The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – Winter Visit
This The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough for Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – Winter explains how to unlock a hidden trophy, Put My Name Up. There are 0 collectibles here.
Enter the aquarium. Feel free to explore the area. Interact with objects for more dialogue/narrative.
Trophy – Put My Name Up (Hidden Trophy)
Interact with the toy bow by the chalkboard to try and get your name on the scoreboard. Hit at least 10 to unlock the Put My Name Up Trophy.
Follow Owen upstairs and a cutscene will play, leading into the next section: Seattle Day 1 – The Forest.
Baldur’s Gate 3 Console Ports Not Ruled Out
Baldur’s Gate III is currently only being developed for PC and Google’s Stadia, with an early access launch on the former hopefully kicking off this August. Larian Studios’ previous title, Divinity: Original Sin 2, eventually arrived on most consoles, including Nintendo Switch, but no such plans are in place for the Baldur’s Gate sequel just yet.
As part of Play For All, GameSpot recently got the chance to sit down with Baldur’s Gate III creative director Swen Vincke, who said he and his team haven’t even tried to run the game on current-gen consoles. Although he didn’t rule out ports to consoles in the future, specifically next-gen ones, Vincke says the studio is just focused on PC and Stadia right now.
“Our focus right now is PC and Stadia,” Vincke stated. “We’re going to first focus very hard on getting those two to work, and then we’ll see what happens.” You can watch the full interview above.
Silence Of The Lambs: 15 Thing You Didn’t Know About The Classic Serial Killer Thriller

Hannibal “The Cannibal” Lecter made his first appearance in 1981, in Thomas Harris’s crime novel Red Dragon. He was neither the main hero nor villain (that was FBI profiler Will Graham and serial killer Francis Dolahyde respectively), but was easily the most interesting character in the book. Lecter is a brilliant psychiatrist and cannibalistic killer, who aids Graham in his pursuit of Dolahyde from his prison cell. It was the contradictions in Lecter that made him so fascinating– he was sophisticated, charming, and polite, but also a sociopathic murderer with a taste for human flesh.
When Harris wrote his next novel, it was Lecter he returned to. 1988’s The Silence of the Lambs had a similar basic plot to its predecessor–in this case Lecter helps an FBI trainee named Clarice Starling track a killer known as Buffalo Bill–and the book was an instant success. It didn’t take long before work began on a movie adaptation.
Red Dragon had already been adapted by this stage–Manhunter was released in 1986, directed by Michael Mann and featuring Brian Cox as Lecter. But while the movie is now considered an ‘80s classic, it was a flop at the time–would an adaptation of the follow-up book fare any better?
The answer was, of course, yes. Jonathan Demme’s adaptation of The Silence of the Lambs hit theaters in February 1991, starring Jodie Foster as Starling and Anthony Hopkins as Lecter. It went on to gross $272 million at the worldwide box office and won five Oscars the following year. Lecter was now firmly established as one of pop culture’s most iconic villains, and has returned to the screen numerous times since, most recently played by Mads Mikkelsen in the TV show Hannibal.
But as good as some of these other movies and shows have been, The Silence of the Lambs remains the definitive Thomas Harris adaptation. It’s an absolute classic, a brilliantly-made combination of procedural crime thrills and ghoulish horror, that still thrills and shocks nearly 30 years later. With the new TV show Clarice set to premiere in the Fall, there’s never been a better time to revisit Demme’s masterpiece, which can be streamed on Netflix. So here’s 15 things you never knew about The Silence of the Lambs.
1. Gene Hackman was going to direct and star

Veteran actor Gene Hackman was heavily involved with the movie in its early days. The star initially optioned Harris’s novel, with the intention that he would direct and potentially play Lecter. But according to Harris’s agent Robert Bookman, Hackman withdrew from the project after his daughter read the book and asked her dad not to make it.
2. The producers got Hannibal Lecter for free

