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

Showcase

In Full Bloom isn't just about being a planet-devouring Sarlacc's babysitter, it's my brain on games showcase
Game Updates

In Full Bloom isn’t just about being a planet-devouring Sarlacc’s babysitter, it’s my brain on games showcase

by admin August 20, 2025


I drop the house into the great maw (not that one). It screams as it falls away from the clutches of my mouse clicker. It disappears from view, but there’s a sickeningly wet crunching that betrays its fate. Oh and the fact that the entity’s jaws immediately flare open once more, teeth and tongue dripping with anguish to cram vegetation, trees, towerblocks into its gullet.

This is In Full Bloom, a game that scores the full 10/10 in the wonderfully ironic naming category. Set in a greyscale universe sucked free of all hope and colour, it tasks you with accomplishing an impossible task. You’ve got to keep the infernal child of constant consumption happy by tossing an unending stream of junk into its mouth.

The demo I’ve just played for it has been out for a little while on Itch.io, while the Steam page foretelling a full release in 2026 went up a couple of months ago. The thing that led me to In Full Bloom today, of all days, was one tweet in a thread, which featured a picture of Swiss studio Obleak Games’ patch of Gamescom. I saw the giant mouth perched atop a dark planet, and decided this was a thing I had to play.

I’m glad I did. In Full Bloom’s described as a Katamari-like, and the truth is that it’s exactly what would happen if the folks who do Katamari were like ‘Right, how can we take everything that doesn’t make the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end in this game, and flip it so that’s a feeling so overwhelming you won’t be able to forget it’. To put it another way, the game’s like jumping into a MeatCanyon video about ASMR. Being not just present among the skin-crawling proceedings, but winding the crank that powers their descent into even more horrific depths.

Ok, I might be being a bit dramatic, but if you dislike the sound of people eating, this isn’t the game for you. The demo has three stages – small mouth, big mouth, and bigger mouth. You start off with the first, feeding it detritus and colourless veg from a garden as it grows with each gulp. The entity’s young at this point, so it makes panicked baby squeals and gurgles amid the slurping and swallowing of its three-toothed maw. I think they get more intense if you stop shovelling food in, but honestly they made me so uncomfortable that I couldn’t entertain slowing down to find out.

Watch on YouTube

Big mouth’s grown up, so it has a full set of human gnashers and can gradually work its way up to chowing down a full cul-de-sac. Fences, trees, screaming houses. There’s also a bus doing merry laps around the creature – you can have your weird son try to catch it by pointing with the mouse, but I didn’t manage it. The lethargy of this movement, while saving In Full Bloom from being a fully static experience and undeniably fitting with the rest of its atmoshere, does mean there’s nothing akin to the frenetic rolling that gives good universe Katamari its upbeat tempo and fuels a lot of the fun.

The sense of satisfaction you get from plucking up increasingly ludicrous amounts and sizes of object is still there, but that sense of satisfaction has become terrifying, as you sacrifice moons to a continent-proportioned pit of despair.

Image credit: obleak games

The demo will need plenty of fleshing out before it’s a game I can see myself playing for more than one sitting. It’s carried a lot by the novelty of the weirdness. As of right now, it’s a top class metaphor for the mechanisms of capital, always desperate for more, demanding constant and unsustainable growth because as the game’s description says, “there is only one way”.

I reckon it’s more universal than just that, though. It might be because the experience is fresh in my mind, but I spent my time with it being reminded of how helping cover the biggest game showcases has often left me feeling so far in my career. I like video games, but when they’re being fired at you one after the other, in a barrage of double digit minutes or hours, they tend to just blend into an overwhelming soup of lights, faces, rambling voices, bangs, booms, instrumental swells, platforms, release dates, jangling Keighs.

By the time your eyes have adjusted to try and take in one, the next has already arrived, like scoops of ice cream being fired from a machine gun. In the rush of the moment, the job’s to be a speedy vessel of information, from the stream to the virtual page. Ice Cream. Vanilla. Travelling at 50mph. Could have been double scoop if £50.99 deluxe edition was bought. Publish.

There’s a great skill to it, and even more of a skill to being able to take all of this in and occasionally give some useful commentary, like ‘the consistency of that mint scoop as it flies by may hint at chocolate chips, which would be an improvement from the last one, the chiplessness of which I and many long-time fans disliked’. As with folks watching at home, there’s a thrill to just seeing which games pop up, but the adrenaline rush is tied to a love of the scramble.

