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

Stranger

Time Stranger Shows The Series Is Still Growing
Game Reviews

Time Stranger Shows The Series Is Still Growing

by admin June 20, 2025


Remember how, when Palworld was blowing up, fans were excited that a Pokémon competitor might force The Pokémon Company to get its act together and stop releasing busted games like Scarlet and Violet? Whether that pans out remains to be seen, but given that Digimon, arguably the most notable competition Pokémon had in the 90s and early 2000s, has been quietly running circles around Pikachu and friends on the video game side for years, I’m not holding my breath. I played about half an hour of Digimon Story: Time Stranger at Summer Game Fest earlier this month, and though my time with the RPG was brief, it was a succinct reminder that Digimon has been cooking up some excellent, polished RPGs in its own lane. The last mainline Story game, Cyber Sleuth, was a hidden gem of 2016, so I’m hopeful Time Stranger breaks through the noise when it launches later this year.

Tactical RPGs, Creepy Circuses & More New Releases | The Week In Games

If you’ve ever played Digimon or watched the anime, you know the general conceit of the franchise. The titular critters live in a digital world that humans are able to enter via virtual reality. Time Stranger focuses on a different “server” than the one where previous Story games took place and is set in the digital world of Iliad, managed by a powerful pantheon of Digimon called the Olympos XII.

As a longtime Digimon fan, I’ve always been drawn to how the games riff on the lore by finding new ways to implement old characters and mythological figures into new iterations of the Digital World, and Time Stranger already has me intrigued. Recent Story games were set in a somewhat barren cyberspace world that was aesthetically compelling in a minimalist way, but weren’t that stimulating to walk around in. Time Stranger’s shift to Iliad not only opens up the visual identity of these games to include lush environments and lively towns filled with Digimon living in harmony; it’s also paving the way for new stories with different major players. Cyber Sleuth was a sort of Avengers moment for some of the series’ mainstays, so Time Stranger putting the focus on the Olympos XII for the first time in several years is an exciting prospect.

Image: Bandai Namco

In the short time I was able to spend in Iliad’s Central Town hub, I was excited to explore and meet all the Digimon living there as civilians, unbothered by the petty squabbles of humanity in the real world. There’s so much character to this little town that even as the game pans over it in a cutscene, so many lively details catch your eye. Little touches like seeing Zudomon using its hammer to pound away on an anvil as a blacksmith and Etemon hanging off the signage on the buildings make the town feel lived in, and nearly every inch of the town is covered in Digimon interacting with the world and each other like this.

I didn’t plan to spend most of my time playing Time Stranger comparing it to Pokemon, but the stark difference between it and Game Freak’s RPGs is top of mind for me right now after playing a bit of Scarlet and Violet on Switch 2. Yeah, the games finally run at a smooth 60 frames-per-second, but the world still looks and feels like a GameCube-era tech demo, whereas Time Stranger, and Digimon games more broadly, feel like childhood dreams realized. They take risks, change up the formula constantly, and most importantly, they feel like fully realized worlds visually, narratively, and systemically. Whether it’s been in the Story series, the World games, or more off-the-wall spin-offs like the the visual novel tactics RPG Digimon Survive, this franchise has never stopped swinging for the fences, even after it was deemed the “loser” of the ‘90s and ‘00s monster tamer race. Maybe that’s what happens when you still feel like you’ve got something to prove and can’t rest on your guaranteed millions of sales. There’s some freedom in not being beholden to the same machine your rival is, and it makes for more interesting games.

Image: Bandai Namco

While exploration is much more of a priority this time around, Time Stranger is still focused on the monster taming aspect above all else. With more than 450 Digimon available to you, there’s a lot of room for experimentation in what might look, at a glance, like a pretty straightforward turn-based battle system. Time Stranger still utilizes the rock-paper-scissors structure Digimon always has, but it also has a Final Fantasy X-style swapping system that lets you adjust your strategies on the fly by switching between your active party and your benched teammates without penalty. Some of the battles I took part in were your standard random fight affair, but the boss fight against a super-powered Parrotmon really showed the potential of its turn-based battles. This clash felt more like a raid battle that required a lot more setup with support abilities, pushing me to prioritize defense rather than just bulldozing through with my most powerful attacks, and demonstrating that Time Stranger could be more dynamic than its predecessors.

