martes, 2 de abril de 2019

Resident Evil 2 Remake | Review, Trailer, Release Date, News, Gameplay, And More...


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Resident Evil 2 Remake | Review, Trailer, Release Date, News, Gameplay, and more...


Capcom is releasing some extremely impressive games in 2019, Resident Evil 2 Remake is one of them. The Resident Evil 2 Remake isn't too far-away, set to release on 25 January 2019 (soon after its release, Capcom is releasing Devil May Cry 5). First declared in 2015, Resident Evil 2 Remake is planned as an advanced emphasis of the 1998 release. Fans have been asking for the game for a very long time, and following the accomplishment of the first Resident Evil and Zero remasters, Capcom is at long last tuning in.


Quick Facts:


  • Release date: 25 January 2019
  • Developer: Capcom
  • Genre: Survival horror
  • Platforms: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Microsoft Windows

Resident Evil 2 Remake release date :

The remake was declared at E3 2018 for PS4, Xbox One, and PC and will release on January 25, 2019, Just before Capcom's Devil May Cry 5 Release. So entirely excited for both the games. 


Related Article: Devil May Cry 5: Review, Trailer, Gameplay, Release date


Resident Evil 2 Remake Trailers :

Tokyo Games Show 2018 has presented to us another trailer for Resident Evil 2 Remake, and this one spotlights for the most part on the story. We see a lot of Leon and Claire previously however Capcom had been generally silent regarding certain characters in the Resident Evil 2 Remake, one of these being Ada Wong, The opponent has at long last divulged it. It likewise has us frantically needing a reboot of Dino Crisis in the RE Engine. 




Just underneath, you can look at a further trailer for the Resident Evil 2 Remake. This trailer appeared amidst Sony's E3 2018 introduction in June, and it was here that the release date for the game was revealed. 




Resident Evil 2 Remake Claire Campaign Preview:

Following quite a while of pausing, Capcom is at long last coming back to its undead well and redoing what many consider to be Resident Evil's most remarkable part. Initially released for the PS1 in 1998, it's not the most straightforward title to return to with its cumbersome tank controls and blocky visuals. It's as notorious as survival repulsiveness comes. Be that as it may, the fans who discovered Resident Evil arrangement with Resident Evil 4 or later ones probably won't concur with its traditional way to deal with problems. 


This could all change with Resident Evil 2 Remake, Playing through two individual battles as arrangement's veterans Leon S. Kennedy and Claire Redfield, you'll scour the remnants of Raccoon City in the midst of a fatal zombie episode, revealing reality behind the underhanded Umbrella Corporation. 

Here's the Gameplay from IGN, if you wish to watch.






Resident Evil 2 Remake: Minimum PC Specs


  • Operating System: WINDOWS 7, 8, 8.1, 10 (64-BIT Required) 
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-4460, 2.70GHz or AMD FX-6300 or better 
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM 
  • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760 or AMD Radeon R7 260x with 2GB Video RAM 
  • DirectX: Version 11


Resident Evil 2 Remake: Recommended PC Specs


  • Operating System: WINDOWS 7, 8, 8.1, 10 (64-BIT Required) 
  • Processor: Intel Core i7-3770 or AMD FX-9590 or better 
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM 
  • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 or AMD Radeon RX 480 with 3GB VRAM 
  • DirectX: Version 11

Resident Evil 2 Remake: Leon Campaign Preview

Fans, for what feels like the longest time, have been shouting for a Resident Evil 2 Remake, to such an extent that they willingly volunteered make one quite a long while prior before Capcom put a stop to it for reasons that have now turned out to be clear. Capcom's new Resident Evil 2 is everything fans have ever needed it to be, it can possibly be the apex of what the great vision of the arrangement could plan to turn into. Prepare to reemerge the universe of survival awfulness in its most genuine shape. 


The short interactivity demo at E3 2018 happens in the police headquarters, and it's quickly clear this isn't simply Resident Evil 2 with prettier graphics, on account of the RE Engine. Capcom needs to make a Resident Evil 2 that plays with fan desires, in this way things will look recognizable, yet feel somewhat extraordinary. 

