Tag: strategy’
Minecraft Legends is a colourful mix of real-time strategy and snappy building
Minecraft Legends was first announced at Geoff Fest earlier this year, and a smidge more footage dropped again at a Nintendo Direct Mini. But despite both of these events, it’s been difficult to ascertain what the game actually, well, is. Aside from being a real-time strategy spin-off, there’s been nothing else to scan with our eyeballs for more info.
Colour me intrigued, then, as I sat in a quickfire presentation at this year’s Gamescom and bore witness to some mythical gameplay. I can now report that what Minecraft Legends appears to be is as mix of real-time strategy and building, made all the more approachable by being set in Minecraft’s colourful cube-verse.
Amid a changing landscape, Macy’s (M) gears up to change its strategy for the remainder of 2022
Shares of Macy’s Inc. (NYSE: M) were down over 3% on Wednesday. The stock has dropped 29% year-to-date and 21% over the past 12 months. On Tuesday, the company reported […]
The post Amid a changing landscape, Macy’s (M) gears up to change its strategy for the remainder of 2022 first appeared on AlphaStreet.
Holy heck, there are a lot of strategy RPGs on PC now
What’s your favorite thing a unit in a strategy game says when you click on them?
How Stellaris has taken on new life over its six-year strategy journey
Galactic alliances aren’t built in a day, a month or even a year, to warp a comfortingly familiar phrase from 90s telly. Interplanetary 4X Stellaris has been evolving for more than six years now, having first released on May 9th 2016. Unusually, I remember exactly when I bought the game, because it was in the days just before my partner and I welcomed our first child. Being a ginormous sci-fi nerd, I enthusiastically downloaded it thinking I’d have all the space-time in the universe to invest in building my own interstellar superpower.
I did dip my toes in back then, and have many, many times since, but rather naively didn’t foresee the inevitable. The structure of my life altered dramatically with the arrival of our baby. It didn’t stop there either, and still hasn’t, taking on some unfamiliar but just about recognisable form every few months. I suspect the developers of Stellaris had a similar feeling following the game’s release into the wider universe, like Kubrick’s giant cosmic infant at the end of 2001: A Space Odyssey. I know I’ve felt like my furniture’s been rearranged whenever I’ve started a new game of Stellaris with a different civilisation over the intervening years.
’90s strategy king MicroProse is back with a Cold War blend of wargaming and RTS
Intel VP talks AI strategy as company takes on Nvidia
Meet John Kirk, Chief Strategy Officer at Team ITG
What’s the mentality behind the success of Team ITG? Our founder, Simon Ward, spotted a gap in the market for…
The post Meet John Kirk, Chief Strategy Officer at Team ITG appeared first on TechRound.
Meta’s anti-misinformation strategy for the 2022 midterms is mostly a repeat of 2020
Meta has outlined its strategy for combatting misinformation during the 2022 US midterm elections, and they’ll mostly sound familiar if you remember the company’s 2020 approach. The Facebook and Instagram owner said it will maintain policies and protections “consistent” with the presidential election, including policies barring vote misinformation and linking people to trustworthy information. It will once again ban political ads during the last week of the election campaign. This isn’t quite a carbon copy, however, as Meta is fine-tuning its methods in response to lessons learned two years ago.
To start, Meta is “elevating” post comments from local elections officials to make sure reliable polling information surfaces in conversations. The company is also acknowledging concerns that it used info labels too often in 2020 — for the 2022 midterms, it’s planning to show labels in a “targeted and strategic way.”
Meta’s update comes just days after Twitter detailed its midterm strategy, and echoes the philosophy of its social media rival. Both are betting that their 2020 measures were largely adequate, and that it’s just a question of refining those systems for 2022.
Whether or not that’s true is another matter. In a March 2021 study, advocacy group Avaaz said Meta didn’t do enough to stem the flow of misinformation and allowed billions of views for known false content. Whistleblower Frances Haugen also maintains that Meta has generally struggled to fight bogus claims, and it’s no secret that Meta had to extend its ban on political ads after the 2020 vote. Facebook didn’t catch some false Brazilian election ads, according to Global Witness. Meta won’t necessarily deal with serious problems during the midterms, but it’s not guaranteed a smooth ride.