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The game ‘Saints Row’ is good, mindless fun. The game is also barely playable

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Saints Row is an open-world action game series that has characterized itself for being sheer, stupid tomfoolery. Assuming that Hangar 13’s Mafia series is the “The Godfather” of video games and Rockstar Games’ Grand Theft Auto series is “Goodfellas,” then, at that point, Volition’s Saints Row is “The Fast and the Furious” with touching, hoverbikes and stunned bazookas. 2006’s “Holy people Row” and its spin-off “Holy people Row 2” were open-world activity games about an anonymous lawbreaker driving a road pack’s ascent to control, a generally dull story sprinkled with kooky minutes. “Holy people Row: The Third” cemented the establishment’s currently brand name way too tasteful and “Holy people Row IV” covered off the series by transforming the player into a superpowered legislator (leader of the United States, to be definite) warding off an outsider intrusion.

Enter 2022’s “Saints Row,” a reboot that engineer Volition said would return the series to its foundations and spotlight on a humble group turning into a central part in the criminal world — yet without losing the nervy, contemptuous specialty that Saints Row has cut for itself. I’m glad to report that “Holy people Row” prevails on that front. The composing is odd, the humor is senseless and the characters have a few shockingly powerful in the middle between all the insane fun times. I’m miserable to say, nonetheless, that “Holy people Row” is additionally quite possibly of the most incredibly seriously upgraded and buggiest game I’ve played throughout the year.

In this most recent passage, you play as a destitute 20-something-year-old living with their three companions in Santo Ileso, another city roused by the huge urban communities of the Southwest. Your tightknit gathering of rebels incorporates the intelligent business visionary Eli, creative repairman Neenah and carefree DJ Kevin (a not so subtle reference to Asian American rave bae image persona, Kevin Nguyen). Your history is quintessentially millennial and Gen Z: After working unpleasantly for goliath enterprises and battling to find solidness in an exceptionally unpredictable work market, you and your companions conclude to do whatever you might feel like doing by beginning another crook organization called the Saints.

To finance your thriving illegal undertaking, you carry out bunches of lavish, absurd violations. The fundamental story missions in “Holy people Row” range from Hollywood blockbuster style heists to cut of-life groupings. I have pancaked many vehicles from furious opponent packs in my beast truck; I likewise took Kevin on a journey to get a youngster’s feast toy and discovered that he never got one as a kid experiencing childhood in child care. The repeatable side gig missions incorporate penetrating monitored roofs utilizing a wingsuit and backing up the driver for skilled accomplices. In the absurdist, cartoony universe of “Holy people Row” where deaths are publicly supported out to the gig economy through an application called Wanted, piling up a body include in the large numbers ought to be joyful tomfoolery. Sadly, a large portion of that tomfoolery has been squashed under the game’s reiteration of bugs.

Gracious the bugs, such countless bugs. Posting them all would take a totally different article. In one mission, my shotgun quit working totally during a succession where I was being surged by about six foes with scuffle weapons; reloading my game didn’t fix it. I naturally bombed one more mission in light of the fact that the last objective I expected to kill generated a quarter pretty far from the objective region and passing on to seek after him planned me out. My game crashed during a cutscene after a primary story mission, and when I stacked back in, the mission had previously closed. It was absolutely impossible for me to return and see what occurred. On one more mission, subsequent to battling my direction through a glove of foes to find a vehicle I expected to obliterate, the vehicle unexpectedly became resistant. I needed to reload and do everything over once more, trusting that the bug was an fluke.

Be that as it may, even without the bugs, “Holy people Row” is needing greater advancement time. The PC form of the game (which is the variant I played) feels like a reconsideration. The mouse settings aren’t recorded in the control menu yet in the camera menu (which records the mouse under Controller Sensitivity Settings) and in the availability menu. It likewise seems difficult to kill mouse speed increase: With just a handle and no real way to straightforwardly enter a worth, the most reduced I could get it to was a 0.01 worth totally.

