An upgrade of the Golden Shower, Everglade Spray retains itsIchordebuff and gains a new one calledCursed Inferno, which increases all damage received by a struck enemy by 20% and also acts as a heavy DoT. This weapon is almost necessary for many late-game boss fights, thanks to its abilit...
In Shovel Knight, you play as a knight who uses a shovel as a weapon, hence the name, and you have to do your best to save his love interest, Shield Knight. The game also has a co-op mode and considering that it’s really simple to get the hang of it, it might be one of th...
in the sense of two dimensions closing in on each other, causing cataclysmic events. Clank, being the genius he is, repairs a weapon called the Dimensionater. During an attack by Doctor Nefarious, Rachet
Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity: This is a hack-and-slash prequel that explains the events leading up to the story of Breath of the Wild. You get to play as Zelda, Link, Mipha, Daruk, Urbosa, Impa, and others. Tears of the Kingdom: This upcoming title, commonly referred to as Brea...
It’s set in a technically post-apocalyptic, but actually pretty cozy world which hasn’t managed to recover technology lost in the Calamity. This is where you come in, as a fresh-faced Builder bringing in much-needed technical expertise to the town of Sandrock...
Other games don't give you that sense of discovery. Other games treat you like a child and tell you what to do, but in Breath of the Wild, you don't have to have that special weapon or power to get somewhere or defeat something. Everything you need to do that is handed to you ...
slicing and dicing its way to the next calamity. Gilmour also plays bass here, galloping alongside Nick Mason’s drums while dodging in and out of the way of Richard Wright’s off-kilter organ. The whole ordeal ends in a shower of sparks, a glittering waterfall of jagged guitar that sends...
In “Glitch,” imperfections are embraced and wielded in dramatically intensifying ways: “I might appear anywhere / Stay on your toes / I’m everywhere now,” she teases, guiding the music into a breathless calamity of shuffled hi-hats, dipping bass lines, and shimmering vocal echoes. There...
But Silence Yourself carries every bit of that adrenaline; in its coiled, sparking guitars and rabid screams, it warns of the dangers of technology while weaponizing its potential. Too loudly to be ignored, it disputes complacent norms: Maybe marriage isn’t idyllic, but asphyxiating. Maybe an...