Octopath Traveller gets a release date

Octopath Traveller, the sublime looking JRPG from the Bravely Default team at Square Enix, finally has a release date, with the Switch exclusive coming out on July 13th.

News came in tonight’s Nintendo Direct, in which we also got details on two new characters: Tressa, the merchant, who can purchase items from townsfolk, and Alfyn who specialises in apothecary.

We’ll also be receiving a special edition of the game, complete with a pop-up book, map and coin coming day and date with the release of the game.

Before all that, you can still pick up the extremely generous demo on the eShop. Seriously, do it now if you haven’t already – there’s at least five hours of action to enjoy which will likely stoke your appetite for more.

Israel and Islamic Jihad agree truce after worst Gaza rocket attacks in months

Palestinian militants have said that they would halt attacks into Israel from the Gaza Strip after they fired the heaviest rocket salvoes across the border in months.

The Islamic Jihad, one of the armed groups that operates in Gaza, said it fired the rockets in retaliation for Israel’s killing of four Palestinian protesters on Friday.

Israel in response struck dozens of targets in the Gaza Strip on Saturday.

Video footage showed several of the rockets from Gaza being shot down by Israel’s Iron Dome air defence system. No casualties were reported on either side.

Israel took the unusual step of claiming Syria and Iran had been behind the attacks and hinted that their response would not be limited to Gaza.

"The rockets that were launched against Israel… we know that the orders, incentives were given from Damascus with the clear involvement of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force," Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus, an army spokesman, said, referring to the Guards’ foreign operations unit.

Lt Col. Conricus told reporters Israel’s response "is not limited geographically."

Israel has regularly hit Iranian targets in Syria, but has never struck these sites in response to bombardments from Gaza.

Islamic Jihad is an Iranian-backed military group that sometimes operates independently of Gaza’s Hamas rulers.

Its armed wing initially threatened to continue and expand its rocket fire. But by the afternoon, the group’s spokesman announced an immediate ceasefire.

The biggest rocket barrage from Gaza in months came despite talk of progress towards an Egyptian-brokered deal to end months of often violent protests along the border in return for an easing of Israel’s crippling 11-year blockade.

Last week, Israel reopened the people and goods border crossings with Gaza and on Wednesday renewed the flow of Qatar-funded fuel to the Palestinian enclave, in an indication of its confidence that Hamas would rein in violence.

The Friday border marches however drew 16,000 protesters, some of them clashing with Israeli soldiers.

Five Palestinians were shot dead by Israeli fire in separate incidents along the border fence, the Gaza health ministry said.

Saleh an-Nami, a political analyst in Gaza, said the rocket fire would weaken Hamas’s efforts to reach a long-term truce and showed it was unable to impose its position on other factions.

"It embarrasses Hamas in front of regional and global mediators that are intervening to achieve a truce," he said.

Inside San Pedro Sula, the corrupt, cartel-infested birth place of the migrant caravan

In the Rivera Hernandez neighbourhood in southern San Pedro Sula, there are no official wars or borders.

But the sprawling urban slum of breeze block houses is clearly divided up between seven opposing gangs, and the streets that divide the territories are considered lines not to be crossed.

It is one of the most violent areas of one of the most dangerous cities in the world’s most murderous region.

And it was from here, and other zones like it, that hundreds of Hondurans packed their bags earlier this month and left to join the migrant caravan to cross real borders in an attempt to get to the United States.

Among them were Carlos Hernandez’s 19-year-old cousin and aunt. Mr Hernandez, 28, stayed…

You can now play as Master Chief in Nintendo Switch’s Minecraft

Master Chief, Microsoft’s biggest gaming icon, is now available in Minecraft on Nintendo Switch.

Characters from Banjo Kazooie (which was, obviously, originally released on N64), plus Fable and Gears of War franchises are also included in the skin pack, which launches today for both Switch and Wii U.

Xbox owners will likely have the pack already – it’s been available for years on Microsoft’s own consoles – but it also arrives for the new, unified version of Minecraft today across all of its platforms.

Somewhat oddly, the now-discontinued Minecraft: Xbox Edition also gets a new skin pack today for the Disney film Moana.

Minecraft: Xbox Edition is no longer available to buy and download – it has been replaced by the cross-platform Minecraft which, months on, still feels like the game’s mobile version plonked on a console with little more thought to it (because that’s exactly what it is).

