GDC 2015 hits record attendance with 26,000

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - March 10, 2015

Develop GDC announced that more than 26,000 games industry professionals were in San Francisco for last week's Game Developers Conference hitting an all time record high. GDC 2015 announced some big news with Epic Games and Unreal Engine 4 becoming free to all, and Unity 5 launching. In addition Vale announced their Source 2 engine. Valve hit the virtual reality scene with HTC Vive, and Project Morpheus release some updates, and AM

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Blizzards Overwatch address female diversity

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - March 09, 2015

Ever since Blizzards FPS: Overwatch was announced we've been on the edge of our seats watching the awesome cinematic and arguing over who looks coolest. One issue was raised where it was observed that female characters lacked coverage of all roles. Blizzard has answered with Zarya. Announced at PAX East 2015, Zarya, is a Russian soldier who is one of "world's strongest women.": We've been hearing a lot o

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Valve announce Steam Machine details

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - March 06, 2015

Valve's have announced their new Steam machines, designed in taking PC gaming into the living room and will cost as little as $460 (£302). The Steam Machines have been detailed on the Steam website, and shows multiple suppliers from Alienware, Asus, Gigabyte, Origin, Zotac and more (up to 15).  Does Steam and their design of living room boxes appeal to the average gamer? Will this re-introduce living ro

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Battlefield 4 - Mega patch improvements!

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - March 03, 2015

DICE has released a huge mega patch today, with updates to Battlefield 4 to make the multiplayer experience stellar. Improvements to the netcode have been a welcome bit of news with new game modes, improvements to spawning, combat, health, new graphic updates and ui changes. You can check out the full blog announcment in the battlelog, where you can read all about the PC, Xbox and PS updates.    

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3DRealms is back with Bombshell

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - March 03, 2015

From the creators of Rise of the Triads, Duke Nukem and Max Payne, comes Bombshell, an isometric action role-playing game for PC and consoles. Bomb disposal technician turned mercenary for hire, Shelly "Bombshell" Harrison must strong-arm her way across 4 planets in an Unreal Engine-powered galactic adventure to rescue the president from an apocalyptic alien threat.  The trailer (available on youtube) reminds me of Alien

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We Happy Few, new crazy indie title.

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 27, 2015

Compulsion games have announced their title: We Happy Few, a game they've been developing since early 2014. With a very special theme and artwork the game feels freaky and I'm eager to get more information! We Happy Few will be at PAX East 2015 with a playable "build" for anyone to have a go. Check out the trailer here, its crazy, awesome and I cannot wait to get my hands on it!

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Warhammer 40,000 announce their PC MOBA

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 26, 2015

Games Workshop’s Warhammer 40,000 is at it again, Whitebox Interactive announce their latest game devloping Warhammer 40k: Dark Nexus Arena. Stated to have the heroes such as Space Marines, Orks, and the Tau in an assortment of four vs four player battles. Other races such as the Sisters of Battle, Dark Eldar, Eldar, and Chaos Space Marines will be added in the fullness of time. It is interesting to note the four vs four bat

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GTAV Heists releasing March 10th

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 25, 2015

Rockstar Games announced two updates yesterday with a date of March 10th for Online Heists and another delay for the eagerly awaited PC version to be released April 14th. Online Heists We are excited to announce that the launch of Heists for GTA Online is scheduled for March 10th. We know it’s been a wait, and appreciate your patience. Heists will bring a brand new 4-player cooperative gameplay experience to GTA Online, giving pl

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Steam now has over 125 million active accounts

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 24, 2015

Steam released a press release with the Steam VR.  GDC 2015 will mark the 13th anniversary of Valve's first public announcement of Steam, which has since become the leading platform for PC, Mac, and Linux games and software.  In the last year, Steam added new services and features - including In-Home Streaming, Broadcasting, Music, and user created stores - as it grew to over 125 million active accounts worldwide.  S

