Dark Deity 2 Launches November 7 for PS5 and Xbox Series

Publisher indie.io and developer Sword & Axe have announced that the strategy RPG *Dark Deity 2* will launch for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S on November 7. The game was first released for PC via Steam on March 24, followed by a Nintendo Switch release on September 4.

Watch the PS5 and Xbox Series X|S release date announcement trailer below:

### About Dark Deity 2

*Dark Deity* is back! A quarter of a century has passed as Irving and the Eternal Order carefully rebuilt Verroa to protect it against a future war. However, their efforts will be put to the test far too soon as a new threat looms on the horizon.

The neighboring Holy Asverellian Empire is seeking new lands to expand, and the fractious, fragile Verroa seems ripe for the taking. Standing in its way are the Order and twenty scrappy heroes-to-be.

Take command of the Eternal Delegation, led by Irving’s descendants Gwyn and Riordian. They must navigate the treacherous politics of Verroa and weave a web of alliances to turn the tide of the coming war. Your decisions will shape these alliances and define your army. With a massive pool of customizations, no two playthroughs will ever feel the same.

Put simply, *Dark Deity 2* is about playing your way, all the way.

### Strategize and Prevail

Turn-based tactical combat lies at the heart of *Dark Deity 2*. Your 20 heroes have access to 45 branching classes, each with unique abilities, passive effects, and tactical roles.

But it doesn’t stop there: by experimenting with skills, abilities, and gear, you can completely change how a unit performs on the battlefield, allowing you to upend your tactics in exciting new ways.

As your heroes fight against overwhelming odds, they will form powerful bonds. Hardship may forge these bonds stronger—or it could destroy friendships and wreak havoc. Can you maintain the delicate balance?

### Make Your Decisions Wisely

*Dark Deity 2* is a desperate defense against a formidable foe. Verroa is gripped by war fever, panic, and factional strife, with traitors lurking around every corner.

To win, you’ll have to make difficult choices: decide who to support, and who to throw to the wolves. But choose carefully—your decisions can drastically change the battles ahead.

No two playthroughs are the same; what succeeds in one game may fail catastrophically in another.

### Twist the Threads of Destiny

While every playthrough is unique, you can push *Dark Deity 2* even further. Inspired by community-made randomizers for popular RPGs, the game features a built-in comprehensive randomizer and campaign customization suite right from launch.

Customize recruitment order, adjust difficulty with stat, aptitude, XP, and gold sliders, and more—offering nearly limitless replayability.

*Dark Deity 2* will be available on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S starting November 7.

### About the Author

A lifelong avid gamer, William D’Angelo was introduced to VGChartz in 2007. After years of supporting the site, he joined in 2010 as a junior analyst, progressing to lead analyst in 2012 and taking over hardware estimates in 2017. William has expanded his involvement in the gaming community through content creation on his YouTube and Twitch channels.

Follow the author on Bluesky.

For the full article, visit: [VGChartz – Dark Deity 2 Launches November 7 for PS5 and Xbox Series](https://www.vgchartz.com/article/466154/dark-deity-2-launches-november-7-for-ps5-and-xbox-series/)
https://www.vgchartz.com/article/466154/dark-deity-2-launches-november-7-for-ps5-and-xbox-series/

Plaschke: Now that’s more like it! Dodgers recapture mojo, survive scary World Series Game 6

The Dodgers, it turns out, chose the perfect costume in which to parade on this scariest of Halloween nights. They were dressed as the Dodgers. The Yoshinobu-Yamamoto-firing Dodgers. The Mookie-Betts-blasting Dodgers. The energetic-and-inspired Dodgers.

The listless team of the previous two games was gone. The inspired team of the previous month was back. Earlier this week, fans were asking, who are those guys? On Friday, they emphatically answered that question by finally, forcefully, being themselves.

Faced with elimination in Game 6 of the World Series, the Dodgers rose from the presumed dead to haunt the Toronto Blue Jays at the Rogers Centre with a 3-1 victory to knot the duel at three games apiece. And they did so with the most unlikely of saves—a game-ending double play on a lineout that Kiké Hernández caught in left field and threw to Miguel Rojas at second base.