The movie rights to Harris’s novel and the character of Hannibal Lecter were, in fact, separate. The latter was owned by legendary producers Dino and Martha De Laurentiis, who had made the previous Harris adaptation, 1986’s Manhunter. Luckily for The Silence of the Lambs producers Orion, Manhunter was a financial failure, so De Laurentiis let the studio use the character for free. “We were afraid to make [Silence of the Lambs],” Martha said. “You could be terrible and say no, or you could demand money, which was kind of, ‘Why be greedy?’ Or you let them use it, and if it’s successful, your asset has value.”
3. Michelle Pfeiffer and Meg Ryan were offered the lead role

Jodie Foster wasn’t Jonathan Demme’s first–or even second–choice to play Starling. The director initially wanted Michelle Pfeiffer, who had starred in his last movie, the comedy Married to the Mob. However, the dark content of the story led Pfeiffer to turn it down. “It was a difficult decision, but I got nervous about the subject matter,” she explained in 1992. Demme then offered the role to Meg Ryan, who declined for a similar reason (“I thought it was dangerous and a little ugly,” Ryan said).
4. Sean Connery Was approached to play Hannibal

Sean Connery was the first actor that Demme approached to play Lecter. Demme stated that Connery had the “fierce intelligence and also that serious physicality” to play the role, and with Connery having recently won an Oscar for The Untouchables, the director decided that he would take “the most commercial path” and offer him the role before he asked anyone else. But as with Pfeiffer and Ryan, Connery declined on account of the subject matter. “He thought it was disgusting and wouldn’t dream of playing that part,” Demme revealed.
5. Hopkins did a lot with little

Anthony Hopkins might not have been the first actor to be asked to play Lecter, but his performance is one of the most iconic in cinema, and it is the role that many viewers most associate the actor with. Amazingly for such a defining role, he has only 16 minutes of screen time out of the two hour movie, which is the second shortest of any Best Actor Oscar winner (beaten only by David Niven with 15 minutes in 1958’s Separate Tables).
6. Demme’s B-movie roots

By 1991, Jonathan Demme was one of the most respected directors working in Hollywood. But like Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese, he got his first break working for legendary independent producer Roger Corman, and never forgot his B-movie days. The movie has a number of roles for people famous from that world. Veteran B-movie star Charles Napier plays one of the guards who Lecter kills when he escapes, Corman himself appears as FBI Director Hayden Burke, and zombie master George Romero can be seen in the sequence where Starling is dragged away from Lecter’s cell.
7. The movie had full FBI cooperation

There was an unusual level of cooperation between the FBI and filmmakers, who wanted to portray the bureau in a realistic and positive way. The scenes set at the FBI training academy in Quantico, Virginia, were actually shot there, with Foster and Scott Glenn, who plays Behavioral Science Unit boss Jack Crawford, immersing themselves in the day-to-day work of agents in preparation for filming.
8. Lector almost never blinks

Anthony Hopkins barely blinks in the film, and the actor later explained that he did it to “keep the audience mesmerized.” “It’s not so much not blinking, it’s just being still,” he said. “Stillness has an economy and it has a power about it.”
9. Lector’s voice had some surprising influences

Hopkins used three very different influences for his performance. “I knew intuitively how to play him,” he told Empire in 1991. “I knew how he looked and how he sounded. There were two, maybe three voices that I heard. I thought of him as a combination of Katharine Hepburn, Truman Capote, and HAL from 2001.”
10. Buffalo Bill’s dance

Buffalo Bill’s infamous dance–for which he dons makeup and glitter, and, erm, conceals his genitalia–wasn’t actually in the script. It was actor Ted Levine who suggested it, based on a scene in the novel. “That’s from Chapter 20, where he was in the shower and did the little penis-tuck deal,” he said. “That wasn’t in the original script, and I asked that that be put in there because I thought it was really pretty key. It made this psychotic monster accessible, in a strange sort of way.” Levine also said he needed “a few drinks” before shooting the scene.
11. Bill’s Pit

