Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Tag:

gamers

As Microsoft lays off thousands and jacks up Game Pass prices, former FTC chair says I told you so: The Activision-Blizzard buyout is 'harming both gamers and developers'
Gaming Gear

As Microsoft lays off thousands and jacks up Game Pass prices, former FTC chair says I told you so: The Activision-Blizzard buyout is ‘harming both gamers and developers’

by admin October 4, 2025



As Microsoft slashes jobs and raises prices, former US Federal Trade Commission chair Lina Khan has taken to X to say that the company’s actions since completing its acquisition of Activision Blizzard in 2023 is pretty much what the FTC warned would happen when it opposed the deal.

Khan, you may recall, was head of the FTC when it challenged Microsoft’s proposed acquisition of Activision Blizzard, a convoluted process that didn’t formally end until May of 2025—almost two years after the deal closed.

“Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision has been followed by significant price hikes and layoffs, harming both gamers and developers,” Khan wrote on X. “As we’ve seen across sectors, increasing market consolidation and increasing prices often go hand-in-hand.


Related articles

“As dominant firms become too-big-to-care, they can make things worse for their customers without having to worry about the consequences.”

Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision has been followed by significant price hikes and layoffs, harming both gamers and developers. As we’ve seen across sectors, increasing market consolidation and increasing prices often go hand-in-hand. As dominant firms become… https://t.co/FoI50tlEsLOctober 3, 2025

Well, when you’re right, you’re right, and it’s hard to argue that Khan wasn’t right on this one. The FTC filed a lawsuit to block the deal in 2022 over concerns that the impact of the proposed acquisition was “reasonably likely to substantially lessen competition and/or tend to create a monopoly in both well-developed and new, burgeoning markets” if it was allowed to go through.

Microsoft and Activision, of course, insisted otherwise: Bobby Kotick, then the CEO of Activision Blizzard, said in a July 2023 statement that the merger “will benefit consumers and workers,” and also “enable competition rather than allow entrenched market leaders to continue to dominate our rapidly growing industry.”

The deal was closed in October 2023, even though the FTC’s legal action against it was still pending, and it’s been one shitty thing after another since then. Just a few months after the deal was sealed, Microsoft laid off 1,900 workers at Activision Blizzard and Xbox, and cancelled the studio’s long-awaited survival game; then in September 2024, another 650 people were shown the door. That was followed by the layoff of 9,000 more employees across Microsoft in July 2025, a spot of unpleasantness that also saw multiple game cancellations, the closure of The Initiative, and knock-on impacts on other studios, even as Xbox boss Phil Spencer said the company’s gaming business “never looked stronger.”

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Meanwhile, in case you hadn’t heard, the cost of Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass also jumped significantly this week. Which is actually the second price hike for Game Pass since the Activision Blizzard deal was concluded: The FTC had some harsh words for the previous (and, ironically, much smaller) price increase in July 2024.

Khan was replaced as chair of the FTC in January 2025 by incoming president Donald Trump, so her comments on X don’t carry any regulatory weight. But even if this is a hollow I-told-you-so, I’d say it’s a well-earned one.






Source link

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Trevor walks away from a burning van in Grand Theft Auto 5.
Gaming Gear

GTA 5 Trevor actor feels ‘nothing inside’ for GTA 6, challenges gamers to read Crime and Punishment: ‘Books are my thing’

by admin September 22, 2025



Excited for Grand Theft Auto 6? Odds are the answer is yes. With Rockstar already calling it the “largest game launch in history” over half a year out from release, I’m pretty sure the only people who aren’t feeling some kind of way about it are uncontacted in the Amazon or… they’re Steven Ogg, who played Trevor Philips in GTA 5.

In a recent, brief chat with YouTuber HarrisonShippp, Ogg was asked how excited he was for GTA 6’s release next year. “I feel nothing inside,” answered Ogg, definitively. And just in case you’re wondering if that’s a more general cry for help, he quickly made clear he was speaking specifically about GTA: “I’m not a gamer. I’ve never played a videogame, so I feel absolutely nothing.”