I wrote about this new “Bedrock” version of Minecraft a while back, and called it a mess on console. Back in October, the Minecraft community was asking for a user interface tailored to consoles, like the old Xbox Edition had, and fixes for other things which the new version had changed (redstone, coordinates). Months on, it doesn’t seem like anything has changed.

US mail bombs: FBI searches Florida postal centre in hunt for sender of devices

Federal agents searched a US mail facility near Miami on Thursday night racing to find who sent 10 pipe bombs to prominent Democrats and critics of Donald Trump as leads pointed to Florida as the possible origin of the packages.

Investigators were treating the devices as "live" explosives, not a hoax, said James O’Neill, police commissioner of New York City, where two of the parcels have surfaced since the bomb scare began on Monday with a device addressed to billionaire Democratic Party donor George Soros.

A federal law enforcement source told Reuters the devices were thought to have been fashioned from bomb-making designs widely available on the internet.

Investigators believe the packages, which were intercepted before reaching their intended recipients, all went through the US Postal Service at some point, that source said. None detonated and no one has been hurt.

Authorities have branded the parcel bombs, coming less than two weeks before national elections that could alter the balance of power on Capitol Hill, as an act of terrorism, though they have declined to say whether the devices were built to be functional.

Bomb experts and security analysts say that based on the rudimentary construction of the bombs it appeared they were more likely designed to sow fear rather than to kill.

But the episode sparked an outcry from Mr Trump’s critics who said his frequent expressions of inflammatory rhetoric against perceived enemies among Democrats and the press was stoking a climate ripe for politically motivated violence.

After first calling for "unity" and civil discourse on Wednesday, Mr Trump lashed out again on Thursday at the "hateful" media, while his supporters accused Democrats of unfairly suggesting the president was to blame for the bomb scare.

Kirstjen Nielsen, Homeland Security Secretary, confirmed that Florida was the starting point for at least a portion of the bomb shipments.

"Some of the packages went through the mail. They originated, some of them, from Florida," she told Fox News. "I am confident that this person or people will be brought to justice."

A police bomb squad and canine units joined federal investigators on Thursday examining a US mail distribution centre at Opa-Locka, northwest of Miami, Miami-Dade County police said.

The sprawling warehouse, where authorities believe several of the parcels were processed, appeared to remain in operation during the search, with tractor-trailer traffic continuing to and from the facility as police were seen walking around the loading docks.

On Wednesday, two days after the first package arrived at Soros’ home, the FBI identified five more targets – President Barack Obama, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Attorney General Eric Holder, former CIA director John Brennan, and California Representative Maxine Waters. Two packages were found addressed to her.

Mr Brennan’s package was sent in care of the Manhattan bureau of CNN, where he has appeared as an on-air analyst.

On Thursday, the investigation widened with the discovery of three additional packages – two intended for former Vice President Joe Biden in his home state of Delaware and one for Hollywood actor Robert De Niro in Manhattan.

"It does remain possible that further packages have been or could be mailed," William Sweeney, assistant director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said.

The FBI has said at least five of the packages bore a return address for the Florida office of U.S. Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who formerly chaired the Democratic National Committee. Mr Holder’s package ended up rerouted and delivered to the Ms Wasserman Schultz return address.

No one has claimed responsibility for the bombs, and the public was asked to report any tips.

The parcels each consisted of a manila envelope with a bubble-wrap interior containing "potentially destructive devices," the FBI said. Each was affixed with a computer-printed address label and six "forever" postage stamps, the agency said.

Mr Sweeney said all of the devices were being sent to the FBI’s crime lab in Quantico, Virginia, for analysis.

Most of the intended recipients were high-profile Democrats and all were known to be outspoken critics of Mr Trump, foils for his political rhetoric or both.

The US president long questioned Mr Obama’s US citizenship and referred to Mrs Clinton, whom he defeated in the 2016 presidential race, as "crooked Hillary." He has derided Ms Waters publicly as "low-IQ Maxine."

The president revoked Mr Brennan’s security clearance after the ex-CIA chief, a veteran intelligence official in Democratic and Republican administrations, lambasted Mr Trump’s Russia summit performance as "nothing short of treasonous."

Mr Biden once said he would have fought Mr Trump if they were in high school, while De Niro received a loud ovation when he hurled an obscenity at Mr Trump at the Tony Awards in June.

