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PEAK future roadmap explored
PEAK future roadmap explored

Time of India

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

PEAK future roadmap explored

Image via Landfall. There is no doubt that PEAK by Aggro Crab and Landfall has to be one of the most talked about video games right now. This title is so simple, but still is jam-packed with great gameplay. PEAK is actually a mountain climbing simulator, which can be played solo or in a squad. A unique feature of this game is that each in-game day features a brand new map across four unique biomes. Players are stranded on a mysterious island, where they need to find their way out scaling mountains by scavenging food and equipping climbing gears. All over, fans have liked this game very much, and that is why we might see new updates of this game very soon. PEAK developers confirmed future updates and localization PEAK will get future major updates. | Image via Landfalll. In a post on Steam, both the developing companies of Peak, Aggro Crab and Landfall thanked the fans for this unwavering support from the fans. In this post, the developers also confirmed that there will be future updates for this game, although they are in the 'very early stages.' As of now Peak has received a number of updates, but all of them were stability and bug fixing patches, so no substantial upgrades or new contents have been implemented so far. However, the game isn't free from all the bugs yet as it is still facing disconnection glitches, optimization issues, crashes, etc. So more small patches are expected to be on the way. In the FAQ section from Landfall's official website, the developers stated that they didn't have any plans for future PEAK updates at that point as both Aggro Crab and Landfall have other projects ahead of them. However, the promising words from the developers via the Steam post seal that there will certainly be major updates in the future, like major content addition or quality of life upgrades. The developer team also confirmed that localization would be coming soon as well, that means the game will support more regional languages, specific UI adjustments and many more. These decisions at least make it sure that the road of PEAK is not ending here, and the developers are definitely having a thought about its future. Actually the developers themselves never thought that a small game like PEAK which costs just $8 would burst into the scene so wildly. The game sold more than two million copies world-wide in just nine days of its release. So, developers have realized that the fans are definitely in for the next stage of PEAK. Read More: All items in PEAK explained Game On Season 1 continues with Mirabai Chanu's inspiring story. Watch Episode 2 here.

How to locate the Scoutmaster in PEAK
How to locate the Scoutmaster in PEAK

Time of India

time23-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

How to locate the Scoutmaster in PEAK

Image via Landfall. Since its release, PEAK has become a fan-favorite title. Despite having no gigantic storyline or specular visuals, this mountain-climbing game from Landfall Games and Aggro Crab sold over 100,000 copies in just 24 hours of its launch. Solo or with your friends, you can begin your mountain scaling experience in a struggling but peaceful way in this title, that too with different maps each day among 4 different biomes to ascend through. However, this soothing journey can become a fearful experience if the Scoutmaster starts to run you down. PEAK: How to find the Scoutmaster? Finding the Scoutmaster in PEAK can be pretty tricky. | Image via Landfall. Scoutmaster is a nasty, tall, and green monster who will chase you down and eventually kill you if you get face-to-face with it. Players always want to stay away from this creature, so why should you find him? Actually, finding the Scoutmaster unlocks the Mentorship Badge achievement. Also, it grants players the Inverted Eye cosmetic. Now, it makes sense why some people still want to come across this giant. There are actually two ways to find Scoutmaster, or rather two scenarios in which you can locate this monster. For solo players, you need to blow the Scoutmaster's Bugle in order to spawn the Scoutmaster. Now, it may look easy but finding the Bugle is pretty tough because of its low-spawn rate. Still, players are advised to look through the top of the cliffs, where you have comparatively a higher chance of finding this legendary item than other places. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Free P2,000 GCash eGift UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo Blowing this Bugle will also grant you additional maxed out stamina, which will eventually be conceded when Scoutmaster will chase you. For players in a squad, finding this giant is really easy. All you need to do is to run faster than your allies and leave them behind. Upon doing so, the Scoutmaster will spawn out of nowhere as you have broken the law of mountain climbing, by scaling it alone but leaving your friends behind struggling, despite being in a group. The Scoutmaster will then chase you down to punish you for your mountain sin. Keep in mind that the Scoutmaster is immortal, so any weapon be it the Rope Canon or the Piton is of no use against the green monster. As there is no current way to defeat it, you need to run as fast as you can to lose it. It's actually pretty tough, but if you manage to get away from the Scoutmaster for a minute or so, it will eventually leave the chase. However, always try to run on falter surfaces because the Scoutmaster climbs faster than you. Read More: All items in PEAK explained Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