Which, hey, fair enough. Some voice actors get super deep into their roles—like the cast of Baldur’s Gate 3—and for others it’s just a paycheque. Neither’s an illegitimate approach, and Ogg has made clear before that he’s not keen on GTA fans essentially treating him like Trevor in real life.


Related articles

But then it gets a little weirder. “I think someone said yesterday at one point, ‘You should play GTA 5,'” recounted Ogg. “I said, ‘Why?’ They said ‘Because it’s so great!’ And I said, ‘Well one day you should read Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment’ and he went completely blank.”

Which is, uh, a bit of a non-sequitur, and I can’t help but wonder if Ogg’s interlocutor didn’t go “completely blank” because he was outmanoeuvred, but because countering a suggestion that you play GTA 5 with your own suggestion to read Dostoevsky is like responding to ‘You should try Indian food’ with ‘You should visit the proud nation of Denmark in autumn.’

Trevor from GTA 5 says this about GTA 6 – YouTube

Watch On

“Do you know Dostoevsky? Fyodor Dostoevsky?” Ogg interrogates his interviewer, who says he does not. “So there you go,” replies Ogg. “Why don’t you read that?

“Are you excited about that book coming out?” asks Ogg, of a book which was published during the reign of Tsar Alexander II. “See? It’s the same thing. Books are my thing.”

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

Now, I think Ogg was trying to make a point that asking him about games was like asking someone who doesn’t read books about books, but it’s certainly quite a roundabout way of going about it, and maybe a touch pretentious. The irony is, of course, that Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov—Crime and Punishment’s murderous main character—would probably be one of the most terminally online, videogame-meme-spouting nihilist weirdos in the world if he had the misfortune to exist in 2025. He sure as hell would’ve had feelings about GTA 6.

And anyway, The Idiot is better.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
90% of gamers have played a remake or remaster, finds new report
Esports

90% of gamers have played a remake or remaster, finds new report

by admin September 17, 2025


90% of PC and console gamers have played a remaster or remake in the last 12 months, a new report has found.

MTM, a specialist strategy and insights consultancy firm, published its findings in the ‘Remake vs Innovate: Is the past the future of gaming?’ report, published on September 15, 2025.

The report explored “the sentiment, tension, and economic impact of remakes and remastered video games on the market,” and saw MTM interviewing 1,500 monthly console/PC gamers in the US and UK (750 in each).

For this report, MTM specifically defined a remake as a “reimagining of an original game, built from scratch with updated graphics, gameplay mechanics, and sometimes story elements,” while the firm defines a remaster as “an enhanced version of the original game, improving visuals, sound, and performance without altering the core gameplay.”

MTM’s research found that 85% of those who played a remaster or remake in the last year did so despite not playing the original version of the game.

The research also found there’s a desire for remakes and remasters, with 76% of respondents saying they find them “appealing.”

In 2025 alone, we’ve seen several remakes and remasters, including Tomb Raider 4-6 Remastered, The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4, and the House of the Dead 2: Remake.

And there’s more to come, with Croc: Legend of the Gobbos, Gothic, Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, and Splinter Cell among the games set for revivals in 2025 and beyond.

According to MTM, many respondents said that they find remakes and remasters “help them reconnect with positive, comforting feelings and memories that they had when they first played the game.”

However, the firm noted that others raised concerns about studios “taking an easy, repetitive route to market” and that these remakes come at the cost of “sacrificing innovative, new experiences that could redefine the industry.”

“Our report shows that there is a strong appeal for remakes and remasters, but it’s a tight balancing act for studios to get right,” said Martin Bradley, head of gaming at MTM.”Many of these games are far out-selling their original release.

“Commercially, across games and other media, nostalgia is a trend set to continue well into 2026 and beyond, but gamers understand that remakes and remasters can come at the cost of creativity – potentially missing out on fresh narratives and experiences.”



