
Oh, and Bethesda’s going to release a “definitive” graphically enhanced edition of the original Dishonored for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. Dishonored series developer Arkane said the game is in development for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC, but didn’t offer a release timeframe (though if we take Hines literally, the “coming over the next year” statement implies we’ll see it by the close of 2016).

Fans will doubtless unearth more from the showcase teaser trailer, but we know that it’s set in a coastal city, that you’re hunting down new adversaries, that you can opt to play as Dishonored‘s original (male) protagonist or a new one (female) with unique powers and gadgets, and that you can experience the entire game without killing a soul. The company also touted something it’s calling The Elder Scrolls Legends, a free-to-play strategy card game based on the company’s fantasy-verse, queued for PC and iPad later this year.Īnd we finally got confirmation that steampunk stealth sequel Dishonored 2 exists, though details were scarce. If you’re into the whole sleek, stylish carnage thing, Doom should have at least those bases covered when it ships in spring 2016 for PC, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One.Īlongside sizzle reels for known games like Battlecry (an online free-to-play multiplayer video game for Windows) and The Elder Scrolls Online (just launched for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One), Bethesda unveiled - essentially its version of Blizzard’s, an online hub for all of its games. When you’re ready, you just push a button to play, or share your creation with anyone in the world. The most interesting wrinkle? “Doom Snapmap,” an in-game level editor designed, says Bethesda, to let any player craft complex maps or fiddle with the game rules on the fly.

After an oblique nod to multiplayer (we’ll learn more about it soon, said Bethesda), the company finished with a peek at Hell, which, as you’ve probably guessed, resembled the cover of an Iron Maiden album lacquered with bile and viscera.
