Scorn Review – Pound Of Flesh

Scorn is designed to be disgusting. The walls of its labyrinthine halls are constructed with twisting contortions of flesh, and its mechanically complex contraptions are drenched in the blood of discarded carcasses that lay decaying without care. The inspirations of Scorn’s aesthetic are familiar but well-implemented, creating an atmosphere of languish and disgust that is maintained throughout. However, disappointingly, Scorn’s infuriatingly unbalanced combat, uneven puzzle design, and severely restricted checkpointing make its setting the least off-putting part about it.

Scorn’s most immediate impression comes from its aesthetic. This is textbook H.R. Giger, with the artist’s flair for biomechanical structures influencing every biome you visit in Scorn. If you’ve watched Prometheus recently, you’ll be quite familiar with the types of interweaving, fleshy layouts that Scorn has in store, with some variety in each new area preventing the presentation from fe…

Song of the Deep Review

If Insomniac’s Song of the Deep was a children’s book or a graphic novel, I would have no problem singing its praises to anyone of any age. Its captivating portrayal of a young girl’s undersea adventure not only looks and sounds beautiful, it also tells a story that sparkles with all the wonder, danger, and timelessness of a classic fable. But Song of the Deep is not a book. Rather, it’s a relatively uninventive Metroidvania-style action-adventure title whose gameplay turns tedious and frustrating a little too often to forgive. If you’re willing to weather the storm, however, Song of the Deep still delivers moments of fun and, more importantly, an entrancing, well-crafted story.

The setup is simple and sweet: when her father fails to return from his latest fishing expedition, the young, resourceful Merryn cobbles together a ramshackle submarine and goes looking for him. Beneath the waves, she finds a spellbinding world full of sunken ships, hidden treasure,…

Candyman's Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Signs On For Warner Bros. Action Thriller By All

If you don’t know the name Yahya Abdul-Mateen II yet, you will before too long–he’s one of the busiest working actors around and he’s just signed on for a new action thriller called By All, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Come from Sports betting site VPbet

The story followed Abdul-Mateen as Donte, a man on the run from the law in “a world without police, where justice is crowd-sourced,” THR says. The timely subject matter reportedly attracted both the actor and studio to the project.

Outriders Cross-Play Between PC And Console Not Working

Update: A notice in the Outriders game client now says there is an issue regarding cross-play disconnects between PC and console players specifically. Cross-play should work between EGS and Steam players, as well as between PlayStation and Xbox players.  Come from Sports betting site VPbet

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