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Mobile Syrup

Here’s how to watch Letterkenny season 11 in Canada

Whether you’re a skid, hockey player, or Amish, the hicks are back with Letterkenny season 11 coming to Crave on Christmas Day.

In Canada, the only way to watch Letterkenny is through to Bell’s streaming service, Crave.

A Crave subscription starts at $9.99/month for a Mobile plan, which includes access to HBO content like The Matrix Resurrections. A $19.99/month Crave Total subscription is required to stream this content on Crave’s supported devices, like Android, iOS, Apple TV, PlayStation, etc.

The show stars Jared Keeso, Nathan Dales, Michelle Mylett, K. Trevor Wilson, Dylan Playfair, Andrew Herr, Tyler Johnston and more.

While this is the first time we’ve gotten a new Letterkenny season this year, earlier in 2022, spin-off series Shoresy and a Letterkenny International Women’s Day special streamed on Crave.

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Mobile Syrup

AJ Fernandez Rivera’s push to make queer leadership a norm in tech

Hopefuls aiming to enter the tech industry don’t have to look further than AJ Fernandez Rivera for inspiration. The industry trailblazer has modest roots, starting as a computer programmer in the ’90s, and working her way through the U.S., U.K., and Asia-Pacific. She is now a managing director at Accenture Canada.

But working in IT isn’t the only thing she’s known for. While certainly a passion, she also advocates for queer people in tech, talking about the many challenges they face. From experience, she knows this industry is a good one to work in, but if ongoing barriers go unaddressed, the tech industry will miss out on talented individuals looking to do what they love.

This “personal passion” stems from challenges Fernandez Rivera faced herself, once feeling alone in a space that refused to understand her.

Unconscious biases are one of the biggest challenges, Fernandez Rivera told MobileSyrup. The thought process involves people using unconscious beliefs and stereotypes to categorize people into different groups. Everyone has them, but they may not know when they’re using them.

“When you are a queer person, and you join the industry, you can’t be your true self,” Fernandez Rivera said. “If we eliminate that barrier and make it an accepting environment, the potential of queer people to actually eliminate the chatter in [their] head and just come as [their] authentic self…[they’ll] be looked at on skills and talent rather than how [they] package themselves.”

Hiding her true, authentic self is a struggle Fernandez Rivera experienced. When she started working at Accenture in 1997, Fernandez Rivera didn’t reveal her identity as a trans-woman. Her professional life differed from her personal; she felt like the industry wasn’t ready for her.

But she didn’t let the unconscious doubt the industry held stop her from doing a job she loved. She quickly moved through the ranks of the company and established an LGBTQ+ network in Accenture’s Asia-Pacific region. Fernandez Rivera was a strong voice for the LGBTQ+ community at her company, but doubt was still there.

Coming out in her professional life was a big decision. She knew the industry wouldn’t change if she continued to hide who she was. Being alone in the tech industry put a “burden” on her shoulders, and she didn’t want others to be in the same position. “The challenge has always been being a unique individual, a unique person in the industry. I don’t want it to be [a challenge] in the future,” she said.

The final push came through a phone call with her best friend in the U.K. last year. That friend told Fernandez Rivera that visibility matters. “If you don’t tell your story, I don’t think things will change,” Fernandez Rivera recalls her friend as saying.

She took a big step and was pleasantly surprised. When she did come out to her company, she received nothing but support. She felt safe.

Fernandez Rivera (second from the right) speaking at a panel at the QT Qonference. Image credit: Karishma Singh/ Proof Strategies

But Fernandez Rivera acknowledges that everyone has their own journey of coming out. The best the industry can do is make it a safe environment for people to be themselves.

Training for unconscious bias is helpful, Fernandez Rivera said. Accenture rolled out training to its offices around the world, and many employees found it helpful. Training is now mandatory at the company. Allowing employees to declare their pronouns also goes a long way, a practice that can be done regardless of industry.

In November, Fernandez Rivera was part of a panel at the QT Qonference. It was the first conference put on by QueerTech, an organization that focuses on making the tech industry inclusive for LGBTQ2S+ people. The panel also contained speakers from the federal government, who shared they were also taking up the practice of allowing employees to share personal pronouns.

Fernandez Riveria said she was “impressed” to hear this. “If we normalize it…I feel like it would encourage more and more people to feel safe in the tech industry.”

Making it easier to work in tech also requires a landscape change with different sectors, including private, government, academic, and non-profit organizations. “Because if we want a landscape change, everyone needs to work together. The end goal is making sure that tech space is, number one, a safe space for queer people to build careers on and be proud of it.”

