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Mario, Peach, and the rest of the Mushroom Kingdom characters get to trash talking in Battle League, getting into the game library this summer, Samsung’s racing sim rig, Xbox Canada and the Blue Jays.

Raucous, hilarious Mario Strikers: Battle League shines with personality

Coming from Vancouver’s Next Level Games, Mario Strikers pits two teams against each other in a stylized, arcade-style sport called Strike.

Strike resembles soccer but borrows a bit from the chaos that is roller derby, and in the short Battle League games you’ll play you can step into the boots of one of ten Mushroom Kingdom characters including Mario and Luigi and their alters, Wario and Waluigi, Peach and Rosalina, Yoshi and Toad, Bowser, and Donkey Kong.

Each of the characters has a special “hyper strike” that is accompanied by stylized animation and its in these and the taunts that the characters throw at their opponents where Next Level really celebrates the individual personalities. You can also equip them with gear to improve their abilities.

I expect that Nintendo will release more characters through downloadable content in the coming months. What’s not easy to update, though, is how limiting it is to play Mario Strikers with friends.

You can only play with one other person on the same system, and online you can only go two versus two. The game accommodates up to eight players with local wireless, but only if you’ve connected four Nintendo Switches.

Nintendo seems to be encouraging players to play online in the Strikers Club where you can create a club with up to 19 other players to compete against other clubs.

But it’s too bad that our family can’t play two-on-two on our Switch. Because there would be some serious trash talking then.

Why I’ve gone back to Horizon Forbidden West

I’ve been writing – and talking – for months about how the video game industry has been impacted by the covid-19 pandemic. Shifts in how the work was getting done and interruptions in the supply chain are only a couple of examples.

One of the consequences is that games we expected last year were pushed into this year, and games we hoped would come out this year are pushing into next year, and beyond.

Which is a perfect opportunity to consider games you may have overlooked, or to spend more time with games you may have started and abandoned.

For me, the recent lull has given me a chance to go back to Horizon Forbidden West. I’ve now put some 80 hours into Aloy’s story, and I haven’t even finished the main narrative.

The far future Earth that is the setting for the Horizon games is compelling to me (there are interesting parallels with Neal Stephenson’s novel, Seveneves), and the writers at Guerrilla Games created side missions that have an impact on the world, and with characters who seem entirely real.

I’ll probably be finished Forbidden West in the next couple of weeks, and it just may be the first game that I fully complete.

Then I’ll have to wait for Horizon: Call of the Mountain, the virtual reality experience developed for PS VR2. There’s currently no release date for that.

Playstation Plus Premium library is extensive, and hard to navigate

Another way to deal with the slowdown of new gaming releases is to dig into a catalogue and find something you missed.

Which is easy to do with Playstation’s new library of games available through the Playstation Plus subscriptions.

The basic, Essential service ($70 a year) gives you a couple of games a month you can play. These are often back catalogue titles, but if you’ve got a PS5 you can get must-play games like Bloodborne, God of War, and the Last of Us.

Upgrading to Extra ($115 a year) gives you access to hundreds of more games, including recent hits like Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, Control, Ghost of Tsushima, Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy, and Returnal.

The Premium upgrade ($140 a year) adds games that Playstation has deemed “classics”, some of which were released on the original Playstation console (itself released in 1994).

Some of the highlights include Ape Escape, Enslaved: Odyssey to the West, the original God of War trilogy, Infamous, and Resistance 3.

The number of truly old-school games available through Premium is limited, but it provides a nice nostalgia trip.

And a number of those older games are only playable by streaming from cloud servers, so you should keep that in mind.

What’s harder to get past is the confusing way that you can view and access these games on your console. It’s difficult to find anything, which will limit what people ultimately choose to play. I hope that a lack of engagement isn’t used as evidence that there’s no demand for those games when the problem is that people couldn’t find them.

Step into a high-tech car racing simulator courtesy of Samsung

If you’re in Toronto at any point this summer, consider visiting the Samsung Experience Store at Eaton Centre to drive a virtual race car in a unique racing rig.

Samsung put three 65-inch Neo QLED 8K screens and a Q990B soundbar into this set up, which includes rigging and seating from Advanced SimRacing.

You’ll need to clutch and shift, accelerate using foot pedals, and get bumped around by the hydrolics in the system. It’s the kind of experience you’re not likely to get at home, and sitting in that cockpit is the closest you’re going to get to actually driving a Formula 1 machine.

Get a special, in-person Blue Jays experience thanks to Xbox Canada

Xbox Canada’s official sponsorship with the Toronto Blue Jays means that Canadian gamers are getting a chance this summer to get Access Unlocked.

Four prizes are being awarded through the summer, and the prize packs include things like brunch in the dugout, swinging a bat in the batting cages, and playing Xbox games on the massive video screen.

If you’re not within 300 km of Toronto, you’ll also get flight and hotel.

The first prize period ends on June 30, so get your name in the hat.

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Xbox and Bethesda showcase upcoming video games, the Last of Us Part 1 is getting a remake.

Xbox and Bethesda show off some games in annual showcase event

In an online broadcast last week, Xbox and Bethesda, now part of the same organization, showed off what’s coming for Xbox consoles and Windows game systems.

In opening the show, which in past years would have been presented live in L.A. as part of the larger E3 extravaganza, Xbox head of global gaming Sarah Bond said that everything that was being talked about would be released “in the next 12 months”.

And while that may be true, it’s also true that a lot of what was shown isn’t coming until 2023.

But that doesn’t mean there aren’t games coming to the Xbox platform.

A major announcement that came early was that free to play games from Riot are coming to Xbox Game Pass. The benefit to subscribers is that the characters and agents from the games – League of Legends, League of Legends: Wild Rift, Valorant – are unlocked, whereas they would have to be earned by playing or paying.

