Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 had earned another Game of the Year award by the Indie Game Awards last week, but the organization has since announced that the award would be retracted because developer ...
YouTube has launched a closed beta test for a new AI-powered tool it calls Playables Builder. Using Gemini 3, the tool will ...
According to a handful of video game concept artists, it can actually make things harder. Talking to Edmond Tran from This ...
Duke football will play for the ACC championship — and, potentially, a College Football Playoff berth — after all. The Blue Devils, who have five losses on the season, were sent to the ACC ...
Although playing games these days is dominated by video games, Stephanie Kuroda of Herndon went the opposite way. Kuroda invented a card game to sharpen the mind and bring people together. Her game, ...
Until recently the Arcement family wondered how they were going to move thousands of boxes of unsold board games filling their garage. Now they’re just trying to keep up with demand. What changed?
The company is shifting its video game strategy to focus more on popular games you already know, such as Pictionary and Boggle. Credit... Supported by By Nicole Sperling Reporting from Los Angeles ...
Arc Raiders' use of AI tools continues to create divides in gaming. The CEO of its developer's parent company, Nexon, recently claimed that generative artificial intelligence tools are everywhere in ...
Many people go through a career change, but one millennial man has stunned internet users after taking on a new role as a video-game developer—despite having no prior knowledge of coding or ...
Marc Santos is a Guides Staff Writer from the Philippines. He's a seasoned writer with over four years of industry experience, and he is an enjoyer of all things difficult in gaming. If Marc's not ...
Elon Musk has made a series of ambitious predictions about his AI tech and its ability to create video games and movies, although there is a healthy dose of scepticism online around the claims. In a ...
As reported by Automaton, a survey conducted by the Computer Entertainment Supplier’s Association (CESA) during June and July found that 51% of Japanese game companies are using AI in some capacity.