Month: April 2019

Home / Month: April 2019

Space sim Kerbal Space Program gets its first PC expansion on 13th March 2018.

Making History adds a mission builder and a history pack, the latter of which contains missions inspired by historical moments in space exploration. Perhaps it’s not too late to include a mission where you ride Elon Musk’s Tesla to Mars!

Digging deeper, the mission builder lets you create missions that include launches, landings, rescues, malfunctions, explosions, repairs and more. As you’d expect, you can share your creations with other players.

As for the missions inspired by historical moments, expect spacewalking and crash landing, but with a Kerbal twist. There are a number of new parts and astronaut suits inspired by the space race you can use, too.

These days, Kerbal Space Program is published by Private Division, the indie-focused label set up by Take-Two. It’s still developed by Mexican studio Squad though. Squad said the expansion costs £9.99, but all players who bought the game before April 2013 will get it for free.

Egyptian authorities on Sunday denied reports of alleged organ theft after the body of a British tourist who died suddenly while on holiday was returned home without some organs.

David Humphries, 62, died in the seaside resort of Hurghada on the shores of the Red Sea on September 18.

His body was returned to the UK where a second post-mortem ordered by a coroner discovered that his heart and some other organs had been removed.

Accusing the UK media of publishing "flawed reports", the Egyptian state information service (SIS) said allegations of "organ theft are unfounded".

The statement said that samples were taken and the heart, parts of the liver, kidneys and other organs had been removed in order to establish the cause of death.

It did not give an explanation as to why they had not been replaced. The service said the tourist had probably died of a heart attack, citing the medical report.

Mr Humphries’ daughter, Anita Goodall, 36, said: “We are totally in shock and don’t know what to do or think. We don’t know why this has happened to us.

“Dad will be buried without his heart. Some say that the heart is the soul and it is the heart that takes you to heaven, but dad won’t have his heart to take with him.

“Dad was such a kind and generous man. He was still working and seemed so fit and so full of life. Everyone who knew him will miss him.”

In another case in Hurghada on August 21, travel operator Thomas Cook moved all its clients to another hotel after a British couple died in what their daughter called "suspicious" circumstances.

Egyptian authorities say John and Susan Cooper, who fell ill and died suddenly while staying at the five-star Steigenberger Aqua Magic Hotel in the resort, succumbed to the effects of an E. coli infection.

NetherRealm has released gameplay showing off the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in DC-themed fighting game Injustice 2.

The video below shows how other members of the turtles gang fly in to finish attacks and extend combos by way of an assist. Michelangelo can kick his skateboard across the screen. Donatello, who wields a bo staff, has longer reach than the other turtles. Leonardo can chuck ninja stars, whereas Raphael looks like he’s mostly about being up close and personal. The super sees all four turtles slam into their opponent for a shellshock attack. There’s a nice Mortal Kombat Easter egg during Raphael’s victory cutscene, too.

Here’s how the turtles work in Injustice 2: by equipping one of four accessories – swords, bo staff, nunchakus or sais – you can change your character loadout to play as Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello or Michelangelo. Each has their own unique move sets, character powers and special moves. In online and tournament modes where specific loadouts are unavailable, you can select each individual turtle from the character select screen.

The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles arrive in Injustice 2 on 13th February as part of Fighter Pack 3. You can buy the Turtles on their own on 20th February priced £11.9. The other Fighter Pack 3 DLC characters are The Atom and Enchantress.

The US Navy has confirmed it is investigating 15 sailors working mainly in the nuclear reactor department of the aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan for allegations of LSD abuse.

Lt. Joe Keiley, spokesman for the Seventh Fleet, based in Japan, said that two sailors are already heading to court-martial accused of using, possessing and distributing the hallucinogenic drug, while three are waiting to see whether they will be charged as well.

Another 10 sailors were administratively disciplined. Of the 15, 14 worked in the nuclear department.

News of the LSD ring was first reported by The Wall Street Journal in February, but Lt Keiley confirmed that the initial investigation had resulted in charges.

When the allegations were first reported, the Seventh Fleet – beset by a series of problems – issued a statement saying that “the Navy has zero tolerance for drug abuse and takes all allegations involving misconduct of our sailors, Navy civilians and family members very seriously.”

