Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water, Microsoft are bringing Maneater back to Game Pass. Yesterday they unveiled the next batches of Game Pass additions and two are returnees, with the delightful fighty platformer Indivisible accompanying brutal shark 'em up Maneater. What's more important is that it's adding the game with the cutest little Nurglings, grimdark retro-styled FPS Warhammer 40,000: Boltgun. The rhetoric of 'purging xenos and heretics' surely doesn't apply to these darling babies. Read on for all the games coming to (and going from) Game Pass over the next few weeks.
I haven't played the retrofuturistic first-person explore-o-story which pokes at the fractured remains of a godlike AI, but I know Alice Bee talked about it on the podcast and has—for RPS supporters only, sorry—written about that 60s style.
"It takes a little time to warm up to Tales of Arise's main characters (ironic, when two of them wield the powers of hell itself), but once you're over that hump, you're left with a charming JRPG powered by a battle system that never slows down," said our Tales Of Arise review in 2021.
I know little about this but resident child-haver Graham had a lot of praise for Bluey: The Cartoon Which Inspired The Video Game when it launched last year. "Do I have a reasonable expectation that any of this will make for a good video game when it releases on November 17th?" he wrote. "No, not really, but thank goodness I finally have an excuse to write about Bluey."
It's like Madden NFL 23 but a bit newer. Look, if you're interested, you already know.
Honestly, I'm installing this just to check out the pretty underwater scenes. Might as well do a few cool sharkmurders while I'm there, though I probably won't stick around. Nate's Maneater review called it "an ecstatically violent simulation of being a fool's idea of a shark, which long outstays its welcome when stretched into a repetitive open world game." It has been on Game Pass before, leaving in
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