Cyber Sleuth’s story and Persona-esque vibe were the draw above all else, with some critics arguing that the battle system was generic and uninvolving. (Kotaku’s Mike Fahey called them“a mindless chore.”) Time Stranger, by contrast, is certainly not reaching the elaborate, systems-heavy turn-based play of something like Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, but what I played of it suggests developer Media.Vision is taking that criticism to heart, and I”m interested to see just how far it can take these systems when the game launches on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S on October 3.

 



Source link

June 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
David Harbour Is More Than Ready for 'Stranger Things' to Be Over
Product Reviews

David Harbour Is More Than Ready for ‘Stranger Things’ to Be Over

by admin June 12, 2025


David Harbour has been acting professionally for over two decades—he was nominated for a Tony in 2005—but his big break came with Stranger Things. Harbour’s portrayal of Sheriff Jim Hopper immediately endeared him to viewers, and over the show’s run we’ve seen Hawkins, Indiana’s top cop morph from boozy sad sack to strict but loving dad to supernatural beastie-fighting hero to Siberian prison escapee, plus a little romantic tension with Winona Ryder’s character on the side.

And since Stranger Things‘ debut in 2016, Harbour has parlayed his Netflix success to other starring roles; while his Hellboy was a bust, he also created a whole new kind of Santa Claus in the excellent Violent Night and entered the Marvel Cinematic Universe via Black Widow and Thunderbolts. He’s also found success on the DC side too, starring in animated series Creature Commandos.

While it doesn’t seem like Stranger Things‘ filming schedule has held him back from adding to his filmography, he’s clearly ready for the freedom he’ll have once the show has aired its final batch of episodes. His schedule will be more open to new projects, of course, but he’ll also be able to put Jim Hopper to bed for good.

In an Interview Magazine chat with Scarlett Johansson, his co-star in Black Widow, he sounded grateful but weary.

“When I started I loved it so much. Buddies of mine who’d done TV shows for many years said, ‘By season three or four you’ll be running.’ And I was like, Never! I love all these guys so much,’” he recalled. “And then you get to a certain point where you’re like, ‘How much more story is there?’ You’re having to play a lot of the same beat, and there’s a feeling where you’re like, ‘I want to take a risk. I want to do something that people haven’t seen me do before.’ So yeah, after 10 years, it’s like, ‘Okay.’”

Later, he elaborated more on what it felt like to be so committed to Jim Hopper, in response to Johansson speaking about being locked into her Marvel character for months at a time and not feeling challenged (or able to change anything about her appearance).

“There’d be certain seasons where you feel like, ‘I’m going to go in this different direction.’ But … a piece of your psyche is occupied with this group of people and this storyline,” he said. “I don’t paint my nails, but I get that idea of ‘I can’t get a haircut’ or ‘I can’t shave this freaking mustache.’”

One of the post-Stranger Things Harbour projects we’re most excited for is the Violent Night sequel, which Variety reported today just got a release date of December 4, 2026.

Stranger Things returns November 26 to Netflix for the first four episodes of season five. The rest of the season rolls out December 25 (episodes 5-7) and December 31 (episode 8).

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



Source link

June 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Few trailers were as cool as Stranger Than Heaven's Summer Game Fest reveal, and not just because the Yakuza dev's DNA is all over it
Game Reviews

Few trailers were as cool as Stranger Than Heaven’s Summer Game Fest reveal, and not just because the Yakuza dev’s DNA is all over it

by admin June 9, 2025


Though you may not vibe with every one of their games, it’s hard to deny that the people behind the Yakuza/Like a Dragon series have an abundant sense of style. It’s not every year, however, we get a new franchise from the legendary Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio, but damn if this next title doesn’t look special.

Initially teased at The Game Awards 2024 as Project Century, the studio has now given the game an official title: Stranger Than Heaven.


To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

Stranger Than Heaven’s debut was on the Summer Game Fest event stage, and it was hard to guess just what game we were looking at initially. The trailer starts off with the character sitting at a live musical performance in what looks to be 1940s Japan, before they exit the bar and we get the iconic Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio logo.

There are, of course, plenty of trademark RGG elements in this one. Combat looks about as brutal (and silly) as the older Yakuza games, and the exploration and city life side does show up in the footage, too.