There may well be a day when this work feels more like classic Katamari rolling to me, but for now it’s more like feeding In Full Bloom’s great gob. Speaking of which, oh god, I think it’s hungry again.



Source link

August 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Arc System Works Showcase Announced For This Friday
Game Updates

Arc System Works Showcase Announced For This Friday

by admin June 24, 2025


Arc System Works, the developer behind Guilty Gear, BlazBlue, and the recently announced Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls, is revealing its next projects via its own showcase.

Airing on Friday, June 27 at 6 p.m. PT/9 p.m. ET, the Arc System Works Showcase will feature new updates on what’s coming from the popular studio. In addition to providing what the publisher states as the “latest information on various game titles, including completely new titles,” the event will feature the reveal of a new project by Guilty Gear creator Daisuke Ishiwatari. You can check out the showcase once it goes live here. 

 

Though not confirmed, there’s a good chance we’ll see more of  Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls, Arc’s superhero 4v4 tag fighter revealed during the PlayStation State of Play earlier this month.  The promising title is slated to launch next year, so here’s hoping it makes an appearance during the Showcase.  Other announced upcoming games that could appear include Hunter x Hunter: Nen x Impact, launching on July 16, and Double Dragon Revive, launching on October 25. 

What do you hope to see at the Arc System Works Showcase? Let us know in the comments!



Source link

June 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Little Nightmares Showcase Announced For Next Week
Game Updates

Little Nightmares Showcase Announced For Next Week

by admin June 20, 2025


It’s summer gaming showcase season, and the minds behind Little Nightmares are getting in on the fun by announcing a dedicated presentation for the franchise. The Little Nightmares Showcase has been revealed for next week and will likely have an update on the upcoming third entry.

All we know about the showcase for now is that it airs on June 24 at 12 p.m. PT/3 p.m. ET. The news was shared by the Little Nightmares III X account, with a post stating,

Something unsettling is coming. It’s closer than you think.

Are you ready to face it, little ones? 

One would imagine the presentation will heavily revolve around Little Nightmares III, which was first announced at Gamescom 2023. Supermassive Games is developing the title, replacing the original creators, Tarsier Studios, which is currently working on a new horror platformer, Reanimal. Little Nightmares III was delayed to 2025 last year and has no concrete release date.

 

It’s also plausible we’ll learn concrete details for the long-rumored Little Nightmares Enhanced Edition. Though technically unannounced, the game’s existence first came to light in late 2023 after it received a rating by the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) in South Africa. Much like the Enhanced Edition for Little Nightmares II that released in 2021 (also developed by Supermassive), this would presumably be a new-gen remaster of the 2017 original game.

Whether we get a Little Nightmares III release date or confirmation for the Enhanced Edition of the first title, we don’t have to wait long to find out either way.  Until then, you can brush up on Little Nightmares III by checking out 18 minutes of gameplay here. 

What do you hope or expect to see during the Little Nightmares Showcase? Let us know in the comments. 



Source link

June 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Capcom Spotlight Will Showcase New Monster Hunter Wilds Update, Resident Evil Requiem, And More Next Week
Game Updates

Capcom Spotlight Will Showcase New Monster Hunter Wilds Update, Resident Evil Requiem, And More Next Week

by admin June 20, 2025


The summer game showcase madness isn’t over yet! Resident Evil and Monster Hunter publisher-developer Capcom has announced it will hold a Capcom Spotlight next week to showcase several upcoming games and more, including the newest update for Monster Hunter Wilds. More specifically, it will air at 3 p.m. PT/6 p.m. ET on Thursday, June 26, and run for approximately 40 minutes. 

“The Capcom Spotlight is a digital event that brings you the latest news from Capcom,” the show’s description reads. “We will be presenting the latest news on highly anticipated upcoming Capcom titles along with developer interviews. Please look forward to information regarding the newest update for Monster Hunter Wilds as well.” 

If this description and accompanying teaser video, which you can view below, are any indication, it seems the new update for Monster Hunter Wilds will be the big highlight of the show. But, considering Capcom pulled back the curtains on Pragmata gameplay at Summer Games Fest, and recently revealed Resident Evil Requiem, Street Fighter 6’s Year 3 fighters DLC, and more, there’s plenty of Capcom games to go around. 

