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The Rogue Prince of Persia is out now on Game Pass and PlayStation Plus, Switch 2 version coming later this year
Game Updates

The Rogue Prince of Persia is out now on Game Pass and PlayStation Plus, Switch 2 version coming later this year

by admin August 23, 2025


The Rogue Prince of Persia has finally launched after a period in Early Access. The game is available now on Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5, and PC. You can grab it on Game Pass and PlayStation Plus too.

The game will also be headed to the Switch and Switch 2 later this year, but no firm release date for that has been established as of writing.

To celebrate the 1.0 release, Ubisoft has released a swanky new trailer that combines some lovely 2D animation as well as plenty of gameplay, showing you exactly what the game’s like before you decide to grab it or not.

Watch the launch trailer for The Rogue Prince of Persia here!Watch on YouTube

In case you weren’t aware, this new Prince of Persia has a lot of Dead Cells DNA in it, with it being an excellent 2D platformer packing a bold new art style for the series. It’s been quite the journey for the game, leaving the prince very… Purple. He was purple for a while. Here’s to a fancy release for Prince of Persia!

This is a news-in-brief story. This is part of our vision to bring you all the big news as part of a daily live report.



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The '90s Darkstalkers Animated TV Series Is Getting Resurrected With A New Blu-Ray Release
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The ’90s Darkstalkers Animated TV Series Is Getting Resurrected With A New Blu-Ray Release

by admin August 23, 2025



Back in the ’90s, several classic fighting games got their own official animated series, including Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat. One of the most surprising adaptations was Capcom’s cult-classic brawler Darkstalkers. While the Darkstalkers animated series has been hard to come by for decades, distributor Discotek recently revealed that it’ss bringing the entire series to Blu-ray on October 28. If you’re looking to add an overlooked piece of Darkstalkers history to your collection, you can preorder Darkstalkers: The Complete Series on Blu-ray now for $32 (was $40) at Amazon. Preorders are also in stock at Crunchyroll for $40.

$32 (was $40) | Releases October 28

This Blu-ray includes all 13 episodes from the show, presented in 480i standard definition and with an overall run time of 325 minutes. There’s not too much included here in terms of bonus materials, but you can check out on-disc extras like a series trailer, the original promotional bumpers and a credits, select commentary tracks, and a video compiling several memes from the show. The cover artwork is also a nod to the video game source material, as it’s inspired by the original artwork of the game releases on consoles like Sega Saturn.

Darkstalkers: The Complete Series Special Features

  • Series trailer
  • Commentary tracks
  • Meme compilation video
  • Promotional bumpers and credits

Loosely based on the video games, Darkstalkers revolved around the eternal battle between monsters. On the side of evil, the lord of vampires Dimitri, led his forces on a campaign of terror at the behest of his master, the cosmic menace Pyron. Opposing him were various Night Warriors–and their human ally–who were the last line of defense against Pyron and his minions.

$24 (was $30) | Now available

This isn’t the only time that Darkstalkers has received an animated adaptation, as a four-episode original video animation series ran from 1997-1998. Animated by Madhouse Studios–who had been on a roll in the ’90s with Trigun, Cardcaptor Sakura, and Yu Yu Hakusho–this was a far more faithful adaptation of the games and it was well-received thanks to its high-quality animation.

This Blu-ray was released in 2022, and it it features the OVAs remastered in 1080p and in the original aspect ratio of 1.33:1 full frame. The audio quality is also impressive, as you can watch the anime in Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, Japanese DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, and English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0. There’s even a music-only DTS-HD Master Audio option if you want to focus purely on the visuals and soundtrack. For the extras, there’s a selection of promotional materials, sequences without the credits text, and art galleries.

Darkstalkers: The Complete OVA Collection Special Features extras

  • Original and remastered trailers and TV spots
  • Promotional videos for various Dark Stalkers video games
  • Epilogue without title text
  • Ending without text
  • Alternate Japanese ending credits sequence
  • Vintage English opening and ending sequences
  • “The Trouble Man” music video
  • Art galleries

If you’re looking to grab more Blu-rays of classic animated shows, then you can check out everything else that Discotek has to offer currently. One of the big releases on the way is Mega Man: The Complete Series, as all 27 episodes from the show’s two-season run (1994-96) are coming to Blu-ray. The new Blu-ray edition is available to preorder for $50 at Amazon or $40 at Crunchyroll ahead of its October 28 release, and it comes with a selection of archival content, TV commercials, and new commentary tracks from Mega Man’s US voice actor, Ian James Corlett.

You can also pick Street Fighter: The Animated Series for a cheesy adaptation of the Capcom fighting game series from the ’90s. The new Blu-ray release also includes commentary tracks featuring popular Fighting Game Community streamers and competitors, including Matt McMuscles and Maximillian Dood. The Street Fighter 2: The Animated Movie is also available on 4K Blu-ray that includes clean credit sequences, archival promotional materials, production art, an isolated score, and various cuts of the movie in English and Japanese as extras.

Sega fans can also grab all 78 episodes of Sonic X on Blu-ray–available in both its original Japanese format or the English version–and Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva before the new game in the series arrives next year. We’re rounded up even more animated video game adaptations available on Blu-ray in the list below.



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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"I don't think RTS is back; I don't think it's ever really gone away": Dawn of War 4 devs on taking over from Relic and reviving a legend of the genre
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“I don’t think RTS is back; I don’t think it’s ever really gone away”: Dawn of War 4 devs on taking over from Relic and reviving a legend of the genre

by admin August 23, 2025


Dawn of War 4 is back, and I’m feeling pretty good about it. You can read my full thoughts on actually playing it – or really, playing the one available skirmish about six times over and over – in our big Dawn of War 4 preview, but alongside that hands-on time we also had a virtual sit-down with DoW 4’s brand new development team.