How do the Blue Jays come back from that? How can the Dodgers not gain all the momentum from that? The quest to become the first team in 25 years to win consecutive World Series championships lives on. Game 7, Saturday night in Toronto, awaits. And Shohei Ohtani pitching somewhere is up.

The stage is set for all sorts of dramatics after a night when the Dodgers took an early three-run lead on the back of slump-busting Betts and then cruised to victory on the strength of another brilliant pitching performance by Yamamoto and a surprising three-inning shutdown from the Dodger bullpen.

It didn’t end smoothly, but it ended splendidly. After reliever Roki Sasaki began the ninth by hitting Alejandro Kirk in the hand with a two-strike pitch, Addison Barger hit a ball to center field that lodged under the outfield tarp for a ground-rule double. With runners on second and third and no out, Tyler Glasnow made an emergency appearance and recorded that memorable save, retiring Ernie Clement on a first-pitch popout and ending the game by inducing Andrés Giménez into a lineout that Hernández perfectly threw to Rojas.

The Dodgers have been here before. It was just last year, in fact, when they needed consecutive wins against the San Diego Padres in the division series to save their season. They calmly won both and rolled to a championship. A similar path could end in a similar destination this weekend after the Dodgers rebounded from two lifeless losses at Dodger Stadium to weather the loud Game 6 storm with calm and cohesion.

“Yeah, I mean, we all know that everything has to go perfect for us to be able to pull this off,” said Teoscar Hernández before the game.

So far, so good, beginning Friday with the much-maligned Betts, who smacked a two-out, two-run single in the third inning to give the Dodgers a lead they never lost. Next up was Yamamoto, who followed consecutive complete games by giving up one run on five hits in six innings.

Enter the bullpen, which had given up nine runs in the Dodgers’ three losses in this series. But the sense of dread lightened when Justin Wrobleski worked around a two-out double by Clement to end the seventh with a strikeout of Giménez.

On came Sasaki, who immediately found trouble in the eighth inning by yielding a single to George Springer and walking Vladimir Guerrero Jr. But the rookie remained calm, retiring Bo Bichette on a foul popout and Daulton Varsho on a grounder.

This set up the breathtaking ninth—the inspired Dodger tone actually set by manager Dave Roberts a day earlier. Roberts did his best Tommy Lasorda imitation by literally leaving it all on the field during Thursday’s day off when he challenged speedster Hyeseong Kim to a race around the bases.

Roberts gave himself a generous head start, but as Kim was passing him up around second base, Roberts tripped and fell flat on his face. The moment was caught on video that quickly spread over social media and actually led the FOX broadcast before Friday’s game.

Roberts looked silly. But Roberts also looked brilliant, as his pratfall injected some necessary lightness into the darkening team mood.

“I clearly wasn’t thinking,” said Roberts. “I was trying to add a little levity, that’s for sure. I wasn’t trying to do a face-plant at shortstop, and yeah, the legs just gave way. That will be the last full sprint I ever do in my life.”

He lost, but he won.

“Of course it makes you smile and it makes you have a good time,” said Rojas. “When the head of the group is loose like that, and he’s willing to do anything, that’s what it tells everybody, that he will do anything for the team.”

The spark was lit in the third inning Friday after Blue Jays starter Kevin Gausman had struck out six of the first seven batters. Tommy Edman, one of last fall’s postseason heroes, ripped a one-out double down the right-field line.

One out later, after Ohtani had been intentionally walked, Will Smith ripped an RBI double off the left-field wall. It was the Dodgers’ first hit with runners in scoring position since the fifth inning of Game 3, but the surprise was just beginning.

After Freddie Freeman walked, the bases were loaded for Betts, who was the biggest villain of the Dodgers’ hitting drought with a .130 World Series average while stranding 25 consecutive baserunners. He had been dropped to third in the batting order in Game 5, and then dropped again to fourth for Game 6, and it finally worked, as he knocked a two-strike fastball into left field to drive in two runs and give the Dodgers a 3-0 lead.

