Yearly Archives: 2020
WandaVision Will Pay Homage to The Office and Modern Family, Says Feige
Orlog From Assassin’s Creed Valhalla Is Getting A Physical Release
Fuser Review
I've never really been a musician. When I was in middle school, I took the trumpet. In high school, I took guitar lessons. But I was never dedicated enough to the craft and I dropped both after a couple of years. Making music, even just for fun, was a prospect I left behind a long time ago. So I'm surprised by how inspired I was by Fuser, Harmonix' new musical mash-up making game. While it has a score-based story mode similar to the studio's past games, Fuser actually empowers you to be creative and make music from parts of songs you may already know. The core mechanic, switching tracks in and out to make music, is easy to use and wonderful to play with. The game Harmonix built on top of that core idea, however, doesn't always take advantage of it effectively. As a result, Fuser is better at spurring you to be creative than it is at challenging you. That may sound like a daunting, niche experience, but no game's made it easier to feel good about getting creative.
Fuser rides a vanishing line between music game and music-making toolkit. As a mash-up DJ, you create music by blending (or fusing) parts of songs together to make a new and often dancier version of your own. Each of the 80-plus songs in the base game's library, plus a growing supplemental library of DLC songs, is broken down into four color-coded instrumental tracks, which you can switch in and out on the fly, changing the song as you go. You can play the drums from "Killing in the Name" by Rage Against The Machine, the guitar from "Jolene" by Dolly Parton, the trumpets from "Bring ‘Em Out" by T.I., and the lyrics of Sean Paul's "Temperature," and they'll all cohere into one brand new sample. Your set is an evolving compilation of combinations.
The music you use spans decades and genres far beyond what you might expect from a game about DJing at a music festival. The tracklist spans pop, rock, country, dance, hip-hop, R&B, and Latin/Caribbe music from the 1960s through 2020. As with Rock Band, there's a nostalgia that draws you in, but you quickly cultivate a new and surprisingly deep relationship with specific tracks that you may not have had before. I found myself growing to enjoy songs I knew but didn't really love before, and staying away from some songs I like, but don't fit in with the songs I like using most. Everybody I know Guitar Hero or Rock Band has a song they know and like from playing those games. The same thing happens here.
Continue Reading at GameSpotFuser Review
I've never really been a musician. When I was in middle school, I took the trumpet. In high school, I took guitar lessons. But I was never dedicated enough to the craft and I dropped both after a couple of years. Making music, even just for fun, was a prospect I left behind a long time ago. So I'm surprised by how inspired I was by Fuser, Harmonix' new musical mash-up making game. While it has a score-based story mode similar to the studio's past games, Fuser actually empowers you to be creative and make music from parts of songs you may already know. The core mechanic, switching tracks in and out to make music, is easy to use and wonderful to play with. The game Harmonix built on top of that core idea, however, doesn't always take advantage of it effectively. As a result, Fuser is better at spurring you to be creative than it is at challenging you. That may sound like a daunting, niche experience, but no game's made it easier to feel good about getting creative.
Fuser rides a vanishing line between music game and music-making toolkit. As a mash-up DJ, you create music by blending (or fusing) parts of songs together to make a new and often dancier version of your own. Each of the 80-plus songs in the base game's library, plus a growing supplemental library of DLC songs, is broken down into four color-coded instrumental tracks, which you can switch in and out on the fly, changing the song as you go. You can play the drums from "Killing in the Name" by Rage Against The Machine, the guitar from "Jolene" by Dolly Parton, the trumpets from "Bring ‘Em Out" by T.I., and the lyrics of Sean Paul's "Temperature," and they'll all cohere into one brand new sample. Your set is an evolving compilation of combinations.
The music you use spans decades and genres far beyond what you might expect from a game about DJing at a music festival. The tracklist spans pop, rock, country, dance, hip-hop, R&B, and Latin/Caribbe music from the 1960s through 2020. As with Rock Band, there's a nostalgia that draws you in, but you quickly cultivate a new and surprisingly deep relationship with specific tracks that you may not have had before. I found myself growing to enjoy songs I knew but didn't really love before, and staying away from some songs I like, but don't fit in with the songs I like using most. Everybody I know Guitar Hero or Rock Band has a song they know and like from playing those games. The same thing happens here.
Continue Reading at GameSpotWorld of Warcraft: Shadowlands Is Live Now
World of Warcraft: Shadowlands Is Live Now
Batman: Earth One Vol. 3 Gets June 2021 Release Date
Art by Gary Frank. (Image Credit: DC)[/caption]
As with the previous two books, Batman: Earth One Vol. 3 is set in an alternate, new reader-friendly DCU where Bruce Wayne is still a rookie hero. This sequel will explore the ongoing fallout of two major changes to traditional Batman mythology - Bruce's Arkham family heritage and the rise of a very different Two-Face.