Source link

September 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
An image of Hornet from Silksong engulfed with rage.
Product Reviews

Hollow Knight: Silksong sinks to ‘Mixed’ Steam review status among Chinese gamers over its bafflingly bad translation, with Team Cherry promising to improve it

by admin September 6, 2025



As reported by Eurogamer, Hollow Knight: Silksong has not met Chinese players’ expectations the way it has globally, with a 42% positive “Mixed” review status from nearly 20,000 Chinese language users, who say that the game’s localization was abysmally, uniquely poor.

Team Cherry has already responded to the issue, promising to work on the Chinese localization. “We appreciate you letting us know about quality issues with the current Simplified Chinese translation of Hollow Knight: Silksong,” wrote the game’s publishing and marketing lead, Matthew Griffin. “We’ll be working to improve the translation over the coming weeks.”

To our Chinese speaking fans:We appreciate you letting us know about quality issues with the current Simplified Chinese translation of Hollow Knight: Silksong.We’ll be working to improve the translation over the coming weeks.Thanks for your feedback and support.September 5, 2025

The reception among Chinese speaking reviewers sharply contrasts with Silksong’s reviews in all other languages it’s available in, with an overall 80% “Very Positive” rating among over 80,000 reviews worldwide. Of about 16,000 negative reviews worldwide, 11,800 of them are in Simplified Chinese.


Related articles

Some commenters on Griffin’s post have tried to elaborate on the specific issues at hand. Tiger Tang, who led the Chinese localization of 2020 RPG Omori, wrote that the main issues in Silksong’s localization are creative, not grammatical. “The current Silksong CN translation reads like a Wuxia novel instead of conveying the game’s tone,” said Tang. “This isn’t about effort, but about taste and direction, and speaking from experience likely can’t be fixed without replacing the translator.”

Others in the comments noted the same bizarre, anachronistic quality Tang mentions, while it also reportedly devolves into total gibberish in places. Kotaku cited criticism from translation expert Loek van Kooten, who called Silksong’s Chinese dialogue the equivalent of “a high-school drama club’s Elizabethan improv night.” Silksong had two people credited for its Chinese localization, versus the first game’s team of six.

In a final twist, one of those two translators, Hertzz Liu, appears to have been leaking details about the much-anticipated Silksong on social media. A June comment on the r/Silksong subreddit by user Infinite-Lake-7523 includes a screenshot of a Q&A on the Chinese site Tieba from a user named “Hertzzz.” Infinite-Lake-7523 ironically thought this was a hoax, but said Herzz(zz) estimated a pre-Christmas release date and shared some of their plans for the localization.

Is it still a “review bomb” if people are understandably upset over a defective product? The current Chinese translation of Silksong sounds like that infamous “restoration” of Ecce Homo. With issues this extensive and structural, I would expect Team Cherry to commit to an entirely new Chinese localization, but that will likely take some time.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.






Source link

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
G-Man’s Wobbly Walk from Garry's Mod
Gaming Gear

Now that the wait for Silksong is over, gamers can get back to their true calling: asking for Half-Life 3 in the chat

by admin September 6, 2025



Even gaming’s strongest warriors lose their way once in a while.

As skilled as we are at following checklists of things to collect and arrows that point us to our precise destination, sometimes a shiny object in the distance catches our eye and lures us away from our destiny as the one true savior of the realm. Sometimes, instead of staying devoted to our highest purpose as videogame enthusiasts—typing the words “Half-Life 3?” into the Twitch or YouTube chat box during any and every livestreamed event—we get distracted.

Hollow Knight: Silksong was very distracting. Announced, then vanished, then resurfaced and re-vanished in such a way as to inspire waves of hope, despair and development hell conspiracy theories. Half-Life 3 had to earn its place as the mystical ur-announcement, the unlikeliest of hoped-for “One last thing” bombshells to trot out at the end of a Game Awards or E3 keynote, by not existing for decades. Silksong took a mere five years to run the same cycle. And the whole time it was a real game!