Buffalo Bill’s basement was built on a multi-level set in a former airplane turbine factory in Pittsburg. The pit in which he imprisons Catherine Martin could be entered via a trapdoor in the floor or hidden doors on the side. But actress Brooke Smith later stated that she found the whole experience difficult. “I think I really messed with my own head to do those scenes,” she said. “I remember being aware that the camera was there and thinking, ‘I’m in all this agony and not only is no one helping me, but they’re actually filming me.’ I literally felt it.”
12. Foster didn’t like her accent being mocked

Foster looks momentarily shocked in the scene where Lecter starts mocking her Southern accent–and it turns out that reaction was genuine. “It upset me so much,” she said. “It struck a really bad chord in me. Anthony is the nicest man I’ve worked with in a long time, and the difference between that, of course, and the fury and passion of Hannibal Lecter is very interesting.”
13. The actors kept their distance

Jodie Foster kept her distance from both actors portraying serial killers in the movie. She revealed that she didn’t have a conversation with Hopkins until after filming was complete. “We got to the end of the movie and had never really had a conversation,” she said. “I avoided him as much as I could. I really avoided him.” Equally, Buffalo Bill actor Ted Levine explained that he and Foster deliberately kept out of each other’s way. “I think that was a good choice when you’re the antagonist and you’re dealing with the protagonist,” Levine said. “I want to keep that kind of thing going.”
14. The final scene was written specifically for the film–but it was nearly a lot scarier

In the novel, Lecter says goodbye to Clarice in a letter, but screenwriter Ted Tally decided the movie needed something more cinematic. So he wrote a scene in which Lector phones Starling from Dr Chilton’s house, where Chilton is tied up and about to become Hannibal’s next victim. But Demme decided this was “too horrifying” to be the final scene in the movie, so it was given a more ambiguous ending, with Lector simply following Chilton.
15. The movie was met with protests