The panel was also a preview of what is possible and the ability of various players to work together to make a change. But there isn’t a singular answer to why it took so long for a gathering like the QT Qonference to come together at a large scale.

Fernandez Riveria believes timing played a role, as it took people in leadership roles time to realize the barriers. She believes having queer people in leadership positions played a role in creating more visibility and realization.

So what can the tech industry, and others like it, do moving forward? Fernandez Riveria says they need to revisit their policies. Displaying personal pronouns “matters a lot.” Mentoring and providing benefits employees are happy with also play a role. Tech companies should also create ally programs.

“I actually want to look forward to the day when there are actually more [queer] people in leadership positions because there is power in numbers.”

Image credit: Annayah Jean (AJ) Fernandez Rivera/Linkedin 

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Mobile Syrup

Best Buy’s Boxing Day sale offers discounts on several wearables

Best Buy Canada’s Boxing Day Sale is here! Save big on tech and treat yourself to something great with discounts over 50 percent on several product categories, including wearables, peripherals, storage and more.

The sale starts today, December 24th, at 6pm ET, and ends on December 31st. Check out some of the deals from the sale below:

Fitbit Versa 4 + Premium Smartwatch with Heart Rate Monitor – Waterfall Blue: $199.99 (save $100)

Logitech G29 Driving Force Racing Wheel for PlayStation/PC – Dark: $299.99 (save $93)

Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 40mm Smartwatch with Heart Rate Monitor – Pink Gold: $199.99 (save $80)

Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine (BES870XL) – Stainless Steel: $749.99 (save $50)

WD Easystore 18TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive (WDBAMA0180HBK-NESE) – Black: $359.99 (save $170)

Schwinn IC4 Spin Bike – Includes 1-Year JRNY Subscription: $959.99 (save $440)

Segway Ninebot G30P MAX Adult Electric Scooter (350W Motor/ 65km Range / 30km/h Top Speed) – Dark Grey: $999.99 (save $200)

Logitech M720 Triathlon Wireless Optical Mouse – Black: $39.99 (save $30)

SteelSeries Apex Pro TKL Backlit Mechanical OmniPoint Gaming Keyboard – English: $169.99 (save $70)

Corsair K65 Mini Backlit 60% Mechanical Cherry MX Red RGB Gaming Keyboard – English: $69.99 (save $80)

Corsair K55 RGB PRO Optical Keyboard & Harpoon RGB Pro Gaming Mouse Combo – English: $59.99 (save $50)

Blue Microphones Yeti USB Microphone – Blackout Edition: $109.99 (save $19.99)

Logitech C920S Pro 1080p 30fps HD Webcam: $69.99 (save $10)

Fitbit Inspire 2 Fitness Tracker with 24/7 Heart Rate – Black: $79.99 (save $20)

Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 40mm Smartwatch with Heart Rate Monitor – Black: $199.99 (save $80)

Fitbit Sense 2 Smartwatch with Heart Rate Monitor – Shadow Grey: $259.99 (save $140)

Seagate One Touch 2TB USB 3.0 Portable External Hard Drive (STKB2000404) – Grey: $69.99 (save $20)

Check out the full Best Buy Boxing Day sale here. You can find all of the top Boxing Week deals at Canadian retailers here.

Image credit: Best Buy

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Mobile Syrup

Pixel 6a wins MKBHD’s blind camera test

Marques Brownlee (MKBHD) has done another blind camera test, pitting sixteen smartphones against each other and having participants on the internet vote for their favourite pictures taken from these devices.

The phones include plenty of handsets that don’t release in Canada, along with devices that do, like the iPhone 14 Pro, OnePlus 10 Pro, Pixel 6a, Pixel 7 Pro, iPhone SE, and the S22 Ultra.

However, the Huawei Mate 50 Pro, Moto Edge 30 Ultra, Nothing Phone (1), Oppo Find X5 Pro, Realme 10 Pro+, Asus ROG Phone 6, Sony Xperia 1 IV, Xiaomi 12s Ultra, Asus Zenfone 9 and the Vivo X80 Pro+ on the list are not available in Canada, which is worth keeping in mind.

This year the MKBHD used an ELO rating system similar to what you find in competitive games to break down devices into ‘Best Overall,’ ‘Best HDR,’ and ‘Best Portrait.’

The Pixel 6a won the contest, with the Pixel 7 Pro in second place and the Zenfone 9 in third for best overall photos. The S22 Ultra was fifth on the list, and the iPhone 14 Pro landed in seventh.