Related articles

That realness made the possibility of Silksong popping up in every single Nintendo Direct, Gamescom Opening Night Live, or Sony State of Play seem so tantalizingly possible. How could anyone under those conditions not type “Silksong?” into the chat of any and every Twitch stream?

How could that infection of the mind not spread into ever-more-desperate permutations?

Silksong when?

Silksong where?

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

📢SKONG📢

Silksong??? 🤡

🤡

🤡🤡🤡

🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡

🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG🪡SKONG

Deep down, everyone who’s typed Silksong into chat over the last five years has known that they’d diverged from the critical path. They were on a sidequest, and it was taking a lot longer than they expected it to.

Of course that fosters a nervous, even manic energy. We are masters of efficiency! We live to complete objectives! The sooner we could stop typing Silksong into chat, the sooner we could get back to our one true duty of typing “Half-Life 3?” and knowing we are answering our true calling.

Team Cherry has done gamers the world over a great service by releasing Silksong. That it is seemingly a pretty dang good game is ultimately superfluous. We’re all now free to, undistracted, focus on what we can’t and will probably never have, which is far more important than enjoying what we’re fortunate enough to possess.

I know you may be rusty after half a decade, but it’s time to get your mojo back. It’s only a few months until The Game Awards, so you’re going to have to start practicing now, so that the letters and that tricky hyphen flow out of you as instinctively as a Mario hop.

Go ahead and open a random Twitch chat. Refamiliarize yourself with the endless rush of messages. Don’t let all those emotes and colored names distract you. Just start typing: Maybe a tentative “HL3?” to test that Silksong is fully out of your system. That you have the focus for the full name.

Keep typing it! Over and over again. I’m sure the streamer won’t mind! They’ll love it, actually. So will the other chatters, because even without a distraction as powerful as Silksong, there’s always something else to momentarily snare our attention away. A rupee. A bad hair day. A streamer not knowing how to pronounce “Lichdragon Fortissax.”

Once everyone sees your absolute commitment in typing it again and again I’m sure they’ll thank you for your vision. Soon everyone will be typing it too, snapped back to the path of destiny by your guiding hand:

Half-Life 3?

Is this Half-Life 3?

Half-Life 3 when?

Half-Life 3 when?



Source link

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A third of women mobile gamers in the UK feel guilty, says new study
Esports

A third of women mobile gamers in the UK feel guilty, says new study

by admin September 2, 2025


A new study has found that nearly a third of women who play mobile games in the UK feel guilty about gaming.

Published on August 21, 2025, the study was led by University of Stirling’s Dr Steph Rennick and Cardiff University’s Dr Seán Roberts, in partnership with Swedish gaming studio Undone Games, and surveyed 1,000 women who play mobile games in the UK about their attitudes to gaming.

The research found that 28% of the women surveyed agreed they felt guilty about taking time to play games, with older players (those over 55) less likely to feel shame than young players (those aged 16 to 24).

According to the study, women who kept that gaming secret from friends and family were three times more likely to feel guilt (63%) than those who didn’t (23%), while women who look forward to playing are 9% more likely to feel guilty than those who don’t (34% vs. 25%).

The research also found that this feeling of shame was aligned with whether women identified with gaming culture.

60% of respondents didn’t believe they played enough games to be considered a “gamer,” and women who said they perceive gaming as a male pastime were twice as likely to feel shame about playing games (46% vs. 23%), while those who would be embarrassed to call themselves a gamer felt 20% more guilt.

By contrast, women who believe occasionally playing games makes you a gamer felt 42% less shame.

“The study shows many women feel excluded from video game culture, with significant numbers of women feeling guilty about playing video games and worrying about what others think of them taking time to play games,” Dr Rennick told the University of Stirling.

“Interestingly, feeling guilty or keeping secrets about gaming did not correlate with how much time women spent playing games.

“We expected a significant proportion of women to report feelings of guilt around playing video games and taking leisure time more generally.

