Garrett Glass at TheKoalition.com writes: Observing the other journalists twist, aim and react to nothing at all changes the Fallout 4’s common descriptor: Immersive. A dubious term, immersive often implies that the player is so engrossed in the experience that he or she believes they are part of it, when in actuality their brain is so engaged with the mechanics that they begin to lose track of time.
After seeing genuine emotion on their faces so widely expressed that not even a bulky visor covering half of their heads could obfuscate it, I couldn’t help but believe that perhaps Fallout 4 VR might be the real deal.
Frame generation technology has arrived on consoles, amplifying frame-rates and potentially transforming experiences.
Impressive results... sadly I don't have a 120hz display. I was thinking this technique could increase fps on any game that supports it regardless of the display.
Now I've extensively tried it I'm not too fussed about 120 fps. Give me a locked 60 and more details and I'm more than happy
YouTube is probing its employees following the PlayStation State of Play leak that revealed all announcements ahead of the presentation.
I’m pretty sure leaks or not, by the end of the show people will still be disappointed. The only highlight for me was MH: Wilds… everything else was mid to forgettable. Hope them HaaS games you got lined up really work out for you, Sony. Everyone asking for Bloodborne Remake, Wolverine, and, uh, well other games like that could’ve made this epic. Instead we get Concord, some derivative Souls-like games, that were fine looking, and a Silent Hill 2 Remake with horrible character designs and janky combat animations… great.
The Epic Games Store has yet another free game, and it's a pretty damn good one.
Fallout 4 VR sounds like both a frightening and exciting thing to experience.