Dragon Glyphs are collectables you can find in World of Warcraft: Dragonflight. These glyphs are scattered around the Dragon Isles and you can use them to unlock additional dragonriding talents. You unlock your first dragonriding mount soon after arriving in the first new zone so it’s worth keeping an eye out for these to make getting around a little easier.

You’ll generally need to take to the skies to pick up these Dragon Glyphs as they’re often high in the air or pretty much unreachable without the aid of your mount. So if you’re ready to start powering up your flight, here’s where to find every Dragon Glyph in Dragonflight and how to unlock your dragonriding talents.

WoW Dragon Glyphs: How to unlock dragonriding talents 



Source link

World of Warcraft: Dragonflight is doing things a little differently when it comes to getting around the new zones. The new dragonriding feature means you’ll be able to take to the skies from the start instead of having to wait half a year for flying to be unlocked in the new expansion areas.

Dragonriding isn’t like regular flying though. While it’s probably safe to assume that the latter will come to the Dragon Isles later on, you’re going to want to master dragonriding to take advantage of the airborne exploration this new feature offers. So if you’re ready to spread your wings, here’s how to unlock WoW dragonriding, as well as how to customise your mount and level up your riding talents.

How to unlock dragonriding in World of Warcraft 



Source link

When Activision launched Call of Duty: Warzone 2 (opens in new tab) a few weeks back, Warzone 1.0 went temporarily offline while developer Raven Software focused on support for the new game. Raven has its hands busy with flying boats, infinite money glitches, and frequent crashes (opens in new tab) plaguing Warzone 2, but it has kept its promise: as of today Warzone 1.0 is back online, but it has a new name.

Warzone 1 is now called Call of Duty: Warzone Caldera (opens in new tab). It’s pretty much the same Warzone it was a few weeks ago, but with major features missing. There’s only one map now (Caldera) and two playlist options, battle royale Quads and Solos. All of Warzone’s existing weapons, custom classes, and unlocks remain intact, but there is no new battle pass or any way to unlock old battle pass content. Warzone Caldera is now essentially a Call of Duty game from before the service game era—an island of content with no roadmap or major updates in the works. A battle royale locked in time.



Source link


The PlayStation Store has two massive year-end sales discounting hundreds of AAA and indie games on PlayStation 4 and 5 right now. The End of Year sale features a ton of popular games, including some titles from 2022. Meanwhile, the PlayStation Indies sale includes a lot of gems across a wide variety of genres for cheap. Both events run through December 21 and include some of the best-selling PlayStation games, new and old, for as much as 80% off.

There are more than 1,000 items included in the sales so we can’t list all the discounts, but there are some enticing offers like the Resident Evil 2 Remake for $10 (normally $40), or Dragon Ball FighterZ for $9 (down from $60). You can also snag premium versions of games like Yakuza: Like A Dragon Legendary Hero Edition for $31.49 (down from $90), Far Cry 5: Game of the Year Edition for $48 (normally $120), or Doom Eternal: Deluxe Edition for $17.49 (normally $70).

There are also a few recently released titles on sale like Gotham Knights and Sonic Frontiers, as well as multi-game bundles like this Star Wars Triple Pack that includes Jedi: Fallen Order, Star Wars Squadrons, and Battlefront II: Celebration Edition for $22.49 (discounted from $90). Or the Assassin’s Creed Mythology Pack with Assassin’s Creed Origins, Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, and Assassin’s Creed Valhalla for $48 total (normally $160). And that’s not to mention all the discounted DLC and season passes for games like Dead by Daylight, Mortal Kombat 11, Guilty Gear Strive, and more. In some cases, PS Plus members can get an additional discount on these sale prices.

As for the indie discounts, Death’s Door is on sale for $10 (normally $20), Outlast 2 is down to just $3 (normally $30), and Inside is available for $5 (down from $20).

We rounded up some of our favorite deals from the PlayStation Store’s End of Year and Indies sales to give you a glimpse of what’s on offer, but be sure to check out the PlayStation Store to see the hundreds of other items discounted over the next few weeks.

PlayStation Store End of Year Deals

  • Assassin’s Creed Valhalla (PS4 and PS5) — $19.79 ($60)
  • Bloodborne – Complete Edition Bundle (PS4) — $17.49 ($35)
  • Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (PS4) — $19.79 ($60)
  • Control: Ultimate Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $12 ($40)
  • Dead Cells (PS4) — $15 ($25)
  • Death’s Door (PS4 and PS5) — $10 ($20)
  • Doom Eternal Deluxe Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $17.49 ($70)
  • Dragon Ball FighterZ (PS4) — $9 ($60)
  • God of War Digital Deluxe Edition (PS4) — $15 ($30)
  • Gotham Knights: Deluxe (PS5) — $49.49 ($90)
  • Far Cry 6 Game of the Year Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $48 ($120)
  • Immortals Fenyx Rising (PS4 and PS5) — $15 ($60)
  • LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga Deluxe Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $35 ($70)
  • Limbo (PS4) — 2.49 ($10)
  • Outlast 2 (PS4) — $3 ($30)
  • Pumpkin Jack (PS4 and PS5) — $13.49 ($30)
  • The Quarry – Deluxe Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $40 ($80)
  • Resident Evil 2 (PS4 and PS5) — $10 ($40)
  • Saints Row: The Third Remastered — $10 ($40)
  • Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove (PS4) — $20.79 ($40)
  • Sonic Frontiers: Digital Deluxe Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $49 ($70)
  • Soul Hackers 2 Digital Deluxe Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $34 ($70)
  • We Happy Few (PS4) — $6 ($60)
  • Yakuza: Like a Dragon Legendary Hero Edition (PS4 and PS5) — $31.49 ($90)

The products discussed here were independently chosen by our editors. GameSpot may get a share of the revenue if you buy anything featured on our site.