“But while we thought feelings of guilt or shame would have a negative impact on the amount of time women spent playing games, we didn’t find such a connection. Those who feel guilty or keep secrets don’t play less, but they feel worse.”

Elsewhere, the study found correlations between guilt and barriers related to game marketing, with 41% of women more likely to feel guilt if they didn’t know which games to try, and 44% feeling more shame if they thought games were too violent.

“This aligns with barriers identified by Chess (2017): That women may not be aware of the diversity of games available, because there is a limited range marketed to them (thus the former), and yet when they think of ‘games’ simpliciter, they may not have casual games in mind (thus the latter),” the report said.

The report specifies that this study only considered responses from people identifying as women, and while its results are “revealing,” they do not demonstrate that women feel more guilty about playing mobile games than other genders.

“Taken as a whole, we propose that the results suggest that many UK women feel excluded from video game culture, and that this exclusion can be a barrier to playing mobile games, or being open about one’s play,” the report stated.

“In other words, many of the results can be explained by women’s sense that games and gaming culture are not for them.”

“This is in keeping with previous research, which has found many gender disparities in leisure time, with women being almost twice as likely to feel guilty about taking ‘me time’ than men (GameHouse, 2023),” the report continued

“Women tend to spend less time playing if they feel they don’t fit into gaming culture – for example, if they believe that gaming is a male pastime, or that they don’t play enough games to be a gamer, are embarrassed to call themselves a gamer, or think video games are too violent,” Dr Roberts told the University of Sterling.

“In contrast, women spend more time playing if they are proud of their gaming achievements.

“This suggests that guilt and shame are just symptoms. While these are clearly negatively impacting women gamers, they may not be the root of the problem.

“Instead, removing barriers to play for women may require deeper changes such as reducing leisure inequality between men and women.”



Source link

September 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
39% of gamers in China are interested in generative AI’s application in games
Esports

39% of gamers in China are interested in generative AI’s application in games

by admin September 1, 2025


According to a new report, gamers in China are expressing a “high interest” in generative AI.

Niko Partners’ China Gamer Behaviour and Market Insights report, published on August 27, 2025, surveyed 1,058 gamers in China to provide insights on player demographics, behaviour, and engagement in 2025.

The report found that 39.4% of gamers in China are interested in generative AI’s application in games, while 85.2% are aware of the technology.

Niko Partners noted that Chinese studios are “ahead of the game” with 60% already using generative AI in their development pipelines.

The analysis firm, in particular, highlighted NetEase, which has “integrated multiple generative AI features into Justice Online Mobile, allowing players to interact with smart NPCs or create custom videos with their in-game character.”

Elsewhere, the report found that esports and game livestreaming remain “key verticals” in China in 2025.

46.5% of respondents said they have engaged with esports, defined as having played or watched an esports game, or competed in a tournament themselves, while one in four respondents said they regularly watch game livestreamers, with “influencers and streamers playing a key role in game marketing and promotion.”

According to Niko Partners’ report, short video apps, like Douyin (TikTok) and Kuaishou, have continued to grow in importance and are “key marketing channels for game developers looking to target players in the country.”

The survey found that these short video apps are one of the leading sources of video game information, with 41% of gamers in China getting new game information from these platforms, compared to game platforms and stores (38.7%), social media (33.9%), messaging apps (33.4%), and influencers and streamers (31.6%).

Niko Partners noted that while “short video is the leading source for both mobile and PC gamers,” game platform recommendations are the leading source on console.

The report also found that mini games have “emerged as a notable segment” in China.

The firm defines mini games as those “can be played instantly, without download, and are typically available within platforms and apps such as WeChat and Douyin.”

The report found that 84.4% of gamers in China have played a mini game, with 17.7% of women playing these games daily, compared to 10.3% of men.

“Mini games are reaching a broader and more casual demographic in China, already accounting for nearly 10% of total player spending on video games,” Niko Partners stated.

In June, Niko Partners released its Market Model Reports, which reported that the Asia, Middle East, and North Africa (MENA) games markets generated $86.6 billion from player spending on software and services in 2024, marking a 1.4% increase.