The Blue Jays came back with a heroic run in the bottom of the third when, after Addison Barger doubled down the left-field line, the wincing George Springer fought off a painful side injury to drive a ball into right-center field to score Barger.

Now it’s down to one game.

The Dodgers are back. Advantage, Dodgers.
https://www.latimes.com/sports/dodgers/story/2025-10-31/dodgers-blue-jays-world-series-game-6-kike-hernandez

Seductive, romantic guy dumped after ‘mid’ sex – Minute Cryptic Answer

Minute Cryptic offers a daily dose of delightful wordplay with a single cryptic crossword clue. Unlike regular crosswords, cryptic clues have two parts: a straightforward definition and a second meaning hidden through clever wordplay. Your challenge is to decipher both layers to find the answer that fits the grid.

If you need help finding the solution for today, the answers for Minute Cryptic can be found below.

Clue:

Seductive, romantic guy dumped after ‘mid’ sex

Minute Cryptic Answer

To avoid giving away the answer instantly—especially if you haven’t tried the puzzle yet—we have hidden the solution. You can reveal the answer by simply tapping the button below.

The Answer is: EROTIC

Helpful Hints

This clue’s indicators are ‘dumped’, ‘after’ and ‘mid’. One instructs us to delete some fodder from another piece of fodder, another flags which letter(s) to select, and the third tells us how to position two chunks of fodder relative to each other.

The clue’s fodder words are ‘romantic’, ‘guy’, and ‘sex’. We need to use a short synonym for one of these, combined with selected letters from the others, as guided by the indicators, to construct our answer.

Our definition here is ‘Seductive’, and the answer will be another word that means the same.

https://tryhardguides.com/seductive-romantic-guy-dumped-after-mid-sex-minute-cryptic-answer/

Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani ends hitless streak with towering World Series double

Shohei Ohtani Ended Offensive Drought in Game 6 of World Series

Shohei Ohtani broke through a crucial offensive drought during Game 6 of the World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday night. Prior to the game, Ohtani had been silent at the plate for Los Angeles, not recording a hit since his home run in the seventh inning of Game 3. This offensive slump left a significant hole in the Dodgers’ lineup, allowing Toronto to seize momentum in the series with a 3-2 lead going into Game 6.

Fortunately for the Dodgers, Ohtani finally found his groove in the top of the eighth inning. He delivered a solid double to left field, sparking hope for Los Angeles as they aimed to stay alive in the series.

How Shohei Ohtani and the Dodgers Played Against the Blue Jays

It was about time for Shohei Ohtani to get his offensive rhythm back, helping the Dodgers secure a 3-1 victory over the Blue Jays in Game 6 and force a decisive Game 7.

Both teams scored all their runs in the third inning. Los Angeles got on the board with key hits from Will Smith and Mookie Betts, while George Springer was Toronto’s lone scorer with an RBI single.

On the mound, Yoshinobu Yamamoto started for Toronto and pitched six innings, striking out six batters while allowing five hits and one run. He was followed by Justin Wrobleski and Roki Sasaki, who handled the seventh and eighth innings respectively.

In the bottom of the ninth inning, Dodgers’ closer Tyler Glasnow took the mound to shut down any potential rally from Toronto. Glasnow needed only three pitches to secure the final outs, inducing a flyout and then a clutch double play with help from Kike Fernandez. He earned the save and will remain part of the bullpen rotation for Game 7.

Looking Ahead to Game 7

The Dodgers will now fight for the right to repeat as World Series champions in Game 7 against the Blue Jays. The winner-takes-all contest is scheduled to take place on November 1 at 8 p.m. ET. Baseball fans across the world will be eagerly watching as these two talented teams battle it out for the championship.
https://clutchpoints.com/mlb/los-angeles-dodgers/dodgers-news-shohei-ohtani-ends-hitless-streak-towering-world-series-double

Seahawks Trade Idea Pairs Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Cooper Kupp With $110M WR

The Seattle Seahawks’ passing game is performing as well as anyone could have hoped following key offseason changes. The team added quarterback Sam Darnold and wide receiver Cooper Kupp while moving on from former QB Geno Smith and longtime pass-catchers DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett. Despite these transitions, the Seahawks boast an impressive 5-2 record heading into their Week 9 matchup against the Washington Commanders.