The top line is that the studio has, at least at first glance, done a pretty comprehensive job of taking the original Dawn of War – and a few sprinkles of its sequels – and turned it into a properly modern entry. It’s honed in on the first of the trilogy as inspiration, for starters, bringing back classic aspects like full base-building and standard RTS style maps with requisition points and all the regular gubbins. And, aside from maybe just missing a bit of campy levity here and there, the developers have also got the tone pretty spot-on, going full grim, dark, and down in the muck and mud.

Put it down on paper like that and it all sounds simple enough, but naturally for new developer King Art Games, a studio based in Bremen, Germany – which has only produced one RTS before, in 2020’s generally well-received Iron Harvest – following on from heavyweight strategy studio Relic was of course a challenge.

Image credit: Deep Silver / Plaion

You might be wondering how a storied series such as Dawn of War came to be made by a studio with such a short history of strategy game development (albeit one with a long history of developing all kinds of games overall, from point-and-click adventures to browser games, via the Nintendo DS’s Inkheart, tactical RPG The Dwarves and more, stretching back to its founding in the year 2000.) The answer involves a little bit of serendipity – but also, a clear indication that King Art earned its role here on absolute merit.

“It came a little bit out of nowhere,” studio co-founder, creative director, and DoW 4 game director Jan Theysen tells me. The team was working on its debut RTS, Iron Harvest, at the time, and “since it was a Kickstarter, we were very open and showed a lot of behind-the-scenes stuff, a lot of our technology and what we can do in terms of visuals, and so on,” he explains. “And someone at Games Workshop saw that. They basically came to us and said, ‘You know, hypothetically, if we would do a Dawn of War 4, what would you do with it?'”

Theysen assumes Games Workshop asked “a bunch of different developers” the same thing, and so the team went away and made a proper presentation just to try their luck. “Let’s come up with the concept and let’s do our best,” as Theysen puts it. “But we didn’t really expect this to go anywhere, right?” The studio sent over the presentation, focused back on Iron Harvest, and later on after the game was released, a few conversations with publisher Deep Silver later (and probably a lot more convoluted conversations than that behind the scenes) and the decision was made. Dawn of War left franchise custodians Relic, which had a couple of tricky years before its recent move to independence from Sega, and came to its surprise new home in Germany.

“Relic is a studio that we owe a lot to,” Elliott Verbiest, senior game designer, added. “As the entire genre of real-time strategy owes them a great debt for all the work they’ve done, across not just Dawn of War but all their other titles… for us it’s an enormous honour to pick this up.” There’s a little pressure, understandably. “It does feel like we are trying to fill very, very big boots in this regard,” he continues, and is keen to emphasise the studio’s desire to “do that legacy right… that we can say: Okay, the things Relic did really, really well, we can only hope that we follow in their footsteps.”

Image credit: Deep Silver / Plaion

How did King Art decide what to focus on for a new Dawn of War game, and which elements did it feel were particularly important to get right? “There is not really a ‘Dawn of War formula’,” Theysen says, noting the difference even from the first DoW to the much smaller-scale, more tactical DoW 2, let alone the change again to DoW 3. But the team “knew that people were interested in this more classic style of RTS, with base building and economy and research,” and so ultimately opting to focus specifically on the original felt like the most sensible choice. “When in doubt, it’s Dawn of War 1 – but then the point is, of course, that it’s a 20-year old game. What you can’t do is just pick a feature, put it in a new game and assume that it feels the same way that it did for people 20 years before. So we basically asked ourselves: how did Dawn of War make us feel 20 years ago? And how can we evoke the same feelings again today?”

Theysen has some smart answers there. “Dawn of War’s battles feel very distinct, because they’re relatively big battles and they take a while, right? It’s not like they’re fast, surgical strikes – it’s more like ongoing, big battles. You might lose a few units, or you can put a lot of resources in your battles and make sure your units don’t die… eventually maybe you won the battle, but you lost the war, because you paid too much in resources.” The other big example? “Synch kills.”

The studio asked what people loved in the original, and synch kills came up repeatedly – those being the bespoke animations for when a unit, like say a hulking Space Marine Dreadnought, executes another with a flourish, like say picking up an Ork, spinning it around and crushing it in its mechanised hand. That in turn led to one of Dawn of War 4’s defining new additions in the “combat director”, a brilliant visual flourish that means all units, in melee, battle each other with specific, synched up combat animations, as though each fight’s fully choreographed rather than playing out in standard RTS style, with units broadly swinging at the air in their enemy’s general direction.

As for those challenges, Theysen says there were a few. The team already knew what it wanted to improve after Iron Harvest – “could there be bigger armies, or could there be more base-building?” – and used those to “get the cogs turning” for how it might go a step further with Dawn of War. The biggest, in Theysen’s terms, was simply “the overall complexity” of RTS games as a whole, coupled with Warhammer’s expansive, intertwining lore and the sheer number of units and things going on in a Dawn of War game. (King Art’s keen to boast the “more than 110” figure for units and buildings, which is undoubtedly impressive at launch.)

Theysen’s also keen to point out the studio’s history of pivoting quite successfully between genres, if never truly breaking out into the gaming mainstream before Iron Harvest. “We have our 25th anniversary this year, and we did a lot of different games and a lot of different genres on a lot of different platforms, and it was pretty natural for us to just take on a new genre,” he says.