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Updates and Fixes

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 23, 2015

Hello all, Thank you for your continued support, reports and emails about errors, bugs and features. We take everything on board and strive to build the best service for all.  We've been busy this last week fixing some glaring bugs involving: Landing page game art. Landing page graphical bugs fixed and load speed improved. Game Library now pulls games correctly. Footer layout bugs fixed. Subscription displaying incorr

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UK's first dedicated eSports arena: The Gfinity Arena revealed

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 20, 2015

Next month the UK gets its first dedicated eSports Arena at the Vue Cinema, Fulham Broadway London. Within the Vue Cinema, the Gfinity Arena hosts three custom-built stages with capacity to house over 600 gaming fanatics, offering the comfiest seats found in eSports. Get your tickets through the Vue website when they go on sale, and what a better place to take your special someone on a special date. eSports Arena to watch our f

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GamersGate celebrate 10th Anniversary

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 19, 2015

GamersGate are celebrating 10 years of trading with exclusive 48 hours deals. You can pick up Valkyria Chronicles, Company of Heroes 2, Defiance, and Tom Clancy's games for 50-75% off. We always like to see successful gaming ventures last a while, and we'd like to salute GamersGate for 10 years of -as they call it- awesomeness. Some cracking games ideal for co-op play, and some amazing rpgs.

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Grow Home patched

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 18, 2015

Grow Home has been one of those games that slips easily under your radar. You play as BUD (Botanical Utility Droid), a robot on a mission to save his home planet by harvesting the seeds of a giant alien plant. Sure, sounds a little... dry, but it's a great 3D platformer with charm, and taste. With the latest update: Some rare flora and fauna has been recently detected on the alien planet. M.O.M has a new side quest for B.U.D to inv

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New Colorblind Support in WoW Patch 6.1

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 17, 2015

World of Warcraft patch 6.1 has revealed that you’ll find a new user interface system that we’ve designed to assist players who have common visual issues related to colorblindness. In the new ‘Accessibility’ interface configuration section, you’ll be able to enable both text and color enhancements that may improve your visual experience while playing WoW. ‘Enable UI Colorblind Mode’ (which was pre

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ESL reveals biggest UK tournament for CS:GO and LoL

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 16, 2015

The ESL UK Premiership, the company's largest tournament since 2010, has been announced today for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and League of Legends players to win £12,000. The tournaments will be spread over two months of online brackets to culminate in an offline finals at London MCM Comic Con over the 22-24 May weekend, in front of an expected 110,000 spectators. The first qualifiers are scheduled to begin on 23 February. Y

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Silly Stereotypes that Surround Gamers

Posted By: Melissa - February 15, 2015

When I opened my eyes the other morning to a pounding headache and an empty bed, I was instantly in a grumpy mood. Jordan had been out of bed for a couple hours, from what I could hear, his cough was getting worse. Now, I feared I was in the virus’ sights. Thoughts of having an excuse to make chicken soup would usually at least make me a little happy, but today would be a long day with no extra bandwidth. Sitting up, my fears were confirmed

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Why Super Mario 3D World might quite possibly saved my love life.

Posted By: Lacey - February 15, 2015

My husband doesn’t get me. I’ve known this… I’m a complicated stress ball of a woman and at times a bit demanding. Like any woman I appreciate romantic gestures or thoughtful gifts. Which is why last Christmas when my husband gifted me with a Wii U I was honestly a little confused. Please don’t get me wrong I knew how great of a gift it was! But I don’t game… I should have kept my confusion to myself

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GamerDating Launch

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 15, 2015

GamerDating has launched, congratulations and welcome to GamerDating.  To get started fill in your profile to reflect you, the person behind the screen. Hang up your gaming persona, because here we are all gaming fanatics, but we are people! Once you've finished filling in your profile (and remember the more detail, the more success), search the matching system for like minded people. If you like the look of someone, get in touc

