Equipment

Warhammer Quest is being delisted from Steam in December, but will remain available on GOG-

Warhammer Quest was a well-liked Games Workshop board game from 1995, a halfway point between dungeon crawls like HeroQuest and tabletop roleplaying games. Its videogame adaptation was released on PC in 2015, and while its simplicity kept it from topping the list of the best Warhammer games, it made an ideal laptop time-filler. Which is why it’s a shame that in October it was announced that Warhammer Quest is being delisted on Steam.

Ian Baverstock, director of publisher Chilled Mouse, told PC Gamer that December 12 will be the day of Warhammer Quest’s removal from Steam, although “It isn’t being delisted from GOG at this time.” Presumably GOG is subject to different licensing terms, which makes sense given its original remit as the home of Good Old Games. Man O’ War: Corsair, a kind of “Sid Meier’s Pirates goes Warhammer”, also suffered a delisting on Steam but remains available on GOG.

Warhammer Quest’s sequels, Warhammer Quest 2: The End Times and Warhammer Quest: Silver Tower, the latter of which is set during the Age of Sigmar, won’t be affected. The original was the best, however, thanks to its between-dungeon text segments, which made it feel like a choose-your-own-adventure book with Warhammer theming.

With a review rating of Mostly Positive, Warhammer Quest clearly did OK on Steam over the course of almost nine years there. Its forum users have responded to the announcement by recalling the good times, with one thread declaring “I can’t explain why, but this is one of my favorite games of all time.” As a reply puts it, “This is such a great game! It really does a good job of translating the table top experience I had playing the original back in the day.”

“We are still considering whether to run one last Steam sale”, Baverstock said.

Related Posts

The Complicated Legacy of the GameStop Craze

In early 2021, millions of ordinary people across the United States began buying shares of the declining video game store GameStop in increments of tens, hundreds or thousands of dollars. Their investments were mocked by financial experts, who cited the store’s poor underlying metrics. But the masses’ collective action proved shockingly powerful: they pushed GameStop’s price from under $3 to as high as $483 in late January 2021, causing the hedge funds that had bet against it to lose billions of dollars.

Nearly three years later, the new movie Dumb Money attempts to dramatize and make sense of the strange episode. Paul Dano stars as Keith Gill, a trader and livestreamer whose full-throated support of the stock on the subreddit community Wall Street Bets catalyzed a movement around “meme stocks”: assets that surged in price fueled by social media enthusiasm. Seth Rogen, Pete Davidson and America Ferrera all play various characters swept up in the mania that …

After two decades, Ratchet & Clank finally come to PC this summer-

The Ratchet & Clank series recently celebrated its 20th anniversary and, remarkably enough, it’s been around all this time without any of the games finding their way to PC. But as is the way of all PlayStation things now, barring Bloodborne, Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart is coming to PC on July 26.

The game is being handled by Nixxes Software in collaboration with original developer Insomniac Games (which is probably quite busy with Spider-Man 2 at the moment). In a blogpost making the announcement Nixxes’ Julian Huijbregts says the game “is a visual spectacle that is perfectly suitable for newcomers”, and it’s true that the Ratchet & Clank games have always been showcases: Sony loves to launch a new PlayStation in the vicinity of a new game in this series, to give the early adopters something to show off. As for this entry specifically, our sister site GamesRadar+ called it “the best in the series” and awarded five stars.

And the PC version is go…

Fight rat hordes with steam guns in this tactical, squad-based survival RPG-

An upcoming turn-based tactical RPG will put players’ choice of survivors against a horde of giant, mutated rats in the struggle to cross the ruins of a fallen city and survive another day. Shardpunk: Verminfall will release on April 13, 2023, and sounds like an interesting blend of the turn-based tactics, RPG, resource management, and survival genres.

The core of Shardpunk looks to be fast-moving tactical fights over the course of a day spent scavenging in the ruins of your steampunk-ish capital city—one where you must constantly move to outrun the oncoming vermin horde. At night your team shelters somewhere and you make choices about managing their health, morale, equipment, and stats.

“In Shardpunk: Verminfall you already lost. Now you need to run for your life while saving as many people and pieces of equipment as possible. Keep on moving and use every skill and item at your disposal to reach the safety of fusion core-operated bunkers,” says the developer.

<…

The PC Gaming Show returns December 5 with a sleigh full of the latest and greatest PC games

It’s arriving in December and represents a festival of togetherness that enraptures families the world over. That’s right: The PC Gaming Show is back, and it’s bringing a hefty sack of videogame magic when it hits this December 5.

What have we got in our bag? Oh, you know, just a buffet of premieres, announcements, and interviews that bring out the best of the best of the best of PC gaming. Expect faces both new and old in a show stacked to the gills with the greatest our hobby has to offer. Also expect us to create at least one intensely gif-able moment of our hosts that will live on in their social media replies until the end of time.

It’s our 10th year putting on the Ritz for this kind of thing, and we’ve gotten pretty good at it. We’ll be bringing some warmth to the doldrums of autumn with a true banger of a show. If you’re a developer, publisher or PR firm that wants to participate in it? You can hit up Editorial Director [email protected] or the sho…

Abiotic Factor, a 6-player survival game where you’re scientists in a paranormal lab, is rising up Steam’s top-sellers chart-

Gordon Freeman is a nerd who cuts a heroic profile, but in Abiotic Factor you’re just a nerd: a regular, lab-coat-wearing new employee in a Black Mesa-like science facility that’s undergoing an unspecified security situation. Your job, at least for starters, is to avoid dying.

Out in early access on Steam today, Abiotic Factor’s premise seems to be striking a chord with co-op survival crafting fans: It hasn’t hit Steam’s top concurrents chart at the time of writing, but it has jumped to seventh place in Steam’s US top-sellers list just a few hours after launch.

I like how much Abiotic Factor commits to the ’90s parody corporate scientist theme: its character creator features 19 ties, 12 kinds of glasses, and 11 snazzy belts. And how refreshing it is to play a co-op survival crafting game that doesn’t immediately ask you to punch down a tree! The rough equivalent in Abiotic Factor is bashing an old beige computer case to bits and harvesting its power supply. 

A…

Chrome got rid of the downloads bar- here’s how to defy the cruel whims of Google and get it back-

Even good UI changes are met with hostility from belligerent software users who liked things the way they were, so I won’t claim to know whether or not the choice to move Chrome’s downloads list from a bar at the bottom of the screen to a tray at the top right is good UX design or not. I’ll just meet it with hostility.

Until today, I was living in a dreamlike state of delusion over the loss of Chrome’s download bar. I tilted my head at its absence every time I downloaded something, but rather than believing that some cruel Silicon Valley fiend would really move my downloads from the place they’ve been since before I even started using Chrome—so, for decades—I shook it off, found the file in Explorer, and left the mystery for another day.

It wasn’t until I saw a tweet from Rust creator Garry Newman that I really comprehended the situation. “Chrome moving the downloads to the top right has ruined my entire life,” he wrote.

The update happened on …