wolfenstein youngblood

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  • Bethesda.net PC games launcher

    Bethesda will shut down its PC launcher in May

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    02.22.2022

    You'll be able to transfer your purchases and wallet balance to Steam.

  • An onscreen example of NVIDIA's  Wolfenstein: Youngblood ray tracing.

    NVIDIA shows 'Wolfenstein: Youngblood' with RTX ray-tracing on ARM

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.19.2021

    At GDC, NVIDIA unveiled a technical demo with an RTX-powered MediaTek ARM processor running Wolfenstein: Youngblood.

  • Bandai

    What we played in August: Gundam building, 'Fire Emblem: Three Houses'

    by 
    Devindra Hardawar
    Devindra Hardawar
    08.15.2019

    Welcome back to Engadget's Gaming IRL, a monthly segment where we run down what our editors are playing. This time around, we dive into the new Gundam mobile model building game, and chat about our time with Fire Emblem: Three Houses and the new Wolfenstein side-story, Youngblood. Because who wouldn't want a Nazi murder simulator to go alongside their religious high school anime sim? We'd also love to know what you've been playing, shout out in the comments below!

  • 'Wolfenstein: Youngblood' makes me want more co-op shooters

    by 
    Mat Smith
    Mat Smith
    06.13.2019

    Wolfenstein: Youngblood is definitely a spin-off, not a sequel. It helps explain why the latest game in the reinvented Wolfenstein universe feels and plays so differently. When first revealed, I was intrigued by the idea of making the blunt, gory, Nazi-hunting first-person shooter into a cooperative game. In Youngblood, you work alongside a buddy or AI assistant to unlock doors, ransack storage and cut a swathe through fictional armor-plated soldiers and robots.

  • Christian Petersen via Getty Images

    Watch Bethesda’s E3 2019 highlights in 15 minutes

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    06.10.2019

    Bethesda kicked off its E3 event yesterday, and if your head is still spinning from all of the gaming updates announced this weekend, here's your chance to catch up on Bethesda's biggest news. The company debuted Orion, a software collection meant to optimize game engines for streaming on platforms like Google's Stadia or Microsoft's xCloud. The goal is to improve the game-streaming experience for folks with slower internet speeds or those who live far from data centers. Bethesda gave us a glimpse of Doom Eternal, Fallout 76 and the new Wolfenstein: Youngblood. There's also the new supernatural action adventure Ghostwire Tokyo and a new dragon quest line in Elder Scrolls: Blades. Today we learned that Doom will stream on iOS later this year. In case you missed Bethesda's E3 presentation or need a second viewing to catch all the details, we've compiled this supercut to bring you up to speed.

  • MachineGames/Arkane Studios/Bethesda

    Co-op shooter 'Wolfenstein: Youngblood' arrives July 26th

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.27.2019

    Bethesda has been mostly tight-lipped about Wolfenstein: Youngblood since unveiling it at E3 last year, but it's not holding back now. The publisher has revealed that its co-op anti-Nazi shooter will debut July 26th on PC, PS4, Switch and Xbox One. You play as BJ Blazkowicz's daughters Jess and Soph (either with a friend or an AI substitute) as they track down their missing dad in an alternate history Nazi-occupied Paris circa 1980. The new story trailer (below) makes clear that there's plenty of the modern series' over-the-top action, although there's also a bit of mystery involved -- it's now clear that BJ doesn't want to be found, and that he's up to something big.

  • id Software/Bethesda

    'Doom Eternal' and other Bethesda games are coming to Steam

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.25.2019

    The rise of proprietary game launchers appears to be getting worse, but there's at least one company headed in the opposite direction. Bethesda has announced that its upcoming games will be available through Steam, including Doom Eternal, Rage 2, Wolfenstein: Cyberpilot and Wolfenstein: Youngblood. On top of that, it's bringing Fallout 76 to Steam at some point later in 2019. While that won't help the shared-world RPG fare any better, it will at least ensure that you can start complaining about the game that much sooner.