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Xbox Canada announces new podcast, ‘Xbox Passport’

Xbox Canada has launched a new podcast called Xbox Passport, a Game Pass podcast hosted by Leah Jewer, the co-founder of Girls on Games, and Steve Saylor, a notable accessibility advocate.

The inaugural episode of Xbox Passport features Larry Hryb (Major Nelson), the director of programming for Microsoft’s Xbox Live.

The first episode of the podcast is available on iHeart Radio, Spotify and Apple Podcasts and YouTube.

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Valve reveals Counter-Stike 2 is coming in summer 2023

In a surprise move, Valve has confirmed that Counter-Strike 2 (CS2) will release this summer.

The game will release as a free upgrade to CS:GO and runs on the developer’s Source Engine 2. Valve describes the game as “the largest technical leap forward in Counter-Strike’s history, ensuring new features and updates for years to come.”

In several videos, Valve highlighted Counter-Strike 2’s overhauled maps, new dynamic smoke grenades and “moving beyond tick rate” through a new “sub-tick” system.

“Counter-Strike 2 is the largest technical leap forward in Counter-Strike’s history, ensuring new features and updates for years to come,” said Valve during a trailer for the game.

Rumours regarding a numbered sequel to the original Counter-Stike started circulating a few months ago. This is the first confirmation from Valve that the game is in development.

A limited test of CS2 is available now, but only select players will be able to participate.

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Save up to 20 percent on select Xbox Wireless Controllers today

If you’re in the market for a new controller, check out these deals on the Xbox Series X/S gamepad from Amazon Canada

The Xbox Series X/S gamepad has received several design upgrades that significantly enhance its functionality compared to the Xbox One controller. These upgrades include textured grips, triggers, and a redesigned D-Pad, which provide a solid gaming experience.

MobileSyrup utilizes affiliate partnerships. These partnerships do not influence our editorial content, though we may earn a commission on purchases made via these links that helps fund the journalism provided free on our website.

Source: Amazon Canada

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Canadian narrative cooking game Venba coming to Xbox Game Pass this summer

Toronto-based Visai Games has announced that its narrative cooking game, Venba, will be coming to Xbox consoles (plus Game Pass) and PlayStation 5 this summer in addition to Nintendo Switch and PC as previously announced.

This marks a slight delay from its original spring 2023 release window.

Venba focuses on an Indian mother who moves to Canada with her family in the ’80s. Through minigames, players will prepare authentic South Indian dishes, which help to connect her to her old home. Players will also engage in branching conversations to learn more about the immigrant family.

For more on Venba, check out our interview with the game’s creator, Abhi. As well, here are several other Canadian-made games to look out for this year.

Image credit: Visai Games

Source: Visai Games

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Microsoft’s Xbox mobile gaming store could release as soon as 2024

Microsoft envisions a future where Apple will be forced to open up its App Store to third-party storefronts and hopes to take advantage of this changing tide with its own Xbox mobile marketplace.

In a recent interview with the Financial Times, Xbox CEO Phil Spencer said that Microsoft wants “to be in a position to offer Xbox content from both us and our third-party partners across any screen where somebody would want to play.”

“Today, we can’t do that on mobile devices but we want to build towards a world that we think will be coming where those devices are opened up,” said Spencer.

This isn’t the first we’ve heard of Xbox’s mobile gaming ambitions. Back in October, Microsoft detailed plans to build its own mobile apps store in a filing to the U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority tied to its pending purchase of Activision Blizzard.

The Xbox mobile store will likely feature notable Activision Blizzard-owned mobile games like Candy Crush Saga, Call of Duty Mobile, Diablo Immortal and more.

While Microsoft could easily launch an Xbox storefront on Android right now, it needs regulators to push Apple to allow alternative stores on the iPhone and iPad. Through the EU’s Digital Markets Act, this could become a reality in the coming months.

“The Digital Markets Act that’s coming — those are the kinds of things that we are planning for,” said Spencer. “I think it’s a huge opportunity.” Microsoft has a small presence in mobile gaming right now, and the Xbox maker admitted that in a filing with the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) last year: “Microsoft currently has no meaningful presence in mobile gaming and the [Activision Blizzard] transaction will bring much needed expertise in mobile game development, marketing and advertising,” said Spencer during the interview.

