How Guilty Gear saved its online play in a post-offline world

We played Guilty Gear Strive’s online beta to see how its netcode holds up

Sol Badguy faces off against Faust in <em>Guilty Gear Strive</em>, the latest entry in the long running fighting game series coming in April

Enlarge / Sol Badguy faces off against Faust in Guilty Gear Strive, the latest entry in the long running fighting game series coming in April

As a huge fighting game fan I'm always excited when a new game comes out. No other genre captures my attention in the same way. The feeling of discovery, the community and competitive spirit—a good release means potentially thousands of hours of playing and learning, not to mention all the sharing and talking with fellow players.

This week I'm excited about Guilty Gear Strive, releasing April 9 on PS4, PS5, and PC. There's an open beta this week, and Ars got early access to try it out, including the newly improved netcode.

I'm happy to report that the beta is already doing the right things to make an online game feel as much like an offline one as possible.

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Spanien will Weltmeister bei der Inhaftierung von Musikern bleiben

Nun wurde der Rapper Pablo Hasél inhaftiert, der sich anders als Valtònyc nicht für den Gang ins Exil entschieden hat, um seine Meinungsfreiheit zu wahren. Kommentar

Nun wurde der Rapper Pablo Hasél inhaftiert, der sich anders als Valtònyc nicht für den Gang ins Exil entschieden hat, um seine Meinungsfreiheit zu wahren. Kommentar

Lilbits: LastPass limitations, Windows battery usage stats, and KDE Plasma 5.21

Popular password manager LastPass offers free and paid tiers. Once upon a time, you had to pay if you wanted to use the mobile LastPass app on your phone, but LastPass for desktop users was free. Then the company removed that limitation. Now it’…

Popular password manager LastPass offers free and paid tiers. Once upon a time, you had to pay if you wanted to use the mobile LastPass app on your phone, but LastPass for desktop users was free. Then the company removed that limitation. Now it’s… sort of back. LastPass has announced that starting in mid-March, you’ll […]

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An anniversary for great justice: Remembering “All Your Base” 20 years later

Back in our day, memes didn’t benefit from centralized services like YouTube, Twitter.

A menacing video game character's dialogue reads

Enlarge (credit: Newgrounds / Aurich Lawson)

As the Internet began crystallizing into its modern form—one that now arguably buttresses society as we know it—its anthropology of common language and references matured at a strange rate. But between the simple initialisms that emerged by the '90s (ROFL!) and the modern world's ecosystem of easily shared multimedia, a patchwork connection of users and sites had to figure out how to establish a base of shared references.

In some ways, the Internet as we know it really began on February 16, 2001, 20 years ago today, when a three-word phrase blew up: "All Your Base."

On that day, a robo-voiced music video went live at Newgrounds.com, one of the Internet's earliest and longest-lasting dumping grounds of Flash multimedia content, and went on to become one of the most beloved Internet videos of the 21st century. Though Flash support has since been scrapped across the entire Web-browsing ecosystem, Newgrounds continues to host the original video in a safe Flash emulator, if you'd like to see it as originally built instead of flipping through dozens of YouTube rips.

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NZ Government Lawyers Spent 40,500 Hours Battling Kim Dotcom and Megaupload

After more than nine years of legal battles, the staggering cost of the various copyright-related cases against Kim Dotcom and Megaupload have now been made public. Government lawyers in New Zealand have spent 40,500 hours working on cases related to Dotcom, in addition to burning through more than US$2.6 million in ancillary costs.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Kim DotcomOn 19 January 2012, the United States Department of Justice seized and shutdown Megaupload, a massive cloud-storage site founded by Kim Dotcom.

On the same day, Dotcom and several of his associates were arrested in New Zealand in a military-style raid on his rented mansion, carried out at the behest of US authorities. Ever since, the United States justice system has fought tooth and nail to have Dotcom, Mathias Ortmann, Finn Batato and Bram van der Kolk extradited. That has proven difficult, to say the least.

Unstoppable Force Meets Immovable Object

Whether US or New Zealand authorities expected a monumental fightback from their targets is unknown. But that is exactly what they got. Rather than backing down, Dotcom’s defense team hasn’t given an inch, with every substantial claim challenged in minute detail, and every counterclaim met with the same determination.

As a result, New Zealand’s courts have been kept busy for more than nine years, expending resources on several cases – many involving extradition matters – that are still not over. But while the outcome of this entire process remains uncertain, there can be no doubt over the scale of financial resources poured into the prosecution of Kim Dotcom.

Until now, only estimates of the true costs involved have been aired in public but thanks to an Official Information Act request and data published by NZ Herald (paywall), the cost to New Zeland’s taxpayers thus far are now up for scrutiny.

New Zealand’s Bill is Substantial and Growing

Earlier estimates of a few thousand hours spent on various Dotcom-related cases seemed to be within reason. However, the latest published figures show that government lawyers have already spent 40,500 hours working on these cases over the past decade. Or, as NZ Herald frames it, if the lawyers had been working 40-hour weeks, the effort exerted would be 19 years and six months.

Worryingly, that’s not the entire financial picture either. The data shows that on top of the 40,500 hours of government lawyer time, extra costs including external legal work, airfares, and general administration, account for an additional NZ$3.6 million (US$2.6 million) in expenditure.

Allocation of Legal Resources

Government spending on the Megaupload matter reportedly began before Dotcom was even arrested. In preparing the case against him, Crown Law – the office that provides legal advice and representation services to the government – had already spent 432 hours working on the case. Then in 2012, 2013, and 2014, more than 7,000 hours were expended each year dealing with the fallout.

And the fallout has been huge. Dotcom’s cases have expanded into an interconnected web of complex processes, dealing with matters such as illegal spying by government agencies through to the extradition case itself. In 2011, Crown Law was prepared for two proceedings. Since then the tally has grown to almost two dozen.