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Why you need a picture

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - February 15, 2015

Yes, you will need to upload a picture of real-life you. Because you are awesome. Because you are beautiful. Because real people have real faces. Because relationships happen between people, not avatars. We created GamerDating.com with one goal in mind: to help gamers find other gamers to love them in game and out. To achieve this goal, we feel it is important that our community be made up not of anonymous avatars, but the amazing

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Ian's Story Part 1 - Success of Online Dating

Posted By: Ian - February 15, 2015

Hello, My name is Ian, and happily married to my wife Anne, whom I met through online dating. If you had of asked me some five or six years ago about online dating I may have scoffed at the idea and said it was for either sleazy men and desperate old women. However, times have changed and I now believe it to be one of the best ways to meat like minded individuals and some genuinely nice people. I've never been one for night clubs and

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Resident Evil 4: Remake Review

Posted By: Ryan - April 19, 2023

Game

The best video game of a generation remade for modern audiences.

Resident Evil 4 is commonly agreed to be one of the best survival horror games of all time.

Originally launching in 2005, this classic action horror experience has been remastered many times, and ported to more consoles than I care to list, but it has taken until now for Capcom to fully remake it. I’ve never played the original beyond its opening few hours, so I approached the remake with no pre-conceived notions. For those who care about such things, I played through Resident Evil 4 (2023) (RE4R) on the Xbox Series X.

Graphically, anyone who has played any of the recent Resident Evil titles will know what to expect. The RE Engine continues to be a reliable way of merging photorealistic textures and lighting in the environment with slightly less photorealistic character models. Don’t misunderstand me, the models are good, and the attention to detail on Leon’s skin goes beyond anything it needed to, but the people never seem to quite match the world perfectly.

Something that did bug me was that, as far as I could tell, all the female character models seemed to have pore-less, airbrushed skin, while Leon had easy to see pores. A small thing, but annoying nonetheless as we move away from the sexualisation of female characters.

Resident Evil 4 Remake best survival horror?

It’s refreshing to see a female character whose alternate costumes aren’t revealing.

 

As with every Resident Evil title since 2019’s Resident Evil 2 remake, the attention to detail shown in the textures and character models extends to the sound design. Nothing here is over the top, each sound and voice line is crisp, easily distinguished, and feels a part of the world. Guns are satisfying to fire, the environmental sound effects are a quiet counterpoint that provide an almost contemplative backdrop for Leon’s journey, and the score is there to highlight and supplement what is happening as it fades in and out to accompany climactic moments.

That minimalism extends to other aspects of the game’s design as well. Interactive objects don’t shine or flicker as they have in other games in the series, although they do appear on the map if you miss them with your initial visual pass, and small objects like eggs, crossbow bolts, and money pouches are highlighted in the game world with a small pillar of light because they’re difficult to see otherwise.

Leon looks great in Resident Evil 4

Thank you for showing me where my crossbow bolts are with a red column of light, game. I appreciate it.

 

Yellow paint is splashed liberally throughout the game world to indicate breakable objects and serves as a gentle, if incongruous, prompt during the game’s many puzzle sections. None of these are terribly difficult, but the yellow paint does rather stand out and provide more of a hint than might be needed. The HUD itself is tiny, and can’t be scaled, but the ‘Evade’ prompt that flashes in response to some attacks appears in the centre of the screen, making itself difficult to miss.

Happily, objects vital to side-quests are equally as difficult to miss.

 

All these factors weave together to make a game that is all about style. The original game was a departure from the series’ survival horror roots, and that has been continued here. Darkened caves, hallways that echo only with the sound of Leon’s footsteps, and the creeping dread of something being around the next corner are still here, but are all mixed in with open areas that invite a stealth-based approach or a more bombastic section that is all about the gunplay.

Where the Resident Evil 2 and 3 remakes were all about the personal horror of being trapped in Raccoon City, this game knows that its hero has survived worse than what this small village can throw at him and embraces that.

