With the rise of the indie movement and decline in mid-level games, will the next generation belong to the small developers rather than the seemingly unstoppable multi-million dollar corporations.
The Microsoft Store has hinted at the upcoming release of Minecraft: Bedrock Edition on Valve's digital distribution platform, Steam.
1 major advantage to this will be launching it straight from SteamVR. You have to make a custom shortcut to get it working right now in VR.
This is good news. It will be much easier to get it installed on my devices without using workarounds.
The Minecraft 1.21 Tricky Trials update's combat and technical aspects make it a fitting choice to bring in one missing crafting recipe.
From base building to swinging willies, here are the best survival games around, which include a couple of less than obvious picks.
Shouldn't say the future of the industry, but definitely a good part of it.
Very doubtful. It seems the game industry is going through the same thing the movie and music industry is going through. We'll eventually move past the "hipster" generation and be back with gamers playing games.
And this doesn't mean Indie games are bad or anything, it's just they are getting more attention because there are people hating on popular games, and claiming these smaller games are groundbreaking.
I'll always play Uncharted, Borderlands, Battlefield, Call of Duty, Gears of War, Counter-Strike, Team Fortress, Half Life, Doom, God of War, etc, over many, many indie games.
If we lost games like those I mentioned, the gaming industry would be more about fashionista's then actual gaming.
There are indie games that push the better budgeted games though. Games like The Walking Dead (?), Bastion, Legend of Grimrock, Minecraft, Tiny and Big, and such.