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Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater Review - A true classic sheds its skin with a bold new look
Game Updates

Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater Review – A true classic sheds its skin with a bold new look

by admin August 22, 2025


How crisp and 4K-ified a nostalgic menu looks on a big TV is the silliest thing I’ve ever been excited about, but Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is a shot-for-shot remake which luxuriates in the little things.

What makes Metal Gear Solid 3 one of the best games of all time isn’t necessarily its sneaking or its plot, but its inventiveness and reactivity. If you whip the camera around Snake in the medical screen too quickly he falls to his knees and blows chunks when you return to the game, if you quickly snipe a boss after a cutscene hours before his scheduled fight, he’ll be dead when you’re supposed to face him, and rabbit might taste pretty good, but instant ramen noodles are still the greatest food known to man.

It’s full of bespoke, purpose-built mechanics which had never been used before or since, all of which were so exciting in their nerdy but approachable simulation. Whether it’s digging out bullets with a combat knife and bandaging the wound or burning off a fat leech with an equally stubby cuban cigar in the Cure screen, or snaring vampire bats, rats and reticulated pythons to recover your stamina, each moving part is so simply implemented, but with an accessibility that made them iconic.

Metal Gear Solid Delta translates the original’s quirkiness beautifully to a new generation with MGS5-esque controls and modern Unreal 5 engine textures and lighting which don’t so much reinvent the classic, but leverage the soft-focus of memory. Delta looks like you remember MGS3 looking, rather than the sharp, polygonal reality of a 20 year old PS2 game.

The visual improvements are, by-and-large, fantastic, going above and beyond the stretched and muddy environments of a typical HD remaster to deliver lush jungles, dusty mountain trails and austere laboratories which feel dense with granular detail and distinctly different from one another.

Image credit: Konami

You might spot a rough clothing texture here-and-there, but given MGS’s proclivity for crawling through the undergrowth and more portrait close ups than school picture day, everything and everyone looks good.

This gives a new lease of life to one of the more underrated aspects of Kojima games, the kinetic cutscene camera work and shot selection. Once you notice how dynamically and playfully the remade cutscenes are presented, and how much that contrasts with the legendarily (infamously) verbose codec scenes, it drives home even more clearly how perfect Metal Gear Solid is for this visual overhaul.

However, within the remake realm, Metal Gear Solid Delta occupies an interesting spot. While there’s now been a plethora of remakes, remasters and reimaginings from all sorts of studios and genres, it’s obvious that Konami was most inspired (both judging by this and their recent Silent Hill 2 remake) by the Resident Evil remakes.

All of the Resident Evil remakes are great but they make such an interesting contrast with Metal Gear. In Resident Evil 4 Remake, which I expected to be a lot more similar to the dogged, reiterative style of Delta, the development team, comprised of many of the people work had worked on the PS2 version, took the opportunity to “fix” fan-favourite flubs and memes which they obviously felt undermined the vision they were going for but, I feel, lost some of the magic in doing so.

Resident Evil 2 Remake on the other hand was absolutely triumphant in its reimagining of the original game. It felt like a modern game designed with the spirit of the classic that gained a truly innovative impetus from the new technologies and mechanics developed for Resident Evil 7 that it added, creating something which didn’t just reanimate the bones of the old game, but augmented them into something tangibly exciting.

Metal Gear Solid Delta, for all its strengths, doesn’t do that. All of the fun stuff that you remember is still here, ready and waiting for you like a gavial under the waterline. But outside of the new shooting controls, which are a vast improvement even if you try and argue that the original was a more tactile and realistic simulation of the complexity of actually firing a weapon, Delta feels relatively untouched creatively and mechanically.

Image credit: Konami

I’m not saying I wanted Ocelot to suddenly start to hunt you through the jungle like Mr X in Resident Evil 2, but within the wider context of what’s clearly inspired Delta, it doesn’t quite reach the heights of something you’ve never seen before – which is ironic given the greatness of MGS3 lies in its originality.

