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Sony PlayStation reportedly moving away from PC ports
PC

Sony PlayStation reportedly moving away from PC ports

News in today is that Sony PlayStation will reportedly be moving away from single-player games having PC ports as they try to keep people buying consoles.Read the full article on GamingOnLinux.

"Gary will no longer attack the player from beyond the veil" says The Outer Worlds 2's latest patch, which also makes a death pit work as intended
PC

"Gary will no longer attack the player from beyond the veil" says The Outer Worlds 2's latest patch, which also makes a death pit work as intended

It's been a little bit since The Outer Worlds 2 got that November patch aiming to take care of mysterious eyebrow disappearances. I wonder what the latest one, which is fairly beefy, does. Oh, it adds a number of handy features like the option to advance time by waiting, toggle walking via key press, and extra stealth kill animations. Nice and boring. Oh, wait. "Gary will no longer attack the player from beyond the veil". "Fixed cases where some NPCs could see the player while they were wearing

Sony will no longer release their biggest PlayStation games on PC, claims report, starting with Ghost of Yōtei
PC

Sony will no longer release their biggest PlayStation games on PC, claims report, starting with Ghost of Yōtei

Sony are breaking up with PC, reportedly! The PlayStation creators will no longer release big PS5 singleplayer games on things that are not actual PlayStations, according to "people familiar with the company's plans". In the short term, Sony will no longer publish a PC port of Ghost of Yōtei, sequel to windblown action samurai game Ghost of Tsushima. It's all part of a pivot back towards the simpler days of console exclusivity, the insiders claim, and forms a stark contrast with rival

Planet of Lana 2 review - a grander, more dynamic platformer sequel that keeps hold of its heart
PC

Planet of Lana 2 review - a grander, more dynamic platformer sequel that keeps hold of its heart

The original Planet of Lana proposed a science fiction fantasy that appealed on two levels: one, being able to adventure through a wondrously lush exoworld, and two, having a cat who actually listens to you. Planet of Lana 2 is more of the same, on both counts, while adding enough athleticism to its platforming and depth to its puzzling to feel like a worthwhile sequel. Read more