’s Gambit (side quests)
  • Hunting for the Lodge (errand)
  • Hunter’s Blind, Deadliest Game and Redmaw (side quests)
  • Heap of Trouble (side quest)
  • Sun and Shadow (side quest)

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All Horizon Zero Dawn side quests and errands, and where to find them

Below you’ll find a list of every side quest and errand we found in Horizon Zero Dawn. We’ve grouped them by general region, and put them in the order you’ll likely explore the map in.

Mother’s Embrace

All of these quests can be found in Horizon Zero Dawn’s starting zone, before Aloy has access to the whole map.

  • Side quests
  • The Forgotten
    On the main road south towards Mother’s Watch, look for a tall rock spire. Speak to the woman at the top.
  • In Her Mother’s Footsteps
    North east of Mother’s Watch, along the riverbank, you’ll find an injured man who gives this quest.
  • Errands
  • Odd Grata
    Ask Rost “Anything else?” at the beginning of the adult Aloy sequence in the prologue, or encounter Grata at her camp high in the mountains to the west of your starting point.

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The Sacred Lands

All of these quests can be activated before leaving the Nora hunting grounds and crossing into Carja lands at Daytower.

  • Side quests
  • Insult to Injury
    Speak to Fia in Mother’s Rise, a settlement found along the mountains forming the border between Mother’s Embrace and the wider Sacred Lands.
  • A Daughter’s Vengeance
    Speak to the worried young man in Mother’s Rise.
  • Ancient Armory
    Explore the Bunker ruins east of Mother’s Rise.
  • A Moment’s Peace
    Speak to Tikuk in the Banuk Encampment at the far north east of the Sacred Lands.
  • Underequipped
    Speak to the worried trader at Hunter’s Gathering, a settlement in the north west of the Sacred Lands, close to the border with Carja.
  • Errands
  • Hunting for the Lodge
    Speak to a Keeper at any of the Hunting Grounds arenas.
  • Sanctuary
    Speak to Den in Mother’s Rise.
  • Shortage of Supplies
    Speak to Sona in Mother’s Crown. Must have completed The War-Chief’s Trail and Revenge of the Nora.
  • Luck of the Hunt
    Speak to Taim in Mother’s Crown.
  • To Old Acquaintance
    Speak to Gera at Hunter’s Gathering.
  • Traitor’s Bounty
    Unlocked during a cutscene on the critical path.
  • Queen’s Gambit
    Unlocked upon completion of Traitor’s Bounty.

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Meridian

All of these quests can be found in or near Meridian, or are intimately tied to it.

  • Side quests
  • Robbing the Rich
    Speak to the noble loudly decrying a robbery near the main market area.
  • Honor the Fallen
    Speak to Mournfall Namman in the circular area on the upper level of the city.
  • Fatal Inheritence
    Speak to Ranaman in Meridian Village, a settlement just south east of the city itself.
  • Hunter’s Blind
    Speak to Talanah in the Hunters Lodge. Must have completed the errand Hunting for the Lodge.
  • Deadliest Game
    Speak to Talanah in the Hunters Lodge. Must have completed Hunter’s Blind.
  • Redmaw
    Speak to Talanah in the Hunters Lodge. Must have completed Deadliest Game.
  • Errands
  • Demand and Supply
    Look for two squabbling merchants on the outer edge of Meridian, towards Meridian Village.

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Carja Territories

These quests are available as Aloy roams the wider map beyond the Sacred Lands. Quests found in Meridian and nearby hubs are not included here.

  • Side quests
  • Heap of Trouble
    Speak to Petra at Free Heap, a settlement to the north east of Carja territories, close to the border with the Sacred Lands.
  • Hammer and Steel
    Speak to Kaeluf at Free Heap.
  • Death from the Skies
    Find a man wounded on the roads west of Free Heap.
  • Blood on Stone
    Speak to the quarry foreman at Cut Cliffs, a settlement north east of Meridian.
  • Sun and Shadow
    Speak to Lahavis at Brightmarket, a settlement northwest of Meridian.
  • Sunstone Rock
    Approach Sunstone Rock, a settlement far to the southwest of Meridian.
  • Cause for Concern
    Unlocked after completing all Bandit Camps if you’ve met Nil on your journeys.
  • Errands
  • In Foreign Lands
    Speak to Balahn at Daytower.
  • Collateral
    Unlocked during The City of the Sun during conversation with Olin.
  • Sun’s Judgment
    Speak to the grumbling stall owner in Brightmarket.
  • A cCrious Proposal
    Speak to Fernund in Brightmarket.
  • Healer’s Oath
    Speak to Abas outside Sunfall.

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All Horizon Zero Dawn weapon tutorial missions and how to beat them

Every time you acquire a new weapon in Horizon Zero Dawn, you unlock a short tutorial quest. These offer pretty decent XP for not very much work, but be aware you have to manually select them in your quest journal for your actions to count as progress.