It’s worth noting that the Pixel 5a won the blind camera contest last year, so that’s two years in a row for Google’s Pixel a series handsets.

Source: MKBHD

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Mobile Syrup

Nintendo’s newest deal discounts Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope and more

Nintendo has more games on sale in time for the holidays.

Switch titles like Just Dance 2023 Edition, Mario + Rabbids Sparks Of Hope, and NEO: The World Ends with You are available on the list. It’s worth noting that the sale on the games ends on different dates.

Below are all of the deals:

Image credit: Nintendo

Source: Nintendo

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Mobile Syrup

Here are some of Best Buy’s upcoming Boxing Day deals

Best Buy Canada has leaked some of its upcoming Boxing Day sales that go live on Saturday, December 24th at 3pm PT/6pm ET, with promotions on Dyson, HP, Samsung, Acer and other brands included.

Check out some of the deals below:

Samsung 65-inch 4K UHD HDR LED Tizen Smart TV (UN65TU690TFXZC) — 2022: $649.99 (save $100)

HP Gaming PC – Mica Silver (Intel Core i5-12400F/512GB SSD/16GB RAM/RTX 3060/Windows 11): $1,199.99 (save $500)

Acer 23.8-inch FHD 75Hz 1ms GTG VA LED Monitor (KA242Y ABI) : $119.99 (save $30)

Lenovo IdeaPad 3i 15.6-inch Touchscreen Laptop – Grey (Intel Core i3-1115G4/256GB SSD/8GB RAM/Windows 11 S): $449.99 (save $200)

Dyson Airwrap Multi-Styler Complete Curling Iron: $699.99 (save $50)

Logitech G29 Driving Force Racing Wheel for PlayStation/PC — Dark: $299.99 (save $93)

WD Easystore 18TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive (WDBAMA0180HBK-NESE): $359.99 (save $170)

Mario Party Superstars (Switch): $54.99 (save $25)

Nautilus T618 Folding Treadmill: $998.99 (save $1,001)

Acer Aspire 3 15.6-inch Laptop – Silver (AMD Athlon-3050U/512GB SSD/8GB RAM/Windows 11): $369.99 (save $130)

Dyson V15 Detect Complete+ Cordless Stick Vacuum: $949.99 (save $200)

It’s worth noting that the sale pricing isn’t live yet. You can find the discounted deals online on Saturday, December 24th at 3pm PT/6pm ET.

Check out all of Best Buy’s Boxing Week deals here.

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Mobile Syrup

Samsung to sell Poké Ball Galaxy Buds case on December 26th

Samsung is bringing a new collection of Pokémon accessories to North America, including the hotly anticipated Poké Ball Galaxy Buds case.

There’s also Galaxy Watch strap and a Galaxy Z Flip 4 case alongside the Poké Ball case. The Galaxy Buds case is the most intriguing, and it should be noted that it’s a case for your existing Galaxy Buds charging case, so makes the wireless earbuds less pocket friendly.

To remedy this, a pretty cool matte black lanyard comes with the enclosure. There are still cutouts for the charging port, so once you slot them into the Poké Ball, you’ll never really need to take them out. The case only fits newer Galaxy Buds, including the Galaxy Buds Live, Buds 2 and Buds 2 Pro.

I’ll note that the inside of the Poké Ball matches the black Galaxy Buds Pro, so other brightly coloured earbuds might look a little strange when open. The case is set to go on sale in the U.S. on December 26th for $39.99 USD (roughly $54.35 CAD). MobileSyrup has reached out to Samsung for more specific Canadian pricing and release info.

The watch strap works with Galaxy Watch 4 and Galaxy Watch 5 in both sizes, according to The VergeIt also retails for $39.99 USD (roughly $54.35 CAD).

The Z Flip 4 case is the same as the existing Galaxy Z Flip cases with the ring attachment. This costs $49.99 USD (roughly $67.94 CAD). However, Samsung usually sells these cases for $60 in Canada.

Image credit: Samsung

Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

MobileSyrup’s top 10 games of 2022

One of the things I love most about video games is their versatility as an art form.

Movies more or less all carry the same runtimes while adhering to similar visual languages, books are primarily relegated to text and TV shows have to follow an episodic format. All of these structures have their own benefits, to be sure, but the intrinsic beauty of games is that they can really be any combination of all three.

