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It’s mathematically impossible to beat Humble’s latest bundle of legendary CRPGs before Baldur’s Gate 3 comes out-

Have you got time for Humble’s latest collection of CRPG classics? No, you don’t. None of us do, in fact. At time of writing, Baldur’s Gate 3 is about 173 hours away from leaving early access (assuming it does so at about 4 pm BST). According to How Long To Beat, completing a “Main + Extra” run of all six games (plus one expansion) in the Baldur’s Gate and Beyond bundle would take you 421 hours. 

Even if you only try to take on the Baldur’s Gate games in there, it’ll take you 159 hours. Doable so long as you don’t sleep between now and August 3 (PC Gamer does not recommend doing this, but I personally am curious to see you try).

But even if so-called science says you won’t be able to experience the full breadth of these bangers before Baldur’s Gate 3 eats up your August, they’re still well worth picking up. The full list of games in the bundle is: Baldur’s Gate 1 & 2 Enhanced Edition (plus the Siege of Dragonspear expansion for BG1), Planescape: Torment: Enhanced Edition, Icewind Dale Enhanced Edition, Neverwinter Nights Enhanced Edition, and Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous

Several of these are bonafide masterpieces, some of our best RPGs of all time, and you can grab them all if you pay over £9.29 / $12. If you’re excited for BG3 but haven’t ever experienced the classics, I reckon they’re still wonderful to go back to today. Yeah, there’s a bit of gristle to work through—the game design of the late ’90s and early 2000s wasn’t as refined as today’s—but Beamdog’s enhanced editions do a fair bit to smooth down the rough edges.

The crowning jewels of this collection are BG1 and 2 and Planescape, some of the greatest D&D videogames ever made, but they’re all more than worth playing and they all have their vociferous fans even today. Even stuff like Neverwinter Nights—a bit of a transitional fossil in the BioWare catalogue—has people who’ll go to the mattresses for it in 2023 (not naming names, but it rhymes with Bed Sitchfield).

The odd duck is Pathfinder, and only because it’s a modern game amid a gaggle of golden oldies. Wrath of the Righteous is pretty great, though: PCG’s Jody Macgregor scored it 76% in his Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous review back in 2021, giving it some of the highest praise possible when he said “when you find the right path and are solving the world’s problems while jogging across fields with your gang of colorful pals, it’s like Baldur’s Gate 2 never ended.”

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Intel figures out how to make money again-

Intel’s revenue for the last three months was down 15% versus this time last year, but CEO Pat Gelsinger doesn’t seem to mind. He says of the company’s latest earnings represent “just great execution across every aspect of the business.” A surprisingly positive sentiment for what might appear on the surface to just be more bad news.

The reason for that positivity is that Intel is back to making money after a few rocky quarters underperforming in 2022. Last quarter, Intel lost $2.8B from $12B in revenue. This quarter, Intel made $1.5B from $13B in revenue.

Intel also gained $0.13 a share in the past three months, which doesn’t sound like much, however, is generally now assumed to be the beginning of a much-needed rebound. Margins were also up, which shareholders love to get into a fervour about.

“Strength in client and data center and our efforts to drive efficiencies and cost savings across the organization all contributed to the upside in the quarter and a return …

Manor Lords is at its best when ‘players craft their own stories’ and don’t rely on a dev-made tale, which ‘quickly became repetitive’-

If you’ve experienced the dramatic highs and lows of Manor Lords, then you’ll understand just how nail-biting this city builder and management game can really be. But instead of relying on a set story, the real drama comes from letting players live their best lives and create catastrophic situations all by themselves. 

The developer of Manor Lords, Greg “Slavic Magic” Styczeń, told players via Reddit that he “experimented with a story, but it quickly became repetitive, just like Tropico was for me as a player (subjective personal preference). My hope is a sandbox where the players craft their own stories via gameplay.” 

Manor Lords does have a very loose story when it comes to all the shenanigans surrounding rival Lords who have falsely tried to claim your land as their own. Although this serves as a way to include small battle sequences in the game rather than forwarding any story. 

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5 years after it closed for good, Gearbox confirms that the hero shooter Gigantic is coming back for a ‘limited time throwback event’-

Gigantic is—or was—a free-to-play “strategic hero shooter” that went into full release in July 2017 and almost immediately fell into misfortune. In November 2017, developer Motiga was closed, and just a couple months later publisher Perfect World announced that the game would suffer the same fate in July 2018. But now, improbably and unexpectedly, it looks like it might be making a comeback: Gearbox has confirmed that invitations to a “limited time throwback event” are legit.

The event first came to light in the Gigantic subreddit, after numerous diehard fans shared an email that went out today inviting them  to a three-day Gigantic play session, set to run October 5 to October 7. “Relive the good old days of playing this beloved strategic hero shooter” the email exclaimed.

Calling Gigantic “beloved” might be a bit of a stretch—its peak concurrent player count on Steam was 8,303, according to Steam Charts, but six months later that number was down …

MSI’s PBO Enhanced Modes take Ryzen 9000 series chips off the leash, giving you up to 15% extra performance-

AMD’s Ryzen 9000-series processors are out and about. In general, the family’s power efficiency is a highlight, and they’ve rightfully taken some places on our list of best CPUs, but there are those out there that wish for a little more on the performance side of things. Enabling AMD’s own PBO2 setting will give you a bit of a boost, but MSI’s engineers have been hard at work too, and the company is releasing new motherboard BIOSes with what it calls PBO Enhanced modes, which take things a step further.

MSI’s PBO Enhanced features three modes, simply named 1,2 and 3, with Mode 3 being the most aggressive. According to MSI, the Ryzen 9 9950X can gain nearly 10% in the Cinebench R23 multithreaded test when Mode 3 is enabled. Not a bad gain at all.

At default settings, the 65W Ryzen 7 9700X is the most power constrained chip in the Zen 5 lineup, and when it’s taken off the leash, it’s multithreaded performance jumps by an impressive 15%.

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