Microsoft’s Xbox App Store will also likely be tied to its Xbox Cloud Gaming platform that allows players to stream dozens of titles, which is available through a native app on Android and via a browser on iPhone. With this in mind, it likely wouldn’t be difficult for Microsoft to adapt this app into a more unified app store on Android, and then port it over to iOS.

Source: Financial Times Via: Polygon

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Here are the new games hitting PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium in March 2023

PlayStation has revealed what’s coming to its PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium memberships in March. This month’s highlights include Uncharted Legacy of Thieves Collection, Immortals Fenyx Rising, Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Extraction, Ghostwire Tokyo and more

Below are all of the new games hitting the subscription service:

Extra

  • Uncharted Legacy of Thieves Collection
  • Tchia
  • Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Extraction
  • Ghostwire Tokyo
  • Life is Strange: True Colors
  • Immortals Fenyx Rising
  • Life is Strange 2
  • Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot
  • Street Fighter V Champion Edition
  • Untitled Goose Game
  • Final Fantasy Type-0 HD
  • Rage 2
  • Neo: The World Ends with You
  • Haven

PlayStation Plus Extra starts at $17.99/month and includes all of the PS Plus Essential perks.

PlayStation Classics | Premium

  • Ridge Racer Type 4 — PS1
  • Ape Academy 2 — PSP
  • Syphon Filter: Dark Mirror — PSP

PlayStation Plus Premium starts at $21.99/month and includes all of the PS Plus Essential and Extra perks. PS Plus Extra and Premium members can start playing these games as soon as March 21st.

These players can also play titles likes Battlefield 2024 (PS4/PS5), Minecraft Dungeons (PS4) and Code Vein (PS4) from March 7th to April 4th.

PlayStation Plus Essential costs $11.99 per month or $69.99 per year.

Image credit: Sony

Source: Sony

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Former PS5-exclusive Ghostwire: Tokyo is coming to Xbox Game Pass

Tango Gameworks’ Ghostwire: Tokyo is coming to Microsoft’s Xbox Series X/S and Game Pass on April 12th.

Along with the Xbox console release, the game is getting a new update called Spiders Thread that releases on the same day. The update includes a new game mode, areas, extended story cutscenes and more.

Spiders Thread has players moving through 30 unique stages pulled from 120 levels. You can unlock in-game money, skills and other upgrades through the mode. New map areas include a Middle School that offers new missions, and two new enemies called “the invisible Silent Gaze” and “elusive Retribution.”

Ghostwire: Tokyo was first released on PlayStation 5 and PC in 2022. Microsoft purchased Tango Gameworks last year as part of its acquisition of ZeniMaxMedia (Bethesda’s parent company). Despite the purchase going through, the tech giant still honoured Tango Gameworks’ commitment to release Ghostwire: Tokyo on Sony’s competing PS5.

Fast forward to now, and an updated game version is making its way to Microsoft’s consoles. For more on Ghostwire: Tokyo, check out MobileSyrup’s in-depth look at the game.

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Bethesda’s Starfield delayed again, now launches September 6

Bethesda’s Starfield has been delayed yet again.

The anticipated open world title will now launch on September 6th, back from the previous release window of “the first half of 2023,” which was already a delay from its initial November 11th, 2022 release date.

In the release date’s announcement video, Todd Howard, the director of Starfield and the Fallout and Elder Scroll series,  revealed that Bethesda and Microsoft will hold a Starfield direct event on June 11th to reveal more about the upcoming game.

Given the date, this could replace or be part of the keynote Microsoft typically holds during E3.

According to Howard, there’s still a lot to be revealed about the title.

Starfield was formally announced during Bethesda’s E3 press conference back in 2018. The game is set in space and is Bethesda’s first new IP in 25 years.

Last year Bethesda showed off an extended first-look gameplay of Starfield, where we learned that the game features more than 1,000 explorable planets.

Starfield will release on Xbox Series X/S and will be part of Xbox Game Pass.

