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Final Fantasy VII Revelation announced, coming spring 2027, launches simultaneously on all platforms
Square Enix has officially revealed new details about the third and final game in the FF7 Remake series at Summer Game Fest 2026, confirming the game's subtitle as Revelation.
Final Fantasy VII Revelation will launch Spring 2027, with a simultaneous cross-platform release on consoles and PC, including Xbox and even the Nintendo Switch 2. Square Enix says that Revelation will be the ultimate entry in the series, with the new hybrid battle design being "perfected" at the trilogy's end alongside new features like the FITS system.
"The central theme of this title is resolve. Cloud and his companions each confront their own destinies and find the resolve to march towards the final battle," game director Naoki Hamaguchi said on stage.
Former God of War combat designer joins The Witcher 4 development team
Both The Witcher and God of War are having quite a week. Sony just revealed God of War: Laufey at its State of Play on June 2, putting Santa Monica Studio back in the spotlight. And over at CD Projekt Red, the studio is gearing up to launch three Witcher games in six years. It turns out the two franchises now share more than just a good week's worth of headlines.
It looks like Jacqueline Kate Salsman, a former senior combat designer at Santa Monica Studio, has joined CDPR as an Expert Gameplay Designer and is currently working on The Witcher 4. The hire was spotted through her LinkedIn profile and is generating buzz for an obvious reason: combat has long been the soft underbelly of the Witcher series.
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is rightly considered one of the greatest open-world games ever made. The world, the writing, and the side quests are all legendary and have gathered critical acclaim. However, ask any honest fan about the combat, and you'll get a polite grimace. Geralt's swordplay felt clunky and shallow compared to everything else the game did brilliantly. CDPR clearly knows this, and it looks like they're finally doing something about it.
Continue reading: Former God of War combat designer joins The Witcher 4 development team (full post)
SK Hynix plans to double wafer production capacity by 2030 as chairman warns AI will keep memory tight
At Computex 2026 in Taipei, SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won confirmed that the company plans to double its total wafer production capacity within five years, driven by AI demand that he expects to keep memory supply tight through 2030.
"We are going to double the whole capacity over the next five years. There are a lot of obstacles and hurdles, but we will get over them and expand," Chey told reporters. He added that the company would provide whatever funding was required to support the expansion, saying simply, "Whatever we need, we'll provide it."
According to Bloomberg, SK Hynix currently produces around 550,000 DRAM wafers per month, including approximately 200,000 from its Wuxi fab in China. The target is to reach roughly 1 million wafers per month by 2030 to 2031.
AMD hits an all-time high x86 CPU market share record, now holding a third of the server market
AMD has hit an all-time high in overall x86 CPU market share, reaching 32.6% in Q1 2026, according to Mercury Research. A year ago, that number was 27.1%, meaning AMD has gained nearly 6 percentage points in a single year. Intel still leads with 67.4%, but that figure is down from 72.9% a year ago and down sequentially from 68.6% last quarter.
The server market is where AMD's momentum is most visible. The company now holds 33.2% of x86 server CPU shipments, up from 27.2% a year ago and 30% last quarter, meaning AMD now controls roughly a third of a market Intel has long dominated. Overall server CPU unit shipments were more than 10% higher year-on-year, driven almost entirely by AI data center demand. Intel's server shipments remained relatively flat both sequentially and year-on-year. A separate Mercury Research report previously showed that AMD's EPYC CPUs accounted for 46.2% of total server CPU spending in Q1 2026.
AMD's unit shipments increased by nearly 17% year over year, while Intel's declined by more than 10%, a gap that explains the five-and-a-half-point swing in overall share over the same period. Last year, Intel decided to allocate more production capacity to server chips, which had a knock-on effect on other product lines, and AMD benefited. Across the entire x86 processor market, AMD also secured close to a third of all shipments. Worth noting is that this figure includes console SoCs, where AMD has a near-monopoly. Stripping those out, AMD's share of the broader CPU market stood at 30%, still up from 29.3% in the previous quarter and 24.4% year on year.
