Celebrating Bloodborne’s 5th Anniversary

On this week’s episode of IGN’s PlayStation show Podcast Beyond!, host Jonathon Dornbush is joined by Brian Altano and Max Scoville to celebrate Bloodborne’s 5th anniversary, reminiscing on why the game is still so beloved for PS4 players, what it’s like to jump into the game now, and more.

Plus, we discuss the latest updates to Sony’s PS5 backward compatibility stance, PS5’s messaging overall, PS Plus games leaking for April, and much more.

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And, we’ve got a little teaser of our Bloodborne let’s play to come.

Have a That One Thing or Memory Card story to share? Write in to beyond@ign.com!

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Download or listen to the show on these platforms:

Podcast Beyond! is live every Wednesday at 3 p.m. PT. For the latest on PS5, check out the PS5 full specs list, why we’re excited about PS5’s 3D audio focus, an analysis of what teraflops really mean for the PS5 and Xbox Series X, and check out images of the allegedly PS5 dev kit and controller.

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Jonathon Dornbush is IGN’s Senior News Editor, host of Podcast Beyond!, and PlayStation lead. Talk to him on Twitter @jmdornbush.

Half-Life: Alyx Has A Death Stranding Easter Egg

Observant Half-Life: Alyx players spotted a Death Stranding Easter egg in one of the later chapters of Valve’s recently launched VR-exclusive. Reddit user KnightzIX posted an image of the Death Stranding tribute, which you can see below.

Credit goes to Reddit user KnightzIX.
Credit goes to Reddit user KnightzIX.

The find was verified by another Reddit user in the thread.

If you can’t tell, the Easter egg is a Death Stranding-style piece of cargo, complete with BRIDGES logo and the game’s iconic yellow caution tape. Next to it is a black boot with yellow soles. It appears to be located in Chapter 8 of Half-Life: Alyx, in the locked storage room guarded by laser tripmines.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

SteelSeries Apex 5 Gaming Keyboard Review

The SteelSeries Apex 5 gaming keyboard has brought the Danish company’s design language and knack for peripherals to a more affordable price point at $99. This new gaming keyboard delivers many of the premium gaming features, like per-key RGB lighting, found in much more expensive products to a lower price by using a key switch that aims to offer a mechanical feel while using a more affordable membrane. Let’s see how well it pulls this off.

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Design and Features

The Apex 5 looks like I’d expect from a SteelSeries keyboard after having used the Apex M500 and Apex M750. It has a similar aluminum construction to its siblings, with a clean design and a simple drop at the front and back. The underside includes handy three-way cable routing, structural reinforcement that keeps the keyboard incredibly sturdy, and two small legs for adjusting its angle.

SteelSeries has included a wrist rest, which is a surprising extra at this price point. It feels decent, though not luxurious, thanks to a soft touch coating, and it uses magnets that make it easy to attach and remove. Rubber feet on both the keyboard and wrist rest keep the whole thing from sliding around.

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The Apex 5 is a full-length keyboard with a numeric pad, but doesn’t stretch to take up an excess of space on my desk. It tacks on a few extras with a volume wheel, play/pause button, and a small OLED display. The wheel has a good feel to it, spinning smoothly and clicking to mute audio. The OLED display is a simple black and white affair, and has limited use in gaming, but that’s not to say it’s useless. It can display simple GIFs for some fun flair, or indicate which profile is selected. I set it up to display who was talking in Discord, which I felt was maybe the most handy thing it could do.

The keys on the Apex 5 are where things get interesting. For $99, it’s impressive that they come with per-key RGB lighting, especially since SteelSeries lighting effects are dazzling. The Audio Visualizer effect is particularly fun to watch. But, for all its impressive products, SteelSeries still doesn’t seem to know how to make key switches with LEDs that can light up the whole keycap. Secondary symbols are all dim, and taller characters fade near the bottom. It’s a small lack of polish, but also one I see frequently on mechanical keyboards.

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Of course, this isn’t exactly a mechanical keyboard. The key switch is a hybrid mechanical switch. In look and feel, it’s mechanical, but the actual actuation happens through a membrane. It presses down with a tactile bump like a mechanical keyboard, it clicks as loud as ever, and it still has the wobbly keycaps I’ve come to expect from a mechanical keyboard. But, beneath the key, there’s still a soft membrane that gets pressed down to complete the electrical circuit rather than expensive, gold-plated contacts at the side of the switch which close when the key reaches a certain depth. The consistency and durability of a soft membrane is questionable, but we haven’t noticed any issues.

