Fast Travel Games launched atmospheric horror
Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife for Oculus Quest and Rift in April, providing a tense, narrative-driven experience. Now SteamVR users get to step into the expansive Barclay Mansion to test their wits and their nerves. Plus, there’s a free content update for all owners adding some extra goodies.
With the launch of
Wraith: The Oblivion – Afterlife on Steam Fast Travel Games is rolling out a content patch for all platforms, addressing bugs whilst adding 10 new collectables to the mansion. Just like the other objects found throughout the campaign these new ones give additional context to some of the characters and the story.
Marriage of Telegraph owner Sir Frederick Barclay to his wife Lady Hiroko ends dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sir Frederick Barclay, 86, and Lady Hiroko Barclay are both expected to give evidence at the virtual trial being held in private in the Family Division of the High Court. It is expected to last several days
IT HAS been nine decades since the famous Bournemouth Belle express first ran through Basingstoke and Hampshire. And now the journey will be recreated this summer with Britain’s poshest train passing through the town on Monday, July 5. The steam-hauled Northern Belle – described by actor Bill Nighy on TV recently as “the Grand Duchess of luxury trains” – is scheduled to follow the same route from London. But the exact timings are likely to be kept hush-hush in a bid to avoid hordes of trainspotters and railway enthusiasts thronging station platforms along the route and trying to photograph it. Northern Belle sales director Howard Barclay explained: “Normally we’d be delighted to see crowds turning out to see our train and the passengers love that too – they say they feel like royalty waving back!
News Corp editors and execs met ministers 40 times in first 14 months of Johnson government
News Corp executive chairman Rupert Murdoch and his top executives in the UK and US met Prime Minister Boris Johnson and other high-level Government politicians seven times between them in seven weeks last summer.
Murdoch (pictured) met with Johnson, paid for lunch with Chancellor Rishi Sunak, ate a private dinner with Michael Gove and had an “informal lunch between friends” with Jacob Rees-Mogg between 8 August and 25 September last year.
News UK chief executive Rebekah Brooks met with both Johnson and Sunak within one week in September, and News Corp chief executive Robert Thomson each met Johnson held a meeting with Gove at the start of the month.