However, ESPN analyst Bill Barnwell has suggested that Seattle consider adding another wide receiver before the NFL’s November 4 trade deadline.

“The Seahawks are obviously thrilled with Jaxon Smith-Njigba, and Cooper Kupp is making an impact with his blocking, but there are always going to be questions about Kupp’s ability to stay healthy in his 30s,” Barnwell wrote on Thursday. “We’ll see more Tory Horton in the second half, but getting a veteran wideout who can block well as the third or fourth option would track.”

Barnwell also pointed out that the Seahawks could aim higher than just a veteran blocker. He highlighted that Chicago Bears receiver DJ Moore might become available in the coming days.

“If there’s a prominent player who could unexpectedly make sense as a potential trade candidate at the deadline for me, it’s Moore,” Barnwell noted. “The 28-year-old is starting a four-year, $110 million extension next year, but he hasn’t found a consistent role in Ben Johnson’s offense; he is averaging a career-low 47.3 receiving yards per game.”

While a trade during the offseason might seem more logical, Barnwell isn’t ruling out the possibility that Moore could become the odd man out in Chicago.

Moore has yet to make a Pro Bowl, though many argue he deserves the honor at least once or twice. Over his eight-year career, Moore has surpassed 1,000 receiving yards in four seasons and has accumulated impressive career stats: 584 receptions, 7,862 yards, and 36 touchdowns.

With Seattle’s current offensive firepower and the possibility of adding a player like DJ Moore, the Seahawks could solidify their passing game even further as they push deeper into the season.

**Read More:**
[NFL Insider Predicts Three Teams Will Make Big Splash at Trade Deadline]
https://www.newsweek.com/sports/nfl/seattle-seahawks-dj-moore-trade-chicago-bears-10975080

White House Issues New Press Restrictions: What We Know

**White House Imposes New Restrictions on Reporters, Sparking Concerns Over Press Freedom**

The White House has initiated new restrictions for reporters as of Friday, no longer allowing access to Room 140—also known as the “upper press” room. This move has raised significant concern among leading U.S. media organizations, press freedom groups, and First Amendment advocates.

### Why It Matters

These policy changes limit when and how journalists can access crucial government areas and information. Critics argue that the measures threaten transparency and hinder the media’s ability to hold government officials accountable. The new restrictions at the White House come shortly after similarly controversial rules were implemented at the Pentagon.

### What You Need to Know

According to multiple reports on social media, the White House circulated the new guidelines around 5 p.m. ET on Friday. The memo stated:

> “As a result of recent structural changes to the National Security Council, the White House is now responsible for directing all communications, including all national security matters.”

The memo, shared by Sinclair Broadcast Group National Correspondent Ahtra Elnashar on X, continued:

> “Members of the White House Communications Staff routinely engage with sensitive material. To protect such material and maintain coordination between National Security Council Staff and White House Communications Staff, members of the press are no longer permitted to access Room 140 without prior approval in the form of an appointment with an authorized White House staff member.”

These restrictions parallel a crackdown on the press at the Pentagon under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The Defense Department introduced a new media credential agreement that prominent outlets—including Newsmax, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Fox News, and CNN—have declined to sign.

The Pentagon’s proposed rules require military personnel to obtain official approval before sharing information with the press—classified or not—and empower the department to bar journalists they deem security risks.

### Reactions from the White House and Media

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung addressed the issue on X Friday, stating:

> “Some reporters have been caught secretly recording video and audio of our offices, along with pictures of sensitive info, without permission. Some reporters have wandered into restricted areas (our offices are feet away from the Oval Office). Some have been caught eavesdropping on private, closed-door meetings.”

Cheung added:

> “Cabinet Secretaries routinely come into our office for private meetings, only to be ambushed by reporters waiting outside our doors. The press still has access to the lower press area, where the press team sits and can answer all inquiries. Reporters can make appointments to see us in our offices.”