 

The Capcom Spotlight showcase airs next week on Thursday, June 26. 

In the meantime, read Game Informer’s thoughts on Resident Evil Requiem after a behind-closed-doors preview, and then check out our hands-on preview thoughts of Pragmata. After that, read about how Capcom’s sleeper hit Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess runs on Switch 2, and then read Game Informer’s Monster Hunter Wilds review. 

What do you hope to see during next week’s Capcom Spotlight? Let us know in the comments below!



Source link

June 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Silent Hill f gets development deep dive at Konami game showcase
Game Updates

Silent Hill f gets development deep dive at Konami game showcase

by admin June 12, 2025


Silent Hill f just got a comprehensive deep dive during today’s Konami Press Start showcase.

This portion of the event introduced various developers to fans, and highlighted different aspects of the game including the shift to Japan, combat, monster design, and more.

It kicked off with Silent Hill series producer Motoi Okamato explaining why Silent Hill f has shifted to a Japanese setting. He states: “Silent Hill was a series that fused Western horror and Japanese horror, but as the series progressed, I felt that the essence of Japanese horror was lost”.

You can watch the Silent Hill f segment of the showcase here! Watch on YouTube

From there, we were introduced to Neobards and game producer Albert Lee, who described how the studio has approached the Japanese focus on Silent Hill f. Game designer Al Yang then took the spotlight, explaining how Neoboards iterated on the “uneasy charm and loneliness” of Ebisugaoka, where the game is set.

This narration from Yang can be heard while new gameplay footage of Silent Hill f can be seen. In it, we see Hinako explore Ebisugaoka, swing around a steel pipe, and generally be horrified by all the monsters and spooky locations she finds herself in.

Following this, Okamato returned to establish a key pillar of the game and its Japanese horror style, which he dubbed “beauty, but disturbing”. According to Yang, this concept was applied throughout the game, with the team working with artist Kera. This explanation came alongside concept art of different horrific looking monsters.

Silent Hill f is set to release on 25 September, and will be “more action oriented than the Silent Hill 2 remake”.



Source link

June 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A Silent Hill remake has been announced as "in development" during Konami Press Start showcase
Game Reviews

A Silent Hill remake has been announced as “in development” during Konami Press Start showcase

by admin June 12, 2025


A Silent Hill remake has just been announced during Konami’s Press Start showcase.

The game will be created by Bloober team in collaboration with Konami. As of writing, the only confirmed is that the game is “in development”.

The brief reveal trailer was paired alongside the Silent Hill 1 intro theme, further confirming that this is the original game in the legendary horror series being remade.


To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

This remake of the original 1999 game by Bloober Team, the developer responsible for the excellent Silent Hill 2 remake. That game received ample critical and commercial success, and in Eurogamer’s own review of the Silent Hill 2 remake, Vikki Blake noted: “Against the odds, Bloober Team has delivered a remake that both expands Silent Hill 2 in just the right places, and gives careful attention to what it preserves.”

This will be the first time Silent Hill 1 has gotten the remake treatment, although it was reimagined back in 2009 with Silent Hill: Shattered Memories. That game, released on the Wii and later ported to the PS2, was an interesting spin on the game that started it all.

Bloober Team is also working on Cronos: The New Dawn, which got a release date announcement at Summer Game Fest only a few days ago.



Source link

June 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Metal Gear Solid Delta’s James Bond opening gets the remake treatment
Game Updates

Konami’s Press Start games showcase: how and where to watch

by admin June 11, 2025


In the wake of the Summer Game Fest frenzy, Konami still has games to show. On Thursday, Konami will stream a new showcase called Konami Press Start, an event which promises game news and updates on upcoming titles like the Metal Gear Solid 3 remake and the next original Silent Hill game.

Konami Press Start will stream live on June 12, starting at 9 a.m EDT/6 a.m. PDT. You can watch it live on Konami’s YouTube channel. The stream is expected to run 37 minutes, and cover Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater and Silent Hill f. Konami also promises more than just those games, so keep your fingers crossed for new details on the Gradius Origins collection, an update on the next Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection, and confirmation on DLC for Bloober Team’s Silent Hill 2 remake.