The photograph highlight, which you use for side journeys and to record quick travel focuses, would arbitrarily quit working for me. There are a few times where I’ve been in the front seat and my AI driver would continue to crush into regular citizen vehicles until we both passed on in an unstable fiery blaze. For some odd explanation, the game won’t allow you to quick go during the early on period of a primary mission. I would begin a mission, see that the journey provider needs to meet me as far as possible on the opposite part of town, quit the mission, quick travel to draw nearer and afterward start the mission once more. Indeed, even the gunplay, a center piece of the experience (you shoot endlessly loads of things in this game) feels drowsy, uncertain and janky.

The most disappointing thing pretty much this is that I really accept there is an extraordinary game covered under the bugs. I love the plan approach of putting fun first over authenticity. While you’re not kidding “Holy people Row,” you are a relentless power — and in Santo Ileso there are not many resolute items. You can blast through streetlights, trees, letter drops and basically anything shy of a structure without dialing back by any stretch of the imagination, even on a bike. There is an enormous exhibit of various vehicles and weapons, each with top to bottom highlights and customization choices. I find the composing enchanting and the Saints group to be endearingly messy, loaded up with characters who likewise overflow with genuinetenderness and vulnerability.

There is no deficiency of pleasant activities in “Holy people Row,” yet doing them implies tolerating a serious absence of clean. As it as of now stands, “Holy people Row” is scarcely playable. It’s great, careless tomfoolery, yet I can’t suggest it sincerely. I offer a little supplication that a the very beginning patch can address a portion of these worries, and that the studio has a drawn out plan to rescue this promising title.

Available on: PC, PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X and Series S, Xbox One, Google Stadia

Developer: Deep Silver Volition

Publisher: Deep Silver

Release: Aug. 23, 2022

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“Him” Teaser: Jordan Peele’s New Sports Horror Film Tackles Obsession and Sacrifice

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How far would you go for greatness?

The first chilling teaser for “Him”, a Jordan Peele-produced psychological sports horror film, has dropped—and it raises an unsettling question: What must athletes truly sacrifice to achieve superstardom? From blood and sweat to faith and identity, the film looks to unpack the cost of ambition in the most terrifying way possible.

A Dark Tale of Fame and Obsession

“Him” stars Tyriq Withers, a real-life former college wide receiver, as Cameron Cade, a fictional rising-star quarterback whose dreams are crushed after a brutal attack by an obsessed fan. Just when his future in football seems over, Cade is offered a lifeline from his idol: Isaiah White, an NFL legend played by Marlon Wayans.

Isaiah invites Cade to train at his secluded compound—an invitation that seems too good to be true. As their training intensifies, Cade discovers that his mentor’s charm masks a much darker force. What starts as a chance at redemption turns into a psychological descent that threatens Cade’s mind, body, and soul.

Official Synopsis

“Cameron Cade (Withers) is a rising-star quarterback who has devoted his life and identity to football. On the eve of professional football’s annual scouting Combine, Cam is attacked by an unhinged fan and suffers a potentially career-ending brain trauma. Just when all seems lost, Cam receives a lifeline when his hero, Isaiah White (Wayans), a legendary eight-time Championship quarterback and cultural megastar, offers to train Cam at Isaiah’s isolated compound that he shares with his celebrity influencer wife, Elsie White (Julia Fox). But as Cam’s training accelerates, Isaiah’s charisma begins to curdle into something darker, sending his protégé down a disorienting rabbit hole that may cost him more than he ever bargained for.”

A Star-Studded, Genre-Bending Cast

Joining Withers and Wayans are Julia Fox as Isaiah’s enigmatic wife, Tim Heidecker, Jim Jefferies, MMA star Maurice Greene, hip-hop artist Guapdad 4000, and Grammy-nominated musician Tierra Whack.

Directed by Justin Tipping, the film is based on a Black List screenplay by Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie, with Tipping contributing to the final script. The production is helmed by Monkeypaw Productions, the creative powerhouse behind Peele’s genre-defining hits like Get Out and Nope.

Monkeypaw’s Latest Mind-Bending Vision

“Him” is the latest project under Monkeypaw’s ongoing five-year deal with Universal Pictures, signed in 2019. Producers include Jordan Peele, Ian Cooper, Win Rosenfeld, and Jamal M. Watson, with David Kern and Kate Oh serving as executive producers.

