Hold onto your joysticks, pilots, because the world of Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion is here, and it’s a glorious, chaotic ballet of bullets and booster fuel. If you’re a fresh-faced rookie ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Ollie Barder covers Japanese pop-culture and gaming from Tokyo. With the release of Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion looming, we’ve ...
Jenni Lada: Daemon x Machina: Titanic Scion offers a more open-world approach with different biomes compared to the original game. What led to this change in design and direction? Kenichiro Tsukuda: ...
In both narrative, gameplay & world design, developer Marvelous has tried to make Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion bigger and refined in almost every way. While it hasn’t exactly remedied the issues of ...
Scott Baird is a contributor with over a decade's experience writing about video games, along with board games and tabletop RPGs. Scott has previously worked for Dexerto, Cracked, Dorkly, and Gamepur.
From the moment 4-year-old Cameron first stepped out into Glimmer in Spyro 2, he knew video games were going to play a central role in the rest of his life. Though he never planned to make it the ...
Giant robots are inherently cool, yet they’ve never broken into the mainstream in the way they deserve. Take the original Daemon X Machina, which was an under-appreciated gem of the previous console ...