Survival horror and action have always been uneasy friends.

The minimalism inherent throughout everything discussed so far combines into a fractured whole as the game progresses. I cannot speak for the original, although I imagine it likely faced a similar problem, but the merging of survival horror and cinematic action doesn’t work very well. At least, not as it is presented here.

The slow, methodical controls of the previous remakes mesh poorly with the focus on gunplay, larger open spaces, and an increased number of enemies. At several points in the game, Leon endures horde events where the goal is simply to survive long enough that a timer runs out or all the enemies are killed. These sections grate against the more measured pace of the horror aspects that the game indulges in, a situation worsened by a few stealth sections that feel tacked on for the sake of gameplay variation.

Resident Evil 4 Map of Items is great

Items that you miss in the environment are revealed on your map.

 

And where there is stealth, there are stealth kills. Among Leon’s arsenal are a variety of knives and a bolt-thrower (crossbow). The latter functions as a silent gun that deals less damage than most of the other guns in the game, but has ammunition that can be recovered from corpses or turned into a proximity mine. The former are found throughout the environment as each use of a knife, including to instantly escape a grapple or dispatch a downed enemy, reduces its durability.

Leon has a personal knife that can be upgraded and repaired – other knives can be used to craft crossbow bolts – but the entire system can leave you without a defensive item if you are grabbed or without easy means to kill a hostile NPC mutating on the ground, if you aren’t careful. On paper, it sounds like an excellent balancing mechanic, in practice is feels like it was thrown into the game as something else to spend your in-game currency on.

RE4 Map and Inventory is a good improvement

The number of bolts you can make depends on the durability of the knife being sacrificed.

 

And you’ll end up with a lot of that for one simple reason: you can’t buy ammunition. The currency is used to buy, and upgrade, weapons, as well as a small selection of other items including crafting resources. Crafting items is easy, although each resource takes up space in your limited inventory, but feels superfluous and the ammo droughts that you will encounter regularly throughout the game feel designed to force you into crafting ammunition.

I understand that being able to buy ammunition would detract from the horror atmosphere, but there are few things more tedious than reloading a checkpoint – because you don’t have the right ammunition to clear an action-heavy section of the game – for the third or fourth time. I don’t mind the crafting in the other recent Resident Evil games, but it just doesn’t feel like it fits properly with RE4R’s emphasis on cinematic set pieces and willingness to throw larger numbers of enemies at you.

This eclectic mash up of genres and gameplay styles extends to the story as well. Characters are introduced and then killed almost immediately afterwards despite reading as Tyrant-style threats, the game’s third act is infamous and remains a bizarre counterpoint of bullet-sponge induced frustration to the first two acts, and very little time is spent on character motivations. RE4R has far more characters with intelligence than the previous remakes and I can’t help but feel that the development team were constrained by the limits of the original in terms of what they could and could not do.

Ganados: smart enough to lay traps, not smart enough to avoid them.

 

This is all without even mentioning Leon’s (the main character) complete lack of agency. He bounces from plot point to plot point, being told what to do and never being given a chance to choose anything. Something that is mirrored in the forced stealth and horde sections that are clearly designed to be climactic moments but fall flat as they have no real emotional weight to them.

Certainly, I’m led to believe that the plot this time around is slightly more cohesive, and several characters more fleshed out, but there’s a definite feel that each speaking character is simply there to progress the plot, rather than be a whole person with their own motivations and desires. For what it’s worth, the plot itself is serviceable but nothing spectacular.

Leon takes a breather from killing and seeks hard to find things out

Not everything is as easy to find as the Merchant’s side quests.

I would be remiss if I didn’t briefly discuss the game’s numerous text files. As with previous titles in the series, these are found throughout the game world and add flavour and lore to it, without being required to understand the main plot. Attempts at fleshing out characters are made through these collectibles, but they aren’t terribly successful. They can be read at any time, but I doubt you’ll need to re-read any of them.