Image credit: Deep Silver / Plaion

“We usually tackle it by really doing our homework and really trying to figure out what makes these games tick, and play a lot of them and analyse a lot of them. Read everything you can – read about RTS development and so on. Then it really comes down to making educated guesses, and having a lot of people play the game often, right? And getting feedback.” The studio did that a fair bit with Iron Harvest, giving it to that game’s die-hard Kickstarter community early and then iterating.

“This, by the way, is also something we want to do with Dawn of War 4, now it’s finally announced,” he adds. “We want to make sure we get it in the hands of the players to get their feedback and input – because to be honest, it’s so complex and so complicated that, for example, with four really different factions to balance for multiplayer, you just need a lot of people playing the game.”

And then there’s that combat director. The idea actually came from a “hardcore Dawn of War 1 fanatic” at the studio, in Thomas Derksen, the developer’s head of animation. “That was his game,” Theysen says, “his whole teenage years were Dawn of War 1, and he basically said: Okay, if we do this, we do it right.”

None of the team were particularly convinced it was possible, “but basically him and a couple of animators and tech artists and coders, they dug in and, I don’t know, half a year later, they came up with the system that basically dynamically puts little snippets of animations together to form new combat animations.” The result sounds incredibly complex. “It figures out, okay, I’m a smaller unit fighting a bigger unit, that unit is heavy, so there are certain things I can do and I can’t do. There’s an explosion left of me and there’s I don’t know, another ally on the right, this means I could do the following things, and then the system basically dynamically puts together the animations and it works great. Looks great, I think. And is super fun – you always wondered how it would look if a Redemptor Dreadnought fights a Tomb Spider, right? And now you can see it!”

One of those other big challenges was fitting the game into pre-existing Warhammer 40K lore. The return of John French, a prominent Black Library novel author who also wrote on games such as Rogue Trader, certainly helps there. As does opting to set the game on Kronus once more, the planet of the series-peak single-player campaign in the original’s Dark Crusade expansion. Theysen could share a little more of the setup here: “We basically follow the story of Cyrus and Jonah from the previous games,” (Cyrus featured in DoW 2, and Jonah in both 2’s Chaos Rising expansion and DoW 3) “and they go to Kronus in the hope to maybe find some brothers there, or maybe find recruits to rebuild the chapter a bit. But of course, it’s 40K, so everything goes horribly wrong.”

Image credit: Deep Silver / Plaion

The 200-years-later choice meant the team could use the present-day version of 40K, including all of the story that’s happened since Dark Crusade’s release, but the story itself will be intentionally “Kronus-centric,” as he puts it. “The wider effects might not be the biggest but, let’s put it this way: part of the story is to make sure that actually there are no wider effects for the rest of the galaxy, and it stays contained…”

As for how the four-part campaign will work – which can be played entirely in co-op if you like, it’s clarified – Theysen also shared a little more. There’s really one campaign for each of the factions – Orks, Space Marines, Necrons, and newcomers Adeptus Mechanicus – and then within each of those campaigns there are decisions you’ll have to make which then thread into the next. One example: “when you play the Ork campaign, eventually you have to decide [between] two different war bosses… the Beast Snaggas, which is more like the wild, original Orks, or the Bad Moons, which is more like mechanics, mechs, and so on… and in the end only one of those guys survives or stays around.” Then in the next campaign you play as another faction, the chosen boss is the one you’ll be fighting as, say, the Necrons.

This is all set up on a kind of “world map,” as Theysen puts it, where you’ll be able to select different missions based on what units or bonuses each might unlock for completion, “similar to Dawn of War 2,” Theysen says. “Where you can say: Okay, what do I get here? Who am I fighting? And okay, actually, this mission sounds the most fun, I’ll play this one.” Some of those missions will be mutually exclusive – you can’t play all the missions in one playthrough – encouraging multiple runs. And likewise it sounds like there’ll be a bit of those classic vendettas you can build with the AI, at least to some extent – with the Space Marines for instance, in one scenario you can either save a city, or save some other territory, with the one you don’t choose being conquered and you later on having a chance to exact revenge.

On the topic of differing factions, I was also keen to know why King Art’s team chose the four they did here. “Some of it was relatively straightforward, some of it a little less so,” Verbiest says. The Blood Ravens were a given, having first appeared in Dawn of War itself, and similarly essential were the Orks – “a no-brainer,” Verbiest says, given the roots in Dawn of War one and their prominence there. After that things got more interesting. As well as being pretty prominent in 40K more widely at the moment, the studio chose the Necrons specifically because of how Dawn of War 3 ended (or didn’t end). “They were kind of teased towards the end of Dawn of War 4, and that was something that never really came to fruition, unfortunately. So it’s kind of our way of saying to the fans, essentially: Hey, we’re making good on this particular promise.”

The Adeptus Mechanics, meanwhile, came about because the studio wanted to include a faction that had never been included in Dawn of War before. “It kind of helps a little bit because we worked previously on Iron Harvest,” he adds, “so we have a lot of experience with big walking machines and the like.” Any chance of more down the line via expansions, if things go well? “Unfortunately, I can’t say anything regarding future content,” is the predictable reply.

Image credit: Deep Silver / Plaion

There’s plenty more the team is keen to talk about, as our conversation begins to run short on time. “You probably get more stuff in this game than in any other – not only Dawn of War, but probably most RTS games,” Theysen says, at least in terms of what’ll be there at launch. Skirmishes are “very, very configurable,” for instance, multiplayer maps can be configured too, as can enemy behaviour. The Last Stand, a horde mode from DoW 2, returns here and is playable solo with multiple others in co-op. The sense, above all, is that King Art games is naturally proud, and quite optimistic, about what it’s been able to produce so far. After playing it I think it’s very much justified.