One thing I can most likely say that the game will be unimaginably startling, as zombies will spring up in new places to keep you continually alarmed.



The below 18-minute extended Gameplay from Gamespot completely shows how the zombies are gonna be and how they are going to keep you petrified every moment




A $30 Game In A $50 Box


It's always especially disappointing to me when a great (or even a merely adequate) game is let down by sub-standard production values. You could argue that it shouldn't matter that much, as long as the playing pieces work your imagination can do the rest, and that may have been true in the '70s and '80s with games like Dune or Aliens that have some great game play but fall short on component quality.

In the current board game renaissance, however, the bar has been significantly raised, so much so that a game that doesn't look good is at best embarrassing, and at worst difficult to find players for. The Expanse Board Game, published by Wizkids and based on the television and book series, is such a game.

The game itself is fairly good. Players control the planetary governments that hover in the background of the TV series, manipulating events in order to control the solar system. The core of the game is a row of action cards which are purchased by players using their victory points, and then used either for their printed game effect, or spent for more general actions such as moving fleets around the board. There are several scoring cards shuffled into various points of the deck, and when one of these comes up, players score points based on the number of planets and moons they control, with ties broken by the strength of a player's fleet.

It's a fairly basic area control game, with two important elements that make it feel like the TV show it's based on. One is that each player has a series of tech cards that are earned at various points throughout the game, which serve to escalate the conflict between the planets; early in the game there is an uneasy truce in which players are not allowed to openly attack each other, but this quickly escalates into open warfare, much as it does over the course of the show.

The other interesting game element is the Rocinante, the misfit ship whose crew are the main characters of the show. In the game, James Holden and his crew change their alliance from turn to turn, with control of them going to whichever player is in last place. I particularly like this touch, as it reflects their shifting alliances and also their tendency throughout the series to support the underdog.


The aforementioned poor components -- mainly muddy images on the cards, a bland board that is sometimes difficult to read, and too-small cardboard counters to represent each player's mighty warships -- stop just short of actually being distracting, and might be acceptable if the game's asking price were a little lower.

On the other hand, maybe that's appropriate for a game that takes place in the Belt, where resources are scarce and everything is more expensive than it should be.

Rating: 3 (out of 5) A decent game that would probably rate higher if either the production quality were better, or the price point were lower.

lunes, 1 de abril de 2019

Thomas Johnson Heads Both The Senior And High School Rankings For The HearthStone Esports Title.

Thomas Johnson (Northcliff High School) heads both the senior and high school rankings for the HearthStone esports title.
With MSSA's Western Cape Championships going to be held at Curro Durbanville on 23 March 2019, MSSA is releasing all the rankings that shall be used at such provincial championships.

It is no surprise that with Thomas Johnson's stellar performance at MSSA's recent Gauteng Championships that he dominates both the senior and high school rankings.

The current rankings for the HearthStone esports title for High Schools is as follows:



PosName of PlayeryearClubPoints
1Thomas Johnson19Northcliff High School143.3
2Mark Thomas19Northcliff High School111.1
3Orlando Crossling19Northcliff High School110.6
4Cyrus Huang19Northcliff High School110
5Grey Craven19Curro Aurora109.1
6Matthias Dhont18Paul Roos Gimnasium108.8
7Geoffrey Tarbuck18Grey High School108.8
8Jason Mostert18Grey High School108.8
9Junior Moor18Empangeni High School108.8
10Cleveland Crossling18Northcliff High School108.8
11Reagan Marthinus18Paul Roos Gimnasium108.8
12Janke Janse van Vuuren18Paul Roos Gimnasium108.8
13Aaron Mulligan17Maritzburg College104.5
14Kelvin Yang17Northcliff High School104.5
15Alexander Westley17Maritzburg College104.5
16Ethan Bulford18Northcliff High School103.5
17Dylan Hanger17Northcliff High School104
18Kyle Voster19Curro Aurora95
19Lloyd Little17Maritzburg College90.3
20Kit Rawlings17Northcliff High School90.3
21Kevin Plint18Northcliff High School85.8

Rankings produced by MSSA are as follows:
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