There appears to be more of a puzzle-solving, and choices focus in this one, however, which isn’t typically what you come to Like a Dragon for. Something else well worth mentioning is that the game takes place over multiple eras. The initial reveal trailer showed a 1915 setting, whereas today’s re-reveal takes place in 1943 – which is a massive jump.

Watch on YouTube

If the game’s working title holds true, the game may let us experience a story that takes place across the entire 19th century, but we’d be happy to just see pre and post-World War 2 Japan. There’s clearly a lot going on in this; not least of which the American influence element, and what seems to be a supernatural side to our hero.

Stranger Than Heaven does not yet have a release target, nor do we know which platforms it’s going to be coming to, yet. Considering how cool this re-reveal is, however, the game already has fans eager to see what RGG Studio will show of it next.



Source link

June 9, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
RGG Studio's Project Century Formally Unveiled As Stranger Than Heaven In New Trailer
Game Updates

RGG Studio’s Project Century Formally Unveiled As Stranger Than Heaven In New Trailer

by admin June 7, 2025


Ryu Ga Gotaku Studio has formally unveiled Stranger Than Heaven, the official title of its in-development game, Project Century. It revealed this during today’s Summer Games Fest showcase with a new gameplay trailer. 

Set in the years 1915 and 1943 (at least), this action game oozes the style and substance of RGG’s Like a Dragon series, but with some 20th-century noir flair, and it looks awesome. When we first saw Project Century last year, we saw a game set in 1915, but in today’s trailer, Stranger Than Heaven brings us to 1943, a different decade. Fortunately, all the fisticuff combat from 1915 remains in this 1943 look at the game, and if these two trailers together are any indication, it seems Stranger Than Heaven will jump between different time periods. 

Check out the Stranger Than Heaven reveal trailer for yourself below: 

 

There’s no release date or projected platforms for Stranger Than Heaven. While waiting to learn more about it, read Game Informer’s feature on the history and future of RGG Studio. 



Source link

June 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Resident Evil 9, Stranger Than Heaven, and more of the key reveals from Summer Game Fest 2025
Esports

Resident Evil 9, Stranger Than Heaven, and more of the key reveals from Summer Game Fest 2025

by admin June 7, 2025


Geoff Keighley’s annual Summer Game Fest showcase had a few big moments, including a major showing from Capcom, some sharp-looking indie games from well-known developers, and a creative tie-in between Hitman and James Bond by IO Interactive.

Find a selection of 10 key SGF 2025 highlights below, including all-new reveals and several worthwhile updates on already-announced games.

End of Abyss


To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

Created by Section 9 Interactive, a Malmö-based studio of developers who worked on the Little Nightmares games, and published by Epic Games itself, this was the horror highlight of SGF. In End of Abyss, a combat technician explores a facility that’s riddled with fleshy monsters, in what looks a little like a twin-stick survival horror shooter.

New pathways will emerge in the game as players become stronger, suggesting something of a Metroidvania structure. This one doesn’t have a specific release date yet beyond 2026, but it’s coming to Xbox, PlayStation, and PC.

Lego Voyagers

This two-player Lego game from the developers of Lego Builders Journey left an impression with a simple but perfect pitch: what if you played as a single Lego brick, and the entire game was built around that notion?

Anyone still craving high-value co-op experiences for couch play after finishing this year’s wonderful Split Fiction should keep this beautiful-looking game on their radar. It’s coming to PC and consoles, including the original Nintendo Switch, and will be playable either locally or online (with only one purchase necessary for the latter).

Mina the Hollower


To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

Mina the Hollower, the long-awaited new game from Shovel Knight developer Yacht Club Games, got a release date of October 31, 2025 during SGF. This trailer will set off fireworks for anyone familiar with its inspirations: Link’s Awakening and the other Game Boy Color Zelda games, for example, as well as the side-scrolling adventures of the Castlevania series.

Marvel’s Deadpool VR

Rather a lot of licensed games made the cut in this Summer Games Fest (who could’ve predicted that this year’s livestream would offer viewers a real-time strategy game tie-in to Game of Thrones, a TV show that ended on a contentious note in 2019?). Meta’s big reveal at SGF was Deadpool VR, another superhero-themed exclusive coming to Quest 3, following last year’s killer app Batman: Arkham Shadow.

This game stars Neil Patrick Harris as Marvel’s Merc with a Mouth, and comes from ‘Splosion Man developer Twisted Pixel. As ever, Deadpool’s delivered-via-sledgehammer meta humour is something of an acquired taste, yet the recent history of pop culture would suggest it’s never been more popular.