It also leads on to a final question, which feels frustratingly inevitable with conversations about RTS games these days (though I’m well aware I’m saying that the one asking it). Does the team feel good about the state of the RTS these days? Is there optimism here beyond just Dawn of War 4, for such a venerable genre to at least regain a bit of its lost footing? Does all this “death of the RTS” stuff feel a bit overblown?

“RTS definitely isn’t the mainstream genre that it was maybe 20 years ago or something,” Theysen says. “And you know, if you expect, creating an RTS game like Age of Empires 4, sell a couple of million [copies] and then you know, call it a disappointment or whatever – or at least not a success – then okay, what do you expect?

“I think from our side,” he continues,” we know that there is a core RTS target audience that really likes to play RTS, and hopefully plays Dawn of War 4 because it’s a big, good RTS. Then we have this other target audience with 40K fans, who are interested in the game because it’s a 40K game… and we also hope to reach some players that are maybe looking for a good way to get into 40K, because it’s notoriously hard to get into such a big and complex universe.” (Worth noting here: Dawn of War 1 was my own personal introduction to 40K as a goofy little tween myself, so Theysen might be onto something.)

Verbiest’s answer meanwhile is simple enough, and one that, hopefully, Dawn of War 4 will help to ring especially true: “I don’t think that the RTS is necessarily back,” he says. “I don’t think it’s ever really gone away.”



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Before KPop Demon Hunters, There Was K/DA
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Before KPop Demon Hunters, There Was K/DA

by admin August 23, 2025



KPop Demon Hunters’ fictional bands have become some of the hottest musical acts on the planet since the Netflix animated film released in June–but before Huntrix and Saja Boys were tearing up the charts, a quartet of League of Legends characters were making waves in virtual K-pop.

Even before KPop Demon Hunters was released, the film’s fictional K-pop band was seeing comparisons to Riot Games’ virtual girl group, K/DA. It’s not a stretch to spot the similarities–two animated girl groups releasing catchy K-pop anthems in between fighting enemies with signature weapons and battle costumes. Even some of the costumes and color schemes feel familiar, and both groups have collaborated with real-world K-pop girl group Twice.

Though it feels likely that the team behind KPop Demon Hunters was inspired by K/DA, it hasn’t commented much on the comparison. One of the only official references to K/DA comes from KPop Demon Hunters’ music supervisor Ian Eisendrath, who confirms that Riot’s virtual band was “one of our many influences” for Huntrix’s musical sound. Eisendrath adds that K/DA was just one of “8-12 references” that was mainly used to “envision what these songs could sound like.”

No matter what level of inspiration K/DA had on KPop Demon Hunters, the Riot K-pop project proved almost seven years ago that fans would get behind a virtual girl group.

Made up of League champions Ahri, Akali, Evelynn, and Kai’sa, each member of K/DA is voiced and performed by a real-world pop artist. American artists Madison Beer and Jaira Burns provide the singing voices for Evelynn and Kai’sa, respectively, while members of K-pop group I-dle (formerly (G)I-dle) Miyeon and Soyeon voice Ahri and Akali, respectively. The group is structured like a classic K-pop girl group, with each member having a performing strength, and they mirror certain K-pop archetypes in personality and style.

K/DA was formed back in 2018 as an opening act for the League of Legends World Championship–and as a vehicle to sell their shiny popstar outfits as skins. The single and music video launched the same day as K/DA’s debut augmented-reality performance in Incheon, South Korea, and quickly took off.

The debut single, Pop/Stars, charted at number one on the K-pop music charts and number five on the overall pop charts for Apple Music in the US, as well as topping Billboard’s World Digital Song Sales chart. The music video went viral on YouTube, reaching over 100 million views in its first month. Despite being a fake band, K/DA made history by becoming the first K-pop girl group to have a single certified platinum with Pop/Stars.

Viranda Tantula, the creative lead on the opening ceremony performance, explained in an interview that Pop/Stars’ success was all about commitment to the “fantasy of the champs being in the real world.” In order to sell this fantasy, Tantula explained, they had to create a pop song that stands up against real-world pop music and a performance that competes with real-world stadium-level pop.

Despite how much went into K/DA’s debut, it initially wasn’t intended to be any more than the one single. “We really went into it wanting to make the singular moment as dope as possible and intentionally weren’t thinking much further into the future than that,” Tantula said in the same interview. When Pop/Stars started taking off, far eclipsing anything the Riot music team had released previously, Tantula says the team started “chatting about where this could go.”

K/DA was quiet for a while after their debut, though they remained popular with fans who created art, cosplay, and dance covers for Pop/Stars–and spent plenty of cash on K/DA skins. After two years of speculation, the group finally returned with a bang in 2020, releasing the five-song EP All Out and once again gracing the Worlds opening ceremony with an augmented-reality performance of lead single More.

While none of the All Out tracks reached the viral peak that Pop/Stars saw, the EP performed well as a musical release in its own right–with play counts on Spotify comparable to Huntrix’s discography at the time of writing.

Riot hasn’t revisited K/DA since the All Out release–though it did experiment with a boy band, Heartsteel, and an Akali-led side project, True Damage, all of which exist in the same alternate universe of League of Legends lore. The rise of KPop Demon Hunters seems to have brought fans back to K/DA, however: The Pop/Stars YouTube comments are full of people who say they’re watching because of KPop Demon Hunters, while the K/DA subreddit is full of Huntrix/K/DA mashups and fan art.