Looking back on the year that was for gaming, I’m reminded of that fact. After playing around 50 new games and keeping up with many more, I’m in awe at the staggering variety of the kinds of experiences that were created this year alone. An FMV game that uses interactivity and metatextuality to immerse players in a decades-spanning mystery. A grueling dark fantasy world that creates an unparalled sense of discovery and companionship. A cyberpunk RPG about finding hope and meaning in an unrelentingly harsh city. A cat simulator that captured the hearts of gamers and non-gamers alike. A 100-plus-hour existential odyssey. A fighter in which Batman, Shaggy Rogers and LeBron James can duke it out. Games can be pretty much anything.

Naturally, this has made putting together a top 10 list an enjoyably tricky challenge. I thought long and hard about this, which is why it’s coming mere days before 2023 rolls in. But in the end, I’m happy with what I’ve picked. Before I go further, though, I should fully acknowledge the quality of Elden Ring. Developer FromSoftware’s rich and freeing open-world design that encourages exploration without any hand-holding is extremely commendable and even ground-breaking. The action-RPG is, without question, a monumental achievement and absolutely worthy of all the Game of the Year accolades it’s received. However, it’s not something I got into, as I don’t generally enjoy experiences that are so punishing or lore-heavy without some core narrative hook. If I’m going to spend close to 100 hours playing a game, I typically need to care enough about the story and people who take part in it. Therefore, it’s not on this list.

With that out of the way, here’s the top 10!


10. Marvel Snap

Marvel Snap

Image credit: Second Dinner/Marvel

Platforms: iOS, Android, PC (early access)

As someone who almost never enjoys mobile gaming, I’m surprised that I fell in love with Marvel Snap earlier this year. That’s because developer Second Dinner crafted an experience that is absolutely perfect to play your phone. It’s an elegantly simple card game that’s designed around appreciably bite-sized matches using decks of just 12 cards, making it remarkably easy to pick up and play. The Marvel license enhances the novelty of collecting new cards, but even if you took that away, this is just a damn good game. Honestly, the only reason why this isn’t higher is that I forced myself to stop playing to get to other things — it’s that addictive.

9. Kirby and the Forgotten Land

Kirby and the Forgotten Land Karby

Image credit: Nintendo

Platform: Nintendo Switch

In the first five minutes of Kirby and the Forgotten Land, our titular pink hero sucks up an entire car and zooms around a post-apocalyptic city that looks straight out of The Last of Us. It’s an absolutely hilarious and outlandish sight to behold, and it sets the tone for the next 10 hours. Through the game, there’s a consistent joy in finding what new everyday object Kirby would comically stretch around and absorb next, be it a traffic cone to stomp on enemies with earth-shattering force, a lightbulb to navigate ghost-infested areas or a vending machine to blast pop cans like a machine gun. Throw in some gorgeously vibrant and charming stages, a solid assortment of upgradable enemy-copying abilities and a delightfully bonkers Platinum Games-esque final stretch and Kirby and the Forgotten Land is such a treat.

8. Neon White

Neon White

Image credit: Annapurna Interactive

Platforms: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4/5, PC

On a raw, moment-to-moment enjoyment level, Neon White might actually be the most fun I’ve had in a game this year. As the deceased assassin White, your job is to clear out demon-infested afterworld stages as quickly as possible to appease your heavenly overlords. The anime-inspired story is reasonably entertaining, especially thanks to stellar voice work from the likes of Steve Blum, but it’s mostly just an excuse for an utterly engrossing speedrunning-focused experience. It’s a breathtakingly thrilling gameplay loop in which you have to maintain momentum while collecting ‘Soul Cards’ to alternate between attacking enemies and executing unique traversal moves to continue forward. The balletic pace of ping-ponging between platforms as I jump, slide, shoot, dash and zipline my way through hellish creatures created an exhilarating rush I’ve rarely felt in games. Even as someone who otherwise couldn’t care less about speedrunning, Neon White‘s short, tightly paced levels and fast and frenetic traversal have me genuinely eager to continue to try to improve my clear times.

7. Immortality

Immortality Marissa

Image credit: Half Mermaid

Platforms: Xbox consoles (and Game Pass), Netflix Games (iOS/Android)

Every once in a while, you come across a story that could only be told in a video game, and Immortality is the epitome of that. It seems simple enough at first; like other FMV titles, your job is to review live-action video files from three fictional movies to piece together the story — in this case, the strange disappearance of actress Marissa Marcel. But it’s how developer Half Mermaid has interwoven all of these clips — a ‘match-cut’ mechanic that lets you click on one person or object to jump to something similar in another piece of footage — that feels genuinely innovative. It’s a thoughtful way of encouraging you to carefully study clips to consider how they might connect to others. Adding layers to the narrative is the fact that hidden footage lies behind many clips that you have to figure out how to reveal, and discovering these proved to be some of the most fascinating, if bone-chilling, moments I’ve had in a game in years. To say more would spoil Immortality‘s many surprises, but suffice it to say that this is one mystery you’ll absolutely want to solve.

6. Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope

Image credit: Nintendo/Ubisoft

Platform: Nintendo Switch

Admittedly, my initial interest in Ubisoft Milan’s Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope almost entirely stemmed from the involved musical talent: my second-favourite composer of all time, Yoko Shimomura (Kingdom Hearts), as well as Grant Kirkhope (Banjo-Kazooie) and Gareth Coker (Ori and the Blind Forest). And sure enough, their soundtrack for the game is magnificent. But I was absolutely elated to discover an absolutely fantastic turn-based strategy experience in its own right.

The ability to move around in real-time adds a lot of thought to character placement, while the titular ability-granting Sparks allow for a wonderful level of mix-and-match customization. Whether it was giving ace sniper Luigi a cloaking power so he can sneak around and pick apart enemies or the punky blade-wielding Edge a regenerative ability to charge an area like a tank, I was constantly eager to keep building out my team for greater tactical efficiency. The amusingly self-deprecating humour about the Rabbids and impressive explorable 3D Mario-inspired overworlds only sweetened the deal.

5. Horizon Forbidden West

Horizon Forbidden West San Francisco

Image credit: PlayStation

Platform: PlayStation 4/PlayStation 5

With Horizon Forbidden West, Guerrilla Games meaningfully addressed pretty much every issue I had with its 2017 predecessor. The cast of characters was richer and more three-dimensional. The Breath of the Wild-esque glider made traversal a lot more seamless, encouraging greater exploration of its stunning post-apocalyptic, robot-infested world. The once-bland melee combat was significantly expanded to include a satisfying array of combos and upgrades. At the same time, everything else that was already great about the original game, including the tight bow mechanics and fascinating lore, were made better than ever. Bring on Horizon 3.

4. Pentiment

Pentiment murder

Image credit: Xbox

Platforms: Xbox consoles (and Xbox Game Pass), PC

Over the past few decades, Obsidian has made a name for itself for rich, choice-driven narratives, and Pentiment might just be the purest distillation of the developer’s strengths to date. In many ways, the mechanically-light experience is more like a visual novel (just look at Hannah Kennedy’s wondrous art!), but it’s ultimately better for it. Rather, Obsidian focused on crafting a magnificently well-realized version of 16th century Bolivia and an enrapturing murder mystery at the heart of it.

Best of all, the developer refuses to reveal a canon killer, forcing you to instead consider the ramifications of your choices on the townspeople over the course of the game’s sprawling 25-year tale. Seeing characters come and go — maturing or regressing, living or dying — in response to both the time period’s political and religious turmoil and my own decisions created a more profound connection to this world than I’ve had with many games. In a day and age where many people seemingly expect everything to be wrapped up cleanly, Obsidian’s restraint in keeping things ambiguous and thought-provoking is absolutely admirable.

3. Citizen Sleeper

Image credit: Fellow Traveler

Platforms: Xbox consoles (and Game Pass), Nintendo Switch, PC

Nowadays, it’s not uncommon in media to see variations on the “capitalism bad” type of story. And while that will always be inherently true, it can also feel fairly rote at times. Citizen Sleeper, however, approaches these themes in a much more unique way. Yes, it’s undoubtedly about capitalism, but what impressed me the most is its unflinchingly uplifting spirit. While the central dice-roll mechanic is a tacit commentary on how life can often deal you a shitty hand, it’s Citizen Sleeper‘s focus on the power of human connection that shines through.

Doing daily hard labour to scrape together just enough money to buy food and life-saving medicine, you have to make the best with what you’ve got, so how you choose to spend your time — be that by sharing a story with a local street vendor below the stars or bonding with a struggling father and his adopted daughter — is how one ultimately finds existence in your life. These moments create an achingly beautiful tenderness to Citizen Sleeper, made even more earnest when factoring its allegorical relevance to developer Gareth Damian Martin’s experiences as a non-binary person in the gig-economy. A soulful, deeply moving experience that I won’t forget.