SteelSeries put a pleasant finishing touch on each keycap with a subtle soft touch coating that adds a hint of grip. That traction makes it easier to keep my finger at home on WASD, but it would have been even more useful to have a bump on the W key as some gaming keyboards like the Roccat Horde AIMO feature.

Software

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SteelSeries Engine 3 lets you customize the Apex 5 with up to five on-board profiles. It allows custom keybinds for all the keys, macro editing, and custom lighting. You can also draw or upload an image or animation for the OLED display. Some of the best features for the Apex 5 are available in the Apps section of the software, where you can enable integrations with select games and programs, enabling special lighting effects and letting the OLED panel show notifications or game data.

Gaming

Gaming is where the Apex 5 gets interesting. Considering its features and solid design, it would be truly impressive at $99 if it were a true mechanical keyboard. Few mechanical gaming keyboards come below $100 without ditching fancy lighting or other extras – the IOGear HVER Pro RGB being a compelling exception. But, the Apex 5 isn’t a true mechanical keyboard because of its membrane switch. That said, in my testing it performs just as well as one.

The Apex 5 switch has a 4mm travel and 2mm actuation point, the same as many mechanical gaming keyboards. In practice, I found it to be every bit as dependable as other mechanical keyboards I’ve used.

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In more than a dozen hours gaming and typing on the Apex 5, it didn’t let me down in any unique ways. I find mechanical switches can fall short when it comes to repeatedly pressing a key because of the long travel. The Apex 5 suffers from that same issue, but it does so in the same way as competing mechanical keyboards.

It performs stunningly for every other action, though. I could count on it well enough to pull off quick peeks around edges or popping up over shields in Rainbow Six Siege. In every match I played, I felt comfortable with the Apex 5. I never noticed inconsistencies some might expect from a membrane keyboard, nor did I notice any mushiness. It’s not clear if the membrane will continue to behave the same way over a long time (SteelSeries rates it for 20 million keypresses), but I can say the experience isn’t readily distinguishable from a pure mechanical switch.

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Some of the extras can even be semi-handy while gaming. When I’m in a game wondering who popped onto Discord to silently breathe into their microphone, the OLED display can show me exactly who. The volume wheel is great for a quick adjustment as well, so I can crank the sound of enemy footsteps during tense moments in a game.

SteelSeries missed an opportunity to make the visual equalizer not just cool but also useful. If the equalizer could show stereo separation, thus indicating which direction louder noises were coming from, it could have been a handy extra indicator in games.

Purchasing Guide

The SteelSeries Apex 5 is available on Amazon and Best Buy with an MSRP of $99.

Batman v Superman Fans Celebrate 4th Anniversary With Favorite Stills

The Batman v Superman four-year anniversary is today, March 25, and fans came out in droves to show their support of the Zack Snyder movie with some of their favorite shots from the movie.

Zack Snyder’s last complete DC movie, Batman v Superman, hit theaters four years ago on March 25, 2016, and fans have the hashtag #BvS4Years trending on Twitter as a result. With new tweets going up every few seconds featuring stills from the movie, custom art, apparel, and feel-good stories about personal connections to the movie.

We’ve created a slideshow of just a handful of the movie stills and accompanying words shared on Twitter that you can check out below.

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Some fans are using this opportunity to voice their support of specific scenes or shots. Others are sharing their thoughts on the movie, calling it “severely underrated,” “absolutely beautiful,” and the “best comic book movie ever made.” You won’t find negativity in this thread and it’s clear that fans of the movie are still thinking about it four years later.

Others are using the trending moment to voice their support of Zack Snyder’s fabled cut of Justice League using the now-famous hashtag #ReleaseTheSnyderCut. This cut of the movie seemingly exists if the original director of the movie’s Vero posts is anything to go by. Stars of that movie have even voiced their support of this cut with Ben Affleck commenting on it as recent as last month.

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Whether or not the Snyder Cut ever amounts to anything more is unknown, but one thing that is known is that fans of Batman v Superman absolutely adore the movie and still look back on it fondly four years later.

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Wesley LeBlanc is a freelance news writer and guide maker for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @LeBlancWes.