Some fans who were introduced to K-pop by the Netflix film even appear to be jumping to K/DA for their next fictional K-pop fix. Though this could just be because both bands have a similar sound, there’s an argument to be made that virtual acts may be less intimidating for first-time fans who aren’t ready for the complexity of real-world K-pop fan culture. No matter the reason, both K/DA and Huntrix have proven themselves successful gateway artists for fans who have never engaged with K-pop before.

The similarities between K/DA and Huntrix may be undeniable, but there’s one major element that sets the two groups apart: K/DA is a virtual K-pop group, while Huntrix doesn’t exist outside of the narrative of KPop Demon Hunters–for now. The difference is the conceit that K/DA is a band that really exists in our world–they’ve performed stadium shows, filmed music videos, and even held interviews and addressed fans directly via social media.

Riot’s handling of K/DA as a virtual band provides a template that Netflix could very well follow with KPop Demon Hunters. In a Reddit AMA with members of the KPop Demon Hunters team, a fan asked if Huntrix and Saja Boys could become bona fide virtual bands, and music supervisor Ian Eisendrath replied, “I would love that.”

Just like K/DA before them, both Huntrix and Saja Boys are blowing up the charts right now–going head to head with some of the most popular real K-pop groups. Huntrix surpassed Blackpink as the highest-charting K-pop girl group when it hit number two on the US Spotify charts, while Saja Boys surpassed the likes of BTS and Stray Kids to become the highest-charting K-pop boy group. There’s no word yet on Netflix’s plans for either fictional group, but it’s not hard to picture them selling out stadiums.



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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How purple skin and a Spanish phone number almost sank The Rogue Prince of Persia
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How purple skin and a Spanish phone number almost sank The Rogue Prince of Persia

by admin August 23, 2025


The Rogue Prince of Persia celebrated its 1.0 release yesterday with a remarkably honest behind-the-scenes video from developers Evil Empire, detailing the ups and downs of a year-long Early Access period, including the decision to completely overhaul the game’s art style and redesign its purple-skinned protagonist.

The video opens with the admission that this Roguelike take on the wall-jumping, time-rewinding Prince suffered multiple blows upon its Early Access release in May 2024. The first of these was the surprise drop of heavyweight Hades 2, which also launched in May and stole most of the Prince’s limelight. The second was the negative player response to both the game’s lack of content and its colourful visual style, which was inspired by Persian miniature paintings and the artwork of Mœbius/Jean Giraud.

Watch on YouTube

Notably, the decision to give the titular Prince and all NPCs a purple skintone was met with confusion. In a developer diary from 2024, it was revealed that this was intended as a direct ode to the PC CGA port of Prince of Persia from 1990, which featured neon skin for all due to a limited 4-colour palette. Unfortunately, this homage went over the heads of most players.

“During a brainstorming session about skins, our art director had raised a seemingly innocent question,” says Evil Empire Marketing Manager Matthew Houghton in the video. “Are we sure that making the Prince purple won’t be a problem? At the time, everyone told him no. He was overthinking it; colours are cool, they’re stylish, it adds a bit of fantasy! Well…now we all know how that turned out.”

The Prince’s purple look, along with its original inspiration. | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Evil Empire/Ubisoft

The rest of the footage details how Evil Empire not only packed The Rogue Prince of Persia with additional content, but also revamped the art style – a decision that is now conveyed in more detailed levels and a decidedly less-purple Prince adorning everything from the game’s key art to the album cover of its impressive soundtrack by Persian American musician ASADI. Alas, even this visual update faced unexpected friction in the form of a bizarre Steam issue which required the devs to use a Spanish phone number to get their own product updated.

“Through all those problems and roadblocks,” Houghton continues, “we’ve had a great community giving us a helping hand the whole way. Even when it was clear we had a tonne of work to do, they’ve been there giving us support, feedback and encouragement. So a special shoutout to you guys for sticking with us on our crazy journey.”

Despite these nice words, Houghton acknowledges that the game has faced a low player count during its Early Access. The 1.0 release is now considered final, and throughout the video there does seem to be a slight feeling of “well, we sure hope more folks play this, or else we’ll never make a sequel.” Which would be a shame, considering that last year’s Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown was a superb effort that Ubisoft sent out to die with poor promotion before disbanding the team behind it.

I intend on giving the Rogue Prince of Persia a proper go this weekend and am looking forward to it. I also liked the purple Prince look, because I can’t help but admire unorthodox art design decisions, especially when they’re an ultra-niche homage to computer colour schemes that existed when I was a kid. But I can see how his grape skin along with the game’s more cartoony and dreamy original visuals failed to latch onto players, and it does feel as if the final result is actually a tad more reminiscent of the Persian miniature inspiration.

Most of all, however, I’m sticken by the frankness of Evil Empire in this video. Despite taking over Dead Cells DLC from Motion Twin, Houghton consistently acknowledges that the team was inexperienced in certain regards, and that this was their first fully-fledged project. It’s rare to see admissions of setbacks that aren’t couched in corporate industry speak (particularly for a gaming brand owned by Ubisoft). I only hope that the Rogue Prince of Persia manages to catch a few more eyes because of it.



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The Blood Of Dawnwalker Is More Than The Witcher With Vampires
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The Blood Of Dawnwalker Is More Than The Witcher With Vampires

by admin August 23, 2025


Admittedly, from what I’ve seen of newcomer developer Rebel Wolves’ upcoming first game, The Blood of Dawnwalker, it’s given off some heavy Witcher vibes. That’s not completely misplaced, considering Rebel Wolves was formed by former CD Projekt Red devs with experience working on The Witcher series and Cyberpunk 2077. Sure, there are vampires, but it’s still a medieval dark fantasy where the protagonist is a gruff swordsman with one goal in mind. 