Image credit: Bethesda Screenshot

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Canadians sure do love Nintendo, especially Fire Emblem

Historically, news of the best-selling video games each year has been focused on the U.S. and you’d be hard-pressed to find any Canadian-specific data. Even when brands like PlayStation release sales breakdowns, Canada is lumped in with the U.S.

Now, however, that’s finally changing. The Entertainment Software Association of Canada (ESAC), the lobbying group on behalf of Canada’s booming video game industry, has partnered with NPD Group to reveal Canadian-specific figures each month. Until now, the market research firm has only publicly divulged U.S. data.

Canada's best selling games of January 2023

Canada’s 10 best-selling games in January 2023. Image credit: ESAC/NPD

It’s an initiative that Jayson Hilchie, ESAC president and CEO, says is particularly “exciting” to get out there.

“This idea of Canadian sales really spun out of an idea that we were going to write an op-ed about how important Canadian games were on a global stage,” Hilchie told MobileSyrup. “We were going around the world getting German sales, we were getting Pan-European sales, Australian sales, British sales, Türkiye, and NPD sales in the U.S. And the whole point was to show how many Canadian games were in the top 10, top 20, best-selling over the holidays, all around the world.”

NPD U.S. Jan 2023

The 10 best-selling games in the U.S. in January 2023. Image credit: NPD

While he says those plans ultimately fell through, he says his organization’s long-running relationship with NPD Group paved the way to a different initiative: publishing Canada’s top 10 best-selling games directly through the ESAC. So far, he’s happy with the results.

“Obviously, I was happy to see the three Canadian games in the top 10,” he says of Canada’s inaugural January 2023 list. Indeed, the third, fourth and fifth spots are held by Dead Space (Montreal’s EA Motive), NHL 23 and FIFA 23 (both developed by EA Vancouver), respectively. Notably, while FIFA appeared on both the Canadian and U.S. lists, Madden NFL 23 was the only other sports game on the American list — a testament to how much Canadians love their hockey.

Hilchie also notes that this list is lacking Ubisoft, the French publishing giant with several studios across Canada, including in Quebec and Ontario. “Normally, I think we would see some Ubisoft games in there, but I don’t think they had a release calendar that matched that particular month.” Indeed, the company confirmed in January that sales were down in part due to a comparatively lighter 2022 lineup; major franchises Assassin’s Creed and Far Cry didn’t see new releases last year, while Just Dance 2023 underperformed.

It’s worth noting that January’s best-selling game in Canada, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II, also has a Canadian connection. While the game was primarily developed by California’s Infinity Ward, Quebec City-based Beenox handled the PC port.

Even a juggernaut like Call of Duty has ties to Canada. Image credit: Activision

“I think as time goes on throughout the year, we’re always going to see at least a couple of Canadian games,” says Hilchie. “And in that top 10, I think is really good considering we’re a big industry, but we’re a small country relative to some of these other places.”

One area in which the Canadian list stood out from its American counterpart was the prevalence of Nintendo. On the U.S. list, the Japanese gaming giant’s Fire Emblem Engage and Pokémon Scarlet and Violet placed fifth and tenth, respectively. In Canada, Fire Emblem Engage was second and Scarlet and Violet placed seventh, while a third Nintendo title that didn’t chart on the U.S. list, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, came in at 10th. This also follows Nintendo’s recent confirmation that the Switch has been Canada’s best-selling console for five consecutive years.

While Hilchie says this likely speaks to Nintendo’s long, storied history in the industry, he says he’s more surprised by how much the company’s fans responded to the results of this data.

“I can tell you that the Nintendo fans, based on our social media site, are not only surprised but excited about the number two game on the list, [Fire Emblem Engage], especially because it doesn’t even include digital sales,” he says. “So it’s done quite well. Obviously, there are some major fans of that franchise that were happy to see that the game is doing quite well. To me, that was one of the more fun things that came out of it.”

Fire Emblem Engage characters

Fire Emblem Engage seems to have resonated with Canadians, in particular. Image credit: Nintendo

He says this speaks to the surprisingly substantial public interest in this data, especially since it was dropped without any prior tease.