Goliath versus…Goliath?

That a wealthy Pacific nation can afford to continue with expensive litigation over the course of a decade shouldn’t be a surprise but the fact that it is effectively up against the determination and resources of one man should be pause for thought.

Kim Dotcom has occasionally hinted at the scale of his legal bills since 2012, suggesting that they run into the tens of millions of dollars. How he has been managing to pay those bills after the authorities reportedly seized most of his assets isn’t completely clear but as recently as 2015, he was apparently “broke and destitute” and begging the courts for seized assets to be released.

Since then there has been little sign that Dotcom is struggling for cash, with his luxury lifestyle often portrayed on Twitter to the envy of many followers. How much he has spent on lawyers since 2012 isn’t revealed in the latest data but according to NZ Herald’s analysis, matching the New Zealand government’s expenditure would’ve cost Dotcom around NZ$25 million (US$18 million).

Not Over Yet

While Crown Law initially seemed somewhat unprepared for the expansive battle that eventually panned out, the office will have by now got the message that Dotcom isn’t one to back down. Despite all of the money spent on both sides to date, Dotcom is still entrenched in New Zealand and most probably will remain that way for years to come.

Meanwhile, Dotcom is as defiant as ever – both in court and on Twitter, of course.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Daily Deals (2-16-2021)

Presidents’ Day has come and gone… but Lenovo’s Presidents Day sale has not. You can still score some pretty deep discounts on a range of thin and light laptops, along with other PCs, accessories, and gadgets. Meanwhile B&H is of…

Presidents’ Day has come and gone… but Lenovo’s Presidents Day sale has not. You can still score some pretty deep discounts on a range of thin and light laptops, along with other PCs, accessories, and gadgets. Meanwhile B&H is offering discounts on a bunch of not-that-old smartphones, which means you can pick up a OnePlus […]

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Posing as Amazon seller, consumer group investigates fake-review industry

Fake Amazon reviews still sold in bulk—it costs $10,900 for 1,000 reviews.

Cardboard boxes made to resemble Amazon packages, but with the logo in the shape of a frown.

Enlarge / Cardboard boxes made to resemble Amazon packages during a protest outside the home of Amazon Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos in New York on Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2020. (credit: Getty Images / Bloomberg Collection)

Posing as an Amazon seller, a UK consumer group dug into the shady marketplace where fake reviews are sold in bulk by companies promising sellers a quick rise to the top of Amazon's charts.

"In December 2020, we signed up to 10 sites offering review manipulation services, including free or discounted products in exchange for reviews, or sales campaigns for sellers to boost their positive reviews," according to the report published yesterday on Which?, a website run by the Consumers' Association, a UK-based charity that does product research and advocacy on behalf of consumers. The consumer group said it found an army of "702,000 product reviewers across just five businesses" and "one site selling contact and social media details for Amazon reviewers."

One review seller is a German company called AMZTigers. "Amazon prohibits sellers from paying third parties in exchange for reviews, and says that it suspends, bans and takes actions against those who violate these policies. But this is exactly the sort of service AMZTigers offers," the report said. "We posed as an Amazon seller and signed up to find out more. After a short registration, we were assigned an account manager who arranged a call to discuss what we were looking for, including whether we already had stock to sell."

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Microsoft releases new, all-in-one Office app for iPads

The all-in-one iPhone app made a seamless transition to the iPad.

Microsoft yesterday released an all-in-one Office app for iPads, bringing a new approach to Office on mobile previously seen on iOS and Android to iPadOS. The app combines Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and a number of mobile device-specific features, including PDF management tools and a file browser.

A year ago almost to the day, Microsoft released this update to iPhones and Android phones, and the update has appeared on some Android tablets as well. As an iPhone app, it previously ran on iPads but only in a windowed mode of sorts. This new version has a full-screen tablet interface and supports various iPad multitasking features.

Users can still download individual Word, Excel, or PowerPoint apps in the iPad's App Store; the standalone apps and this all-in-one option seem likely to coexist at least for a while, as the standalone alternatives haven't gone away on the iPhone.

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Today’s best tech deals: Hitman 3, 400GB microSD cards, and more

Dealmaster also has Apple’s MagSafe Charger, Roku streamers, and gaming laptops.

Today’s best tech deals: Hitman 3, 400GB microSD cards, and more

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

Today's Dealmaster includes a nifty $10 discount on Hitman 3, with the PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, and cross-gen Xbox versions of the stealth-action game all down to $50 at Amazon and Walmart. While we've seen this deal available for a few weeks, the game itself still only launched less than a month ago, so we figured it was worth highlighting for anyone who planned on picking it up elsewhere (and doesn't mind waiting for a physical copy to ship).

In general, Hitman 3 doesn't stray far from its predecessors but provides another collection of playful and slyly comedic sandboxes in which to goof around. It puts a bit more emphasis on the narrative surrounding globe-trotting assassin Agent 47, which can be hit or miss, but most of its six worlds still give you several avenues to explore on the way to each hit. While this isn't the kind of game that will change anyone's opinion of the series, it's as good a starting point as any for those who've thought about giving the saga a try, since it's possible to download and play the first two installments directly within this latest game. We should also note that anyone who buys the PS4 or Xbox One edition can download a next-gen upgrade at no extra cost.

Elsewhere, we have good discounts on recommended gadgets like the FastSnail Grips for Nintendo's Joy-Con controllers and Apple's MagSafe Charger for the iPhone 12, plus a variety of laptop deals and a low price on SanDisk's 400GB Ultra microSD card (for those who don't mind trading speed for high capacity on the cheap). You can find those and more in our curated roundup below.

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