Japanese authorities were also initially brought into the investigation because of suspicions that drugs were sold to Japanese residents. They dropped the case in June.

Lt Keiley said that the accused sailors had had their work reviewed.

“Out of an abundance of caution, Ronald Reagan leadership reviewed the work previously performed by the accused sailors and no improper work was identified,” he said, in an email to Navy Times.

The two facing court martial are named in charge sheets as Machinist’s Mate Nuclear 2nd Class Andrew W. Miller, who faces charges of using, possessing and trafficking the drug from January to February of this year, and Electrician’s Mate Nuclear 2nd Class Sean M. Gevero.

Gevero is also charged with distributing LSD and possessing nandrolone decanoate, an anabolic steroid.

Lawyers for the two men have not commented publicly.

Lt Keiley refused to say what rank the other 13 sailors held, but said the ship was never at risk. 

“Propulsion plant operations and maintenance are supervised by senior personnel,” he said. “Due to the defence in depth of the design and operation of the propulsion plants, the reactors aboard (the Reagan) remain safe.” 

The Seventh Fleet has been plagued by problems over the past year. 

In 2017, two ships – the USS John S. McCain and the USS Fitzgerald – were involved in separate collisions with commercial vessels, killing 17 sailors.

In August 2017 Vice Admiral Joseph Aucoin, commander of all US naval forces in the eastern Pacific, was fired as the result of a “loss of confidence in his ability to command,” the Navy said.

The trio of Egyptian deity bosses in Assassin’s Creed Origins are some of the game’s toughest challenges – but fans have been calling for them to be made even tougher.

Tomorrow, those fans will get their wish as the Anubis, Sobek and Sekhmet trials get a fresh Hard Mode.

Each week in March will feature both a standard boss and another on Hard Mode. Slay a one of the Hard Mode bosses and you’ll unlock some eye-catching new gear as a reward:

Next week brings Origins’ much-anticipated Curse of the Pharoahs undead expansion, featuring a vast new map, bags of new loot and a level cap increase. In anticipation, there’s a new introductory quest for everyone tomorrow – Lights Among the Dunes – to celebrate its arrival.

Speaking of Curse of the Pharoahs, Origins will offer an optional level boost for your saved game upon the expansion’s arrival, should you want to tackle it without being underpowered.

And finally, Ubisoft is adding yet more outfits to Oranges, such as a revealing Far Cry Primal-inspired fur outfit to redeem via the Ubisoft Club, plus paid-for Undead and Far Cry Primal packs for the in-game store.

The nationalist Alternative for Germany party (AfD) has been plunged into renewed controversy after it emerged that one of its members posed for photographs on a “pilgrimage” of sites associated with Adolf Hitler.

The politician in question, who has not been named under German privacy laws, posed holding a candle outside Hitler’s birthplace in the Austrian town of Braunau am Inn.

He also posed with a picture of the Fuhrer close to his mountain retreat at Berchtesgaden in the Alps, and with a banner bearing a swastika and SS runes. 

Details of the pictures, which were taken on a tour of Nazi sites the politician made with colleagues in 2015, emerged this week in a report in Thüringer Allgemeine newspaper.

The AfD admitted the existence of the photographs and said the politician concerned had resigned from the party.

Although he has not been publicly named, he is understood to be a senior figure in the party’s regional association in Thuringia, and an associate of Björn Höcke, one of the most controversial figures in the AfD.

There were calls for Mr Höcke to be expelled from the party last year after he called for a “180-degree turn” in German attitudes to the Second World War. The politician involved in the latest controversy is understood to have served on the panel that found in Mr Höcke’s favour.

The AfD has known about the existence of the photographs since September and took immediate action, the party said in a statement.

“The person concerned was clearly reminded by the state board that such incidents are unacceptable and incompatible with AfD membership,” Torben Braga, a party spokesman said. The politician had resigned from the party the same day, he said.

Details of the pictures emerged only days after another AfD politician was caught up in a scandal over old photographs of her posing alongside wine bottles with Hitler’s image on the labels.

Jessica Biessmann, a member of the Berlin regional parliament, is facing moves to expel her from the party over the wine bottle photographs, which were originally posted on the internet ten years ago but re-emerged this week.

