Uncharted
For years, Mark Wahlberg was set to star as Nathan Drake but now is tapped to star as Sully, mentor to young Drake.
Uncharted: The Lost Legacy Review
Chloe Frazer and Nadine Ross obliterate the Bechdel test in the new Uncharted spinoff.
Dork Shelf’s 2016 Game of the Year
Naughty Dog's Uncharted 4: A Thief's End is big-budget storytelling at its finest.
The Development Slate Episode 22 – The Last of Us
Listen as James and Yaw get lost and go to dark places with the horror video game franchise The Last of Us.
Interview: Dan Rodrigues Hears the Runbow
Composer Dan Rodrigues discusses the Runbow soundtrack and the importance of music in video games.
Uncharted: The Nathan Drake Collection Review
Despite the mediocre introduction, the new PS4 compilation once again makes Uncharted one of the most purely entertaining experiences available on a modern console.
The WhaleCast Episode 23
Eric finally finishes Dragon Age: Inquisition and Jon buys a Wii U from a guy in a subway on this week's episode of the WhaleCast.
This Time it’s Permanent: The Art of Death in Modern Games
Most games use checkpoints to remind you that your last death didn't happen. These are the games where dying matters.
Thought Bubble: Anything He Can Do Nilin Does Better
Forcing every game to have a male protagonist is tedious rather than profitable.
Interview: PlayStation Canada’s Matt Levitan
We spoke with Matt Levitan, director of marketing and public relations for PlayStation Canada, about Sony’s strategy for the upcoming holiday season.
Thought Bubble: PlayStation Vita
A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to get some hands-on time with the PlayStation Vita at a Sony event in Toronto, but I’ve avoided the standard review/preview because I honestly don’t feel like I have anything noteworthy to contribute. I do, however, have a few thoughts about the Vita’s prospects and – to put it bluntly – I have my doubts about the handheld’s viability as a platform.
inFAMOUS 2 Review
Perhaps it came out too close to Activision’s Prototype, maybe a superhero-who-isn’t was not a marketable enough concept for people to latch on to, but whatever the reason may be, folks just don’t seem to talk about the original inFAMOUS on the same level they do Uncharted, or even Sucker Punch’s own Sly Cooper. inFAMOUS 2 hopes to drive it all home, carrying the pulse of the first and wrap up both the narrative and the possibilities rooted in the first. Is there chain-lightning in the follow-up, or is there not enough power to keep this engine running?