Tupac Shakur stars in new Stranger Than Heaven video game coming early 2027
SEGA is making a new gangster game, and has conscripted two of the most iconic OGs to make it happen.
SEGA dropped one of the biggest surprises at this year's Summer Game Fest, revealing that the likeness of iconic rapper Tupac Shakur will star in RGG Studio's new gangster drama Stranger Than Heaven. The game is a colorful and gritty period crime drama set across five time periods and locations in Japan, from 1915 in Fukuoka to 1965 in Tokyo.
At the SGF event, Snoop Dogg, who is already starring in Stranger Than Heaven, worked closely with Tupac Shakur's estate to bring him into the game: "The Tupac estate and my son and myself, we work very closely together. So it just made sense to put him in this game, because his likeness and his spirit still lives on, I just felt like it was so connected to what we're doing."
Resident Evil Code Veronica remake announced by Capcom, coming 2027
Capcom has announced a new Resident Evil Code Veronica remake set to launch in 2027, and it could be out before March.
Resident Evil Veronica was announced at this year's Summer Game Fest, confirming recent rumors and reports. While Capcom didn't share specific details on the new project, the short 3-minute trailer showcased the graphical fidelity and prowess of the RE Engine, dramatically overhauling the original Dreamcast SD game to a 4K-ready thriller.
Capcom recently confirmed it had more unannounced projects to launch in its FY26 timeline, and Resident Evil Veronica is a big one. There's a chance that Veronica could slip outside of the fiscal, but if it doesn't, the game should launch between January and March 2027. This is a favored launch timing for Capcom and the company routinely releases big games during the early calendar year months.
Continue reading: Resident Evil Code Veronica remake announced by Capcom, coming 2027 (full post)
Maxsun brings Intel Panther Lake and Wildcat Lake to desktop motherboards with two new MoDT designs
Maxsun has become the first PC manufacturer to bring Intel's Panther Lake and Wildcat Lake mobile processors to desktop motherboards, unveiling two new MoDT (Mobile on Desktop) designs at Computex 2026. These chips are already available on laptops and Mini PCs, but the Chinese board maker is the first to start making Mobile-on-Desktop motherboards with them.
First reported by Wccftech, the more capable of the two boards is the SK-PTLNAS, built around Intel's Core Ultra Series 3 Panther Lake platform. While the board is designed for NAS systems, it follows the ATX standard and can be installed in any regular desktop case.
The unit shown on the Computex floor was running a Core Ultra 7 356H, an 8-core, 8-thread chip with 4Xe3 integrated GPU cores, though Maxsun confirmed the board can scale up to the flagship Core Ultra X9 388H. TDP is maintained at 65W with power delivered through a single 8-pin connector.
Intel Arc desktop GPUs are here to stay, according to an Intel exec
Intel's discrete desktop GPU ambitions are alive, at least according to one of its top executives. At a media Q&A during Computex 2026 in Taiwan, Intel EVP and GM of Client Computing Alex Katouzian was asked directly by Tweakers about the future of Arc desktop graphics cards.
He said that desktop GPUs remain a "super important" part of the company's PC lineup, pointing to gaming as a major revenue driver across both mobile and desktop. He also said Intel is seeing good traction with its GPU cores, and that gamers and game engine developers are actively working with the company.
Despite Alex's optimism, the comments come at an awkward time. The Battlemage generation only produced two gaming desktop cards, the Arc B580 and B570, and the long-rumored "Big Battlemage" Arc B770 has still not materialized. The B770 was expected to drop this year, but Intel chose to limit that SKU to the professional and workstation market.
Continue reading: Intel Arc desktop GPUs are here to stay, according to an Intel exec (full post)
Capcom still has secret games planned for this year, and is thinking about turning Pragmata into a franchise
Capcom's newly-published Q&A with investors shows the company is thinking about turning Pragmata into a fully-fledged franchise, and that there are multiple mystery games in the pipeline for this year.
