
Videogameszone published seven new CryEngine 3 screenshots.

Microsoft announced its financial results for Q3 of fiscal year 2026, including an update on its gaming Xbox business and more.
Not looking good. Hopefully Asha Sharma is able to turn Phil’s disaster around.
To me it's still quite remarkable how they can cash-in 5.3bn in revenue in a single quarter, since their hardware is basically dead.

Thanks to the slip-up of an artist working on the title, we now have more evidence that a new Injustice game is in the works.

Spiders: "We're going to cut straight to the chase so you're not left wondering: After a long period without clear answers, we have received confirmation that Spiders is being liquidated.
What does it mean? This means the company as a whole no longer exists. We'll cease our functions immediately. The planned DLC will release via Nacon, and then-- well, that's it.
We're sorry that it's come to this and would like to thank each and every one of you for your support over the years.
If you have any questions or run into issues with your games, please contact Nacon directly as we'll no longer be able to reply."
Face = PC version yes but other things no.
Console version will be sh!t
confirmed runs better on the powerful PS3
Why are there Mech Warrior screenshots in the same gallery
Unless they've extremely optimized their engine, the console versions will be running 720p or below with a lingering 30fps at medium to low level settings.
You PC guys are the worst. Yes, PCs will always be able to be more powerful than any console because you can customize them and they don't follow a generational model, but for the price, consoles are the way to go in gaming (unless you count the reduced cost of PC games over the long run). Problem is, with genuine console exclusives (mostly PS3 here, not really Xbox), you get games of a production value and quality that in many cases rival or surpass PC. Bottom line, it's a Console war, not a PC vs Console war. PC is better, all hail the PC (or mac I suppose), but stop comparing something that you can spend thousands of dollars on custom building over years and add on to whenever there is a technological leap to something that has to be low cost and stay exactly the same for several years.