Deadpool VR’s first-person combat and storytelling look authentic to the character, which is either a dream come true or a living nightmare, depending on who you ask. It launches exclusively on Quest 3 and 3S in late 2025.

Ill and Mundfish’s push into publishing


To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

Mundfish, the latest developer to move into publishing, had a big presence in this year’s SGF livestream. That included a colourful-if-muddled trailer for Atomic Heart 2, a follow-up to its 2023 hit FPS.

But perhaps more interesting was the horror-themed FPS Ill, the debut game from studio Team Clout. What could be more frightening than being chased by dozens of decaying bald men, and occasionally, some fetid-looking evil giant babies? This game will launch on PC, Xbox, PlayStation, but it doesn’t have a release date yet.

Scott Pilgrim EX

Considering the Scott Pilgrim graphic novels ended 15 years ago, the longevity of a story about a down-on-his-luck 20-something fighting all his new partner’s exes in sequence continues to amaze. This spiritual sequel to 2010’s acclaimed Ubisoft tie-in Scott Pilgrim Vs The World: The Game sees Scott and six of his pals teaming up to fight three different warring gangs who have taken over Toronto.

Developer Tribute Games (creators of the brilliant Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge) comprises staff who worked on that prior Ubisoft title. Pleasingly for fans, too, series creator Bryan Lee O’Malley is behind the story on this project. With four-player co-op part of the mix, Scott Pilgrim EX launches in 2026.

Casino Royale’s Le Chiffre comes to Hitman: World of Assassination

With IO Interactive’s James Bond game First Light not arriving until 2026, this reveal was a real treat for fans of 007, and a fun stopgap. Actor Mads Mikkelsen joined IO’s Hakan Abrak on-stage in announcing that his Casino Royale villain Le Chiffre has been added to Hitman: World of Assassination’s Paris level as a limited-time Elusive Target. Players have until July 6 to take him out.

Blighted

Guacamelee studio Drinkbox is behind this visually stylish action RPG, which looks like it’ll scratch the itch of anyone who got deep into Hades but wants something with a fresh twist (or co-op) to play. The setting is described as a ‘psychedelic western nightmare’ by the developers, and a ‘blighted’ mechanic alters the difficulty of the game dynamically depending on how afflicted the player is. It’s coming soon to Steam.

Stranger Than Heaven

First unveiled last year as Project Century, this deeper look at the next project by Like A Dragon developer RGG Studio showed off the game’s 1943 (seemingly) period Japanese setting, as well as its combat and other gameplay elements like moral choices (of the Xbox 360 era ‘spare/kill’ variety).

Considering the last trailer was set in 1915, it would appear to suggest the game takes place across multiple decades. It’s exciting to see this studio trying something a little different, even if some of the parts are superficially similar.

Resident Evil Requiem

The reveal of the ninth mainline Resident Evil game closed the livestream with a bang. Requiem is slightly hard to grasp from this first trailer, perhaps by design: the protagonist is an agent called Grace Ashcroft, and we see several glimpses of the ruins of Raccoon City amid the horrors in this teaser.

No doubt Capcom will gradually put the pieces together in the run-up to its February 27, 2026 release date on PC, Xbox, and PlayStation. It firmly looks like a stylistic follow-up to the first-person hits Resident Evil 7 and Village. On-stage, it was promised the game will feature “high-stakes cinematic action” as well as survival horror.



Source link

June 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Project Century: Stranger Than Heaven SGF 2025 trailer is Yakuza L.A. Noire
Game Updates

Project Century: Stranger Than Heaven SGF 2025 trailer is Yakuza L.A. Noire

by admin June 7, 2025


Following the reveal of Project Century during The Game Awards 2024, Sega and Like A Dragon developer Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio showed up to Summer Game Fest 2025 with a new trailer, a new era, and a new name: Stranger Than Heaven. Where the initial trailer looked like early-20th century Judgment, where a detective wandered around a rain-soaked, 1914’s Japanese city, Stranger Than Heaven’s latest trailer is more like RGG Studio’s take on L.A. Noire.