After an hour-long hands-off preview with Dawnwalker, though, it’s clear this game is much more than just The Witcher with vampires. Sitting in the room, themed to look like a 14th-century chapel, I frantically took notes of what I was watching on screen, wishing the entire time I was the one playing the game. 

The demo begins in the valley of the Carpathian mountains, sometime during the 14th century. A plague has swept the land, weakening humanity, making them easier than ever to be overtaken by the Vrakhiri, or a race of vampires. Our protagonist, Coen, is what’s called a Daywalker, and though details on what that entails are still murky after my preview, it’s clear he is at least part vampire. 

Rebel Wolves showcased this by running us through the same quest twice: once during the night, when Coen is tapped into his vampire side, and once during the day, when he can’t use his vampiric abilities but can utilize magic. Though this quest ended on the same note both ways, there was an impressive amount of variation between the day and night versions. 

Rebel Wolves began with the nighttime version of the quest. 

Immediately, I’m impressed with the visuals. Sure, the game has been Epic’s baby for demonstrating Unreal Engine 5 in recent showcases, but the art team is doing some gorgeous work with lighting. The way the full moon above illuminates the central cathedral’s stained glass reminded me of the stained glass I witnessed myself at the Dom cathedral here in Cologne. Alongside the full moon high above in the sky is a red full moon, indicating Coen can tap into his vampire abilities. 

Coen infiltrates a cathedral and sticks to the upper floors as, down below, a blood ritual is happening. He uses Plane Shift to walk on walls and ceilings like Spider-Man, albeit on two feet. He also utilizes Shadowstep, which allows him to teleport short distances by transforming into a moving shadow. In the cathedral, he searches nearby Frescoes painted on the ceiling, looking for a clue as to the whereabouts of St. Mihia’s crypt, which houses a sword he’s after. 

After a bit more exploration, Coen fights off some enemies using his claws. It’s fast, visceral, and extremely gory, with dismemberment galore. He also uses Voracious Bite to suck their blood and regain some health. Rebel Wolves says this is useful in battle but even more effective outside of combat. Rebel Wolves also uses this encounter to show off the options to switch between a far and close camera in combat (and a separate option to customize this viewpoint in exploration, too). 

We eventually reach the crypt, and this portion of the demo ends. 

In the daytime version of the quest, Coen is unable to tap into his vampiric abilities, so he must investigate things more closely. To keep it somewhat spoiler-free, instead of climbing walls and ceilings and Shadowstepping to different platforms, Coen speaks with a local monk and agrees to help them find a missing person. This leads him to an abandoned portion of an asylum, and it turns out the person he’s after has become The Almshouse Monstrosity. This person is neither undead nor alive, stuck in the transition from human to vampire, and their mind is essentially gone, driven by an instinctual desire for blood. 

In this form of combat, Coen uses a sword instead of claws, and it’s here that the game looks most like The Witcher. However, Rebel Wolves is doing some interesting things here. Combat features directional blocking, like what’s seen in the Kingdom Come: Deliverance series, and magic, too. After defeating this monstrosity, Coen uses the Compel Soul hex to speak with a corpse and learn what happened in this asylum. This corpse yields some useful information that eventually takes Coen to the same crypt from the conclusion of the nighttime demo, except this time, Rebel Wolves showcases what happens next. I won’t spoil it here, but it’s an awesome boss fight against an undead warrior, and it’s clear you’ll need to tap into all of Coen’s abilities to come out victorious. 

Our demo ended here, and a day later, I’m voracious for more. It just looks awesome, and a great score heightens the entire experience. Like The Witcher, the score in Dawnwalker relies heavily on a high-pitched female chorus, and it rules. I can’t wait to hear more of this and see more of the vampires that run this part of the world when The Blood of the Dawnwalker launches sometime next year. 



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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Assassin's Creed Mirage to get surprise free story DLC later this year
Game Updates

Assassin’s Creed Mirage to get surprise free story DLC later this year

by admin August 23, 2025


Ubisoft has confirmed new DLC is on the way later this year for 2023’s Assassin’s Creed Mirage.

The free new content will feature a new story chapter and an unspecified number of missions set in 9th century AlUla, an ancient Arabian city.

Ian goes hands-on with Assassin’s Creed Mirage.Watch on YouTube

Ubisoft also confirmed the update will bring gameplay improvements for the base game, as well as the new location, “all for free”.

Assassin’s Creed Mirage players, we have a surprise coming your way later this year!

📖 New story chapter & missions set in 9th century AlUla
🎮 Gameplay improvements for the base game and the new location
🎁 All for free

Stay tuned! pic.twitter.com/8CjB3MRvfR

— Assassin’s Creed (@assassinscreed) August 23, 2025

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The new content follows reports Ubisoft received investment from Saudi Arabia’s controversial Public Investment Fund (PIF) specifically to develop additional content for Assassin’s Creed Mirage. The PIF is an initiative designed as a way to diversify the country’s revenues via investment in foreign companies, with a large arm focused on the video games industry. It’s chaired by Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the controversial ruler blamed by the CIA for the assassination of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who has upheld the country’s notoriously poor human rights record. Ubisoft declined to comment on the report at the time.

Despite this, the PIF holds a notable stake in a swathe of gaming companies, including Grand Theft Auto publisher Take-Two Interactive, Nintendo, EA, Embracer, Nexon, and Capcom.

We had a good time with Assassin’s Creed Mirage when we reviewed it, awarding it four stars, calling it “a fascinating new city and the embrace of a classic formula”.





