Become A UI/UX Designer With This $35 Training Bundle

Partner content by StackCommerce

Do you want to start an exciting new career in web design? With the world moving online at an unprecedented rate, there’s never been a better time to learn valuable web industry skills. Even better, right now The Complete Become a UI/UX Designer Bundle is on sale for just $34.99.

If you’re wondering what the difference between UI and UX is, it’s simpler than you might think: a UI (user interface) focuses on a user’s visual experience, while UX (user experience) designers focus on the interaction between people and everyday products.

This complete elearning bundle includes nine different courses and more than 19 hours of content, covering UI and UX design, sales funnels, business development, and more. 

Even if you’re a beginner, the course Introduction to the Web Industry will serve as a practical guide to the web development industry and provides perfect knowledge for making that dream career change. 

Meanwhile, the UI Design (User Interface Design) course will teach you how to make beautiful UI designs for landing pages, websites, apps, and more, with step-by-step, hands-on examples. The course UX Design (User Experience Design) also promises to take you from beginner to expert, teaching you about the customer journey and sales funnels, as well as behavioral psychology and influence triggers, so that you can create an excellent user experience every time. 

All the courses in this bundle are taught by Juan E. Galvan, an accomplished digital entrepreneur with an impressive 4.5/5 instructor rating from previous students. Galvan has started several companies, created many products, and also founded Washington-based agency, Sezmi SEO.

Get started on your path to becoming a UI/UX designer today with The Complete Become a UI/UX Designer Bundle, on sale for just $34.99 (regular price $1800).

 


 

The Complete Become a UI/UX Designer Bundle – $34.99

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This Backend Developer Bootcamp Is On Sale Today For Less Than $30 

Partner content by StackCommerce

Do you want to start an exciting new career as a web developer, or take on lucrative new web development freelance work? You can learn how in your own time, from the comfort of your home with the top-rated The Backend Developer Bootcamp Bundle – and right now, it’s on sale with an incredible 96% discount, for just $29.99 (regular price $995). 

This incredible value elearning bundle includes five different courses, each with a usual $199 value, and more than 31 hours of training in web development, covering C#, SQL, .NET Core, and more. 

If you want to build your practical C# skills, the course Learn C# By Building Applications will teach you how to understand the concepts of C#6 and C#7, and will show how you write programs in C# on your own, as well as write clean code that will make your development work more elegant, readable and respectable, and use your new skills in a real-world application.

You’ll then take these real-world skills further with the course Master C# and SQL by Building Applications, which will teach you to become a better software developer by learning how to build real-world applications using C# & SQL, putting the skillsets you’ve learned in the other courses in the bundle together to solve real problems and build a full-stack application. 

These courses are taught by Avetis Ghukasyan, a successful web developer with an impressive 4.5/5 instructor rating from previous students. Ghukasyan holds a Bachelor of Computer Science from Wentworth Institute of Technology and specializes in helping people write software that helps create growth. 

Start your web development training today with The Backend Developer Bootcamp Bundle, on sale for just $29.99 right now – that’s an amazing 96% off the regular price of $995. 

 

The Backend Developer Bootcamp Bundle – $29.99

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Prices subject to change.

Tom & Jerry Review

Tom & Jerry premieres on HBO Max, and in select theaters, on February 26.

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Tom and Jerry, the perpetually feuding feline and rodent who’ve been warring for our amusement in over 160 animated Hanna-Barbera shorts (plus numerous TV shows and movies) since 1940 — not to mention serving as the inspiration for The Simpsons’ Itchy and Scratchy — are now starring in their own big city-set, hybrid live-action/animated adventure. And it doesn’t quite hit the mark.

Filled with frequent flashes of fun, Tom & Jerry ultimately gets bogged down with an overload of, well, let’s just call it humanity. In an effort to bring together the world of cartoons and real life, the headlining duo often feels sidelined, and supplemental to the story of Chloë Grace Moretz’s Kayla and her schemes and scams to keep a job that she conned her way into at a luxurious Manhattan hotel. The cat and mouse vanish for long stretches of the film while Kayla’s constant crucibles too often feel like they should exist elsewhere, in a different movie.

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The cast, which includes Moretz, Michael Peña, Rob Delaney, and Colin Jost, is a lively and fun batch of game performers, ready to dive wholeheartedly into the silliness involved with interacting with animation, pumping up their performances a bit to fit into a world that’s just a little zanier than our own. Dynamic gesturing, big expressions, and a touch of heightened sitcom-iness are crucial when it comes to playing off of scene partners that only exist in your imagination.