The twin scandals come amid press reports that several AfD members who were elected to the Bavarian regional parliament last weekend are under surveillance by the German intelligence servives as a possible threat to national security.

Only certain individuals are under surveillance, and not the party as a whole, a spokesman for the Bavarian regional intelligence service told Münchner Merkur newspaper.

Paris has finally found a place for a sculpture of a giant bunch of gaudy tulips offered by American artist Jeff Koons in the wake of the terror attacks but which purists complained would lower the tone of the City of Light.

Mr Koons had described Bouquet of Tulips, a 10-metre (34-foot) work of bronze, stainless steel and aluminium weighing 33 tons as a token of “remembrance to the victims of the terrible tragedies” that rocked the capital in 2014 and 2015, adding that he wanted “to give hope to the surviving family members”.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo initially said the multi-coloured sculpture would be installed for all to see opposite the Eiffel Tower and in front of the Palais de Tokyo and the Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris near Trocadéro.   

She hailed it as a "symbol of generosity and sharing", which shows "our capital’s ties with the United States are unbreakable”.

The Bouquet of Tulips features a hand holding the huge flowers in a gesture designed to ape the Statue of Liberty grasping her torch.

However, critics failed to see eye to eye with the mayor.

In an op-ed in Libération newspaper, some 23 figures from France’s art and culture world slammed the choice of a prime location – at the heart of the city’s modern and contemporary art offerings – adding that the museums had no symbolic connection with the Paris attacks.

While Mr Koons was a "brilliant and inventive" artist in the 1980s, he had since morphed into a symbol of "industrial", assembly-line art, they scoffed.

Françoise Nyssen, the culture minister, pledged to find a home for the sculpture at a location that was "popular, visible and shared by everyone”, while the mayor has defended her choice and has been backed by the French government.

"Can you just imagine the international controversy if the city had told the Americans ‘We don’t want your present?’," she said.

After months of dithering, on Friday, Christophe Girard, Paris’ deputy mayor in charge of culture announced that the sculpture would no doubt be installed in the municipal gardens of the of the Beaux-Arts museum in the Petit Palais, opposite the Grand Palais by the Champs-Elysées.

He said the position near the American Embassy was “a very strong symbol and a reaffirmation of our friendship with the American people”.

"We were split between various options… but Jeff Koons never changed his mind about wanting it in the centre of Paris, near where the attacks took place," he added.

Private foundations would pay for installation but as for its upkeep, Parisian taxpayers would foot the bill, he said.

Mr Koons was the subject of controversy of a different kind last month in Paris, where he was accused in court of plagiarising an iconic French clothing advertisement for one of his celebrated sculptures, Fait d’Hiver.

Advertising creative director Franck Davidovici sued Mr Koons, among the world’s most bankable living artists, for €300,000 (£270,000) for copyright infringement, saying he had produced what his lawyer called a “servile copy” of a famous advertising campaign he ran in 1985 for French clothing brand Naf-Naf.

A verdict is due on November 8.

 

A note from the editor: Jelly Deals is a deals site launched by our parent company, Gamer Network, with a mission to find the best bargains out there. Look out for the Jelly Deals roundup of reduced-price games and kit every Saturday on Eurogamer.

One of the stranger decisions the Pokémon Company has made as of late – though not an unwelcome one – is the invention of Detective Pikachu, a Sherlock Holmes-type figure that forgoes the familiar ‘Pika Pika’ dialogue Pikachus of the past have relied on, in favour of a full speaking role. There’s even a Detective Pikachu movie on the way, starring Ryan Reynolds as the titular lightning mouse.

As far as video games go, though, 23rd March sees the release of the Detective Pikachu 3DS game alongside an extra large amiibo of the master sleuth himself. As amiibo tend to have a nasty habit of selling out well before actually making it onto shelves, I figured it would be a good time to give you a heads up.

Head to Nintendo UK’s official store today and you can pre-order yourself one of these oversized Detective Pikachu amiibo for £19.99. Sadly, this one doesn’t talk. If you’re quite taken with the idea of the game, you can pre-order the ‘Detective Pikachu Fan Pack’ for £34.99, which comes with a copy of the game, a keyring and a set of stickers.

