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You Can Try Resident Evil Village In Your Browser Right Now With a little typing and the click of a button, you can try the hit horror title on PC or Mobile.

  In the rare bit of Stadia news, Google has used the same streaming tech to allow players to try out a Resident Evil Village demo right from their browser– both on mobile or PC. To get started, you’ll enter your date of birth and then click on the button that reads “One-click-play.” If your internet connection is solid, the game should start up after some load time. If you don’t have a controller, you can play it with the mouse and keyboard on PC or touchscreen controls on mobile. You can also play it as many times as you like. Keep in mind that streaming games can have a substantial data cost. The website itself estimates about 12.6 GB an hour. It's something to remember if you have data limits. 00:01 / 02:57  Auto  HD  High  Low Report a problem Now Playing:  Resident Evil Village Trailer | Resident Evil Showcase So far, a demo page for Resident Evil Village is the latest public use of this feature outside of Stadia. The first example was in October 2021, AT&T launched a Bat

Duke Nukem,

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  (Image credit: 3D Realms) Audio player loading… The Hollywood Reporter (opens in new tab)  says Duke Nukem, the most infamously failed musclehead in videogame history, is headed to the big screen. The rights to a Duke Nukem film project have been picked up by Legendary Entertainment, according to the report, while Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz, and Hayden Schlossberg, the creators of the Cobra Kai television series, are signed as producers. inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;"> In some ways, it's a natural fit. Duke Nukem was originally created as a simplistic parody of 1980s action heroes, after all: He was all action, ass-kicking, and half-witted one-liners, and the only thing bigger than his guns were his biceps. The games moved from 2D platformer to 3D FPS in 1996 with Duke Nukem 3D, a brilliantly good shooter that earned criticism for e