On Friday, a report emerged that claimed Microsoft was.
Though it certainly sounds like the Gears of War HD Remaster is in development, Microsoft has not offered any kind of statement whatsoever regarding the project.
Amid mounting speculation that the Silent Hills project has been cancelled, Konami has issued a statement that suggests the game is, at the very least, undergoing major changes.
The publisher confirmed to GameSpot that "our contract period with Norman Reedus has expired," following the actor's claims on Twitter that the entire project has been axed.
Regarding those rumours, Konami wouldn't discuss the Silent Hills project specifically, but said: "We will continue to develop the Silent Hill series."
Grave concerns over the Silent Hills game began in March, when GameSpot revealed that Hideo Kojima--Konami's most renowned developer-- in a matter of days.
Following Konami's recent announcement that P.T. would be
Now, reported comments from Pan's Labyrinth director Guillermo del Toro (who is working on the game with Hideo Kojima) and actor Norman Reedus, suggest that the project is undergoing big changes.
According to photojournalist Matt Hackney, del Toro commented on the status of Silent Hills this weekend at the San Francisco Film Festival. He reportedly said of his involvement with Silents Hills: "not gonna happen."
Square Enix has created a gameplay video for a Street Fighter-style Final Fantasy XIV fighting game called Ultimate Fight Final Fantasy XIV. But don't get your hopes up. It's not real.
The mock gameplay video was created by Final Fantasy XIV main scenario writer Kazutoyo Maehiro in his spare time just for fun, it seems.
Square Enix also released a benchmark trailer for Final Fantasy XIV: Heavensward. You'll be able to download the benchmark tomorrow to see how your PC will handle the expansion when it's released, but if you just want to see what it looks like check out the video below.
Square Enix announced Heavensward .
Would you play a Final Fantasy XIV fighting game? Let us know in the comments below.
Call of Duty: Black Ops III presents a dark future, where the line between man and machine has been blurred. Take your first look at the next generation of super soldier.
This week State of Decay: Year One Survival Edition comes out on Xbox One, we get the conclusion to Broken Age, Tropico 5 heads to PS4, Magicka Wizard Wars and Kerbal Space Program leave Early Access.
Valve CEO Gabe Newell said that if the new Steam program that allows users to sell mods instead of just giving them away for free turns out to be bad for gamers, the company will ditch the idea.
"Our goal is to make modding better for the authors and gamers," Newell said in a after claims that it contained the work of another modder.
Newell didn't seem concerned about cases like that becoming too common. "This is a straight-forward problem," he said. "Between ours and the community's policing, I'm confident that the authors will have control over their creations, not someone trying to rip them off."
As for the current revenue split on paid Skyrim mods, which gives the creator of the mod only a 25 percent share of sales, Newell said: "The pay-outs are set by the owner of the game that is being modded. As I said elsewhere, if we are censoring, it's dumb, ineffective, and will stop."