Elsewhere on Nintendo’s online store, the 8-bit Link amiibo is back in stock for the first time in a little while, and can be yours for £11. The SNES Classic Edition stock seems to be holding steady for now as well; one of those will cost you £69.99.

If your thirst for video game related stuff isn’t quite quenched just yet, you can head over to Jelly Deals and check out our guide to the best retro gaming gifts or even the best Nintendo Switch accessories. At least one of those articles contains a plush Lemming, just for the record.

Tourists landed by the boatload Friday on the Philippines’ Boracay island, which re-opened with a slew of new rules after a six-month shutdown aimed at undoing the impact of years of unrestrained mass tourism.

Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippine president, shuttered the tiny white-sand island in April, declaring it a "cesspool" where businesses flushed raw sewage into the once pristine turquoise waters and trash soiled in beaches.

Among the first to land after the government threw open the doors just past dawn were first-timers attracted by the prospect of a spruced up, less crowded island.

Once a quiet hideaway favoured by backpackers, the tiny island was transformed by overdevelopment into a mass destination seeing some two million visitors per year.

Under the new regime, the beachfront is cleared of the masseuses, vendors, bonfires and even the builders of its famous photo-op sandcastles that once crowded it.

All water sports save for swimming are also banned for the time being, while Boracay’s three casinos have been permanently shut down in line with Mr Duterte’s wishes.

Buildings were bulldozed and businesses pushed back to create a 30-metre (98-foot) buffer zone from the waterline.

Away from the water the sound of machinery and hammering echoed in the air as resorts made improvements to meet new requirements and crews toiled away on a widened main road.

Boracay, which major travel magazines consistently rate as among the world’s best beaches, measures a mere 1,000 hectares (2,470 acres).

Yet it was seeing up to 40,000 sun worshippers at peak times, with tourists spending $1 billion (£780,455) a year but also leaving mountains of garbage and overwhelming the sewage system.

The new rules say 19,200 tourists will be allowed on the island at any one time, with the government aiming to enforce that by controlling the number of available hotel rooms.

Scores of hotels and restaurants were ordered to close because they did not meet standards, while just under 160 tourism-related businesses have been approved to re-open.

Drinking and smoking are banned and the huge multi-day beach parties dubbed "LaBoracay" that drew tens of thousands of tourists during the May 1 Labour Day weekend will be a thing of the past.

The Boracay Foundation, the main business industry group on the island, said the sector supports the new regulations aimed at cleaning up the resort.

"The rules and ordinances are really perfect… it’s just a matter of implementation," its executive director Pia Miraflores told AFP.

"For a long time we’ve been asking for the political will to implement the rules and regulations," she added.

Tens of thousands of workers were left unemployed when the island’s tourism machine was deprived of visitors. They cheered as the guests began to arrive.

14.86m Nintendo Switch consoles have now been sold worldwide since the platform’s launch in March last year.

The figures, announced this morning by Nintendo, are impressive – but especially notable as Switch has now eclipsed lifetime sales of its failed predecessor Wii U.

To put this in perspective, Wii U sold 13.5m units in five years. Switch hit its new 14.86m total in nine months.

Nintendo Switch software is also performing well, with incredibly high attach rates for the console’s biggest games.

Super Mario Odyssey has sold a whopping 9.07m copies since its launch in October (that’s comfortably more than Star Wars Battlefront 2 did on PC, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One).

Mario Kart 8 Deluxe has now sold 7.33m, while Zelda: Breath of the Wild is on 6.7m.

With 4.91m sales, Splatoon 2 has surpassed lifetime sales of Splatoon 1.

Exclusives like 1-2 Switch (1.88m), Arms (1.61m) and Xenoblade Chronicles 2 (1.06m) also made it past the million sales mark.

On 3DS, the only notable releases were Pokémon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon, which together managed 7.17m units.

Next up for Nintendo is the job of keeping Switch’s momentum going through 2018. Upcoming games include re-releases of Bayonetta and Bayonetta 2, Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze and Hyrule Warriors, plus new games in the Kirby, Yoshi and Fire Emblem series.