In response, Weijia Jiang, president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, issued a statement Friday night:

> “The White House Correspondents’ Association unequivocally opposes any effort to limit journalists from areas within the communications operations of the White House that have long been open for newsgathering, including the press secretary’s office. The new restrictions hinder the press corps’ ability to question officials, ensure transparency, and hold the government accountable, to the detriment of the American public.”

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Alene commented on X:

> “WH trying to restrict journalist access there, following ejection of the Pentagon press pool. Bill Clinton tried something similar at the WH, but opposition forced him to relent.”

### What Happens Next?

It remains unclear whether journalists will regain access under revised or rescinded policies. Media organizations and press freedom advocates continue to monitor the situation closely.

*Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.*
https://www.newsweek.com/white-house-issues-new-press-restrictions-what-we-know-10975090

Adam Fox ready to take ‘bragging rights’ against Ryan Lindgren in Seattle reunion

SEATTLE — Saturday night will mark just the third time Adam Fox and Ryan Lindgren square off against one another as opponents. The longtime friends, who met as teenagers in the U.S. National Team Development Program, have not lined up on opposite sides of the ice since their college days during the 2017-18 season.

Back then, Lindgren and the University of Minnesota defeated Fox and Harvard in a back-to-back series in November. The Gophers first took a 4-2 victory before emerging with a 2-1 overtime win in the following game.

After reuniting and playing parts of six seasons together in New York, Saturday’s matchup will be the first time the two face off as NHL players since the Rangers traded Lindgren to Colorado in March.

“It’ll be funny,” Fox told The Post on Friday after practice at Climate Pledge Arena. “I obviously played with him at NTDP and then played against him once in college, and that was fun. It’s more a little bit of bragging rights and stuff. It’s been a while since I played against him. But, you know, he’s great. We’ll see him [Friday night], hang out with him. I mean, there will be knowing Lindgren no friendships on the ice [Saturday night]. It’ll be fun.”

“I think we’re all happy for him, we miss him. But, obviously, we’re more focused on the game, but it’ll be fun to play against him.”

Lindgren hosted a few of his former teammates at his place in Seattle on Friday night. The Rangers will also face Kaapo Kakko for the first time since the club’s second-overall pick in the 2019 NHL Draft was traded to Seattle in December. Kakko is expected to make his season debut against his former team after recovering from a broken hand suffered during the preseason.

**Check out the latest NHL standings and Rangers stats.**

This season is shaping up as a tour against former Blueshirts, and this is only the beginning. For Fox, however, Saturday’s game feels especially different given his history with Lindgren, who was his longtime defensive partner.

“It was awesome,” Fox said of his friendship with Lindgren. “Obviously, it’s pretty rare in hockey with how many different directions and places you can go that our paths crossed on two different occasions. It’s amazing. He was a groomsman at my wedding and is super close to my family, and his family as well. We lived together for a few years, too. It’s special when you can have friendships like that.”

“Especially with how hockey goes — the business side of it — guys are in and out of different teams. To be with someone as long as we were was pretty cool for me.”

Since Lindgren was traded along with Jimmy Vesey and prospect Hank Kempf to the Avalanche in exchange for Juuso Parssinen, Calvin De Haan, and two conditional 2025 draft picks, Fox and Lindgren have naturally kept in touch. Not only did they live together for two to three years in New York, but their apartments were also next to each other during their rookie season in 2019-20. That proximity eventually led them to become roommates. They have also continued their annual golf trip together every summer.

Fox believes it will feel like nothing has changed when the former teammates reunite on Saturday.

Regarding his new defensive partner, Vladislav Gavrikov, Fox sounded encouraged by their first 12 games together.

“I think we’re defending really well,” Fox said. “Sometimes, especially when you’re at home and facing other teams’ top lines, defending is the priority. We want to maintain that solid defense while also creating more offense, considering how well that side has been going for us.”