Any games company that needs a crash course on maximizing game sales should pay close attention to Capcom. The Japanese publisher has enjoyed years of continued profit growth thanks to its exceptional new-to-catalog conversion process. Capcom is one of the most adept publishers in the industry at maintaining and carefully curating its catalog content, and as new games release, they are rotated into this sales-acceleration model, which is often driven by steep discounts across digital stores to move a high volume of units--over 59 million in FY25.
In a recent Q&A with investors, Capcom says that it has more games than Pragmata and Onimusha: Way of the Sword planned for this fiscal year. That makes sense, because the firm has to always keep the momentum of releases going year after year, and launching new titles is the first step before the games rotate into the lucrative, business-driving software catalog.
Xbox will 'reset' in the next 100 days, CEO to focus on affordable products and smart investments
Xbox CEO Asha Sharma plans to reset the business in the next 100 days, right-sizing investments, re-evaluating game exclusivity, and focusing on affordable content and hardware.
Asha Sharma just passed her first 100 days leading Xbox. In that time, Sharma has roused excitement around the brand, made some hefty promises about the future of consoles and even discussed the return of exclusivity, and made radical changes to Game Pass. But it's the next quarter that will bring the most change at Xbox.
In a recent interview with Bloomberg Technology, Sharma spoke about 'resetting' the future of Xbox, giving fans an idea of what to expect moving forward. It sounds like Xbox will change what it spends money on, including which games get greenlit, and start focusing more intently on "making affordable products" in the days of the RAMpocalypse.
NVIDIA's Jensen Huang meets T1 Esports team and Faker, gifts a signed RTX 5090
After rocking Computex 2026 with the extremely impressive, and likely intensely expensive RTX Spark, NVIDIA's Jensen Huang has flown over to South Korea to meet the iconic League of Legends Esports team, T1.
It was only a day ago that Huang was spotted on the Computex 2026 showroom floor, meeting media, exhibitors, and companies while simultaneously digging through an editor's wallet for NTD banknotes to sign and hand out to showgirls. Notably, Huang returned the favor to the editor by repaying him with NTD$10,000, a signed NTD$1,000 note, and a signed wallet.
Keeping in the same lane as signatures, when Huang visited the T1 Esports team and met Faker, Doran, Oner, Peyz, and Keria, he gifted a signed GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card. Additionally, Huang held up a signed Faker jersey while declaring that South Korea is the birthplace of Esports and that he is a T1 fan. The meeting with the T1 team is ahead of Huang's visit to several South Korean companies, including Samsung, SK Group, LG, and others producing components powering AI, robotics, and data centers.
Valve confirms how much more powerful the Steam Machine is than the Steam Deck
Valve has published an update on the highly anticipated Steam Machine, which will be the PC company's foray into the console space, but as a PC/console hybrid.
In the update, posted to the Steamworks Documentation website, Valve explains the upcoming PC/console hybrid will be powered by a discrete semi-custom AMD desktop-class CPU, which we know will be AMD Zen 4-based, and a semi-custom AMD RDNA 3 GPU. Valve will target 4K 60FPS in select titles on the Steam Machine, while developers must hit at least 1080p at 30FPS to receive a Steam Machine verification badge.
As for the Steam Machine's power, Valve hasn't released any performance metrics, and the device's performance hasn't been independently verified through extensive testing. However, Valve did give us a hint of what we can expect from Steam Machine performance, as the company wrote in the Steamworks Documentation update that the Steam Machine will be approximately six times more powerful than the Steam Deck.
Steam Machine price is 'nowhere near' what Valve originally planned
After confirming that the Steam Machine and Steam Frame will launch this summer, the next question gamers want to know is how much Valve will charge for the PC that looks like a console.