Jordan Peele has teased his own fourth directorial project is in the works, calling it potentially his “favorite movie yet.” In a 2024 interview on Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, Peele emphasized the importance of “grounding characters” in both horror and comedy, “The fantastical and the imagination… that becomes a certain type of project and exercise. But the exercise of grounding it is always what makes it work. That to me, in horror especially, is the hardest part.”

Conclusion: A New Era of Horror and Sports Collide

With a unique mix of psychological horror, sports drama, and social commentary, “Him” promises to be a genre-defying thriller that pushes the boundaries of what a sports movie can be. As the line between dedication and obsession blurs, audiences are left to ask: How much would you give to be the best?

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Danny Boyle Drops Second Trailer for ’28 Years Later

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Danny Boyle Drops Second Trailer for '28 Years Later

The undead are back, and they’re angrier than ever. Columbia Pictures has unveiled Official Trailer 2 for 28 Years Later, the long-awaited sequel to Danny Boyle’s iconic post-apocalyptic film 28 Days Later. This marks the first in a new trilogy from the original team—director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland—joined by a high-profile cast and a grittier vision of the infected-plagued UK.

A New Generation Faces the Rage Virus

Set nearly three decades after the original outbreak, the film follows a small band of survivors quarantined on an isolated island connected to the mainland by a single fortified causeway. When one member ventures into the devastated mainland, he unearths horrifying truths—not just about the infected, but about what humanity has become.

The trailer offers a grim and suspenseful look at a UK transformed by chaos, brutality, and survival instinct.

Star Power and New Horrors

The cast includes Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jack O’Connell, Alfie Williams, and Ralph Fiennes. Original franchise lead Cillian Murphy, now an Oscar winner for Oppenheimer, is confirmed to executive produce—and hinted to appear later in the trilogy.

At CinemaCon, Boyle said, I still love an apocalypse, British-style. I still love the infected. And I still love blowing shit up.”

Meanwhile, director Nia DaCosta teased the second sequel, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, calling it “very different” and creatively liberating.

The Legacy Continues

From the gritty terror of 28 Days Later to the haunting vision of 28 Years Later, this new chapter expands the franchise while holding true to its roots. With advanced visuals, chilling plot twists, and deep social commentary, the rage virus saga evolves for a new generation of horror fans.

If Trailer 2 is any indication, 28 Years Later is set to reignite the apocalyptic horror genre. With the original creative duo at the helm and a powerhouse cast, this is one sequel fans won’t want to miss.

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HBO Confirms Hogwarts Staff Casting in Harry Potter TV Series

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HBO Confirms Hogwarts Staff Casting in Harry Potter TV Series

The magic is officially returning! HBO has confirmed the first wave of casting for its highly anticipated Harry Potter TV series, unveiling fresh faces who will take on the legendary roles of Hogwarts’ iconic staff.

New Cast Revealed for Hogwarts Roles

Here’s who has officially joined the cast:

  • John Lithgow (The Crown, Conclave) as Albus Dumbledore
  • Janet McTeer (The White Queen, Tumbleweeds) as Minerva McGonagall
  • Paapa Essiedu (I May Destroy You) as Severus Snape
  • Nick Frost (Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz) as Rubeus Hagrid
  • Luke Thallon will play Quirinus Quirrell in a recurring role
  • Paul Whitehouse joins as Argus Filch, also in a recurring role

Showrunner Francesca Gardiner and director Mark Mylod praised the casting, stating, “We’re delighted to have such extraordinary talent onboard and can’t wait to see them bring these beloved characters to new life.”

HBO has promised a faithful adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s bestselling book series. Each season will explore one book in-depth, aiming to expand the magical universe while staying true to the original stories.

Filming is expected to begin this summer, and while the main trio—Harry, Ron, and Hermione—has yet to be cast, over 30,000 actors submitted auditions following HBO’s open casting call.

The series is being written and executive produced by Francesca Gardiner, with direction and executive production by Mark Mylod. The production is a collaboration between Brontë Film and TV, Warner Bros. Television, and Heyday Films.

Executive producers also include J.K. Rowling, Neil Blair, Ruth Kenley-Letts, and David Heyman, who produced all eight original Harry Potter films.

With such a powerhouse team and a carefully selected cast, HBO’s Harry Potter series is shaping up to be one of the most anticipated TV events in years. Stay tuned for more magical updates from the wizarding world!

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