“We don’t want to cheat on the defensive side. We’ve been getting chances, too. Anytime you’re with a new partner for the first time, you’re just trying to develop that chemistry, and it takes a lot of communication. I think it’s just gotten better as we’ve gone along.”
https://nypost.com/2025/10/31/sports/adam-fox-excited-for-his-fun-ryan-lindgren-reunion-in-seattle/

Like a cozy campsite on a cool autumn night, say NYT Crossword Clue

That should be all the information you need to solve the crossword clue: **”Like a cozy campsite on a cool autumn night, say.”**

If you’re looking for the answer or want to explore more clues, be sure to check out our comprehensive collection of Crossword Answers.

*The post “Like a cozy campsite on a cool autumn night, say” NYT Crossword Clue appeared first on Try Hard Guides.*
https://tryhardguides.com/like-a-cozy-campsite-on-a-cool-autumn-night-say-crossword-clue/

Bill Gates and the Redemption Racket

When Bill Gates announced his “pivot” from climate catastrophe to humanitarian hope, the press dutifully nodded along. A messiah-complex monopolist shedding his alarmist mantle for a brighter, kinder cause.

Take a closer look, though, and you’ll see the same stage, the same spotlight, the same script—just new marketing. For decades, Gates has backed policies that punished farmers, penalized energy independence, and empowered unelected technocrats who operate far beyond democratic reach.

He invested in synthetic meat and lab-grown crops while millions of real farmers faced ruin under the weight of green regulation. He funded climate models that forecasted apocalypse, and initiatives that made energy scarce and food expensive—all under the banner of “saving the planet.”
(RELATED: Saving the Planet by Eating Fruit and Whole Grains Is Possible If You’re Dumb Enough)

Now that public trust in climate crusades is crumbling, he’s rewriting his role. The new storyline: humanity first. Less “save the Earth,” more “save the poor.” It’s a clever shift, not a retreat, but a rebrand. By recasting the mission as “human development,” Gates retains the same hierarchy: billionaires setting the agenda, governments executing it, and citizens left to applaud or adapt. The faces change, the structure doesn’t.
(RELATED: A Better Alternative To the Davos Elites)

What looks like repentance is really repositioning. The sermon has simply moved from melting ice caps to malnourished children. The congregation, weary of doom, is offered a gentler gospel—one where Gates emerges as a benevolent pragmatist rather than a panicked prophet.

Yet beneath the new tone lies the same theology: that salvation flows downward, from the billionaire to the billions. His new rhetoric sounds refreshingly modest. “Let’s stop catastrophizing, let’s focus on real improvements in living standards.”

Again, though, look closer and you’ll see that the modesty is strategic. He isn’t ceding power; he’s consolidating it. For years, his foundation’s model has relied on bypassing local governments and funneling vast sums through “partnerships” with international NGOs. The pivot doesn’t end that pattern. If anything, it perfects it.

The climate panic made him influential. The humanitarian pivot will make him indispensable.

And there’s something almost comic in the presentation. The man who told the world to eat less beef and burn less fuel now frames himself as a champion of practical prosperity. The same policies that strangled small farms and inflated food prices are now being recast as learning curves—as if the damage were a necessary prelude to wisdom. The irony is thick enough to spread on toast.
(RELATED: The Great Salad Scam)

To his credit, Gates is not wrong that poverty and disease kill far more people than carbon. But when he says so, he speaks as though the crises were separate, when in truth, one fed the other. Climate orthodoxy—the kind he financed—throttled developing nations’ access to affordable energy. It kept the poorest poor.

Now, in an act of almost biblical self-forgiveness, he presents himself as the one to lift them up again.
(RELATED: Europe’s Energy Suicide: Brussels Trades Industry for Ideology)

It’s the same savior complex with a new script. The same conviction that global order can be engineered from a Seattle office park. The same faith that the planet’s problems can be solved if only the rest of us would get out of the way.

That’s the real meaning behind the pivot.

There’s a darker side, too. When philanthropy becomes policymaking, democracy shrinks. Decisions about vaccines, food systems, and climate strategies migrate from parliaments to private foundations. No one voted for this, yet it happens anyway. Gates’ fortune makes him unaccountable, and his causes, however noble in appearance, come with no oversight.