  • Sharpshot Bow
    Kill three Watchers using Precision Arrow shots to the eye.
  • War Bow
    Shoot power cells using Shock Arrows. Scrappers are the easiest targets; just be sure they’re facing away from you and ping them in the canister on their butts.
  • Tripcaster
    Trip three machines with Shock Wires. Any will do.
  • Sling
    Freeze three machines weak to frost damage, such as Lancehorns or Tramplers, with Freeze Bombs.
  • Blast Sling
    Kill multiple (two or more) enemies with single shots from your blast sling. Human enemies in bandit camps or herds of Striders are the easiest targets.
  • Ropecaster
    Tie down three small machines, such as Watchers or Striders.
  • Rattler
    Kill three human enemies using Metal Bolts. The Rattler is kind of like a shotgun, so just get good and close and let rip.
  • Carja Tripcaster
    Trip three machines with Blast Wires. Easily completed during the Nora Hunting Grounds challenge.
  • Carja Sling
    Shock three machines weak to shock damage with Shock Bombs. Scrappers are a good bet.
  • Carja Sharpshot Bow
    Remove three machine parts using Tearblast Arrows. These must be components like canisters or weapons, not armour plates, so aim precisely. Focus will identify valid targets, but just because you can see it doesn’t mean you can hit it from every angle. Grazers are good targets.
  • Carja Ropecaster
    Tie down three medium-sized machines. Sawtooths, Bellowbacks and Shell-Walkers count. Easiest if you can find one on its own. Tie the same one down three times if you like; just make sure it is completely free before you start again.
  • Carja Blast Sling
    Attach three Sticky Bombs to machines. Very easy from stealth, or find something you can’t miss because it’s enormous.
  • Carja Rattler
    Shock three machines weak to shock damage using Shock Bolts. Longlegs are easiest for this, as Stalkers are more annoying to fight.
  • Carja War Bow
    Shoot Freeze Containers using Freeze Arrows. There are several machines with Freeze Canisters but Lancehorns are far and away the easiest targets; like Grazers, they have a stack of canisters on their backs you can hit with ease from behind them.
  • Shadow Hunter Bow
    Shoot ten plates from machines. This is kind of a pain and easier if you can find an isolated large machine like a Ravager, nullify its ranged attacks with Tearblast Arrows, and then sit up high on a rock where it can’t reach you. Armour plates are pale coloured and when you knock them off the creature appears darker, so target accordingly. You’ll probably need to repeat this a few times to get ten plates. And then you’ll never use this ammo again, probably.
  • Shadow Tripcaster
    Trip three machines with Fire Wires. No special requirements, so very easy.
  • Shadow War Bow
    Enrage three machines with corruption arrows. If you don’t have the Triple Shot skill, find some Watchers or Striders to knock this one over quickly. The more powerful machines will take several shots to corrupt, and since corruption doesn’t make the target friendly to you, you don’t want to break stealth doing this.
  • Shadow Blast Sling
    Kill three machines with Proximity Bombs. The bombs will one-hit kill weaker enemies, but you’ll have to weaken more powerful ones first. Try laying a line of bombs around you then blowing up a canister on something that will charge you in retaliation.
  • Shadow Ropecaster
    Tie down three large machines. Large machines include Stormbirds, Thunderjaws and Rockcrushers. Thunderjaw is easiest to hit; take out any other nearby machines first and, if you’re really struggling, knock off all the Thunderjaw’s weapons so you’re relatively safe from attack as you tie it down repeatedly.
  • Tearblaster
    Remove 15 machine components. The Tearblaster is really easy to use as you only have to point it vaguely in the right direction. Make sure your target actually has some components left to knock off; armour plates do not count.
  • Shadow Sling
    Burn three machines vulnerable to fire using Fire Bombs. This must be a body vulnerability, not a canister or other component weakness. Sawtooth, Freeze Bellowback, Glinthawk, Corruptor, Ravager and Snapmaw all work.
  • Shadow Sharpshot Bow
    Shoot off elemental canisters using Harvest Arrows. Grazers and Lancehorns, or perhaps even Striders, are the easiest targets here.

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Open world Horizon Zero Dawn content

As well as the formal quests listed above, Horizon Zero Dawn has plenty of open world tomfoolery to keep you amused. Below you’ll find a check list of what you should see and do as you wander the map; overriding Tallnecks will reveal all of these locations, but as long as you go everywhere you shouldn’t miss anything.

Collectibles

See our Horizon Zero Dawn collectibles guide for vantages, metal flowers, ancient vessels and Banuk artifacts. Or just buy the maps found in the Special items section of any post-prologue merchant’s inventory.

Bandit Camps

Bandit camps are fortresses filled with human enemies. For best results, sneak in and disable the alarm first; that prevents reinforcements. Free prisoners for AI assistance. Prior to your first bandit camp in the sacred Lands, look for an NPC nearby. Nil proves to be an able companion throughout Horizon Zero dawn if you befriend him.

  • Devil’s Thirst
  • Hollow Fort
  • Two-Teeth
  • Gatelands
  • Shattered Kiln
  • Blackwing Snag

Tallnecks

Tallnecks are to Horizon Zero Dawn what towers are to Assassin’s Creed and Far Cry – but they’re only a few of them, thankfully. Your goal is always to battle or sneak through nearby machines so you can reach a platform along the Tallneck’s patrol route high enough to allow you to jump onto its back. From there it’s an easy climb to the head to fill out nearby map icons.

  • Devil’s Thirst
  • Copper Deeps
  • Sun-Steps
  • Spearshafts
  • Rustwash

Corrupted Zones

There are 11 corrupted zones on the map. They don’t have names, but they’re hard to miss. Tallnecks will reveal them on the map.

Cauldrons

Cauldrons are optional dungeons in Horizon Zero Dawn that are well worth exploring because they grant you the ability to override new machines. There are four of them, and once you’ve done the lot you’ll even be able to turn Thunderjaws to your side.

  • Cauldron Sigma
    In the Sacred Lands, north of Mother’s Crown.
  • Cauldron Rho
    In the Carja Territories, south of Daytower.
  • Cauldron Xi
    In the Carja Territories, far south of Meridian.
  • Cauldron Zeta
    In the Carja Territories, north of the Sunfurrows Hunting Grounds.

Horizon Zero Dawn guide: all quests, where to initiate them and how to get the best ending posted first on http://ift.tt/2k0LiGW