How long is Resident Evil 4? Nearly too long.

Due to my extremely methodical playstyle, I took over 20 hours to beat the main game, but most people will probably manage it in around 15 or so. I was entertained for most of that time, but there were a few sections that made me consider abandoning my playthrough: mostly where the game clearly intended me to use stealth, but I am happy I stuck with it, despite the frustration.

This being a Resident Evil game, however, completing the main story is but the tip of the iceberg. A large number of unlockable cosmetics, a handful of new weapons, and an unneeded number of 3D models and concept art pieces are bought from the in-game store with points earned through in-game challenges, and any of the 19 side quests that you miss the first time through can be finished on subsequent New Game Plus playthroughs as the side quest list completely refreshes every time.

An impressive array of unlockables awaits!

 

 Veterans of the series will be happy to know that, as time of writing, the Mercenaries mode has been added to the game, for those of you who enjoy wave-based horde gameplay.

‘Forced’ stealth sections and ammo droughts weren’t my only problems with the game though. The PC version, I’ve discovered, is missing some important key binding information. On the Xbox, for example, you can press X to bring up a chart detailing a money multiplier when adding gems to certain items to increase their worth, or to bring up a weapon comparison screen. This information is present on the PC version, but nowhere does it tell you to press Shift to access it.

Almost as invisible is the parry prompt that allows you to momentarily stun enemies with your knife. The UI is tiny to begin with – and cannot be resized – and the prompt gives a minute flash for a split second. This wouldn’t be all that much of a problem except an entire boss fight is based around parrying an enemy’s attacks.

As a side note, the approach to accessibility here is a mixed bag. Plenty of options exist to make the game more accessible, but the controls themselves, as well as the lack of option to scale the UI or increase the parry prompt window let the game down.

The rise of pre-set accessibility options makes me happy.

 

Worst of all, at the time of writing, this full-priced premium game has microtransactions.

Historically, Capcom has added DLC that provides all the unlockables for a small fee, which I have no problem with as a disabled gamer who will never be able to beat the game’s hardest difficulty. The problem is that the microtransactions aren’t as comprehensive. Each provides the unique upgrade for a single weapon, of which there are 29 in the game, and you can buy them singly, or in packs of three or five. At £50 to begin with, asking for an additional approximately £30 to unlock upgrades that can be gained with the in-game currency comes across as predatory.

RE4 has a cash shop and thats not really ok

I thought the gacha system of case charms for minor bonuses might have been simplified by micro-transactions post-launch. Each charm is found in a capsule unlocked by exchanging silver and gold tokens.

 

Is Resident Evil 4 worth it?

For my part, there is fun to be had here. Most of the game is enjoyable, the environments are a delight to look at, and explore, and the puzzles are fun without being too difficult. I encountered no gameplay breaking glitches or bugs during my playthrough and had a solidly average experience that was drenched in style.

But those niggles that do exist aren’t insignificant. I can count the numbers of times I have wanted to abandon a game due to disliking it on one hand and RE4R very nearly joined that number with its forced stealth sections – although you can get around most of them with a scoped rifle or by stunning enemies before they can raise the alarm by shooting them repeatedly with the bolt-thrower – and the incredibly small UI with its near unnoticeable prompts for a seemingly key feature.

How are things like this still happening in a AAA game from 2023?

 

There is, obviously, a whole discussion we could have about the nature of video game remakes and how far they can stray from the original game, but for me, RE4R is held back by its adherence to a well-regarded game. The blending of survival horror and action never quite works, and the game just feels like it was made to please fans of the original without adding too much into the mix. That’s no bad thing, it just means I’m not the target audience.

Overall, I’m happy to give Resident Evil 4 7/10. It’s an average game whose high points barely outweigh its low, and whose irritating design choices most likely stem from its connection to the past.

If only the attention to detail here extended to every facet of the game.

 

Resident Evil 4 Remake - 7/10

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