A detective named Mako Daito moodily searches for clues to an unknown mystery in a glitzy city filled with people lost in their pursuit of excess, glamorous nightclubs, rowdy street fights, seedy tenements, and neon-soaked high streets. It looks like RGG Studio is digging more into survival and simulation elements than usual as well. In one brief shot, Mako holds a cigarette as an on-screen tooltip pops up that reads “Draws immense hostility when smoking.” He has hunger and thirst meters, a first for the studio, and makes split-second decisions about what to do in fraught situations, like whether to show a dangerous opponent mercy.

The trailer ends as Mako meets up with an American who’s surprised to find that Mako is Japanese and ends with a dramatic declaration from the detective about how he’s lost sight of himself. The action and setting might be unusual for RGG Studio, but the Yakuza-like melodrama remains the same.

Given the Project Century codename and the fact that the new trailer jumped forward in time by three decades, it seems like a safe bet to assume the story unfolds across, well, the century. RGG had little else to say about Stranger Than Heaven and previously recommended that no one even try to figure out what the game is about.

Stranger Than Heaven is planned for launch in 2026.



Source link

June 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Stranger Things Season 5 Will
Gaming Gear

‘Stranger Things’ Returns for One Last Time This November

by admin June 1, 2025


Get ready to return to Hawkins, Indiana one final time. After three years of waiting since the end of season four, Netflix has confirmed that Stranger Things‘ final season will begin this November, kicking off a trio of releases.

Netflix closed out its Tudum livestream event today with a brief tease for the fifth and final season of Stranger Things, confirming that the series will return to the streamer this November 26, with a second volume arriving on Christmas day, and the final episode on New Year’s eve. Check out a new teaser below, which mostly comprises footage from the last four seasons… and a tiny glimpse of season 5.

It’s been a long road to learn even a little more about what we can expect out of the eight episodes that will bring an end to the supernatural streaming sensation. Netflix already confirmed most of the episode titles last year, and most of what we’ve heard about the season is that the series is going to be taking the long way around to its end, with blockbuster-length episodes bringing about one last adventure for Eleven and the kids to go through in their quest to stop Vecna and the Upside Down invading reality.

We’ll bring you more from Stranger Things‘ final season as and when we learn it.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



Source link

June 1, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A crowd looks at the stage during Netflix Tudum
Gaming Gear

Netflix Tudum 2025 live: the biggest news about Stranger Things, One Piece, Squid Game and more

by admin May 31, 2025



Refresh

2025-05-31T23:18:50.335Z

Where can I watch Netflix Tudum 2025?

Netflix Tudum 2025 | Official Trailer | May 31 | Netflix – YouTube

Watch On

You can tune into the Netflix Tudum 2025 live event from home by streaming it live on Netflix on May 31, 2025, at 8pm ET / 5PM PT. That means viewers in the UK can catch it at 1am BST, while those in Australia will be able to watch it at 10am AEST.

Just like any other Netflix live streaming event, you’ll need a subscription to be able to get in on all the action. If you’re not currently signed up to the service though (Netflix doesn’t tend to feature among the best streaming deals), then you can catch up on anything you missed right here.

Today’s best Netflix deals



Source link

May 31, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (999)
  • Esports (752)
  • Game Reviews (692)
  • Game Updates (877)
  • GameFi Guides (990)
  • Gaming Gear (945)
  • NFT Gaming (973)
  • Product Reviews (934)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Recent Posts

  • Solana Seeker Review: A More Measured Crypto Phone
  • Pi Coin price poised to pop? Two rare patterns form
  • The Final ‘Toxic Avenger’ Trailer Is a Goofy, Retro Call to Arms
  • Twitch’s viewership takes a massive hit after cracking down on viewbots
  • ‘Some Studios Won’t Survive’ as AI Takes Over Gaming, Says Google Cloud Exec

Recent Posts

  • Solana Seeker Review: A More Measured Crypto Phone

    August 24, 2025
  • Pi Coin price poised to pop? Two rare patterns form

    August 24, 2025
  • The Final ‘Toxic Avenger’ Trailer Is a Goofy, Retro Call to Arms

    August 24, 2025
  • Twitch’s viewership takes a massive hit after cracking down on viewbots

    August 24, 2025
  • ‘Some Studios Won’t Survive’ as AI Takes Over Gaming, Says Google Cloud Exec

    August 24, 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

  • Solana Seeker Review: A More Measured Crypto Phone

    August 24, 2025
  • Pi Coin price poised to pop? Two rare patterns form

    August 24, 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