Skip to main content

Fell beasts wreak havoc in this Dragon Age: Inquisition Gamescom 2014 trailer

The latest trailer for BioWare’s Dragon Age: Inquisition goes to some dark places. Large, fearsome creatures and dire circumstances. The world of Thedas that Inquisition reintroduces is a land in turmoil. War has gripped the region, and the strained tensions between various factions have spilled over into outright warfare. The root of all this strife appears to be a tear in the very fabric of space itself, and you get a taste of that in this trailer.

Related: Dragon Age: Inquisition delay, slips into November 2015

Dragon Age: Inquisition reimagines Thedas, with BioWare going bigger on exploration than it ever has before. The game spills out across multiple open world regions, with enough overall square footage to dwarf both of the two games that preceded it. You can see the newly revealed Bog region in a bunch of screenshots up top. It’s looking good for the upcoming November 18, 2014 release on PC and PlayStation/Xbox consoles.

Topics
Adam Rosenberg
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
Dragon Age 4 is in production, but nowhere close to release
Art from Dragon Age 4.

BioWare shared a quick update on its next entry in the Dragon Age franchise, Dragon Age 4, in a blog post on its site. Development on the game is going well, says the developer, and is currently "right in the middle of production."

https://twitter.com/bioware/status/1496546668191358978

Read more
Anthem is getting huge changes to save the game from irrelevancy
Anthem update version 1.1.0 patch notes Sunken Cell weapon loadout contract mission fort tarsis

To say BioWare's Anthem has been disappointing would be an insult to every other disappointing game we've played in 2019. Anthem was a colossal failure for the studio, with mediocre reviews that questioned whether the studio could ever achieve its former glory. But BioWare is willing to try: The studio reportedly plans drastic changes to the game in an effort to save it from becoming irrelevant.

According to Kotaku, several of Anthem's biggest elements are going to be completely overhauled, either in one large update or in a series of smaller updates. These include the structure of missions, as well as the world itself and the loot. The game has been criticized for the relatively arbitrary loot scoring system, with weapons not varying enough in power compared to those found earlier in the game.

Read more
All Resident Evil games in order, by release date and chronologically
Leon parries a chainsaw villager in Resident Evil 4.

There are almost no survival horror games that last for more than few entries, let alone ones that have persisted for decades like Resident Evil. This series had humble beginnings as a small horror experience set in a single mansion to explore, solve puzzles, and fight against the clunky tank controls and fixed camera angles. Since then, the series has evolved and grown into one of the most recognizable Capcom IPs there is, with new entries and amazing remakes coming out almost every year.

Currently, the highest-numbered Resident Evil game is 8, aka Village, but you would be wildly off if you thought there were only eight entries to consider when looking to complete the series. Right from the start, Resident Evil has loved expanding its world with a massive cast of characters and new protagonists from game to game. Resident Evil 7 was a soft reboot for the series, but there is still a cannon order to the events surrounding Umbrella, the various zombie viruses, and all our favorite heroes like Chris and Leon.

Read more