Valve took to its official blog to announce that it's expanding the Verified program to include Steam Machine and Steam Frame, along with a confirmation that it will be shipping both "this summer". For those who don't know, the Steam Machine is a small-form-factor PC that runs SteamOS, a Valve-developed operating system optimized for gaming.
While this all sounds fantastic, the burning question is how much Valve plans to charge for the PC/console hybrid, especially given the company's target of 4K at 60FPS in most games. However, for a title to receive a Verified badge for the Steam Machine, it will need to run at a minimum of 1080p 30FPS on the Steam Machine hardware, which will be a semi-custom AMD RDNA 3 GPU paired with a semi-custom AMD Zen 4 processor.
Continue reading: Steam Machine price is 'nowhere near' what Valve originally planned (full post)
Noctua's Pulsar Feinmann F01 gaming mouse is coming soon, and it's got an embedded fan for the sweaty gamer
Noctua has long been known as a maker of exceptional cooling products, but at Computex 2026, it showed it's finally ready to branch out into the realm of AiO coolers and peripherals. The company showed off its production-ready gaming mouse: The Pulsar Feinmann F01 Noctua Edition. It's not the first time this mouse has been seen publicly, but the difference now is that the unit is scheduled to release later in June or July.
The F01 is developed in partnership with Pulsar, incorporating Noctua's signature beige and maroon colors. It's very light at just 73g, but perhaps the most interesting aspect is the inclusion of a NF-A4x10 5V PWM fan that provides quiet airflow towards your palm, with a very low power draw. It has a motion sensor, so the fan stops spinning when you take your hand off it to conserve power. The fan speed can be adjusted via buttons or a driver, with 5 different levels available.
The Pulsar Feinmann F01 features a carbon composite exoskeleton and a USB-C port for charging. It has the XS-2 42000 DPI sensor with an 8K polling rate.
AMD denies rumors of not bringing FSR 4.1 to RDNA 3.5 integrated GPUs, decision still up in the air
A report out of Computex 2026 sparked concern this week after German publication HardwareLuxx cited AMD Corporate VP David McAfee as saying FSR 4.1 is "not planned" for RDNA 3.5 integrated graphics, with the decision leaning toward a firm no. This is an interesting stance from the company that recently expanded FSR 4.1 support to older GPUs, but then chooses to leave out select iGPUs.
The story was quickly picked up by VideoCardz and others, and for good reason. RDNA 3.5 covers a wide range of AMD silicon, including Strix Point, Strix Halo, Krackan Point, and upcoming refreshes like Gorgon Point and Gorgon Halo, all of which power gaming laptops, handheld PCs, and Copilot+ devices. Integrated GPUs like the Radeon 890M and Radeon 8060S fall into this family, and both can run the INT8 operations required by FSR 4.1.
That's what made the rumor sting. When AMD confirmed FSR 4.1 support for older Radeon GPUs in mid-May, it named the RX 7000 and RX 6000 series but made no mention of integrated graphics based on RDNA 3.5. Part of FSR 4.1's appeal was always its breadth. Unlike NVIDIA's DLSS, which is locked to GeForce hardware with dedicated Tensor cores, FSR is open and software-based, designed to run across a wide range of GPUs, including integrated ones.
Xbox 'must have exclusive content,' CEO Asha Sharma says exclusives to be selected on thoughtful case-by-case basis
Exclusivity is coming back to Xbox in some form as CEO Asha Sharma reiterates the importance of must-have content that's only available on one platform, but no specifics have been revealed yet.
Microsoft's break from game exclusivity has significantly benefited the Xbox business, boosting game sales and per-quarter revenues. But Xbox hardware is a different story, and de-anchoring exclusive software further weakened Microsoft's already-compromised presence in the console market. While previous management took a more aggressive approach to multi-platform, Xbox's new CEO Asha Sharma is open to exclusivity and wants to use it to help strengthen the platform as a whole.