'An intergenerational legacy': Tributes flow for Maurice Gee
'An intergenerational legacy': Tributes flow for Maurice Gee

Otago Daily Times

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

'An intergenerational legacy': Tributes flow for Maurice Gee

By Victor Waters of RNZ The death of Maurice Gee has prompted many New Zealanders to pay tribute to the late novelist. Considered one of New Zealand's greatest novelists, his work extended over 50 years. The author, who died recently aged 93, wrote about ordinary people and ordinary lives, often with the narrator looking back at events that caused damage and unhappiness. Publisher and literary commentator Fergus Barrowman said Gee's work hugely influenced his life. "I read Plumb when it came out in paperback in 1979, and I was 18, and it was the first New Zealand book I read that really sort of fired my imagination and gave me a sense of how sort of diverse and interesting and challenging this country was. "I read everything else, and he's really shaped my view. "I know that his books have stayed in print and been widely read, and the fact that he was at that point turning to write children's books as well meant that there have always been new generations coming on, so people are still reading him as a contemporary," he said. Barrowman said he knew Gee for more than 40 years and had worked with him from time to time. That included Gee's 2015 biography - written by his sister Rachel Barrowman - Maurice Gee: Life and Work. "He was dedicated from early on, but he didn't strike gold quickly," said Barrowman. "He took some time to learn to write and was in dialogue with Charles Brasch, the stern editor of Landfall, with his early stories. "At a certain point when he really felt that he had come of age as a writer, he left secure employment and lived by his writing, his adult novels, his children's books, and writing for TV thereafter, so that dedication has been an inspiration for a lot of writers. "I think he had an inner core of steel and grasped his own significance, but he was also a very humble and modest man who didn't like being the centre of attention. "I think it was interesting that when he did publish a memoir, it was three memoirs, three shorter pieces, which had been written about his family, and for his family he wasn't trying to foreground himself. "It was really his books that he wanted to see recognised and out in the world, and the books are known internationally as well as locally." "Though I haven't seen a lot of him recently, he does leave a hole in my life," said Barrowman. The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi said we they were deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Gee, describing him as "one of Aotearoa New Zealand's most celebrated novelists, a literary giant, and a quiet revolutionary". General manager Jessica Palalagi said this was cemented by Gee earning the prestigious Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship in 1992 and being among the inaugural Icon Whakamana Hiranga recipients in 2003, among numerous other awards. "He has left a strong intergenerational legacy for us all through his work," said Palalagi. "To me, that's what becoming an icon is really. It's that ability to make work and to be an artist that lasts across generations. "I think his writing for children also meant that a lot of us grew up with his literature and then they were turned into sort of like motion pictures and TV shows. "It was world building, he created worlds through his words," she said. Palalagi said The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi had been trying to organise a rare interview with Gee, which unfortunately was not able to materialise. She said even in his final years, he still shied away from the limelight. "I had been actually trying to reach out to him since last year. So we've been talking to him via his daughter because we were trying to organise a sort of a profile piece on him. "He was kind of like, 'oh, why is everyone making a fuss about this work that I did?'. So I think he was just incredibly humble. "He was actually very generous in saying that he doesn't actually do a lot of interviews, but he was happy to sit down and have a chat so I felt very humbled in that way to be able to have that time, but we just couldn't quite get there. "It's quite sad in a way to think that we could have had one sort of last conversation," she said. Gee was born in Whakatāne in 1931 and educated at Auckland's Avondale College in Auckland and at Auckland University where he took a Masters degree in English. He worked as a teacher and librarian, before becoming a full-time writer in 1975. He spent much of his later life in Nelson, where he became a loved consituent. Nelson MP Rachel Boyack said the late novelist made a big contribution to the South Island city. "He was involved in groups like 'Friends of the Maitai', who have done a huge amount of work to protect out river that runs through inner city Nelson. "In a recent interview he spoke of the important of the Maitai river, in terms of teaching his daughters how to swim and so while he didn't grow up here he spent his later years of his life here. "It's really sad, wonderful that he was able to live such a full life into his early 90s but it's always so sad when we've lost someone who made such a significant contribution to our nation." "Nelson people are very proud that he decided to live and retire here in Nelson," said Boyack. Those sentiments were shared by another politician, Minister for Arts, Culture & Heritage Paul Goldsmith. "It's a very sad day, Maurice Gee has been a greatly loved writer and novelist for many decades. "People of my generation grew up on Under the Mountain being a great local story, some of his other great novels like Plumb have had international acclaim but also being part of our literary cannon as it used to be known as," said the minister. Goldsmith said Plumb was his favourite novel written by Gee. He said parliament could look to pay tribute in some way to the late writer in the coming days, but said there had been no discussions yet.