As Vol. 3 opens, a heavily armored gang of criminals has begun terrorizing Gotham City. To Batman's horror, they seem to be led by Harvey Dent, despite Dent's apparent death in Vol. 2. However, given the way Vol. 2 ended, it seems safe to assume Harvey's sister Jessica is the gang's actual ringleader. Following the physical and mental trauma she endured, Jessica now suffers from dissociative identity disorder and believes herself to be Harvey.
Vol. 3 also features the surprise return of Bruce's grandfather, Adrian Arkham, promising an even deeper dive into the shared history between the Waynes and the Arkhams in this universe. And if the cover art is anything to go by, the book may also touch on the ancient, bat-worshiping Miagani Tribe.
[widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=a-visual-history-of-batman&captions=true"]
The original Batman: Earth One was released in July 2012, with Vol. 2 following three years later in May 2015. That means six years will have passed by the time Vol. 3 arrives in stores. Despite these long gaps between volumes, the influence of the Earth One series has been clearly felt throughout the Batman franchise, particularly with adaptations like Gotham and Batman v Superman offering a more aggressive and militant take on Alfred Pennyworth.
Interestingly, DC's description for Vol. 3 gives no indication Johns and Frank will be adding the Joker to Batman's Earth One rogues gallery this time. Johns previously told IGN the duo are waiting for the "right time" to introduce Joker, which could imply they're planning to reunite for a fourth volume.
"The Joker, for Gary and I, is not something we're avoiding. We're just waiting until it's the right time in Bruce's story, for him to go up against someone like the Joker. We have a very specific take on the Joker that we're going to introduce. It's a little bit different than what we've seen before. So when the Joker shows up in our Batman: Earth One series, it will be because that time and place in Bruce's life is where he's going to have face something like that. We have a whole arc plotted out for Bruce, and you can kind of see it build out from book one to two and into three. I think it's going to come in at the exact right time," Johns said.
[ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/08/23/the-batman-trailer-dc-fandome-official-footage"]
You can, however, see Johns add new layers to Batman and Joker's rivalry in the recent Batman: Three Jokers miniseries. Johns and Frank are also teaming up for their first creator-owned project together, a post-apocalyptic Image Comics series called Geiger.
Check out IGN's reviews for Batman: Earth One Vol. 1 and Batman: Earth One Vol. 2.
[poilib element="accentDivider"]
Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.Batman: Earth One Vol. 3 Gets June 2021 Release Date
Art by Gary Frank. (Image Credit: DC)[/caption]
As with the previous two books, Batman: Earth One Vol. 3 is set in an alternate, new reader-friendly DCU where Bruce Wayne is still a rookie hero. This sequel will explore the ongoing fallout of two major changes to traditional Batman mythology - Bruce's Arkham family heritage and the rise of a very different Two-Face.
As Vol. 3 opens, a heavily armored gang of criminals has begun terrorizing Gotham City. To Batman's horror, they seem to be led by Harvey Dent, despite Dent's apparent death in Vol. 2. However, given the way Vol. 2 ended, it seems safe to assume Harvey's sister Jessica is the gang's actual ringleader. Following the physical and mental trauma she endured, Jessica now suffers from dissociative identity disorder and believes herself to be Harvey.
Vol. 3 also features the surprise return of Bruce's grandfather, Adrian Arkham, promising an even deeper dive into the shared history between the Waynes and the Arkhams in this universe. And if the cover art is anything to go by, the book may also touch on the ancient, bat-worshiping Miagani Tribe.
[widget path="global/article/imagegallery" parameters="albumSlug=a-visual-history-of-batman&captions=true"]
The original Batman: Earth One was released in July 2012, with Vol. 2 following three years later in May 2015. That means six years will have passed by the time Vol. 3 arrives in stores. Despite these long gaps between volumes, the influence of the Earth One series has been clearly felt throughout the Batman franchise, particularly with adaptations like Gotham and Batman v Superman offering a more aggressive and militant take on Alfred Pennyworth.
Interestingly, DC's description for Vol. 3 gives no indication Johns and Frank will be adding the Joker to Batman's Earth One rogues gallery this time. Johns previously told IGN the duo are waiting for the "right time" to introduce Joker, which could imply they're planning to reunite for a fourth volume.
"The Joker, for Gary and I, is not something we're avoiding. We're just waiting until it's the right time in Bruce's story, for him to go up against someone like the Joker. We have a very specific take on the Joker that we're going to introduce. It's a little bit different than what we've seen before. So when the Joker shows up in our Batman: Earth One series, it will be because that time and place in Bruce's life is where he's going to have face something like that. We have a whole arc plotted out for Bruce, and you can kind of see it build out from book one to two and into three. I think it's going to come in at the exact right time," Johns said.
[ignvideo url="https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/08/23/the-batman-trailer-dc-fandome-official-footage"]
You can, however, see Johns add new layers to Batman and Joker's rivalry in the recent Batman: Three Jokers miniseries. Johns and Frank are also teaming up for their first creator-owned project together, a post-apocalyptic Image Comics series called Geiger.
Check out IGN's reviews for Batman: Earth One Vol. 1 and Batman: Earth One Vol. 2.
[poilib element="accentDivider"]
Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.