However, that’s not to say that Delta is low effort in any sense. Its painstaking recreation, which brings back one of gaming’s greatest ever Easter Eggs that was missing in the MGS HD Collection, is saved from tautology both by its completeness and commitment to not providing the path of least resistance.

To give more examples, it would’ve been very easy to forgo the Snake vs Monkey Ape Escape mode as a license not worth the effort, or to brighten up the cave complex after The Pain lest modern players think their HDR is broken, rather than letting Snake’s eyes naturally adjust to the gloom.

So, while there are no less than five other versions of Metal Gear Solid 3, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater is now the definitive place to play a bonafide classic in a way that feels both accessibly modern, but still authentic to the original experience.



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Xbox's AMD partnership sheds light on the future of the division's ecosystem
Product Reviews

Xbox’s AMD partnership sheds light on the future of the division’s ecosystem

by admin June 17, 2025


Microsoft has no plans to get out of the console business anytime soon. The company has been reiterating for a while that it’s going to make at least one more generation of Xbox consoles. It’s now been confirmed that AMD will power the upcoming hardware, as it did with the Xbox Series X/S.

Xbox president Sarah Bond made the announcement in a short video. Under the multi-year partnership, Xbox and AMD are “advancing the state of art in gaming silicon to deliver the next generation of graphics innovation; to unlock a deeper level of visual quality; and immersive gameplay and player experiences enhanced with the power of AI, all while maintaining compatibility with your existing library of Xbox games,” Bond said.

A leaked presentation from May 2022 (which was part of the massive Xbox leak the following year) indicated that Microsoft had yet to make a decision about the processor and GPU for the next Xbox console(s), suggesting in one slide that it planned to strike an agreement with AMD to supply those and in another that it yet had to make an “Arm64 decision.” As we now know, the company is doubling down with AMD.

Microsoft

On the surface, the AMD agreement is the main news coming out of Bond’s announcement. But, if you read between the lines, there are lots of other interesting details to tease out from what she said in the short video.

For one thing, the AI aspect of Bond’s carefully crafted statement lines up with details in the leak (and other developments) about Microsoft embracing artificial intelligence and machine learning in future Xbox games, including for things like AI agents. So the company is likely to keep going down that path.

Bond said that Microsoft and AMD will “co-engineer silicon across a portfolio of devices including our next-generation Xbox consoles, in your living room and in your hands,” implying that the company is planning more handhelds beyond the Xbox-branded ROG devices that are coming later this year. Those are also powered by AMD.

In addition, Bond said the next-gen of Xbox devices will maintain “compatibility with your existing library of Xbox games.” Xbox has made a commitment to backward compatibility, but that’s still welcome to hear.

Those are fairly interesting nuggets, no doubt, but there were two other things Bond said that I think are starting to shed more light on the future of the Xbox ecosystem. First, she said that her team is “building you a gaming platform that’s always with you, so you can play the games you want across devices anywhere you want, delivering you an Xbox experience not locked to a single store or tied to one device.”

That “single store” phrasing is a chin stroker, especially in light of the new user interface Xbox is making for the ROG handhelds. The Windows-powered devices won’t only allow users to play games from the Xbox PC app, Xbox consoles via remote play and the cloud. They’ll integrate games from other PC storefronts, such as Battle.net (which is run by Microsoft-owned Activision Blizzard), Steam, GOG and more. Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass users have long had access to EA Play games as part of their subscriptions. Ubisoft+ is on Xbox consoles too.

Microsoft

Perhaps this concept of not being “locked to a single store” will start to work in other ways. Valve said a few years ago that it would be happy to integrate Game Pass into Steam, for instance. Likewise, Microsoft has said it would welcome Steam and the Epic Games Store app onto its PC app store (though Valve and Epic probably wouldn’t want to give Microsoft a cut of game sales). Maybe we might finally see those come to fruition in the next few years.

But how might those integrations work on an Xbox console? Bond hinted at that too. She said Xbox is “working closely with the Windows team to ensure that Windows is the number one platform for gaming.”