Source link

I’m a thousand feet above The Forbidden Reach, with elemental wind buffeting my dragon-like wings. I’ve flown in World of Warcraft (opens in new tab) many times before, but you could hardly call that flying compared to the Dracthyr’s racial Soar ability, which is like a baby version of the full dragon riding system that will be available when the expansion launches. There’s a palpable sense of momentum and wind resistance, and I can’t simply hover in midair indefinitely. Seeing that I’m just about over my next quest target on the minimap, I go into a hard dive toward the cold ground. I want to try something.

Moments before I would have met the horizon line and made a nice reptile purée, I tap the button to break out of the soaring animation and immediately smash the key for my new Deep Breath ability, still in midair. Without skipping a beat, I unfold my wings again and perform a fiery strafing run that devastates the unfortunate enemies who never even saw me coming.

“What just happened??” I excitedly ask my dog sleeping a couple feet away, who doesn’t know the answer and doesn’t care.

Highway to the danger zone

In that moment, I really had to check myself: Wait, this is World of Warcraft? That completely bonkers aerial maneuver I just pulled took place in a practically ancient MMO that I started playing 18 years ago, when the height of adventure was watching my human character auto-attack wolves with a stick? I have mixed feelings about WoW: Dragonflight’s back-to-basics philosophy (opens in new tab). But I have to hand it to Blizzard with my big, scaly claw: stuff like this makes Azeroth feel new again.



Source link

Popular streamer Guy “Dr Disrespect” Breahm, who’s largely built his brand on playing and trashing Call of Duty in equal measure, has had his CoD account suspended for a week after being disrespectful in proximity chat. His connection to the series is not just streaming, but includes a stint at Sledgehammer Games in the early 2010s, during which he worked as a level designer on Advanced Warfare. As any viewer of his streams may know, Dr Disrespect is perhaps the ultimate exemplar of bro-hard culture: swearing and trash talk are a huge part of his brand and appeal.

Which of course is not a licence to behave however you will, though the streamer gives an “I’m not bothered” re-telling that makes clear he is probably quite bothered: the suspension was apparently for calling one or more players a “pussy”. An insulting term and a misogynistic one at that, though it also feels like a harsh thing to be banned for, though it is against Call of Duty’s new code of conduct which explicitly targets “derogatory comments based on […] gender identity”. Players must now agree to this document before playing any of the games.

Call of Duty: MW2's Code of Conduct.

(Image credit: Activision Blizzard)

“I should probably chill on this account champs,” Dr Disrespect says while playing Warzone 2. “I mean with the proximity chat. This is not even my account. They banned my other one for seven days for proximity chat use. Believe it or not champs.”



Source link


Call of Duty: Warzone 2.0 has been out for a couple of weeks now and, unsurprisingly, is bringing back a lot of Warzone vibes with the sheer number of issues players are finding. There is a necessary caveat here, which is that fanbases tend to circulate this stuff in a kind of ‘end of days’ mood, bemoaning how rife with hackers the game is, when in reality many glitches cannot be reliably replicated, are not widespread, and in some cases are being exaggerated for effect.

The bugs are definitely out there though, and the whack-a-mole has begun in earnest as players find exploits and the game’s developers rush to fix them. Yes, players are still Superman-ing it around the place, leading this exasperated player to ask “what in the flying squirrel fuck is this.”

what_in_the_flying_squirrel_fuck_is_this_god_i from r/CODWarzone


Source link

Starship Troopers: Extermination (opens in new tab) is an upcoming squad-based co-op FPS that puts players in the boots of the Deep Space Vanguard, an elite special forces group of the Mobile Infantry, which has been sent to the planet Valaka to stomp hordes of bloodthirsty bugs.

The game will feature three playable classes—Assault, Defense, and Support—and five unique Arachnid enemies when it launches into early access next year. Players will do battle on a “massive map” with five unique zones, constructible defenses—walls, towers, that sort of thing—and different mission types that will unfold over an escalating ground war. “Service guarantees citizenship,” and it will also unlock new weapons, equipment, and perks for each class through the game’s character progression system.



Source link


We’ve previously introduced you to the world of Floodland and the priorities you’ll have in this flooded post-apocalypse. The game is out now on Steam and, for those brave enough to dive into what could be the Earth’s future, here are some tips to help you build a thriving (or at least surviving) haven on the waves.

But survival in Floodland is about more than just learning to fish or putting a roof over peoples’ heads. It’s about those people getting on and, when they don’t, managing disagreements in such a way that they don’t fester and become bigger problems. Everyone would agree that a society needs laws but, in a desperate situation where everything’s on the line, people fall into clans and disputes that, ultimately, you’ll have to settle – one way or the other – and with consequences that will be remembered. 



Source link


I’m smitten with my new Dracthyr Evoker—a big blue boy who’s thrown his lot in with the Horde. But this honeymoon period has not been without its bumps. Really it’s just one bump. The Dracthyr can’t really take advantage of World of Warcraft’s gargantuan wardrobe. This has been a big issue for me, given that playing dress-up is half the reason I’ve spent so much time in MMOs. 

There’s a reason you get to customise your Evoker’s armour before you start your adventure in Dragonflight (opens in new tab): you’re not going to get many more opportunities. When you get your hands on some new mail armour, you’ll notice that your appearance hardly changes at all. And all those transmog options you’ve unlocked? No longer available. It’s not a bug, it’s just the price for looking like a draconic badass. 



Source link