Games

We will see Vanguard on Wednesday -apkrig

Last Thursday, a trio of developers from Sledgehammer Games, Raven Software and Treyarch introduced a new installment in the Call of Duty series. The unveiling took place through a special event in Warzone and was crowned by the first trailer focused on the story campaign, the main characters and the four environments, which we will then visit in multiplayer. However, the developers have not yet shown anything about the game as such, which, according to the moderator Geoff Keighley, will change next Wednesday. As part of the Opening Night Live, which will inaugurate this year’s Gamescom, Sledgehammer developers will be ready to show part of the campaign. In addition, they will invite actress and drummer Laura Bailey to the presentation, who lent her voice to the character of Polina Petrovová, and it will probably be the one that the demonstration will focus on.

As Keighley specified on Twitter, players will be able to watch the passage of one of the selected levels, and if the Russian sniper’s sides were correct, we would most likely see the Battle of Stalingrad. It is one of four battlefields that Vanguard will process in full, along with Western Europe, North Africa and the Pacific. If you’re not too in the mood for the story part – even if the processing in the spirit of Call of Duty: WW2 combined with the technical conveniences of the latest Modern Warfare could suit you – the selected one will probably reach you shortly after Gamescom. Although the developers have not yet confirmed the exact data, insider Tom Henderson and others claim that the alpha test will be available from August 27 to 29, mainly based on a leak directly from the PlayStation Store. In the middle of last week, data miners found a picture referring to the alphatest of the new Champion Hill fashion with the expected size of around 20 GB with it. It should be possible to download it as early as August 26 and start playing at midnight, but now it is not possible to say with certainty whether alpha will be available only on PlayStation or on other platforms. Of course, there should also be a beta, which Henderson is betting on on September 16-20, but players on PlayStation could start playing as early as September 10th.

The revelation of Call of Duty is then connected with the issue of the absence of the Activision logo, which we discussed in the latest news summary. You will not find it in the video even at the beginning, where it was, for example, when the Black Ops Cold War was unveiled, but also at the end on the final screen with the logos of all represented companies. In the beginning, it invites Call of Duty itself to reveal Call of Duty, which seems a bit strange, and in the final screen there is a suspicious blank space between the Sledgehammer Games logo and a link to the official website of the series. In essence, there was immediate speculation that the company’s visibility had been reduced to a minimum due to an ongoing dispute over workplace conditions, but during the weekend, an official statement from Activision and everything is suddenly different. Asked by journalist Stephen Totil, who previously led Kotaku and is now responsible for the Axios Gaming newsletter, answers the spokesman for Activision: “Call of Duty is constantly expanding into an incredible universe of experiences. It was an artistic choice that reflected the way in which Vanguard, as another major work, represents the entire series. ”True, we are not very wise of this, but if it was an artistic choice, then everything is completely clearly

But whatever the decision, the players showed interest in the trailer as it garnered more views on the series’ official channel than the previous Black Ops Cold War. Since last Thursday, the Call of Duty: Vanguard trailer has 18.5 million views, 133,000 inches up and 18,000 downs. In contrast, the first video for Black Ops has Cold War just less than 12 million views, but 470 thousand positive reactions and only 15 thousand negative. Looking at the comments, it’s a little worse and the most common reactions challenge historical authenticity, express concerns about cheaters, and some fans are explicitly “looking forward” to the battle passes and other articles through which the game will be nourished through microtransactions. Fairly, however, we must remember that the developers themselves have refuted that Vanguard would be a historically accurate game, and promised that with the change of the map and the deployment of Warzone mode, there will be new anti-cheating systems. So we’ll see where the work of the three studios finally goes, we’ll be able to start playing the full version on November 5th.

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