Games Need To Steal This Small But Crucial Bleeding Edge Feature

Like plenty of other squad-based multiplayer games that have launched in recent years, such as Apex Legends and Call of Duty: Warzone, Ninja Theory’s Bleeding Edge has a ping system that allows you to communicate with your team without actually speaking into a mic. As someone who doesn’t always want to talk to his teammates when I’m playing online, it’s a trend I hope to see continue in multiplayer games.

Though I’m not a huge fan of Bleeding Edge’s ping system overall (most of its pings require two button presses instead of just one, making it difficult to use in combat), it does offer an option that I haven’t seen in similar games. It’s something that I’ve been hoping Respawn adds to Apex Legends one day–in fact, I hope most multiplayer-focused games steal this one aspect from Bleeding Edge’s ping system. In Bleeding Edge, you can ping your squad to suggest a retreat.

Now, obviously, you shouldn’t just run from every fight. It’s better to win than run away, but sometimes you need to flee in order to regroup so that you can win the subsequent encounter. Most ping systems handle the concept of retreat the same way they do pushing forward–by pinging in a certain direction, your character informs the rest of the team that they should move in that direction.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

AMC Theaters Furloughs Employees and CEO Amid Coronavirus Pandemic

AMC Theaters has announced that the company has furloughed its corporate employees, including its CEO Adam Aron. The decision was made after the COVID-19 pandemic forced AMC to close 634 move theater locations across the U.S. and Canda.

“At this time, AMC is not terminating any of its corporate employees, however, we were forced under the circumstances to implement a furlough plan, which is absolutely necessary to preserve cash and to ensure that AMC can reopen our doors once this health crisis has dissipated,” the company said in a statement to Variety.

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The theater closures impacted 27,000 U.S. employees. During this time, AMC announced that it would pay those employees “as much as we can possibly afford to pay them,” while also providing those who qualify to continue to have health-care benefits.

AMC maintains that it intends to bring back its employees once the movie theaters re-open. AMC previously tried to keep theaters open at 50% capacity, but ultimately ended up closing theaters.

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a massive disruption in the U.S. workforce, resulting in a wave of layoffs for non-essential staff, or new work situations that discourages direct contact and mass gatherings. Retailers like GameStop announced stores would be closed in favor of online orders and curbside pick-ups.

Check out IGN’s resource on how to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic here.

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Matt Kim is a reporter for IGN.

Doom Eternal’s Marauders Will Kick Your Ass, And I’m So Glad

Especially if you’re playing on a harder difficulty, Doom Eternal‘s enemies are quite intimidating. Anything more than the lowliest of demons can often prove too much to stand toe-to-toe with, ensuring you stay on the move at all times. Eventually, a unique challenge appears in the form of the Marauder, who won’t hesitate to kick your ass. It’s great.

Partway into the game, you’re confronted with a showdown against the Marauder. The encounter feels like a one-off boss fight, both because of the preceding cutscene and because the way in which you deal with a Marauder is quite unlike anything else in the game. You can’t blast away or otherwise use standard tactics, as you can read about in our guide to beating the Marauder.

The tutorial window that pops up before this fight unfortunately gives away both the basic strategies (seriously, turn these tutorials off) and the fact that this isn’t likely the only Marauder you’ll face, but it’s a memorable encounter nonetheless. Marauders carry a shield that effectively deflects any damage, and they’ll switch up which attacks they use depending on how close you are; they also periodically summon a wolf companion to flank you and generally keep you from devoting 100% of your attention to the Marauder.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

James Gunn Resorts to Using His Prank Michael Rooker Toilet Paper

Michael Rooker is the butt — or perhaps more accurately the face — of his friend and Guardians of the Galaxy franchise director James Gunn’s recent cheeky social media post.

Gunn, who is staying at home like nearly everyone else during the coronavirus pandemic, revealed that he’s had to break into his stash of prank toilet paper rolls featuring the face of his frequent cast member and pal Rooker.

“I bought a bunch of these rolls of toilet paper as a joke when Rooker came over for Christmas a couple years ago – I put them in all the bathrooms of the house,” Gunn tweeted. “I never thought we were actually going to have to use them, but here we are.”

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Gunn and Rooker have collaborated on a number of films Gunn either produced or directed, including Guardians of the Galaxy Volumes 1 and 2, Super, Slither, Brightburn, and The Belko Experiment.

Gunn and Rooker’s next collaboration is the 2021 DC movie The Suicide Squad. After that film, Gunn will segue to directing Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 for Marvel Studios.

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Would you use a roll of toilet paper with Michael Rooker’s face on it? Let us know in the comments.