
Elden Ring “fort, night” message perplexes Japanese players and made them actually wait at a fort until nighttime. The “fort, night” message is supposed to be a reference to Fortnite.

There once was a Japanese streamer named Matador (マタドール) who livestreamed Dark Souls 3 with a self-imposed rule to study for 10 hours every time they died in the game. Although the actual livestream took place a few years ago, it’s currently attracting attention both in and out of Japan.

Where are Elden Ring players struggling in the game? And how are they overcoming these obstacles when they get stuck? We sent out a survey to find out.

Metal Gear Solid V’s “9-year coma scene” becomes a meme in Japan, prompting series creator Hideo Kojima to respond. MGSV:TPP came out in 2015, around 7 years ago, so it was probably surprising for Kojima to see that scene suddenly become a meme.

Elden Ring’s early boss Margit is stomping players all around the world. Searching “Margit” in either English or Japanese will bring up tons of users either sharing their pain of defeat or the thrills of victory on Twitter.

Working class life simulator Nobody – The Turnaround demo seeing a large player count on Steam. Players engage in various kinds of manual labor and manufacturing work as the game tries to faithfully recreate a blue-collar lifestyle.

Ryu’s nether regions take center stage in Street Fighter 6 teaser trailer. On ResetEra, one user commented that it looks like he’s hiding a gun.

Nintendo has released the latest update for Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl, Ver.1.2.0, which adds more battle options through the game’s new Colosseum.

There was some confusion in Japan regarding Elden Ring’s streaming guidelines. And FromSoftware made an official statement saying their support team gave an incorrect answer to some of their users who had inquired about uploading of videos and screenshots.

Genshin Impact’s tornado bug is back. The bug causes a character to blast across the sky at high speeds while rotating like a tornado.

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild players use Bomb Arrows to reach outer space. The technique involves slowly climbing upward off the reactions of a bunch of immediately exploding Bomb Arrows.

An odd glitch has been found in Pokémon Legends: Arceus that causes an NPC to swell to an absolutely massive size. As for why it occurs, one theory has to do with the level of detail used to display characters at varying distances.