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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The main character of Hollow Knight jumps into a fiery light.
Game Updates

The Internet Reacts To Hollow Knight: Silksong’s Big Day

by admin August 23, 2025


After six years, the clowning is over. Hollow Knight: Silksong is coming to a PC, Switch, Xbox, or PlayStation near you on September 4. Silksong has been conspicuously absent from industry events for so long that the act of anticipating the elusive Metroidvania has become a meme in and of itself. Now that it’s imminent, what does the internet do with all that pent-up energy? They draw, yell, and celebrate.

So far, the most prominent reaction to the Silksong news beyond keyboard smashing is art that represents the end of a meme. For years, Hollow Knight fans have been depicting their constant waiting for a crumb of news with images of the game’s characters dressed in clown make-up. The joke got so popular that someone modded it into the original game, and Geoff Keighley even referenced it ahead of Gamescom’s Opening Night Live show, where Silksong made an appearance. Now, fans are hanging up, throwing away, and burning their clown wigs and wiping off the makeup.

Time to hang up the costume. The wait is over (⁠ノ⁠*⁠0⁠*⁠)⁠ノ@gamescom @TeamCherryGames #gamescom #Silksong #hollowknight pic.twitter.com/rbNxhF9jp1

— Rudy (@ItsRudyArt) August 19, 2025

today#hollowknight #SilkSong pic.twitter.com/hU7wxo2V9D

— Pynch.psd 🇺🇦 (@pynchosa) August 21, 2025

“Leave it behind”#SilkSong https://t.co/8UWze6JTeu pic.twitter.com/5kPD39R5VZ

— Enzo Spagnuolo (@enzo_spagnuolo) August 20, 2025

ITS REAL#SILKSONG #HK https://t.co/hHky0h5uH8 pic.twitter.com/9idjuE2L9f

— ✨🇻🇪💜 Koumouby💜🇻🇪✨ (@koumouby) August 19, 2025

my 5 coins of a shitpost
it’s happening, we celebrate🎉 https://t.co/oFqlbTbLLz pic.twitter.com/PJaL4IoGpl

— Shkarp (@Shkarpett) August 20, 2025

ARGG IM SO HAPPY WAHHHH TWEAKING https://t.co/uL8GofyUvG pic.twitter.com/QUy3D2QeIA

— Miikrowelle (@Miikrowelle) August 21, 2025

FINALLY! https://t.co/tGDkCfYaW3 pic.twitter.com/RtfYAEvJvm

— Jacksepticeye (@Jacksepticeye) August 21, 2025

Farewell “Silksong is fake” and clown makeup jokes pic.twitter.com/kuqdWWJzNp

— TheNCSmaster (@TheNCSmaster) August 21, 2025

 

Though the end of the clownery is one part of the equation, others are just expressing relief and excitement that they’ll finally be able to play the game they’ve waited more than half a decade for.

pic.twitter.com/LwNWLrvqpc

— 할로우나이트 실크송 나왔니? (@hornet_love_you) August 21, 2025

WE WON #SilkSong #hollowknight #teamcherry pic.twitter.com/SG2Si4pbuS

— Grimm (@GrimmHxH) August 21, 2025

Silksong
Silksong is reeaaaaal !!!!#SilkSong pic.twitter.com/pXIaliuVMg

— É o Marill Rapá (@18k26_) August 21, 2025

pic.twitter.com/ZLGc2HDYqv

— Sharpski (@Sharpski_) August 21, 2025

i can’t believe Silksong is real pic.twitter.com/8LdF3vda2S

— Omni ☕️ (@InfernoOmni) August 21, 2025

https://t.co/5FpFzSCj5L pic.twitter.com/Klbx4O7U5d

— Gatuno (COMMISSIONS OPENED!!!) (@gatunowo) August 19, 2025

The end of today’s reveal trailer read “September 4,” but didn’t bother specifying “2025.” Some are using this to joke that the wait may actually be far from over.

September 4th… 2029

— Daniel Failboat (@Failboat103) August 21, 2025

Okay, but what year?

— Cc (@Ccmaci) August 21, 2025

 

Hollow Knight fans are lining up in droves to play Silksong at Gamescom; we’ll see if those lines get a little smaller now that everyone knows the game is just two weeks away.

Here’s the line for the silksong demo at gamescom. They only have 10 game setups😭😭😭 pic.twitter.com/c2HUjdhBPy

— BlueSR @ gamescom (@BlueGoesFast) August 21, 2025

That’s not a lot of time, but it is enough time to play (or replay) the original Hollow Knight. It’s on just about any console you can imagine, and is still considered one of the best Metroidvania games of all-time. There’s a reason people have been clowning for all this time.





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Battlefield 6's Movement Changes Are "Not Drastic," Says Dev
Game Updates

Battlefield 6’s Movement Changes Are “Not Drastic,” Says Dev

by admin August 23, 2025



If you’ve been using the jump button a little too often in the Battlefield 6 beta, then you’re going to notice some changes upon launch. DICE has announced that there’s now a penalty for making consecutive jumps that lowers the jump height. Momentum carried from a slide into a jump has also been tweaked to reduce its speed. Nevertheless, Battlefield 6 principal game designer Florian “DRUNKKZ3” Le Bihan wants players to know that the movement changes “are not drastic.”

“Movement is also getting more responsive in general in places that have felt a bit clunky before. so there is a lot more that is getting quality improvements [and] polish in this same area,” wrote Le Bihan on X. “Adding diminishing returns to jumping is what we’re actually doing, an initial slide or an initial jumps will not be affected. We’re still trying to retain depth to movement with some skill curve to it, just making sure it doesn’t become insane.”