Source link

June 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Konami Press Start Showcase Will Highlight Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, Silent Hill F, And More This Week
Game Updates

Konami Press Start Showcase Will Highlight Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, Silent Hill F, And More This Week

by admin June 10, 2025


Though last week was packed with showcases like the PlayStation State of Play, Geoff Keighley’s Summer Games Fest, the Xbox Games Showcase 2025, Day of the Devs, and plenty more, there’s still some summer fun on the horizon. Konami has revealed it will host a Press Start showcase this week on Thursday, June 12, at 6 a.m. PT/9 a.m. ET, where it will highlight roughly 37 minutes of Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, Silent Hill f, and more. 

“Join Konami for a broadcast of the latest information on new, upcoming titles like Silent Hill f and Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater, and more,” the show’s description reads. 

 

Though that’s not much to go on, fans excited for Konami’s upcoming Metal Gear Solid 3 remake and the latest Silent Hill, which brings players to Japan, should tune in when Press Start airs on Thursday. 

In the meantime, check out the latest Silent Hill f gameplay trailer, where we also learned it is launching this September, and then check out Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater’s remade version of the original game’s iconic opening movie. 



Source link

June 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Ending the Xbox Summer Game Fest Showcase with COD: Black Ops 7 was a terrible decision, even though it no doubt made perfect sense
Game Reviews

Ending the Xbox Summer Game Fest Showcase with COD: Black Ops 7 was a terrible decision, even though it no doubt made perfect sense

by admin June 10, 2025


Xbox had a really good showing on Sunday, its showcase at the tail end of a Summer Game Fest period that has at times felt rather glib managing to make people feel happy about video games again – at least for a little bit. It was full of the kind of quirky and interesting-looking games that in years past would have been reserved for PlayStation’s E3 showcase, with only a smattering of what you might call Big games with a capital B. That was until the end.

Phil Spencer, CEO Microsoft Gaming, appeared on the pre-recorded showcase to wrap things up, tantalisingly teasing 2026 releases for Gears of War E-Day, a new Forza (presumably Horizon), and the next Halo. These big games were absent (as were many others – Fable 4 and Perfect Dark, most notably), and Phil I think wanted to acknowledge that. As with showcases of this nature, especially during key moments of the year, there’s always that hope for a “one more thing” mic drop. And it came… and went.

Maybe it’s just me, but this final reveal (as much as the whole thing is marketing as much as it is an event) needs to be something unexpected. Perhaps a sequel to a franchise that’s been dormant for years, maybe a brand-new game series from a big developer, maybe a big blowout on a game fans have been desperate to see more on. What it shouldn’t be, ever, is the game announcement equivalent of announcing the sun will rise and then fall, that another day is coming tomorrow, or that the tide will be in and then out. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 didn’t need to be at the Xbox Showcase and the Xbox Showcase didn’t need Call of Duty: Black Ops 7.

The Xbox showcase. Phil Spencer comes on at 1 hour 5 minutes to wrap up the show and tease one more thing.Watch on YouTube

Imagine for a moment that EA held its own big showcase event this year, as it used to do back in the days when E3 was really pumping out the events. The publisher has dropped reveals for a new Madden, Battlefield, and Need for Speed, then we’re given the “one more thing” mic drop… and it’s a new FIFA (EA FC). At first, though, you don’t realise it’s EA FC, the snazzy and really pretty cool trailer making you comb through your mind to figure out what this neat looking teaser is revealing. Then, just as the lead character morphs into a football and is kicked by Harry Kane, EA FC 27 flashes onto the screen. You’d feel duped, and somewhat confused.

I understand that Call of Duty is a game series so huge a large portion of people are going to want to see a trailer for the next entry, and that from a business perspective it might seem ludicrous to not give it top billing, but it honestly sucked all the air out of the room. I’m not naive enough to expect something equivalent to an Elder Scrolls 6 reveal at the end of every show, but that moment matters. It’s an important beat that can last long in the memory. It was a moment wasted for Xbox.

If we go back just a couple of days to PlayStation’s pre-SGF State of Play (a lower stakes event, but still a presentation of new games), it ended with Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls. Not a game I’m personally excited about because I can’t get into fighting games, but it was a big surprise reveal, a big license with Marvel, and it went pretty deep into the whole thing. PlayStation is seemingly courting the fighting game fan, and for that audience this was a big moment and a big win. It was everything the BLOPS 7 reveal wasn’t.

