Ghost of Tsushima developer Sucker Punch Productions has revealed that the previously rumored Director’s Cut version of the game will be released for PS4 and PS5 on August 20.
“We’ve thought a lot about how to expand Jin’s story, and we’ve also spent the last year poring over all of your feedback about how we could improve the experience of playing Ghost of Tsushima,” says Sucker Punch Productions communication manager Andrew Goldfarb in a recent PlayStation Blog post. “We’ve been hard at work on a brand new edition of the game, which not only includes a new chapter in Jin’s journey, but also some new updates that are a direct response to some of the community’s most-requested features.”
Based on everything we know so far, here are the major differences you can expect to see in Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut when it...
“We’ve thought a lot about how to expand Jin’s story, and we’ve also spent the last year poring over all of your feedback about how we could improve the experience of playing Ghost of Tsushima,” says Sucker Punch Productions communication manager Andrew Goldfarb in a recent PlayStation Blog post. “We’ve been hard at work on a brand new edition of the game, which not only includes a new chapter in Jin’s journey, but also some new updates that are a direct response to some of the community’s most-requested features.”
Based on everything we know so far, here are the major differences you can expect to see in Ghost of Tsushima: Director’s Cut when it...
- 7/1/2021
- by Matthew Byrd
- Den of Geek
What happens when you mix splatterpunk icon John Skipp with a one-man surrealistic rock and roll band, two of the filmmakers behind Never Sleep Again, a go-go dancer who gives new meaning to the term "eye candy," and a mutant worm that has the need for speed?
You get magic of course, and that's exactly what the Andrew Kasch and John Skipp directed music video for The Slow Poisoner's new song "Hot Rod Worm" is. Yes, it's even wackier than you think! Buz "Danger Wallick" produces, with camera work from Justin Cruse.
The Slow Poisoner (alias of Andrew Goldfarb) is a one-man surrealistic rock and roll band hailing from San Francisco that has been playing the devil's music to audiences across America since 1996. One foot kicks a drum festooned with sleigh bells while his hands strangle a guitar, and through his crooked teeth emerge stories of rural paranoia and cosmic horror,...
You get magic of course, and that's exactly what the Andrew Kasch and John Skipp directed music video for The Slow Poisoner's new song "Hot Rod Worm" is. Yes, it's even wackier than you think! Buz "Danger Wallick" produces, with camera work from Justin Cruse.
The Slow Poisoner (alias of Andrew Goldfarb) is a one-man surrealistic rock and roll band hailing from San Francisco that has been playing the devil's music to audiences across America since 1996. One foot kicks a drum festooned with sleigh bells while his hands strangle a guitar, and through his crooked teeth emerge stories of rural paranoia and cosmic horror,...
- 11/13/2013
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
We don't usually feature reader/listener blog posts here at /Film (although I do hope that will change in the future). However, /Film reader, /Filmcast listener, and Tobolowsky Files [1] intern Andrew Goldfarb recently wrote a post about his work as an extra/background artist over the past four years that I could not resist re-posting here. It's informative, funny, harrowing, and kind of riveting. If you've ever wondered about the fascinating life of an extra, read on. Andrew's post was originally published at his IGN blog [2]. It has been republished here with his permission. *** For the past four years, I've worked full-time as a background actor in film and television. I went to school at the University of Connecticut. At the end of my junior year in 2007, there were rumors that the fourth Indiana Jones movie would be filming in New Haven at the Yale campus. With no idea what...
- 3/31/2011
- by David Chen
- Slash Film
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