The Battlefield 6 devs also recently defended the changes to Rush mode in the beta, including smaller lobbies of 24 players for 12v12 matches. According to the programing team, Rush mode doesn’t work as well with more than 24 players at a time.

Another upcoming change change before for launch is the nerfing of the M87A1 shotgun, which was overpowered in the beta. Now, the shotgun will “[require] more pellets to secure a kill.”

According EA, the recent play test was the biggest beta in Battlefield’s history in terms of players. Research firm Oppenheimer estimated that the beta reached more than 20 million people.

Battlefield 6 launches on October 10 for Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5, and PC.





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Bunnyhop elsewhere, streamers: EA are making Battlefield 6 more strategic, less run-and-gun following the beta
Game Updates

Bunnyhop elsewhere, streamers: EA are making Battlefield 6 more strategic, less run-and-gun following the beta

by admin August 23, 2025



The Battlefield 6 beta is officially a Thing That Happened, and now comes the terrible ordeal of Learning From The Experience. Here is what developers DICE, Criterion, Motive and Ripple Effect have learned from the experience: you are all playing the game far too much like Call Of Duty. Goodness me, it’s like 2007 never ended.

Doing headshots in midair? That’s an updatin’. Doing a parkour while carrying a light machinegun? That’s an updatin’. Bunny-hopping with prejudice? You’d best believe that’s an updatin’. Never mind that those multiplayer reveal montages emphasised footloose quickdraw almost as much as they incited a murderous contempt for helicopters. It’s time to play Battlefield the way Battlefield should be played: lying in a hole praying that one of your team-mates spawns on you before a tank rolls over your head.


This, at least, is my addled Friday afternoon summary of EA’s just-announced post-beta plans, via Mecha-Hitler.com. Let’s squeeze into our thinking caps and break it all down.


Firstly, the developers are doing a “general pass on recoil and tap-fire characteristics across all weapons”, to make them feel more unique, especially in terms of range. They’re also making changes to encourage more controlled tap and burst-firing. In particular, the M87A1 shotgun has been defanged, and they’re “investigating the Time-to-Kill and Time-to-Death experiences”, with news of changes to follow.


As for movement, they want it to feel more “balanced and traditional” in the final version of Battlefield 6. There will be less carry-over of momentum and particularly horizontal speed from a slide to a jump. Jump height will also be lowered during consecutive jumps, and you’ll be less accurate while jumping or sliding.

“These changes are designed to make sliding and jumping more situational, so they are no longer ideal options for engaging in gunfights, and will contribute to a gameplay pace that rewards skillful movement without becoming too fast or unpredictable,” the devs comment. You won’t get as much acceleration when opening a parachute, either, “for more controlled aerial movement”. I hate being in control of my aerial movement. In practice, it just makes it easier for people on the ground to shoot me.


The game’s smaller maps are being tweaked to stop naughty people getting onto rooftops and venturing out of bounds. “This gameplay is not intended for these maps, and the upcoming ladder for the Assault class is also not designed to access these areas,” the devs sternly explain. Bad ladder! Down!

They’ll be testing two more maps in Battlefield Labs before release, a remake of Battlefield 3’s Operation Firestorm and another map set in Mirak Valley, both of which offer “the full complement of vehicles” and “a more vast combat space”. Vaster, EA, vaster! How am I supposed to trust you to fine-tune parachute physics when you can’t even optimise your sentences. Yes, I realise I have just held up a red cape to all the amateur copyeditors in the comments.


Modes? Well, they’ve found that Rush gets a bit smeary when there are too many players involved. Apparently, “when a player tries to arm the M-COM while more than 20 opponents are defending, the intended gameplay becomes less tangible”, presumably because the attacking player’s head and torso also become less tangible. As such, they’re lowering the player count for Rush “to improve the flow of combat and restore the tactical, methodical experience that defines the mode”.


Anticipating pushback on this front, the post points out that people can mess with the count as they please when playing Rush via the Portal editor. Breakthrough, meanwhile, will receive “map-by-map balance adjustments towards our goal of 50/50 win ratio for both Attackers and Defenders”.


In general, EA are taking an ad hoc approach to player counts based on the individual map and mode. “For example, at launch, some Breakthrough layouts will support 48 players, while others will have 64,” the post comments. “It’s the one of many factors we adjust to create the right balance and feel for each scenario. In Breakthrough higher player counts work well on open, dynamic maps, while smaller player-groups offer a more focused experience on denser maps.” They’ve found that “8v8 provides a solid starting point for small-scale, fast-paced modes like Team Death Match, Squad Death Match, Domination, and [King of the Hill]”. Again, you can jimmy the workings in Portal if you wish.


Some final bits: open and closed weapon playlists will continue to be available in Battlefield 6, “and we are looking for ways to keep them easily accessible”. I’m not sure why that would be difficult? They’re also trying to fix matchmaking so that you won’t have too much difficulty finding games in which to complete the Challenge of capturing sectors in Breakthrough or Rush.


Expect some of these improvements to materialise in forthcoming Battlefield Labs playtests. The game launches on 10th October. Our hardware editor James attended a preview event recently and came away with the verdict that it “looks like a Battlefield game”, thereby demonstrating the granular insight that got him promoted to CPU Wrangler First Class.

Even more granularistically, James noted that “there are also reasons to be optimistic that this is a series getting itself back on track, from its renewed emphasis on breaking shit to the replacement of show-off specialists with that old unspoken rule of ‘Stick with your squad or perish.'” Did you play the beta? How did you find it?



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