He may preach transparency, but he governs through opacity—a king whose crown is the presumption of good intent.

The joke, if there is one, is cosmic. The man who spent years warning us that we were running out of time now assures us that everything will be fine—provided we follow his next plan.

The stage lights dim. The actor changes costume. And the audience, desperate for reassurance, claps on cue.

Meanwhile, governments that once marched to the tune of climate panic now quietly rebrand their failures as “development strategies.” Corporations that cashed in on green hysteria are pivoting, too, marketing the same control with friendlier campaigns.

The transition from fear to hope may feel fresh, but it’s still theater. The same hands still pull the strings.

So what do we do when the man with more money than many small nations becomes the moral compass of modern policy? The answer begins with skepticism. It’s not enough to ask what he funds—we must ask what he gains. Every pivot preserves his power. Every cause, however well-presented, extends his reach.

This is the paradox of Gates. His vision always sounds virtuous, but it always ends with him in charge. Climate, health, education—the topics shift, the hierarchy stays.

And now, with his latest transformation from technocrat to “humanitarian,” he is no longer selling fear but faith in himself.

*The Catholic Roots of America’s Horror Craze*
*The Harvard Index of Holiness*
https://spectator.org/bill-gates-and-the-redemption-racket/

Warframe community director talks Nokko, The Vallis Undermind, and the devil in the details

The Warframe community is bracing itself for drama. With *The Old Peace* expansion on the horizon for next year, the story is set to push in new directions, casting even more light on the tragic history of the Tenno. Players have been busy preparing for potential narrative haymakers that lie ahead.

Big story moments in Warframe often include reveals that shift how we interpret decade-old lore. As we make our way to Tau, there has been considerable work done in anticipation of what could be Warframe’s biggest story event to date. Recent updates have brought multiple heavy shifts in narrative and character development—from learning about Albrecht Entrati and The Indifference to uncovering the Drifter’s origins, how they survived Duviri, and the toll it took on them.

Things have been tense. The journey to Tau promises even more emotional upheaval. For this reason, the recent Vallis Undermind update was designed to be a bit lighter—a more relaxed exploration of tunnels and caverns beneath Fortuna, and the introduction of a new playful trickster, the Warframe Nokko. Plus, players get to once again make Corpus overlord Nef Anyo look like a chump. Perfect.

I sat down with Megan Everett, Warframe’s community director, to chat about the update and what might be next for the game. One of my first questions was about the return to Fortuna and Orb Vallis. This follows a recent trend in Warframe: revisiting old in-game geography and bringing fresh content to familiar locations.

“I think what’s good about our open worlds is that we don’t restrict ourselves in how we set them up, making them so they can’t expand,” Everett explains. “Like with Plains of Eidolon, we kind of went back last year with the Koumei & The Five Fates update, and that’s something we never thought we would do when we made Plains of Eidolon, right? But it fits the narrative, and I think you see this a lot. When you create these open worlds—whether Plains or Vallis—people always say, ‘Please don’t make this a content island and just walk away.’ That’s definitely not our intention. We just have to wisely pick where to grow the story, and Orb Vallis was one we really wanted to revisit.”

For this update, the brief was simple: revisit Fortuna and Orb Vallis, and make the update fun—a palate cleanser before more serious business arrives to remind us all that the Origin System is eternally at war with itself.

A central part of that fun vibe has been Nokko, the game’s 62nd Warframe and a truly unique addition with his mushroom-themed lore and abilities. Nokko plants small clusters of mushrooms that lull enemies to sleep and buff allies, before dropping enlarged spores on foes that can obliterate them. His idle animations are playful, and his ability to bounce on mushrooms or transform into a tiny fungi called a Sprodling adds a childlike mirth to his playstyle.

Nokko’s interesting kit and cheerful vibe have won broad community embrace. However, after 62 Warframes, designing fresh and unique abilities must be increasingly challenging for the team. I asked Everett if they ever worry that some Warframes might be divisive or turn off segments of the community. She acknowledges that risk, but sees it as inherent to design.