"I think exclusivity is a tough topic. Look, we're the #2 publisher in the world, and in order to be a great publisher you must have your games reach large audiences to play. At the same time, we're increasingly becoming a platform, in order to be a platform, you must have exclusive content and services," the Xbox exec said in a recent interview with Bloomberg Technology.
Valve reveals Steam Machine launch window, confirms easy compatibility with Steam Deck verified games
Valve will ship its new Steam Machine console PC and Steam Frame VR headset this summer, the company today confirmed.
With the new $99 Steam Controller already out, Valve is preparing to launch its next hardware duo in the coming months. Both devices are set to launch sometime in summer 2026, Valve says, which is technically a span ranging between late June and late September.
"Today we are expanding the Verified program to include Steam Machine and Steam Frame, both of which are shipping this summer. As with Steam Deck Verified, the goal is to help customers understand the out-of-box experience for a given title on these new devices, and how smoothly a game will run with no user work or configuration required."
Amazon clarifies statements on future James Bond games, says it has 'great relationship' with 007 First Light developer
Today's PR fiasco with Amazon is a great lesson in industry politics, and why insulting a potentially lucrative business partner is probably a bad idea.
An Amazon gaming lead today found themselves in hot water when their statements fueled some pretty eye-catching headlines. In a recent interview with Polygon, Amazon Games general manager Jeff Gattis gave an 'um actually' explanation on the new 007 First Light game, saying that Amazon wasn't involved in that project and reminding everyone that new games in the series would theoretically be handled by MGM and Amazon Games.
It wasn't a good look, especially since 007 First Light is a hugely successful AAA release for the aging legacy property. It's been 14 years since the last dedicated James Bond game released, and First Light has become a platinum success shortly after launch with a strong 1.5 million sales in 24 hours. Gattis' implication that Amazon could technically take away James Bond from IO Interactive at a moment's notice simply isn't a great way to maintain a relationship with one of the most talented and proven third-person action sim developers in the industry.
Intel's upcoming LGA1954 socket makes an appearance with a dual retention mechanism
More and more information is starting to appear regarding Intel's upcoming Nova Lake-S desktop platform. During Computex week, tech YouTuber Laurent's Choice (LC Tech Leaks) posted a photo on X showing what appears to be Intel's upcoming LGA1954 socket, captured somewhere in Taipei. No board vendor was named, and it's likely an early engineering sample floating around with a motherboard manufacturer, but the image is real enough to confirm some key details.
The most immediately noticeable thing from the photo is the retention mechanism. Intel is going with a 2L-ILM design, short for two-lever independent loading mechanism. That's a notable departure from the single-lever setup on LGA1851. The dual-lever design distributes the clamping load more evenly across the processor, which is intended to keep the IHS flat and improve contact with your cooler, directly translating into better thermal performance.
It's essentially Intel addressing "bendgate" at the socket level rather than leaving it to users with aftermarket retention kits. Not every Nova Lake CPU in the lineup will require it, so the 2L-ILM is expected to be optional depending on the board.
Elden Ring Tarnished Edition comes to Switch 2 in August, content will be sold as separate DLC on other platforms
FromSoftware has attached a release date and a price tag for its new Elden Ring Tarnished Edition re-release on Switch 2 while also promising all of the extra content will be available on other platforms as DLC.
The new Elden Ring Tarnished Edition will release on August 28, 2026 on Switch 2, Bandai Namco has confirmed.This Tarnished Edition re-release features a bunch of extra content that wasn't available on release, including the addition of two fresh playable character classes--the Heavy Knight and the Knight of Ides--as well as new skills, armor, and weapons.
The extra content will be available to all versions of Elden Ring, including the last-gen versions, for around $3.50 or thereabouts (possibly as high as $5 or so). That's a lot less than we'd expect, especially considering the addition of new classes that could change up gameplay quite a bit.