Had an alien been given the basic rundown of the video game world here on Earth, I have no doubt they’d read this article and shake their head in disbelief and confusion. What can I say, sometimes vibes matter more than numbers. The best option isn’t always the biggest.



Source link

June 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Pip Boy from the Fallout series being the benevolent hacker he is
Gaming Gear

Every videogame showcase is a PC gaming show now

by admin June 9, 2025



Jody Macgregor, Weekend/AU Editor

(Image credit: Future)

This week: Between obsessing over the trailers for Mandrake and Innkeep, I’ve been trying to finish Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. And failing.

I was watching the Frosty Games Fest, a showcase of upcoming games from Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand—where it’s currently cold as balls, hence the “Frosty” part of the name—and realized that, out of more than 50 games I saw there, only two weren’t coming to PC. And that’s because one of them already was on PC, and was just there to announce its mobile port.

The Frosty Games Fest may not be a PC-centric show, yet it has a dedicated Steam page to help you track down the game where you’re a thief with really long arms, or the visual novel where you romance Dracula.

Obviously the PC Gaming Show is 100% PC games, and it’s no big surprise the Xbox Games Showcase is also full of games coming to PC. (Not today, at least, though it wasn’t that long ago that Xbox still did console exclusives.) And it was interesting that the Xbox handheld turned out to just be a ROG Ally that is “bringing together the power of Xbox and the freedom of Windows” according to Sarah Bond, Microsoft’s president of Xbox. And also that Pokémon studio Game Freak’s next game is coming to PC.


Related articles

What is surprising is how much the central tentpole of this overwhelming annual game-a-palooza, the Summer Game Fest, has become a PC show by default. We had to wait years for Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: The Game to come to PC, but Scott Pilgrim EX touts a PC launch from its very first reveal, as does Wu-Tang: Rise of the Deceiver. (I’m still waiting for 1999’s Wu-Tang: Shaolin Style to get a PC port, though.)

Everything from Diablo-but-you’re-SpongeBob to the Lego-themed multiplayer party game is coming to our platform of choice, and when a rare game doesn’t tell you it’ll be launching on Steam it’s only because, in the case of End of Abyss and Out of Words, they’re coming to Epic. At least, for now.

(Image credit: Deep Silver)

When a game like Stranger than Heaven shows up at the SGF with a trailer that doesn’t tell you what platform it’ll be on, or indeed much of anything except that it’s a noir take on Yakuza, once upon a time we might have sat on it while we hassled PR people for confirmation that it would release on PC, too. But now, when Yakuza 0 puts in regular appearances in the PC Gamer Top 100 every year, it’s hard to imagine it won’t.

Back when E3 was still a thing, it often felt like a celebration of big-budget games and console hardware, with everything else a secondary consideration relegated to the fringes. Which is why we set up the PC Gaming Show in the first place. Now, when E3 has a stake through its heart and a mouth stuffed full of garlic so it can’t rise again, PC gaming and the variety of games it supports gets to be at the forefront of our show, and every show—where it belongs.

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



Source link

June 9, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (907)
  • Esports (687)
  • Game Reviews (638)
  • Game Updates (803)
  • GameFi Guides (901)
  • Gaming Gear (867)
  • NFT Gaming (883)
  • Product Reviews (856)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Recent Posts

  • Elden Ring Switch 2 Impressions Sound Not Great
  • New Halloween Game Will Include Multiplayer And Story Mode
  • Ethereum (ETH) Open Interest Hits ATH on CME
  • Traders debate which coin will hit $1 first in the 2025-26 memecoin cycle
  • PS5 prices increase from tomorrow in the U.S. as Sony “navigates a challenging economic environment”

Recent Posts

  • Elden Ring Switch 2 Impressions Sound Not Great

    August 20, 2025
  • New Halloween Game Will Include Multiplayer And Story Mode

    August 20, 2025
  • Ethereum (ETH) Open Interest Hits ATH on CME

    August 20, 2025
  • Traders debate which coin will hit $1 first in the 2025-26 memecoin cycle

    August 20, 2025
  • PS5 prices increase from tomorrow in the U.S. as Sony “navigates a challenging economic environment”

    August 20, 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

  • Elden Ring Switch 2 Impressions Sound Not Great

    August 20, 2025
  • New Halloween Game Will Include Multiplayer And Story Mode

    August 20, 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