2. Live A Live

Live A Live character artwork

Image credit: Square Enix/Nintendo

Platform: Nintendo Switch

I’ve been in love with Square RPGs like Final Fantasy for most of my life, so discovering that the company was remaking this once-Japan-exclusive SNES title with jaw-droppingly stunning HD-2D visuals was incredibly tantalizing. Thankfully, this long-lost game actually exceeded my expectations in practically every way. Where Octopath Traveler disappointed me with its repetitive structure and disparate storylines, Live A Live uses its seven standalone scenarios to great effect.

There was an unmitigated sense of wonder and excitement in exploring each time period, ranging from a charming, dialogue-free prehistoric love story and suave Sergio Leone-inspired spaghetti western  to near-future kaiju hijinks and the far-out Alien-esque spaceship murder mystery. If that weren’t enough, additional chapters later open up that tie everything together in a surprisingly gripping way, adding the deeper hook that Octopath always lacked for me. That’s to say nothing of Yoko Shimomura’s fantastic soundtrack, which is just full of bangers. All told, Live A Live was, for several months, the 2022 game to beat for me, until…

1. God of War Ragnarök

God of War Ragnarok Kratos and Atreus

Image credit: PlayStation

Platforms: PlayStation 4/PlayStation 5

At the start of this list, I mentioned that the games that resonate with me the most are the ones that have compelling stories and characters. That’s God of War Ragnarök to a tee — more so, in fact, than almost every game I’ve ever played. To be able to say that about an action game — a genre in which story is usually an afterthought — is no small feat. To be clear, there’s definitely a tightly constructed combat system that’s punchy and visceral while still allowing for experimentation through an engaging character customization systems. And make no mistake: there’s also expansive-yet-manageable interconnected world full of interesting sidequests, rewarding loot and fascinating world-building.

But why I love God of War Ragnarök — why it has quickly become one of my all-time favourite games — is its heartwrenching and personal father-son story. The intensely relatable specificity with which Santa Monica Studio tells this narrative hit me hard, and that was only strengthened by the expertly written and acted cast and enthralling twists and turns of the plot. By the end of my time with the game, I was moved to tears; I truly felt like I’d gone on this journey with these characters and changed with them. To me, that’s the real power of games, and God of War Ragnarök encapsulates that perfectly.

Honourable mentions: A Plague Tale: Requiem, Hindsight, Sifu, The Quarry and Stranger of Paradise: Final Fantasy Origin


What are your favourite games of the year? Let us know in the comments.

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Mobile Syrup

Microsoft reveals that three upcoming Bethesda games are Xbox exclusive

After acquiring Bethesda parent company ZeniMax in a deal valued at $7.5 billion USD (about $9.9 billion CAD at the time) in 2021, Microsoft has now confirmed that three exclusive Xbox and PC titles from the publisher are in the making.

“Xbox anticipates that three future [ZeniMax] titles — REDACTED — all of which are designed to be played primarily alone or in small groups — will be exclusive to Xbox and PCs,” reads a passage in Microsoft’s response to the FTC regarding its Activision Blizzard deal (via The Verge).

Two of the three titles are likely Bethesda’s Starfield and The Elder Scrolls VI. Alongside Starfield, Bethesda also delayed the release of Redfall to add further polish to the title.

Starfield was originally planned to release in November 2022, while Redfall was scheduled to drop in the summer of 2022. Both the tiles are now scheduled to release in the first half of 2023, so it’s easy to speculate that the third exclusive might be Redfall.

In other related news, the Federal Trade Comission (FTC) has officially filed a suit in order to attempt and halt Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard.

Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

New report details scrapped iPhone 14 GPU with ray tracing

Apple’s chip engineers seemed to be overly ambitious ahead of the iPhone 14’s launch. A new report from The Information outlines how the company scrapped plans for an ultrapowerful mobile GPU before the iPhone 14’s release.

The report also details two lawsuits Apple is engaged in with chip-making startups over what the tech giant claims is stolen proprietary chip design information.

However, what’s most interesting is that Apple is working to bring ray tracing-enabled tech to the iPhone. This relatively recent gaming graphics feature allows for more realistic lighting, shadows and reflections, but it draws a significant amount of power. According to the report, Apple was working on the feature for the iPhone 14 Pro, but had to cut it since it pulled too much power and generated a lot of heat.

Apple may not have gotten ray tracing working on the iPhone 14 series, but it’s fascinating to learn that the company is working on the technology. If Apple can get it up and running, it should give the iPhone and iPad a significant leg up in the portable gaming space. Mobile game Lego Star Wars Castaways already blew me away this year with its graphics, and I can only imagine how much better it would get with ray traced lighting.

Source: The Information Via: 9to5Mac