There’s also a strange, first-person shooter game called High On Life that comes from Rick & Morty co-creator Justin Roiland in which the weapons you wield are sentient creatures called Gatlians.

It looks trippy and absurd and ridiculous and it’s coming this October.

We also saw some of Diablo IV in which we were introduced to the necromancer class. And we learned that in addition to Windows, the game will also be coming to Xbox consoles. It arrives next year.

And there’s Minecraft Legends is a new action strategy game being co-developed by Vancouver’s Blackbird Interactive.

The show ended with an extended look at Starfield, the space exploration role-playing game from Bethesda that is expected to release next year. In the 15-minute trailer, which showed actual gameplay, including exploration, combat, and storytelling.

Your character gets recruited into Constellation, a group of explorers trying to make sense of some strange artifacts.

In the video, studio head Todd Howard explained that the world will include some 1,000 worlds to explore in more than 100 systems.

As you explore, you’ll be able to build outposts and spaceships, hiring staff and crew, and customizing things to your liking. And the ships you build you will be able to fly and take into battles.

I will also note that every game that was shown during the event will be coming to the Xbox Game Pass library.

You can watch the entire event here.

What the remake of The Last of Us, Part 1 tells us about the game industry

One of the announcements at Summer Game Fest was that Naughty Dog is completely remaking The Last of Us, the 2013 game originally developed for the PS3.

The game, which is now known as Part 1, was remastered for PS4 and released in 2014, and you can play that game on PS5.

Why, then, would Naughty Dog and Playstation rework an existing game again? There are a couple of reasons.

First, in case you didn’t know, HBO has a television series based on the game, which has been shooting in Calgary and southern Alberta, that is expected to air next year.

More importantly, though, is how valuable it can be to a studio to remake something that has already proven to be a success.

If there’s any chance that the resource cost to remake The Last of Us Part 1 will be recovered – and that’s easy math, to be honest – the training opportunities alone make it worth the time and effort, as was pointed out by journalist Arthur Gies.

This is not a new thing, either. When producer Rod Fergusson, who helped create the Gears of War franchise, came to Vancouver to lead the team making Gears of War after Microsoft purchased it from Epic, he told me that having the team work on a remake of the original game was a way to make them experts in Gears of War.

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There’s no question Vancouver is a beautiful city, and now you can jog through the most scenic places in the city with the latest Time to Run experience from Apple Fitness+.

The route was set by Apple trainer Sherica Holmon, who also leads cycling sessions for Apple, and it cruises along Vancouver’s famous seawall along False Creek to where it ends at Science World, then along the south bank past Olympic Village, Granville Island, and ending at the beach in Kitsilano.

Apple Fitness+ is a service created for Apple Watch owners, and the Time to Run activities are only one of more than a dozen different things you can do with a subscription ($13 a month, $99 a year, or part of an Apple services bundle), including guided walks, meditation, and numerous types of workouts.

The Vancouver run is accompanied by a playlist featuring Canadian artists including Shawn Mendes and Tegan & Sarah, with tracks selected to match the intensity of the intervals.

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At this year’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference, Apple unveiled the M2 chip which is in two new Macbook computers, talked about updates to the various Apple operating systems, and gave us a sneak peek at updates coming to the Apple ecosystem’s Home and Carplay apps. Plus, ElectricGo will rent you a powerbank short term.

Apple reveals new M2 processor, updates to software and services at Worldwide Developer’s Conference

At this year’s edition of Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference, the company showed off the M2 chip, a second-generation version of the silicon that is being used in its computers.

The M1 chip, which has been in use since 2020, is notable for its power, speed, and energy efficiency. The M2, according to the company, is even faster, more powerful, and more efficient.

The new M2 is going into a new Macbook Air and Macbook Pro 13-inch, both of which will be in the wild starting in July.

Operating system updates

There are also the expected changes coming to the various operating systems that run Apple devices.

  • iOS 16: more customization options for lock screens, widgets, and notifications
  • iPadOS 16: Stage Manager for multiple windows, drag-and-drop files between your Apple devices
  • MacOS Venture: Stage Manager, use your iPhone as a webcam
  • WatchOS 9: Medications app helps you track your daily med intake)

Apple Home and Carplay are getting refreshed

What was more intriguing, though, were the demos of updates that are coming to Apple’s larger ecosystem.

Apple Home, which is part of iOS 16, will give us more control over the devices that we may be using for home automation, and more importantly provide a user interface overhaul to make the app easier to use,

Apple has also been working to build out the Carplay experience. I’ve got quibbles with the existing app, but see great possibility here.

It looks like Apple is bringing a consistent interface to the screens in our vehicles. We’ll also have control over how the information will be presented to us. Kind of like how I can change what information my Apple Watch shows me and how it displays that information.

It’s the user interface and user experience expertise that Apple can bring to the vehicle cockpit that I think is really valuable. I don’t believe that most major auto manufacturers have invested sufficiently in making the instrument panels understandable.

ElectricGo gives you a part-time on-the-go power solution

If your phone is running out of power you may be screwed, even if you have an adapter and a charging cable with you. To get more electricity into your phone, you need to find an outlet and stand by it for as long as you need.

ElectricGo aims to solve this problem by putting kiosks in popular locations where you can rent a fully charged power bank. The idea is that you pop out the portable charger – which is equipped with whatever cable you might need – and you take it with you when you’re on the move.

When you’re done charging, you just find another ElectricGo kiosk where you can return the bank, which then charges up to be used by the next person.

You pay for the amount of time you’ve had the charging bank signed out, $1.50 an hour up to a maximum of $6 a day.

The company has 120 stations set up in Victoria and metro Vancouver right now, in pubs and restaurants.

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