News
‘Dying Light’ PC Specs Are a Little Demanding
Did you glance at the recommended PC specs for Alien: Isolation or The Evil Within and laugh that maniacal PC Master Race laugh, because the rig you had in 2008 had enough Ghz to power them both at the same time? If you answered yes, then here are some more recommended specs to laugh at, this time for the open-world horror game Dying Light.
As we’ve established, my mind is already so jam-packed with mostly irrelevant video game facts and recipes for late-night meals designed to achieve maximum calories with minimal time and effort, leaving me no room left for me to develop more than a child’s understanding of all this.
Minimum Specs:
OS: Windows® Windows Vista® (SP2) / Windows® 7 (SP1) / Windows® 8
Processor: Intel® Core™2 Duo/AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 @3GHz, Intel Core i5 @2.4GHz
Memory: 4 GB RAM
Graphics: DirectX® 10–compliant, 512 MB VRAM
DirectX®: 10
Hard Drive: 20 GB HD space
Sound: DirectX® 10–compliantRecommended Specs:
OS: Windows® 7 (SP1) 64bit / Windows® 8 64bit
Processor: quad core CPU @3GHz
Memory: 8 GB RAM
Graphics: Radeon 7900 Series / GeForce GTX 670, >2GB VRAM
DirectX®: 11
Hard Drive: 20 GB HD space
Sound: DirectX® 10–compliant
Dying Light hits PC, PS3, PS4, Xbox 360 and Xbox One on January 27, 2015.
Movies
McDonald’s No-Clips Out of Reality with Unexpected ‘Backrooms’ Short Movie
The best part about engaging with collaborative genre fiction on the internet is that anyone can get in on the action, with worldwide accessibility often resulting in absurd story beats that wouldn’t be possible if any single person was responsible for the entire narrative. And while Kane Parsons’ Backrooms film is definitely the young filmmaker’s own unique take on the infamous creepypasta, it’s fun to see other creators join the Backrooms sandbox now that the big screen adaptation is getting ready for a record-shattering opening weekend.
As if cleverly timed releases like Puppet Combo’s The Backrooms game weren’t enough (not to mention that Scary Movie poster poking fun at Parsons’ flick), McDonald’s official social media accounts have now released an analog horror video of their own celebrating the liminal terrors of the McRooms – complete with a familiar purple surprise at the end of the footage.
While it’s funny enough to see the world’s most recognizable Fast Food giant engage with internet-borne Found Footage thrills seemingly out of the blue, the video is actually referencing a long-running gag among the Backrooms fandom where creators jokingly talk about there being a fully functional McDonald’s restaurant hidden somewhere in level 0 of the infamous liminal labyrinth.
Now, would it be too much to hope for a moist-carpet-flavored McShake to tie in with the film?
Backrooms is now playing only in theaters from A24.

You must be logged in to post a comment.