'He's left an intergenerational legacy': Tributes for author Maurice Gee
'He's left an intergenerational legacy': Tributes for author Maurice Gee

Otago Daily Times

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

'He's left an intergenerational legacy': Tributes for author Maurice Gee

By Victor Waters of RNZ The death of Maurice Gee has prompted many New Zealanders to pay tribute to the late novelist. Considered one of New Zealand's greatest novelists, his work extended over 50 years. The author, who died recently aged 93, wrote about ordinary people and ordinary lives, often with the narrator looking back at events that caused damage and unhappiness. Publisher and literary commentator Fergus Barrowman said Gee's work hugely influenced his life. "I read Plumb when it came out in paperback in 1979, and I was 18, and it was the first New Zealand book I read that really sort of fired my imagination and gave me a sense of how sort of diverse and interesting and challenging this country was. "I read everything else, and he's really shaped my view. "I know that his books have stayed in print and been widely read, and the fact that he was at that point turning to write children's books as well meant that there have always been new generations coming on, so people are still reading him as a contemporary," he said. Barrowman said he knew Gee for more than 40 years and had worked with him from time to time. That included Gee's 2015 biography - written by his sister Rachel Barrowman - Maurice Gee: Life and Work. "He was dedicated from early on, but he didn't strike gold quickly," said Barrowman. "He took some time to learn to write and was in dialogue with Charles Brasch, the stern editor of Landfall, with his early stories. "At a certain point when he really felt that he had come of age as a writer, he left secure employment and lived by his writing, his adult novels, his children's books, and writing for TV thereafter, so that dedication has been an inspiration for a lot of writers. "I think he had an inner core of steel and grasped his own significance, but he was also a very humble and modest man who didn't like being the centre of attention. "I think it was interesting that when he did publish a memoir, it was three memoirs, three shorter pieces, which had been written about his family, and for his family he wasn't trying to foreground himself. "It was really his books that he wanted to see recognised and out in the world, and the books are known internationally as well as locally." "Though I haven't seen a lot of him recently, he does leave a hole in my life," said Barrowman. The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi said we they were deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Gee, describing him as "one of Aotearoa New Zealand's most celebrated novelists, a literary giant, and a quiet revolutionary". General manager Jessica Palalagi said this was cemented by Gee earning the prestigious Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship in 1992 and being among the inaugural Icon Whakamana Hiranga recipients in 2003, among numerous other awards. "He has left a strong intergenerational legacy for us all through his work," said Palalagi. "To me, that's what becoming an icon is really. It's that ability to make work and to be an artist that lasts across generations. "I think his writing for children also meant that a lot of us grew up with his literature and then they were turned into sort of like motion pictures and TV shows. "It was world building, he created worlds through his words," she said. Palalagi said The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi had been trying to organise a rare interview with Gee, which unfortunately was not able to materialise. She said even in his final years, he still shied away from the limelight. "I had been actually trying to reach out to him since last year. So we've been talking to him via his daughter because we were trying to organise a sort of a profile piece on him. "He was kind of like, 'oh, why is everyone making a fuss about this work that I did?'. So I think he was just incredibly humble. "He was actually very generous in saying that he doesn't actually do a lot of interviews, but he was happy to sit down and have a chat so I felt very humbled in that way to be able to have that time, but we just couldn't quite get there. "It's quite sad in a way to think that we could have had one sort of last conversation," she said. Gee was born in Whakatāne in 1931 and educated at Auckland's Avondale College in Auckland and at Auckland University where he took a Masters degree in English. He worked as a teacher and librarian, before becoming a full-time writer in 1975. He spent much of his later life in Nelson, where he became a loved consituent. Nelson MP Rachel Boyack said the late novelist made a big contribution to the South Island city. "He was involved in groups like 'Friends of the Maitai', who have done a huge amount of work to protect out river that runs through inner city Nelson. "In a recent interview he spoke of the important of the Maitai river, in terms of teaching his daughters how to swim and so while he didn't grow up here he spent his later years of his life here. "It's really sad, wonderful that he was able to live such a full life into his early 90s but it's always so sad when we've lost someone who made such a significant contribution to our nation." "Nelson people are very proud that he decided to live and retire here in Nelson," said Boyack. Those sentiments were shared by another politician, Minister for Arts, Culture & Heritage Paul Goldsmith. "It's a very sad day, Maurice Gee has been a greatly loved writer and novelist for many decades. "People of my generation grew up on Under the Mountain being a great local story, some of his other great novels like Plumb have had international acclaim but also being part of our literary cannon as it used to be known as," said the minister. Goldsmith said Plumb was his favourite novel written by Gee. He said parliament could look to pay tribute in some way to the late writer in the coming days, but said there had been no discussions yet.