“One thing that was really exciting for us was that I don’t think we expected to see as much enthusiasm as there was for the sales data. We got something like 30,000 impressions on that original tweet, non-boosted impressions, which is a considerably high social media post for us,” he says, noting that ESAC’s social media posts are usually more policy, government, or initiative-related. “I’d be lying if I told you I thought that it was going to get as much excitement as what actually came out of it. So we’re really thrilled to move forward with this every month because it looks like we’ve got a really great base audience and we can just build from that.”

Hilchie also says there’s other Canadian-specific data that can be revealed as the reports evolve over time. While he notes that they’ll never divulge how many copies each game has sold as that’s each publisher’s proprietary information, they do have data for up to 50 games that could be shared in the future.

“I think that there’s a lot of opportunity for us, and I think NPD wanted to see how this worked out. But they’ve definitely said that they’ve got other data that they can share with us, and so time will tell what we put out. So we’re starting with this and now that we know there’s an appetite for this type of information, we’ll go from there.”

Dead Space

Motive’s Dead Space remake received universal praise when it was released in January. Image credit: EA

Ultimately, he says this is “another vertical” through which the ESAC can elevate its platform, especially as its found “a whole new kind of audience.”

Naturally, data like this helps the ESAC in its larger push to get government support for the national games sector. Coincidentally, our discussion came mere days after the reveal of Alberta’s latest budget, in which video games were not given an expected tax credit. The fact that this also happened while the province is getting significant publicity from HBO’s The Last of Us, a series based on a video game, makes the lack of a gaming tax credit all the more standout.

“The ironic thing about The Last of Us is that because it’s a published and distributed television show that it’s eligible for the film and television tax incentive that Alberta offers,” says Hilchie. “Yet if The Last of Us video game was shot and designed and developed there, it would get absolutely zero government support.”

Per the ESAC’s Canadian Video Game Industry: 2021 report, there are nearly 100 development studios in Alberta, including, arguably, Canada’s most famous: BioWare Edmonton, the creator of beloved RPGs like Star Wars: Knights of the Old RepublicMass Effect and Dragon Age.

“The seriousness of the matter is that the Alberta video game industry is a nice upstart industry,” says Hilchie. “They’ve got some serious capacity going there. There were investments in studios that set up there when the first iteration of the tax incentive came out, and you started to see a lot of interest in Calgary and Edmonton, and then the tax incentive was canceled.”

A provincial breakdown of the number of gaming studios in Canada, per ESAC’s 2021 report. (Image credit: ESAC)

He hopes that the spring election will offer an opportunity for ESAC, Digital Alberta and other groups to “put the issue back on the table” for all political parties.

“The fact of the matter is that the video game industry proves across Canada that when you put targeted government support toward it, it blows up. It grows. You can look anywhere, whether it’s the original Quebec tax incentive to Nova Scotia to Ontario,” he says.

He points to how such support has helped his native Nova Scotia grow immensely in 10 years, adding the likes of Ubisoft and Bethesda’s Alpha Dog Games (both in Halifax) and 2K Sports (Lunenberg) during this time.

“Now, there are not only those three big publishers but another 30 independent mobile game developers and PC game developers. It can show you what you can do in a place with a million people like Nova Scotia. Just think about what Alberta could pull off with two major cities and a larger population. So I’m disappointed but I’m not defeated.”

Image credit: Nintendo

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Metroid Fusion is coming to Nintendo’s Switch Online Expansion Pack on March 9

Nintendo has announced that Metroid Fusion is coming to Nintendo Switch for the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack on March 9th.

Metroid Fusion is an action-adventure game that launched on Game Boy Advance in 2002. This game is the prequel to Metroid Dread, which launched in 2021. Nintendo brought several Game Boy and Game Boy Advance titles to its Expansion Pack earlier this month, including Kirby’s Dream Land, Tetris, Wario Land 3, The Legend of Zelda: the Minish Cap and more.

The Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack costs $63.99 and gives you access to a library of Sega Genesis, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo 64 games and more.

Source: Nintendo