At a Wisconsin rally on Wednesday night, Mr Trump, who has denounced news media organizations as an "enemy of the people," called attention to "how nice I’m behaving tonight” but on Thursday morning he attacked the media again.

"A very big part of the Anger we see today in our society is caused by the purposely false and inaccurate reporting of the Mainstream Media that I refer to as Fake News," Trump wrote. "It has gotten so bad and hateful that it is beyond description. Mainstream Media must clean up its act, FAST!"

Saudi Arabian sisters found bound together in New York river did not take own lives, family insist

Relatives of two Saudi Arabian sisters found floating in a New York City river, bound together with duct tape, have rejected suggestions that the pair committed suicide.

Tala Farea, 16, and her 22-year-old sister Rotana were discovered in the Hudson River a week ago, on October 24.

The pair were facing each other, fully clothed in the water, and bound together with duct tape.

Police said their bodies bore no signs of trauma, which suggested they had not jumped off the nearby George Washington bridge. But they are still trying to work out how they died.

The pair, born in Jeddah, were living until the summer in Fairfax, Virginia.

Shortly before their deaths, they had applied for asylum in the US, their mother said.

She told detectives, according to the New York Post, that the day before their bodies were discovered, she received a phone call from the Saudi Arabian embassy informing her that the family’s residency in the US was in jeopardy because the two had applied for immigration asylum.

She said that she had not seen her daughters since December 2017, when she reported them missing to police in Fairfax.

Virginia police found them soon after, but rather than return home they went to live in a local shelter, and police refused to tell them where it was, The New York Post reported.

Tala was reported missing again by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in August, but the English-language ArabNews.com, citing unnamed family members, reported that the mother called off the search when it was discovered the teenager was visiting her older sister at an unspecified college in New York.

The Saudi Arabian consulate in New York issued a statement confirming that the sisters were both Saudi Arabian citizens, and saying they were students, “accompanying their brother in Washington.”

New York police are treating their death as suicide, the NYPD told The Telegraph, but stressed that the investigation was still in its early stages.

“We do not know that a crime took place,” said Dermot Shea, the chief of detectives. He told The New York Times: “We have a terrible tragedy for sure."

However, a relative told Saudi newspaper Arab News that there had not been any family trouble, and dismissed reports they may had taken their own lives.

“They were a democratic family, they never had any issues and the eldest was sent to college in New York City with her family’s blessing,” said the family member.

Grabbing the unlikely "sleeping giant" of gaming audiences

Roughly a year ago I found myself in a ‘games as art’ conversation – a conversation I know is tired, but one I hadn’t heard of in earnest for a few years. But the person doing the talking wasn’t wearing a beret or holding a painter’s palette or anything like that. He was a very down to earth man called Simon Meek, making a game called Beckett, and what he said made a deep impression on me.

His game is weird and abstract, a surreal noir investigation closer to a museum piece than game – and which must have turned heads, for it’s going on display at the V&A Museum in Dundee. It’s a relatively swift story of an anti-hero on the heels of a young man suffering from something called The Soft Paranoia, a mental illness that warps reality and, therefore, the game. Characters can be brooches or slices of meat – everything is open to interpretation in Beckett.

Technically, if you want a blunt description of it all, it’s a point-and-click adventure presented in a top-down, relatively flat way, made up of photographs, artwork, illustration, photography, film and print, and a bespoke audio “palette” to go with it. Meek likened it to an independent European cinema piece compared to a Hollywood blockbuster.

It is a barefaced attempt at a game being art, in other words. It is a statement piece.

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“I’m not under any illusions,” Meek told me at EGX Rezzed last year, “I don’t think this is going to be a multi-million bestseller, but things like this are important.” He has confidence a pocket of the PC audience will be open to Beckett, like they were with The 39 Steps, his studio’s previous game. “It mightn’t be for everybody,” he added, “but hopefully you come out of this feeling it was really solid use of two hours.”

It’s that short punch of cerebral engagement he feels could ignite a “sleeping giant” of a demographic I hadn’t considered before – a returning audience, lost and now found.

“One of the things the industry is facing at the moment is as people hit their 30s and they have children and you become time-poor, you need to feel like you’re spending that time wisely,” he said. “We get this whole lapsed gamer thing going, because if games aren’t growing with that original player, who can find time to play an 80-hour game?