Everyone here, top to bottom, knows what the movie is and how it’s supposed to feel, but the stakes often feel strange (are we supposed to root for the ultra-wealthy? Or a mouse who, let’s be honest, is kind of the worst?) and the story feels a bit too weighted on one side, with too much focus given to the real people. As family entertainment, Tom & Jerry is a perfectly adequate offering, though, depending on expectations, some viewers may be bummed to find less Tom and Jerry present than the title suggests.

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To be fair, Tom and Jerry are both non-speaking characters and it’s challenging to craft a full story around that. There aren’t too many hard and fast rules to this specific world, except that all animals are cartoons and, randomly, some can speak (understood by other animals and maybe some humans). It’s a loose enough setting that Tom and Jerry can carry on with their chaos, with some moments nicely lifted from old routines from the shorts. There are segments of mirth that land really well but the story’s a bit too choppy to maintain momentum.

As both Tom and Jerry arrive in New York and begin squabbling in Central Park (from a situation that Jerry is 100% to blame for), hustler Kayla lies her way into a temp gig at The Royal Gate, a landmark hotel that’s hosting a huge celebrity wedding. Kayla’s frank homespun ways endear her to many, except Peña’s rigid hospitality nerd, Terrence. Through Kayla’s drive to keep a job she’s unqualified for, and Terrence’s need to expose her as a fraud, Tom and Jerry, and their penchant for punching each other, get used as pawns in larger human plots.

Which is the main reason they both feel underutilized. So much of what they do isn’t in service of their own story. Of course, neither one’s given an abundance of internal wants or needs. Jerry desires a nice, warm home and Tom dreams of – er – playing keyboard as an opening act for John Legend? Regardless, they’re the thinnest part of the movie. Director Tim Story‘s got some interesting elements here, filling the film with tunes from old school hip hop legends like A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul, and the solid choice to make Jerry a super troll, but the end result is a mixed bag of good intentions, sporadically spirited moments, and an imperfect utilization of the title characters.

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Monster Hunter Rise Fine-Tunes Many Of The Series’ Familiar Elements

For all of the innovative features it introduces to the series, Monster Hunter Rise is still very much a traditional Monster Hunter game at its core. Your overarching goal is to embark on quests, then use the various materials you’ve gathered from those missions to forge better pieces of equipment for your hunter. It’s a familiar and compelling gameplay loop, but Rise also fine-tunes the experience in some helpful ways, which Capcom recently demonstrated to us in a video presentation.

Our look at the game took us on a guided tour of Kamura Village, Monster Hunter Rise’s primary hub area. Like many other aspects of the game, Kamura has a distinctly Japanese flair. The village is lined with cherry blossom trees, merchant stalls, and thatched buildings, while cat-like Felynes scurry about carrying oversized bundles on their backs.

You’ll spend much of your downtime between hunts in Kamura, making use of the village’s various vendors and other amenities to prepare for quests, purchase supplies, craft new gear, manage your items, and advance the story. Monster Hunter veterans will be immediately familiar with this routine, but Rise makes things a bit more manageable by introducing some welcome refinements.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Monster Hunter Rise Is Coming to PC in 2022

Nintendo Switch title Monster Hunter Rise will eventually come to PC, according to producer Ryozo Tsujimoto. While the latest title in the Monster Hunter series will launch on Switch on March 26, Tsujimoto told IGN Japan in an interview that PC players can expect to get their hands on the game sometime in early 2022.

“We received a lot of requests for a PC version of Monster Hunter Rise, particularly from overseas players, and so we have decided to develop a version for PC, which we aim to release in early 2022,” said Tsujimoto. “This is still under development, so I’d like to share more detailed information when the time is right.”

No other details of the PC version were available.

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While Monster Hunter has long been a killer franchise in Japan, 2018’s Monster Hunter: World and its Iceborne expansion brought the series to global success, with World selling over 16.8 million units worldwide, and a further 7.2 million sales for Iceborne. It’s encouraging to hear that Capcom is listening to series fans around the world when it considers platforms for new entries such as Rise.

Monster Hunter Rise has been specifically designed with the Switch’s capabilities in mind – for example, Tsujimoto said in the interview that during development “we considered the characteristics of the Nintendo Switch, which can be used as a handheld, and with that in mind we focused on hunting at a higher tempo than before.”

It is not clear how such aspects will translate to a PC version. But Rise’s emphasis on action results in tightened core mechanics that should be fun to play regardless of platform, and the game has been made even more welcoming to new players than the already accessible Monster Hunter World.

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For example, in addition to the feline Palico buddies from previous games, Rise introduces Palamutes, canine creatures that assist the player in battle and that can even be ridden like a horse, making exploration much faster and more dynamic. “We especially wanted to have the fun of traveling around on the Palamute available in multiplayer,” said Tsujimoto. “Getting the necessary performance out of the [Switch] hardware required some adjustments, but we were able to achieve it eventually through continued development.”

