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As we get ever closer to E3 2021, various publishers are starting to share their plans and offer expectations to excited viewers for their upcoming E3 showcases and content. Square Enix has a place in the prominent E3 festivities this year as well. Not to be left out of the bunch, the publishing and developer giant shared plans for its E3 showcase which is set to go live on June 13 in the middle of the E3 2021 event days.
Square Enix shared its E3 2021 showcase plans via its official Twitter on June 3, 2021. According to its posting, the developer has quite the variety of reveals slated for its E3 showcase. Specifically, Square Enix mentioned that it will be sharing a world premiere from Eidos Montreal, though it didn’t tease what this might be. It will also be showcasing updates for upcoming PlatinumGames collaboration Babylon’s Fall, Deck Nine’s Life is Strange: True Colors, and Crystal Dynamics’ Marvel’s Avengers.
PS Now 1080p Support Finally Being Rolled Out Two Years After the Announcement Apr 22, 2021 12:15 EDT
With a brief tweet posted less than an hour ago, the official PlayStation Twitter account confirmed that PS Now 1080p support is finally being rolled out, at long last.
The rollout will take place over the next several weeks , the tweet says, across Europe, the United States, Canada, and Japan.
Sony had first talked about adding PS Now 1080p support (and beyond) almost two years ago, in May 2019, during that year s Investor Relations Day. So far, PlayStation Now subscribers were limited to streaming games at 720p resolution.
Star Wars game the first in a possible flood of new games taking place in the galaxy far, far away once EA’s exclusive deal with Lucasfilm ends in 2023. Big publishers hoping Hollywood delivers their next blockbuster hit might be smart business or just another fad. In either case, it feels like an ominous sign of creative surrender just months into the next console cycle.
WhileHollywood rushes to buy up the rights to video game movies, the gaming industry now seems poised to lean ever more into Hollywood’s established blockbuster franchises. These aren’t the market synergies I was looking for. Both mediums (and their respective corporate overlords) have plenty to learn from and contribute to one another, but spending years and hundreds of millions on swapping the same old (mostly white) stories kind of sucks. Hollywood is already growing full by eating its own tail creating endless sequels and reboots