We’re coming up on a year since Microsoft finished its acquisition of Activision Blizzard, and the publisher’s games are slowly but surely beginning to trickle onto Xbox Game Pass. In August, the ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook “Crash Bandicoot n sane trilogy will be available on Gamepass on August 8, 2024,” a translation of ...
Tim is an Australian Senior Editor based in Germany who has been passionate about video games since he first picked up a PlayStation 1 controller to play Crash Bandicoot as a kid. He started out with ...
Daniel is a News Writer from the United Kingdom. Relatively new to the industry with almost three years of experience, he has focused on establishing himself in the gaming space. While he focuses on ...
Kerem is a writer and video editor with five years of experience under his belt. When he's not writing or editing, you can find him playing yet another Soulslike game, installing Elder Scrolls: Skyrim ...
For those who skipped it, the Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy is a remake of the first three games. While the standalone game is not on sale, it’s available separately or as part of the Quadrilogy, ...
Crash Bandicoot's original lead programmer has opened up old wounds, recently criticizing Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy's gameplay more than eight years after the remastered game compilation's ...
Before Naughty Dog built its reputation on Uncharted and The Last of Us, it was known for creating a star out of the unlikeliest of obscure animals: the Australian Bandicoot. In the heyday of ‘90s ...
It’s unlikely that even the most zealot of players could predict Crash Bandicoot’s return via the N. Sane Trilogy would be a runaway success. It's doubtful even Activision would have believed that ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook A new Crash Bandicoot game has been teased and it could be announced very soon. The Crash ...
Every generation of gamer talks wistfully about the days gone by, when games where better, harder, more clever, or any other variation of something that ends in -er. Then there’s the opposite camp ...