“There’s a lot of games – and this isn’t a criticism of games – that are really good time-wasting mechanisms, and that’s why people love them. You can get an adrenaline rush and get into it but actually I just start to think, ‘There are all these things I want to do,’ and you’ve got all this amazing stuff on Netflix – all these things competing for your time. We need new forms of content delivering to that audience who actually will start to feel disenfranchised.

“We saw it happen in the early ’90s when the console generation came along and you had this massive wave of the original PC gamer that bought the ZX81 and the Atari ST and they were getting all these experiences like the Hobbit text adventure, Myst – games were very much more experiential back then – and then they became more about adrenaline. And actually we did lose all of those people.

“People in the ’80s playing who were playing are probably now in their 50s and 60s, and what’s quite interesting is that although you become time poor in your 30s and 40s, generally in your 60s your kids start leaving home and you actually become time rich again, so actually the sleeping giant of the broadening of the games audience are those people who have got the bug they’re just not being delivered the content.

“That’s the statement we’re making,” he closed. “Whether someone who is spending their time playing Call of Duty will feel at home in this, I don’t know, but I’d love it if they played it and did.”

Beckett will be released by Kiss Publishing on 27th February on Steam.

Arms keeps swinging with another new update

Arms – 2017’s best game, Nintendo’s best game, quite possibly the peak of human culture and at the very least an achievement on par with the moon landings – has just got a surprise new update that adds new features and an all-new mode.

It’s not as substantial an update as the Switch fighting game has received in the recent past – as the game’s director Kosuke Yabuki confirmed to Eurogamer last week, there are no major content updates now planned for the game – but it’s more substantial than you might have expected given the assumption that support had stopped for the game. More badges – Arms’ in-game achievements – have been added, as well as a new gallery complete with art for players to unlock and an all-new Tournament mode that unlocks all players’ Arms for those that want to get directly into the action (it’s worth noting that in this mode you won’t earn any of the in-game currency or badges).

The artwork you can unlock is a splendid selection, going beyond the character art unlocked when you complete Arms’ Grand Prix mode at difficulty level four or higher and giving us a new look at concepts for the game. Here, for example, is the stellar Min-Min in a piece of art that’s completely new to me.

Not bad, really, for a game that’s blossomed handsomely since its release last June. Now, Nintendo, where are those Arms Amiibo?

Witcher Geralt will appear in another game this year and it’s probably Soulcalibur 6

Witcher video game maker CD Projekt Red has teased that star character Geralt will appear – for the very first time – in another game, and this year.

“What if Geralt was going to step out of the The Witcher for the very first time to make an appearance in one of the upcoming games later this year?” tweeted CDPR community manager Marcin Momot.

What if Geralt was going to step out of the @witchergame for the very first time to make an appearance in one of the upcoming games later this year? pic.twitter.com/dMTn1Im6HD

— Marcin Momot (@Marcin360) March 6, 2018

Which game could it be? The odds-on favourite is Soulcalibur 6, another game in Bandai Namco’s portfolio. It’s also a series with penchant for high profile cameos. Link appeared in Soulcalibur 2 on GameCube, Darth Vader and Yoda in Soulcalibur 4, and Ezio in Soulcalibur 5.

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Soulcalibur’s weapon-based fighting suits Geralt well. His array of Witcher Signs – a kind of magic – could also presumably power special attacks. Will Geralt be the only star cameo in the game, though, or will there be more?

Soulcalibur 6 is due this year on PC, PS4 and Xbox One but was only announced relatively recently so we haven’t seen much of it. Associating itself with best-selling Witcher series will certainly work wonders for exposure.

Emmanuel Macron calls for creation of a ‘real European army’

President Emmanuel Macron of France has called for a "real European army" to defend the continent against Russia, China, and even America.

Mr Macron, who has pushed for a joint EU military force since his election last year, issued the call while on a tour of northern France in the run-up to the centenary of the end of the First World War.

"We will not protect the Europeans unless we decide to have a true European army," Mr Macron said in the interview at Verdun, the scene of France’s most bloody battle.

His call came as he is due to welcome Donald Trump, the US president, and other world leaders, including Theresa May and Russia’s Vladimir Putin to France to commemorate the Armistice centenary…