PC News

I may indeed offer my soul to The Killing Stone, an Arctic mansion mystery card-battler from the makers of The Blackout Club
PC

I may indeed offer my soul to The Killing Stone, an Arctic mansion mystery card-battler from the makers of The Blackout Club

I’ve been shying away from The Killing Stone because it’s a deckbuilding card battler, and we do get a lot of emails about those. The game launches into Steam early access today, so it’s time to have a proper gander. Ho now! This is a deckbuilding card battler… set in a mansion somewhere in the Arctic during the 17th century… created by Question Games, developers of ‘unfinished game’ game The Magic Circle and weird suburbia sim The Blackout Club. Yes

Sorry, Woodstock's off. Or, how I gave everyone dysentery in Transport Fever 3
PC

Sorry, Woodstock's off. Or, how I gave everyone dysentery in Transport Fever 3

Ironically, considering the rampant dysentery moving through my campground in brown, sputtering waves, the problem I'm facing in Transport Fever 3 is a blockage. The trucks I've loaded with antibiotics are stuck in a traffic jam that stretches all the way to the pharmacy in the next city over. If I'm to save the inaugural Woodstock festival, I must find a way to get traffic flowing again before the timer runs out. Read more

Is Overwatch crossplay or cross-platform?
PC

Is Overwatch crossplay or cross-platform?

Overwatch crossplay lets you play across other platforms and pick up your progress in Blizzard's hero shooter regardless of where you play.

"Creativity is the key": how PC hardware’s smaller manufacturers are navigating the RAM shortage disaster
PC

"Creativity is the key": how PC hardware’s smaller manufacturers are navigating the RAM shortage disaster

Far from ushering in a technological golden age, artificial intelligence is giving PC hardware its most trying time in years. As huge, hyper-rich tech companies go about building resource-intensive AI data centres in pursuit of future wealth, the resulting memory chip shortages have detonated consumer-level pricing for RAM modules, graphics cards, SSDs, and even ancient hard drives. Doubling or tripling street-level outlays without harming sales would, you’d think, make a lot of gaming ge