Black Matter — австралийская студия разработки видеоигр, получившая известность благодаря своему реалистичному многопользовательскому шутеру от первого лица Hell Let Loose. Игра, действие которой разворачивается во время Второй мировой войны, отличается масштабными сражениями с участием до 100 игроков, требующими командной работы и стратегического планирования. Black Matter стремится к созданию аутентичного и захватывающего игрового опыта, уделяя особое внимание исторической достоверности и тактической глубине. Компания продолжает поддерживать и развивать Hell Let Loose, выпуская обновления и расширения, а также планирует новые проекты в будущем.
The best King's Field-likes on PC From software, with love. Developer: Kasur Games | Release date: 2025 | Steam Deck: Verified | Link: Steam - King's Field + Dark Souls 2 - Controls like: A sensible station wagon in a forsaken kingdom There's all of the classic FromSoftware paraphernalia in here—a slightly awkward magic system, highly stylised NPCs with no real faces, aggressive plants, poison lakes—but what makes this game stand out is how interconnected it all is. Developer: Rat Tower | Release date: 2024 (early access) | Steam Deck: Playable | Link: Steam - King's Field + Dark Messiah of Might and Magic - Controls like: American muscle in a demolition derby Monomyth may eschew the faux-retro look used to great effect by many Field-likes, but is no less atmospheric or authentic for its modern extravagances. Hudepohl | Release date: 2025 | Steam Deck: Playable | Link: Steam - King's Field + Silent Hill - Controls like: A sedan whose wheels are spinning in the mud as someone tries to carjack you King's Field games were always scary, but this game takes that fear and then turns it up to 11 by adding a generous helping of Silent Hill to the mix.
Touting 16 GB of DDR4 and a 512 GB SSD, its otherwise solid entry-level hardware is stymied by a high price, that's only been amplified by those pesky datacenters hoovering up NAND flash left right and centre. For - Slim form factor - Good selection of ports - Relatively affordable… relatively Against - DDR4 sucks - GPU selection is just okay - Many, many different SKUs PC Gamer's got your back This is the Nitro V 15, a modern entry-level gaming laptop from Acer. I mean It doesn't quite manage to hit that $1,000 mark, at least not in the US, where it retails at $1,079 (it slides under at £925 in the UK), but there is at least some justification as to why these hardware concessions are there. Compared to something like Gigabyte's Gaming A16 with its (admittedly 32 GB of) DDR5 clocked at 5,200 MT/s, and even with the same processor, percentage change is around 66% by comparison.