Welcome to WarBulletin - your new best friend in the world of gaming. We're all about bringing you the hottest updates and juicy insights from across the gaming universe. Are you into epic RPG adventures or fast-paced eSports? We've got you covered with the latest scoop on everything from next-level PC gaming rigs to the coolest game releases. But hey, we're more than just news! Ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes of your favorite games? We're talking exclusive interviews with the brains behind the games, fresh off-the-press photos and videos straight from gaming conventions, and, of course, breaking news that you just can't miss. We know you love gaming 24/7, and that's why we're here round the clock, updating you on all things gaming. Whether it's the lowdown on a new patch or the buzz about the next big gaming celeb, we're on it.

Contacts

  • Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
  • Registration certificate 06691200
  • 16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
  • Czech Republic

Space Marine 2 studio boss hopes for a 'reversion' to a time before games were 'imposing morals' on players

Saber Interactive CEO Matthew Karch—or someone claiming to be him—has stirred up controversy with a comment on a recent Asmongold YouTube video in which he decried the current state of videogames, saying too many of them are built around «messaging or imposing morals on gamers.»

«Hey man. CEO of Saber here. I love your videos,» an account named 'MatthewKarch' said in response to the video, which is actually an hour-long «reaction» to a 20-minute video posted by Legendary Drops. «When we signed the deal to make Space Marine 2, all I wanted was a throwback game. We had the chance to work on something which by its nature was 'old school.' 

»I can't even comprehend many of the current games that we play these days. They are too complex and too much of an investment. We worked on Halo back in the day, and that game could be distilled down to the simplest of shooting loops, but it was entirely addicting. That is what we wanted to recapture.

«I hope that games like Space Marine 2 and Wukong are the start of a reversion to a time when games were simply about fun and immersion. I spent some time as Chief Operating Officer at Embracer and I saw games there that made me want to cry with their overblown attempts at messaging or imposing morals on gamers. We just want to do some glory kills and get the heart rate up a little. For me that is what games should be about.»

In many ways it's a fairly anodyne comment—I miss the old days of my youth—but the specificity of «imposing morals on gamers» was immediately picked up as ammunition in the never-ending online culture wars: Hundreds of replies to the comment poured in heralding Karch as «the gaming hero we all been waiting for» and bemoaning the supposed rise of politics in videogames while celebrating the underperformance of  Dustborn and Concord as evidence that games have become 'too woke.'  It got similar traction on social media.

Weirdly, there's some question as to whether it was actually Karch who posted the comment. Some

Read more on pcgamer.com