Despite the huge acclaim that the movie received, it also came in for considerable criticism over its portrayal of Buffalo Bill. There was an entire year between the movie’s release in February 1991 and the 1992 Oscars, and throughout there were sustained protests from the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). “The killer in the movie is a walking, talking gay stereotype. He completely promotes homophobia,” a GLAAD statement read at the time. Demme himself defended the movie, stating “we knew it was tremendously important to not have Gumb misinterpreted by the audience as being homosexual. That would be a complete betrayal of the themes of the movie. And a disservice to gay people.”
The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – Hostile Territory
This The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough for Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – Hostile Territory includes tips for encounters against Seraphites and all collectible locations which include 12 artifacts, 1 coin, 1 workbench, and 1 safe.
Hostile Territory Walkthrough.
Walk With Manny
Follow Manny down the side of the building.
Inside the apartment building, loot the kitchen for scraps. There’s also white door leading to a bedroom. Open the drawer to pick up a note that Manny will quickly take from you. It’s private! Not a collectible.
Drop down through the hole in the floor and continue to the next room and exit out of the window, onto the scaffolding. Keep following Manny.
Artifact – Scar’s Suicide Note
When you leave Manny behind, head through an alley and down until you spot a brick building with the words “Tang’s Fabric & Imports” painted on, and turn around to see an open window across the alley leading to a small room with a dead Seraphite, who holds a note in his pocket.
Training Manual – Close Quarters
Possibly located in the same room as the dead Seraphite across from the import building, you can find this manual on a kitchen counter. This spawn may vary.
You can loot the dumpling shop for supplies. On the main path, go straight ahead, down a few steps into the building with the open doorway. Look to the door labeled exit, in this clothing store. It’s blocked but you can climb onto the table, covered by the white tarp, and pull yourself over the exit.
Climb up the car to reach the truck leading into the next apartment building.
Coin – North Dakota
As soon as you’re in this apartment, open the desk drawer at the end of the hall to add another coin to your collection.
Move forward and squeeze through the small space. You’ll have to back out take down the enemy that appears. Once dead, go through the small space again as if nothing happened.
Loot the bathroom ahead for supplements. Continue ahead by doing a running jump onto the platform across from the apartment. Loot the lookout post and continue ahead towards the overgrown plants. Crawl through the opening.
Drop down to enter a little courtyard. There’s a huge mural in front of you. Move towards it and jump through the window to loot the laundry room for supplements and other supplies.
Return to the courtyard and head through the opening ahead (the mossy wooden plank doorway). Once you squeeze into the section ahead, infected will be roaming around. Be ready!
Tips:
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Focus on stealth takedowns. Kill the infected walking ahead and then take down the one standing behind the reception desk.
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Head to the desk ahead for more cover. Keep in mind a runner and a clicker are in this section.
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As usual, loot the area for supplies.
When you’re ready, continue ahead, squeezing onto the patio. Lift yourself over the gap in the brick wall again to drop into the alley.
Safe – Location
Walk ahead and break the windows on the left to enter Jasmine Bakery. There’s a safe behind the register and the code isn’t too far.
Enter the restaurant and head through the back door, up the stairs. You’ll have to crawl under the furniture blocking the doorway. Listen to get a sense of where everyone is. Tip: while prone, kill the first Clicker with a headshot. Crawl a little closer and kill the second Clicker with a Pipe Bomb.
Artifact – Jasmine Bakery Safe
Long jump from the restaurant to the other building, across the street. Go through the doorway on the left and immediately turn to find a note on the cardboard boxes. It has the combination to the Jasmine Bakery Safe: 68-96-89.
Artifact – Strange Relic
After picking up the Jasmine Bakery Safe note, head into the next room and immediately look to the right for a small desk with a fan, and you can find a strange golden egg just below it, near the boarded up door.
Artifact – Plea to Seraphite Prophet
From the balcony where you found the safe combination note and strange egg, head back out onto the platform overlooking the alley and move up to find some stairs to a rooftop patio. Here you’ll find the remains of a man with a note tucked in his shirt.
Double Barrel Shotgun Location
Drop down through the floor and defeat the infected inside the shop. Behind the register, you may find the double-barrel shotgun. After looting the shop for supplies, interact with the main exit to get out of the building. Go to the safe and open it before continuing on!
When you’re ready, move forward and jump over the concrete barrier. Keep going and open the Seraphite truck ahead.
Artifact – Serpahite Prayer to Prophet – Peace
Inside the truck, on the right wall, is a peace prayer note. Exit the truck.
Artifact – Serpahite Prayer to Prophet – Prosperity
On the right side of the truck is a prosperity prayer note.
Artifact – Serpahite Prayer to Prophet – Pairing
On the right side of the truck is another pairing prayer note.
Artifact – Serpahite Prayer to Prophet – Steed
On the left side of the truck is a steed prayer.
Artifact – Serpahite Prayer to Prophet – Respect
On the left of the truck is a respect prayer.
Artifact – Prayer for Victory
On the left side of the truck, on the ground, is a victory prayer.
Artifact – WLF Soldier Meets Prophet Letter
Go into the building on the right (via the window) and pick up the note on the table.
Shortgun Holster Location
Continue through the door ahead. On the table, you’ll find a short gun holster.
Return to the area with the seraphite truck and go to the far left. Climb up to get to the platforms above. Drop down into the next grass area and crouch through the gate into the next field. Runners will be nearby but the Seraphites will likely shoot them down. Watch out for
Tips: Use the Moon milk tea shop to take down some enemies, hide, and shoot others from afar. Plus it has supplies. So does Lucky Tiger Comics (on the left).
Keep moving forward into the decrepit building ahead. Make your way up the stairs but keep listening to make sure more Seraphites aren’t waiting upstairs. Climb through the concrete slabs and crawl under all the debris.
Artifact – Letter from Seraphite Father to Son
Now that you’re on the roof, in the open air. You’ll find yourself in an empty Seraphite camp. Pick up the note on the table, secluded in the back.
Workbench Location – Empty Seraphite Camp
In this same area, you’ll find a workbench.
Slip down the grass and dirt ahead and crouch under the metal bars.
Drop down to the next Seraphite infested building.
Tips:
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Use stealth to take down the initial enemies.
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Consider utilizing pipe bombs to kill enemies from above.
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Stay on that side of the building but shoot Seraphites across the way. Occasionally they’ll come over but you can pick them off with stealth when they do.
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Go down to the lower section and kill remaining Seraphites.
On the lower floor, run jump to the next slab of concrete. Go towards the outdoor sunlight and greenery and leap down. A cutscene will play and lead into the next section: Seattle Day 1 – Winter Visit.
Classic ’90s Sci-Fi Series Animorphs Is Getting A Movie
Beloved young adult book series Animorphs by K.A. Applegate is headed to the big screen. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Scholastic will team up with producer Erik Feig for the movie.
“We couldn’t be more excited to work with Scholastic to adapt Animorphs, an iconic book series with a wildly unique combination of exciting, witty, outlandish and grounded elements that feel all too relevant for our times,” Feig explained in a statement. “We know these books have a deservedly deep bench of passionate fans and we hope to make Katherine Applegate and her co-author, Michael Grant, proud.”
The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – The Aquarium
This The Last of Us 2 Walkthrough for Chapter 6: Seattle Day 1 – The Aquarium is a heartfelt flashback that has 0 collectibles. Focus on the story for this one.
The Aquarium Walkthrough
The Aquarium opens with a cutscene and you’ll need to jump into the water. Follow Owen up the stairs and lift the door together. Check out the boat. You can even slide down the railings in the stands here.
Head to the next door and head up and over to get into the next area. In the main area, you’ll find a note by the mural. It doesn’t count as an artifact though.
Max’s Place is locked but you can go upstairs and find a note held by the corpse, it’s not an artifact either. Fortunately, you can get a key to enter Max’s Place.
Return and go to open Max’s Place. Follow Owen onto the ladder in the elevator shaft. A cutscene will play and lead into the next area: Seattle Day 1 – Hostile Territory.
Cyberpunk 2077 Delayed, Spider-Man: Miles Morales Explained, & PS5 DualSense Trademark | Save State
Grand Theft Auto 5 Online Is Offering Triple Rewards For Parachute Races As Part Of Speed Week
Grand Theft Auto V Online is rewarding players for going fast this week, with extra rewards for specific races in Speed Week. Earn double rewards in all open wheel races, all VIP work, and challenges, plus triple rewards in all parachute races this week.
Players that log in anytime between now and June 24 will receive the Coil USA Tee and have a shot at getting this week’s Lucky Wheel prize, the Ocelot R88.