“I think every Warframe falls into that category because some I don’t play simply because it’s not my style, but someone else might be obsessed with them—that’s fine. That’s why we have 62 currently, so players can pick the ones they love. After 12 years, we definitely have to stretch our creative thinking—what does this Warframe do that sets it apart?”

Nokko certainly stands out as a gameplay experience. With the right build, he can run missions weapon-free, blanketing enemies in spores and mushrooms while bringing a youthful energy to the action.

Interestingly, Nokko’s development naturally evolved from the team’s desire to revisit Orb Vallis. “What came first was the setting,” Everett shares. “Initially, we had a different idea that evolved into *The Vallis Undermind*. From wanting to revisit Orb Vallis, we asked ourselves: what does it look like now? The first thing that came to mind was mushrooms—there’s still fungi everywhere even after *The New War*. That became the foundation. The direction from Reb [Ford, Warframe’s Creative Director] was that this Warframe needed to feel fun and whimsical. She even said on the Devstream it should feel like Yareli’s younger brother. We ran with that goofy, younger brother vibe for Nokko, then built the story and Deepmines around that. So it was the tile set first that inspired the Warframe, and then the Warframe’s tone that inspired the Deepmines.”

Player build depth is one of Warframe’s most interesting aspects. Some swear by specific modding techniques, others prefer stealth or survival skills. Nokko shakes things up by appealing to players who might not have been initially drawn to him.

“It’s funny—I’ve seen people play the ‘floor is lava’ game, jumping only on mushrooms,” Everett laughs. “We didn’t think that would be meta, but it’s really fun and perfectly captures what we wanted Nokko to be. When you design a Warframe, you try not to think about whether it will be the new meta everybody wants to play.”

While Nokko brings fresh, lighthearted energy to Warframe’s tone, *The Vallis Undermind*’s Deepmines offer a glimpse into the subtle, ongoing polish the developers pour into the game.

Believe me when I say Warframe is dramatically different than it was at launch. Changes have ranged from gentle to radical, and the Deepmines hint at a shift that will leave a lasting impact.

Down in these tunnels, players undertake bounties—chains of staged tasks, each rewarding progress. Although bounties aren’t new, this iteration is faster, smoother, and more polished than ever. I find myself in and out quickly, with zero downtime. The physical design of the Deepmines encourages fun and elegant movement, letting me traverse points even faster than usual.

I shared with Everett that it feels respectful of player time, a big deal in an era when many games rethink their approach to player engagement. Her reply brought exciting hints of what’s next.

Respect for player time is key to a new mode called *Descendia*, set to be included in *The Old Peace*. It was about to be revealed on stream just before this interview published, but Everett teased a bit early.

“So on this Friday’s stream, we’re showing a new mode called *The Descendia*,” she said. “As you know, we have a new Warframe coming—Uriel, the devil Warframe. In this mode, you go down into hell. It’s 21 floors of hell: complete floor one, then fall down to floor two, and so on, down, down, down. Each floor gets harder, with mini-boss fights, checkpoints, rewards, characters—it’s really cool.”

A mode like this risks becoming a slog if not designed with care, balancing spikes of action and rest. Based on how perfectly *The Vallis Undermind* flows, I’m confident *Descendia* will nail it.

What awaits at the bottom? Probably the glory of victory, or the ignominy of defeat—exactly as it should be.

This reflects a core Warframe strength: its past builds the future, never forgotten. Balancing attention across such a vast, varied game isn’t easy, but Warframe’s 13-year survival in a competitive market speaks volumes.

The reason? The team’s honest dedication to continuous improvement, and a community always ready to engage and offer feedback.

For now, we can enjoy Nokko and the Deepmines. But with *The Old Peace* looming, all I can think about are those trenches from the trailer, waiting to be filled with the dead and dying.

*The Vallis Undermind* may provide a grand distraction—but the war waits for no one.
https://www.shacknews.com/article/146609/warframe-community-director-interview-nokko-vallis-undermind-megan-everett