Beyond Good and Evil 2 unveiled at Ubisoft’s E3 Press Conference

With few bombshell announcements at this year’s E3, Ubisoft made waves at their press conference with a trailer for Beyond Good and Evil 2 on Monday. The explosive preview gave fans their first  look at the long-awaited follow-up to the 2003 cult classic.

The trailer follows a foul-mouthed talking monkey  as he makes a daring escape through the skyline of a sprawling futuristic city. First announced to be in pre-production in 2008, Beyond Good and Evil 2 seemed to be dead before yesterday’s big reveal.

As the wild applause for the trailer died down, Creative Director Michael Ancel seemed to get choked up and wipe a tear from his eye. He then thanked the fans for their support during the game’s long production.

Ubisoft closed their show with the Beyond Good and Evil 2 reveal. They also started off strong, opening the conference with industry legend Shigeru Miyamoto and Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot taking to the stage to announce Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle.

Developed by Ubisoft Milan and Paris, the game will be the first crossover between Nintendo’s flagship franchise and the Rayman spinoff series. In a surprising twist, Kingdom Battle focuses heavily on a turn-based tactical strategy system in the style of the X-Com series. Miyamoto said that he wanted the game to be completely unique from other Mario games.

Ubisoft used their press conference to highlight a number of new IPs that we’ll be seeing in the future. There were trailers for enigmatic sci-fi title Transference and spaceship combat game Starlink: Battle for Atlas. Multiplayer pirate game Skull & Bones showed off tactical naval combat similar to the ship mechanics in Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flag.

The show also featured trailer for Assassin’s Creed Origins. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of the series Origins will explore the beginning of the war between the Templars and Assassins in ancient Egypt.

Five promising games from E3

Nioh

Team Ninja, the people who brought us the notoriously hard Ninja Gaiden series, have returned with a new samurai game. Set in feudal Japan, the gameplay we’ve seen so far promises fast-paced bushido combat in a world inspired by Japanese mythology.

Nioh clearly draws a lot of influence from the Dark Souls series with its daunting difficult level and a deliberate battle system focused around the use of stamina – or ki. Much like the bonfires in Dark Souls, the player must fight their way to new shrines in order to save their progress.

When faced with enemies, you will be able to switch between three sword stances with different movesets and benefits. The high stance deals greater damage at the cost of more ki, the low stance gives you better defense and the middle stance offers a more balanced approach.

The Last Guardian

Sony’s press conference hosted one of the most anticipated reveals in the history of E3. After nine long years of waiting, The Last Guardian has an official release date.

Originally conceived as a PS3 title, production on The Last Guardian began back in 2007. Continuous delays and the transition to the PS4 kept pushing the release of the game back. The game’s turbulent development left many of us wondering if the game would ever come out.

The game follows a young boy who is kidnapped and taken to a castle. There, he meets and befriends another prisoner – a massive half-bird, half-dog creature. Together, they must evade their captors and escape the castle.

The lead designer and director of the game is Fumito Ueda, the man behind the critically-acclaimed Shadow of the Colossus and Ico. The Last Guardian will feature Ueda’s signature artistic style, full of beautiful landscapes and ruins in muted sepia.

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild

Nintendo dedicated their entire E3 Treehouse event to showcasing Breath of the Wild, and with good reason. This new game looks like it will be the most ambitious project from Nintendo in quite some time. With very little information available prior to E3, there were many new mechanics and concepts to introduce at the show.

Breath of the Wild marks a return to the fundamentals of the Zelda franchise with a renewed emphasis on exploration and non-linear progression. You can tackle the dungeons in any order you want and there are plenty of secrets to find while you explore the massive open world. Among those secrets are 100 small dungeon areas – called shrines – which unlock new abilities and items.

Link can traverse the land by riding horses, gliding through the air from high points and even scaling many of the surfaces out in the wild. Your ability to climb and perform other activities will be limited by a stamina meter. We can only hope that it is less restrictive than the much-reviled stamina system in Skyward Sword.

Resident Evil VII

While many of the upcoming games were only available to play at E3, the demo for Resident Evil VII was out on the PlayStation Store right after it was announced.

Set in a derelict house straight out of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre, the demo tasks you with escaping from the building. Along the way, you find a video tape which depicts the grisly fate of a camera crew that previously explored the house.

The demo is definitely reminiscent of PT, the playable teaser for Silent Hills. Both demos offered atmospheric, first-person exploration in spooky houses and they both turned out to be teasers for new installments in traditionally third-person survival horror franchises.

It has been confirmed that Resident Evil VII will be in first-person and it will support PlayStation VR. The developers also said that the demo isn’t necessarily representative of the actual game. Instead, it serves more as a preview of the mood and atmosphere they want to achieve in the final product.