There is also a variety of free vehicles and discounts on real estate, refurbishments, and customizations this week:
3 Xbox One Games Are Free To Play This Weekend
If you’re looking for something to play this weekend on Xbox One, there are three games you can check out for free as part of Xbox Free Play Days. You’ll need an active Xbox Live Gold or Game Pass Ultimate subscription to take advantage of the Free Play Days offerings, but it’s worth noting the Xbox Store offers free trials every weekend. This weekend, you can play Don’t Starve Together: Console Edition, PES 2020, and MotoGP 20 through Sunday, June 21. If you want to keep playing after the free weekend ends, all three games are available to purchase at significant discounts.
Don’t Starve Together is a standalone expansion to the popular indie survival game. As the name suggests, it emphasizes multiplayer, which is perfect for a free weekend. In Don’t Starve Together, you navigate a strange world filled with challenging threats. Along the way, you gather resources to craft items and build structures to keep you safe. Don’t Starve Together holds an “Overwhelmingly Positive” user rating on Steam and remains one of the cooler survival games out there to play with friends. You can grab the Mega Pack, which contains both the original, the Shipwrecked expansion, and Don’t Starve Together for just $10.80.
Soccer fans can dive into PES 2020, the latest entry in Konami’s long-running franchise. It earned a 9/10 in GameSpot’s PES 2020 review for its mechanically sound on-pitch gameplay and deep game modes. While PES doesn’t have the same robust official licensing agreements as FIFA, PES 2020’s soccer gameplay helps make up for it.