Nintendo Download: 1st April (Europe)
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The latest Nintendo Download update for Europe has arrived, and it s bringing new games galore to the eShop in your region.
As always, be sure to drop a vote in our poll and comment down below with your potential picks for the week. Enjoy!
Switch eShop - New Releases
(Forever Entertainment, 1st Apr, £12.14 / €13.49) - A Long way down is a mash-up between an RPG and a deck-building game. Embody Sam and try escaping this maze where a sneaky and evil mastermind reigns. Let your memories and your choices guide you. . . but don t fall into darkness. Craft a deck The cards you choose will determine how you explore the dungeon and how you defend yourself from the horrors it contains. Fight your way through the unforgiving monster maze Great challenges await you as you go deeper into the dungeon.
Image: Landfall Games
Totally Accurate Battle Simulator, the ragdoll-physics, set-’em-up-and-watch-’em-fight game from Landfall, makes a full version 1.0 launch today. Despite the game’s jovial nature and ironic title, the studio says this is not an April Fools’ Day announcement.
TABS, which launched in Early Access almost five years ago, will get multiplayer and two new factions with the 1.0 release.
Totally Accurate Battle Simulator, broadly speaking, allows the player to set up two armies pirates with cannons and cavemen with mastodons are among the factions and let them duke it out to settle an eternal who-would-win question, for science. So far, it’s been a single-player-only game.
With Xbox Game Pass I Am Too Powerful
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Image: Xbox / Kotaku
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Through a bit of luck, I managed to acquire an Xbox Series S for the holidays. I’ve only had it for about a week now, but the slim, be-speakered machine and, more specifically, the Game Pass subscription I purchased for it has utterly changed my gaming life in ways I’m still trying to process.
As 2020 draws to a close, many will reflect on 12 months defined by stress, upheaval, and the urgent need to confront some difficult truths about the way the games industry operates, and the myriad ways it can be a better and more inclusive place.
But just as that process of self-examination is necessary, so too is recognition for those already working to solve those problems. In this GI 100 series we will profile 100 individuals and organisations making progress in vital areas like diversity, accessibility, charity, mental health, progressive politics, lifting emerging markets, uniting communities, and more people whose stories can show us how this industry can be that better and more inclusive place.