After Fortnite Creative Mode XP Glitch, Epic Reminds Fortnite Creators They Can Get Banned For Exploits
While most players know Fortnite for the battle royale portion of the game, there’s also Creative mode, where players can mess around and make all sorts of things, from custom game modes to social spaces. Some have also found ways to use Creative mode to farm experience points for the game’s expansive battle pass–and Epic Games seems to have somewhat passive-aggressively taken notice.
Along with a new blog post introducing Party Worlds, Epic refreshed its Creator rules and guidelines for Creative mode. The move doesn’t change the guidelines, but it does seem to be aimed at reminding some people what’s in them. That’s following a recent exploit that allowed players to farm XP in Creative mode, something that, as you might expect, is frowned upon by the game’s corporate overlords.
While players stumble across these exploits now and then, in Creative mode, they tend to need specific player-created islands to make them work. And that means that players have to make…
Bayonetta 3 Director Tells Fans To Ask Nintendo For PlayStation And Xbox Versions
Hideki Kamiya, the director of Bayonetta 3, says that if fans want to see the game come to other platforms, then they should tell Nintendo.
Bayonetta 3 is an exclusive title for the Nintendo Switch. Kamiya said on Twitter (via Google Translate), “Bayo 3, like Bayo 2, is being developed with funding from Nintendo.” Platinum Games is only handling the development of the game and all product decisions are decided by Nintendo. Come from online casino bangladesh
He continues, “So, for example, if you have a request such as ‘put it out on another model’, please contact Nintendo. If Nintendo asks us to ‘port it to PS5’ and provide funding, we may receive it.” Porting Bayonetta 3 to PlayStation or Xbox isn’t completely out of the question, it’s just that the decision is entirely up to Nintendo, and the company hasn’t branched out to PC as Sony and Microsoft have.
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Battlefield 1 Review
Battlefield 1 wastes little time in conveying the savagery of World War 1. The inevitability of death is the focus of the bleak story prologue. A burning man’s screams can be heard at the start of every multiplayer match in the Argonne Forest. It’s ruination on a multi-continental scale, a conflict so large that its location menus showcase a large portion of the Earth. EA DICE splendidly interprets the early 20th century as a world in technological transition while humanizing the war’s participants through well crafted, albeit fictional, narrative vignettes. Combined with an enthralling multiplayer component, the overall result is the studio’s best work since Battlefield: Bad Company 2.
The horrors and heroism of The Great War are well told in War Stories, Battlefield 1’s campaign. It’s a more focused experience compared to prior Battlefield story modes of globetrotting and one-note powderkeg narratives. These new tales are organized in a non-line…