While the Switch hardware does come with technical limitations, Rise is a beautiful game with stunning art direction and a complex ecosystem that allows monsters to interact organically with one another. It is notably the first Monster Hunter on a handheld system to feature seamless maps with no loading between areas, a challenge that the development team worked hard to pull off. So there should be no reason to worry that a PC version would be held back by the game’s Switch origins.

Capcom has had success with previous ports to more powerful hardware, such as when 2011’s Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate received a gorgeous HD update for Wii U in 2012. So perhaps a PC version of Rise could receive a similar makeover.

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For more on Monster Hunter Rise, take a tour of Kamura Village in the video above, with brand new surprising details about its facilities, like the Gathering Hub, Canteen, and Training Area!  Also, check out our Monster Hunter Rise preview of the game overall.

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Ryuichi Kataoka is a freelance writer for IGN Japan. Daniel Robson is Chief Editor at IGN Japan.

 

Overwatch 2: Jeff Kaplan On Expanding Story, Refining Gameplay, And Beards

Despite being released in 2016, Overwatch remains an incredibly popular multiplayer experience, with a healthy community of players returning day after day for online skirmishes. Naturally, longtime players are eager to play the next entry in the franchise, which was originally announced in 2019. Many fans expected 2021 would be the year a new chapter in the Overwatch saga would unfold, but that is not the case.

The community became crestfallen in the immediate aftermath of this news. However, at BlizzCon 2021, the Overwatch 2 team showed off more of the game than we’d ever seen, and the scope of the effort became more apparent. As well as making drastic changes to the player-versus-player experience, Blizzard is creating a large-scale player-versus-environment suite complete with story missions and over a hundred repeatable missions that can be played with friends, and will allow characters to be developed in an RPG-like fashion. It looks to be much bigger than most imagined.

Following the reveal, we spoke to game director Jeff Kaplan about what the team showed at BlizzCon, balancing their vision with the demands of the community, the challenge of keeping the first Overwatch fresh, and its narrative ambitions for Overwatch 2.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

FF7 Remake: Intergrade Preorders Are Live Now

Final Fantasy VII Remake: Intergrade comes to PS5 on June 10, and if you want to snag the game ahead of launch, so you’re ready to jump in as soon as it releases, there are a number of ways to do so. The PS4 version comes with a free next-gen upgrade, though you won’t get the bonus episode that stars the ninja, Yuffie–that will cost extra for those that upgrade.

If you don’t already own Final Fantasy VII Remake on PS4, then you can snag it right now for $30 at Amazon or Walmart. That’ll get you the 60fps PS5 version that features improved textures and a higher resolution when it releases in June. However, if you want to hold off and wait for the PS5 version, there are two different editions to choose from.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Blackfire’s Titans Season 3 Costume Revealed By HBO Max

We still don’t know exactly when Titans will return for Season 3 on HBO Max. However, the TV series adaptation of the DC Comics title of the same name has a lot on tap for its characters–and a slew of new superhero and supervillain costumes to put to use.

Previously, we’ve gotten new costumes for both Kory Anders/Starfire (Anna Diop) and Jason Todd’s (Curran Walters) new alter ego, Red Hood. Now, HBO Max has revealed the first look at Blackfire in her super suit. The character, played by Damaris Lewis, was first introduced at the end of Season 2 as Kory’s sister. She came to Earth to hunt down her sister and return her to their homeworld of Tamaran.

The new costume was created by costume designer Laura Jean Shannon, and Lewis is the first person to portray the Blackfire character in a live-action TV show or movie.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Two New Final Fantasy 7 Games Revealed: Ever Crisis And The First Soldier

Two new Final Fantasy 7-related games have been revealed: Ever Crisis and The First Soldier, both of which are mobile games. Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade took the spotlight during the recent State of Play, showing off new story content starring Yuffie and flexing the free PS5 upgrade features, but these new mobile games seem to be some wild twists to the FF7 universe in their own right.

Ever Crisis is a…remake of the original Final Fantasy 7 along with reimaginings of Crisis Core, Before Crisis, Dirge of Cerberus, and Advent Children. It follows the same timeline in a chapter structure, but with an all-new graphical style and visual stylings that bridge the game between the original game and FF7 Remake’s flair–a demake of a remake, if you will. It’s coming to iOS and Android platforms sometime in 2022.

The other game coming to the Final Fantasy 7 universe is called The First Soldier. It’s a multiplayer battle royale game that fuses third-person shooter elements with some of the action-based combat and RPG elements of FF7 Remake. It’s also coming to iOS and Android later this year.

Continue Reading at GameSpot