The report also projected that “the regions’ development will continue reliably through 2029” with revenue estimated to reach $96 billion in Asia and MENA by 2029.



Source link

September 1, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Seagate Portable 2tb External Hard Drive Hdd
Game Reviews

Seagate’s Portable 2TB Hard Drive Is Just $5 More Than the 1TB, Almost Free Insurance Policy for Gamers

by admin August 31, 2025


A catastrophic data loss goes way beyond just losing files. You could have digitized photos or home movies on your hard drive, and if they’re not backed up when your computer meets with a sudden disaster, they’re gone forever. That’s when your data loss becomes a huge ball of emotional stress that you really could do without.

The $70 price attached to the Seagate Portable 2TB External Hard Drive at Amazon during a limited-time deal might be the least expensive insurance policy you’ll find today, and that’s true for PC and Mac users, and also Xbox and PlayStation gamers. (Because losing game data also sucks.) It’s two terabytes of plug-and-play, cross-platform-compatible peace of mind at an exceptional price.

See at Amazon

Fast and Secure

The Seagate Portable 2TB External Hard Drive works with USB 3.0 for super-fast file transfers of up to 120MB/s, and also with USB 2.0 on older devices. Either way, there’s no app or driver you need to install, and it doesn’t need any external power source. It’s strictly plug-and-play across all of its compatible platforms. The included 18-inch USB 3.0 cable gives you flexibility when it comes to where to set up the drive. (There’s really nothing worse than those cheap 4-inch cables packaged with other drives.)

The Seagate 2TB drive works with automatic backup apps like Apple’s Time Machine, and also as a drag-and-drop interface. If you want to take your data or game files on the go, the Seagate is literally pocket-sized, barely over a half-inch in thickness and exceptionally light, and built sturdily enough that you don’t have to worry about tossing it into a backpack on your way out the door.

Backup for your Backup

Things do happen, which is why you’re buying a reliable backup drive in the first place. And if some awful fate were to befall your Seagate drive, it comes with a year of Seagate’s Rescue Service, which depending on the severity of the damage would either repair the drive or extract the data from it and send it back to you on a new drive.

A smart and increasingly common practice is to copy your most precious and/or sensitive data and files onto one drive and store it in a safe location outside of your home, thus covering yourself in case of fire or other natural disaster. At the current $70 Amazon price for the 2TB Seagate Portable Hard Drive, having one emergency backup drive offsite and another to keep with your computer is a smart tactic. But having at least one fast, reliable backup drive is essential, so head to Amazon now and grab a Seagate Portable 2TB External Hard Drive while it’s on sale for just $70.

See at Amazon



Source link

August 31, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (752)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • Heart Machine ends development on Hyper Light Breaker mere months after it entered early access
  • Blatant Animal Crossing Rip-Off Somehow Lands On The PS5 Store
  • Beloved co-operative platformer Pico Park: Classic Edition has been accidentally made free on Steam forever
  • Fortnite Creators Accused Of Running A Bot Scam For Big Payouts
  • “Incredibly moved and grateful” – Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’s director talks success, “art house” aspirations and the scope of future projects

Recent Posts

  • Heart Machine ends development on Hyper Light Breaker mere months after it entered early access

    October 9, 2025
  • Blatant Animal Crossing Rip-Off Somehow Lands On The PS5 Store

    October 9, 2025
  • Beloved co-operative platformer Pico Park: Classic Edition has been accidentally made free on Steam forever

    October 9, 2025
  • Fortnite Creators Accused Of Running A Bot Scam For Big Payouts

    October 9, 2025
  • “Incredibly moved and grateful” – Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’s director talks success, “art house” aspirations and the scope of future projects

    October 9, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • Heart Machine ends development on Hyper Light Breaker mere months after it entered early access

    October 9, 2025
  • Blatant Animal Crossing Rip-Off Somehow Lands On The PS5 Store

    October 9, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close