Nonetheless, what we’ve seen so far suggests that the game will be a dramatic departure from both the third-person survival horror the series was built on and the schlocky, action-movie style of some of the more recent installments.

Dishonored 2

The follow-up to Arkane Studio’s 2012 title, Dishonored 2 continues the story of royal bodyguard Corvo Attano. This time around, you can play as either Corvo or as deposed empress Emily Kaldwell as they fight to regain the throne from a mysterious usurper.

The sequel moves the action away from the bleak whaling town of Dunwall to Karnaca, the thriving coastal city where Corvo was raised. The developers have said that they focused on world-building and storytelling in Dishonored 2, an element that was sorely lacking in the previous game.

With multiple solutions to every obstacle and a variety of paths through each level, Dishonored 2 is designed to suit whatever play style you choose. You can rely on stealth to get by your enemies, you can fight them all with sword and gun or you can choose a method that’s somewhere in between.

The gameplay at the show highlighted several new arcane abilities at the player’s disposal. The new Domino power, for example, allows you to link multiple opponents together so taking out one means they all go down. The demo also featured a mission which has the player jumping back and forth between two different time periods.

 

Gears of War 4 and Project Scorpio unveiled at Xbox E3 Event

With the unveiling of two new editions of Xbox One and the return of several flagship franchises, Xbox delivered a solid press conference at E3 2106.

The show opened with the reveal of the Xbox One S, a new white version of the console that is 40 percent smaller than the original.

They also closed out the conference by announcing Project Scorpio, another new type of Xbox One that will be “the most powerful console ever built.” With a 6 teraflop GPU, Project Scorpio will offer top-notch visuals on 4K screens when it comes out late 2017.

Our first game preview was an electrifying video for Gears of War 4. The demo featured the franchise’s trademark cover-based combat as a group of COG soldiers fought off alien Locusts. The newest installment in the Epic Games series will be out on October 11th.

Phil Spencer, the head of Microsoft’s Xbox division, added that the new Gears of War will be one of numerous upcoming games that will feature Xbox Play Anywhere. This new cross-platform initiative will allow any copy of a game with Play Anywhere support to work on both Xbox One and Windows 10 PC.

Forza Horizon 3 was also introduced as an Xbox One and Windows PC exclusive. Set in Australia, the realistic racing game will allow players to seamlessly join their friends in co-op.

Square Enix Director Hajime Tabata took to the stage to show off the “fast and fluid” combat of Final Fantasy XV. Set to a fantastic musical score, the player character faced off with a colossal Titan in a live gameplay segment.

The press conference had plenty of news for fighting game fans. A trailer for Tekken 7 revealed the game will roll out for Xbox One early next year. We were also told that Killer Instinct Season 3 will add a new playable character, General Raam from Gears of War, to its roster of fighters this March.

A new trailer for Battlefield 1 gave us a glimpse into the various forms of combat in The Great War, including aerial dogfights and tank battles. For EA Access users, DICE’s latest game will be available for Xbox One on October 13th, nine days before it arrives on PS4.

Among other games featured at the show were real-time strategy game Halo Wars 2 and sci-fi platformer ReCore. There was also Gwent, a spinoff of a skill-based card game from the Witcher series, and Rare’s Sea of Thieves, a colorful, cooperative ship battle game in the vein of Guns of Icarus.

God of War, Resident Evil VII and Last Guardian at Sony’s E3 Event

It’s hard not to be excited for the future after Sony’s stellar press conference at E3 on Monday.

Following a sweeping overture from the live orchestra, the press conference kicked off strong with our first look at the new God of War game.

The demo featured an aged, bearded Kratos teaching a young boy to hunt in a snowy wilderness. The two are soon interrupted by a group of enemies, a troll and finally a dragon. While previous games in the series drew inspiration from Greek mythology, the setting and creatures in this video suggests this new installment will be centered on Norse legends.

One of the biggest surprises of the show was a gritty, found-footage teaser video which turned out to be the reveal of Resident Evil VII. Available on the PlayStation Store after the announcement, the demo for the upcoming game has the player explore a dilapidated house in first-person.

That wasn’t the only sucker punch the show had to offer. Hideo Kojima made a surprise appearance to present an enigmatic teaser for his new game Death Stranding.

Kojima had previously been attached to direct another horror game, Silent Hills, before it was recently cancelled by Konami. Death Stranding, like Silent Hills before it, will star Norman Reedus as the protagonist.

A new video for The Last Guardian revealed that the long-awaited title is slated for an October release. The news that Team Ico’s next game will finally hit store shelves this year brought thunderous cheer s and applause from the audience.

