In before Bow-Wow

I’m on track to put more time intoHyrule Warriorsthan any other videogame in 2014.

This is coming from someone who has spent, at most, half an hour with Omega Force’s past titles. I may not be aDynasty Warriorsfan — and, hell, I’m often indifferent to theZeldaseries — but combine the former’s hack-and-slash action with the latter’s characters and lore andI’m all in.

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It helps that this is one seriously content-dense game; it’s easy to rack up the hours once you’re committed to Adventure Mode. Its sprawling first map has you playing and replaying missions to unlock new characters, weapons, and one-use items that, if used correctly, can unlock even more rewards. Months afterHyrule Warriors‘ launch, I’ve only just this week gained access to the entire map; I still have to go back in and A-rank most of it using unfamiliar, underleveled warriors. Oh boy.

Also, thanks to continued post-release support, there’s now theMaster QuestandTwilightmaps to worry about. My treasured Link is going to max out at level 150 before I know it.

Promotional art for Warframe`s Duviri Paradox, which shows Dominus Thrax and the cast of the expansion.

For all the enjoyment this game has given me, I thought a little shout-out was in order.Hyrule Warriorsis everything I hoped it’d be and more, in the case of the special Gauntlets found near the bottom right-hand corner of the main Adventure map. What a tough mission.

Join me. Defeat the forest dragon and come smash some Gorons with a freakin’ Chain Chomp.

Naoe, Sorin, and Jinchiro looking serious

Sekiro

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GTA V

State of Decay

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Oraxia, a spider-inspired Warframe with multiple legs. Webs appear on the background.