Sure, that could be a reference to PC gaming. But Bond didn’t explicitly state that, which has me wondering if the next Xbox console might be more of a Windows PC that sits under your TV. That would align with comments made a few months back by Jez Corden of Windows Central, who said the next Xbox is “a PC, in essence, but with a TV-friendly shell.”

As with the likes of the Steam Deck and other handheld PCs, this would potentially give game developers a specific set of specifications to work with (though ensuring their games are optimized for as many desktop and laptop configurations as possible will still be a complex task). Perhaps the user interface Xbox is debuting on the Ally X devices is a sign of things to come on larger displays.

Moreover, the Xbox and Windows teams are stripping out unnecessary aspects of the operating system in the Xbox Ally handhelds to make them run more efficiently. What’s to stop them from doing the same in the next Xbox console? That could enable Xbox to offer a more unified ecosystem across all platforms, while streamlining things for developers who want to make games for both PC and Xbox. Don’t forget that Microsoft has been making a real effort to make Windows run more smoothly on ARM-based processors as part of its Copilot+ PC push.

We might have to wait two or three more years to get a fuller sense of Microsoft’s vision for the future of Xbox consoles. But it certainly has the opportunity to knit its platforms more closely together and make playing Xbox (and PC) games across devices a more seamless experience.



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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The Other Great Wall
Gaming Gear

Archaeological Dig Sheds New Light on the Other Great Wall of China

by admin May 29, 2025


Practically everyone has heard about the Great Wall of China, but the iconic monument is not the only massive frontier in northern East Asia.

An international team of researchers has surveyed a section belonging to the Medieval Wall System (MWS), a little-known and extremely remote network of walls, enclosures, and trenches across China, Mongolia, and Russia. Specifically, the researchers investigated a 252-mile-long (405-kilometer) section in Mongolia, called the Mongolian Arc, and conducted an excavation at one of its enclosures. Instead of a thick stone wall, the archaeologists uncovered a shallow ditch, suggesting the barrier didn’t serve defensive purposes.

“We sought to determine the use of the enclosure and the Mongolian Arc,” Gideon Shelach-Lavi, an archaeologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said in an Antiquity statement. “What was its function? Was it primarily a military system designed to defend against invading armies, or was it intended to control the empire’s outermost regions by managing border crossings, addressing civilian unrest, and preventing small-scale raids?”

Various dynasties worked on the 2,485-mile-long (4,000-km) MWS, such as the Jin dynasty (1115 to 1234 CE), whose empire included modern-day North China and regions of Inner Asia. While the enclosure was made of thick stone walls, archaeologists found that the wall itself was actually a shallow ditch along a pile of earth.

Archaeologists excavating a square enclosure along the Medieval Wall System. © Tal Rogovski

A ditch certainly could not have defended against an invading army—but it may have helped guide people toward gates and served as a symbol of the Jin dynasty’s power and control of the region. Forts built along this barrier would have allowed soldiers or guards to monitor who was coming and going. In other words, the researchers suggest that those in power used the Mongolian Arc to control the movement of civilians, animals, and goods rather than to defend the frontier.

Led by Shelach-Lavi, the archaeologists also unearthed coins from the Song dynasty (960 to 1279 CE), iron artifacts, and a heated stone platform that would have been used as both a stove and a bed. Furthermore, “considerable investment in the garrison’s walls, as well as in the structures within them, suggests a year-round occupation,” explained Shelach-Lavi. He and his colleagues detailed their work in a study published today in the journal Antiquity. More specifically, this indicates that the dynasties who built the MWS greatly valued civilian infrastructure that could both symbolize their power and also enable trade.

Moving forward, future research might shed light on the people who walked along this frigid frontier hundreds of years ago. “Analysis of samples taken from this site will help us better understand the resources used by the people stationed at the garrison, their diet, and their way of life,” Shelach-Lavi concluded.



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May 29, 2025 0 comments
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