There were also plenty of original IPs announced at this year’s show. In the demo for Horizon: Zero Dawn, we were introduced to a breathtaking landscape where sci-fi and fantasy meet. Riding across the plains on horseback, the protagonist battles hostile, animal-like robots with high-tech arrows and bombs.

A gameplay video for post-apocalyptic shooter Days Gone presented a frenetic battle between a biker and a swarm of zombie-like creatures chasing him. Our first look at Detroit: Become Human, the newest offering from Quantic Dream, promised cinematic storytelling based on choices.

PlayStation VR was also a major focus of the conference. A slew of exclusive titles were revealed for Sony’s virtual reality headset, including Star Wars Battlefront: X-Wing VR Mission, a VR add-on for Final Fantasy XV, sci-fi shooter Farpoint and Batman: Arkham VR from Rocksteady Games. We also learned that the headset will be available on October 13th with a price tag of $399.

The new wave of video game movies is here

Historically, film adaptations of video games have never gone well. Despite this bad track record, the new trend in Hollywood looks to be high-profile video game blockbusters.

The first of the new video game adaptations to hit theaters, Angry Birds, is shaping up to be a financial success. The animated movie pulled in $39 million dollars and took the No. 1 spot on its opening weekend.

Perhaps the most baffling news came earlier this week when it was announced that Tetris: The Movie will have a $80 million dollar budget. The “sci-fi thriller” film, which will be the first installment in a trilogy, is being made by a China-U.S. company called Threshold Global Studios.

A few weeks back, the first trailer for Assassin’s Creed generated some positive buzz for the upcoming movie. Set for a December release, the film will follow the age-old battle between the Assassins and the Templars during the Spanish Inquisition.

Warcraft, a $100 million dollar film adaptation of the classic real-time strategy series, is coming out next month.

We also learned this week that Nintendo is planning to get back into the movie industry. Nintendo CEO Tatsumi Kimishima has said that they will be working to produce an official movie within  the next five years.

Of course, Nintendo infamously tried their hand at filmmaking back in the 1990s with the poorly-received Super Mario Bros. movie. Kimishima cited this failure as the reason why Nintendo’s future movie projects will not be live-action.

Legend of Zelda Wii U to take center stage at Nintendo’s E3 show

Nintendo has announced that their E3 livestream event will focus exclusively on the first playable demo for Legend of Zelda Wii U.

The upcoming game, which is slated for a 2017 release, will be the only game featured at Nintendo Treehouse Live on June 14. Along with promises of a revolutionary new mechanic, series producer Eiji Aonuma said the game will offer a new kind of Zelda experience.

In the press release for the event, Aonuma called the latest entry in the franchise “a clean break from the conventions of previous games” with an emphasis on exploration and non-linear gameplay.

Of course, the “freedom of exploration” touted in the new game  was a core key element in the original Legend of Zelda for the NES. The original game allowed players to tackle dungeons in almost any order and it rewarded player exploration with plenty of hidden secrets.

Some of the more recent titles in the series, most notably Skyward Sword, have moved toward a more streamlined, linear experience. So, the open world format and non-linear path promised in the new game seems like more of a return-to-form than a completely new direction.

Anyways, only time will tell if bringing exploration back to the franchise will make this installment the “turning point” Aonuma claims it will be.

E3 Treehouse Live will begin at 9 a.m. Pacific Time on June 14. It will be available for streaming on Nintendo’s E3 website as well as on the company’s YouTube and Twitch channels.

 

 

 

 

Monroe Family Organics Gambles On Farming In Michigan

Here’s an article I did for my Introduction to Business Journalism class at CMU. It’s part of Reinventing Michigan, a collaborative project the class created. It looks at how the 2008 Recession affected Michigan and how the state has recoverd through innovation and diversification.

Seeing the final product, I think everyone involved did a great job. And a special thanks to Professor Micheline Maynard for all the help she has given us this semester.

reinventingmichigan

Brass1By Shawn Tonge

   ALMA – Fred Monroe grew up in the countryside near Alma. He became interested in gardening at a young age. At 16, he started selling the vegetables from his garden at the farmers’ market — and he found his calling. Now, Monroe is part of a nationwide movement that is creating a new market for organic produce in Michigan.

   Monroe Family Organics sells about 40 percent of its produce through a “market-style” Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. Customers buy a share of his crop at the beginning of the season and order what fruits and vegetables they want to receive. The customer can pay the full price of their order upfront or make an initial payment when they order. Monroe then plants and cultivates the produce and delivers it to the customers after harvest.

   Community Supported Agriculture started on the east coast and has…

View original post 770 more words