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The day-long concert special featured standout performances from Osbourne and Black Sabbath, Metallica, Guns n' Roses, Jack ...
Awesome Tricks Bend A Round Bar // Round Bar Half CircleMore for You Marjorie Taylor Greene finds herself in a difficult position Cardiologist Reveals Favorite Breakfast for a Healthy Heart Top ...
It absolutely doesn’t matter, because it’s Doom and you don’t need a story, but we had no idea what was going on at any point in The Dark Ages, and we’ve played and enjoyed the 2016 reboot ...
Doom: The Dark Ages is a good shooter at its core, but as a follow-up to two of the best FPS games ever made, it falls a little flat. The new defensive combat feels like a step back, with movement ...
Ready, set, kill! Having played through about half of the set over lunch, I can confirm that Blitz is a genuinely fun collection of levels built around OG Doomguy's absurd 50 mph run speed.
Case in point is Metal Eden, a fast-paced first person shooter that siphons and then cross-pollinates chunky old school Doom-esque gunplay and the sleek physics-defying parkour of Ghostunner.
If Ghostrunner and Doom had a lovechild, it would be Metal Eden, an upcoming sci-fi FPS with a new demo that can net you part of a $1,000 prize pool if you complete it fast enough.
The Dark Ages is a prequel to the 2016 Doom game, which itself had such a thin story that players shouldn't worry terribly if they've forgotten what happened (or never played). The newest game is ...
I am your shield Doom: The Dark Ages is similar to the last two titles id Software has released: the 2016 reboot and 2020’s Doom: Eternal, but with fun tweaks and additions that offer you a ...
Swedish band Candlemass’ 1986 debut album Epicus Doomicus Metallicus is a bona doom metal landmark, giving the template laid down by Black Sabbath in the early 70s and developed in the US by The ...
Buy NowSpring 2025 What Lies Beneath From Brazilian speed metal to Italian doom: This month’s highlights from the underground We round up the latest and greatest from heavy music’s underground.
The easiest way to describe Metal Eden is that it's Ghostrunner meets modern Doom, meshing the latter's 'move or die' mantra with the former's abstract corridors of generic sci-fi set dressing.