'Intergenerational legacy' - Tributes for Maurice Gee
'Intergenerational legacy' - Tributes for Maurice Gee

RNZ News

time15-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

'Intergenerational legacy' - Tributes for Maurice Gee

The death of Maurice Gee has prompted many New Zealanders to pay tribute to the late novelist. Considered one of New Zealand's greatest novelists, his work extended over 50 years. The author, who died recently aged 93 , wrote about ordinary people and ordinary lives, often with the narrator looking back at events that caused damage and unhappiness. Publisher and literary commentator Fergus Barrowman said Gee's work hugely influenced his life. "I read Plumb when it came out in paperback in 1979, and I was 18, and it was the first New Zealand book I read that really sort of fired my imagination and gave me a sense of how sort of diverse and interesting and challenging this country was. "I read everything else, and he's really shaped my view. "I know that his books have stayed in print and been widely read, and the fact that he was at that point turning to write children's books as well meant that there have always been new generations coming on, so people are still reading him as a contemporary," he said. Barrowman said he knew Gee for more than 40 years and had worked with him from time to time. That included Gee's 2015 biography - written by his sister Rachel Barrowman - Maurice Gee: Life and Work. "He was dedicated from early on, but he didn't strike gold quickly," said Barrowman. "He took some time to learn to write and was in dialogue with Charles Brasch, the stern editor of Landfall , with his early stories. "At a certain point when he really felt that he had come of age as a writer, he left secure employment and lived by his writing, his adult novels, his children's books, and writing for TV thereafter, so that dedication has been an inspiration for a lot of writers. "I think he had an inner core of steel and grasped his own significance, but he was also a very humble and modest man who didn't like being the centre of attention. "I think it was interesting that when he did publish a memoir, it was three memoirs, three shorter pieces, which had been written about his family, and for his family he wasn't trying to foreground himself. "It was really his books that he wanted to see recognised and out in the world, and the books are known internationally as well as locally." "Though I haven't seen a lot of him recently, he does leave a hole in my life," said Barrowman. The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi said we they were deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Gee, describing him as "one of Aotearoa New Zealand's most celebrated novelists, a literary giant, and a quiet revolutionary". General manager Jessica Palalagi said this was cemented by Gee earning the prestigious Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship in 1992 and being among the inaugural Icon Whakamana Hiranga recipients in 2003, among numerous other awards. "He has left a strong intergenerational legacy for us all through his work," said Palalagi. "To me, that's what becoming an icon is really. It's that ability to make work and to be an artist that lasts across generations. "I think his writing for children also meant that a lot of us grew up with his literature and then they were turned into sort of like motion pictures and TV shows. "It was world building, he created worlds through his words," she said. Palalagi said The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi had been trying to organise a rare interview with Gee, which unfortunately was not able to materialise. She said even in his final years, he still shied away from the limelight. "I had been actually trying to reach out to him since last year. So we've been talking to him via his daughter because we were trying to organise a sort of a profile piece on him. "He was kind of like, 'oh, why is everyone making a fuss about this work that I did?'. So I think he was just incredibly humble. "He was actually very generous in saying that he doesn't actually do a lot of interviews, but he was happy to sit down and have a chat so I felt very humbled in that way to be able to have that time, but we just couldn't quite get there. "It's quite sad in a way to think that we could have had one sort of last conversation," she said. Gee was born in Whakatāne in 1931 and educated at Auckland's Avondale College in Auckland and at Auckland University where he took a Masters degree in English. He worked as a teacher and librarian, before becoming a full-time writer in 1975. He spent much of his later life in Nelson, where he became a loved consituent. Nelson MP Rachel Boyack said the late novelist made a big contribution to the South Island city. "He was involved in groups like 'Friends of the Maitai', who have done a huge amount of work to protect out river that runs through inner city Nelson. "In a recent interview he spoke of the important of the Maitai river, in terms of teaching his daughters how to swim and so while he didn't grow up here he spent his later years of his life here. "It's really sad, wonderful that he was able to live such a full life into his early 90s but it's always so sad when we've lost someone who made such a significant contribution to our nation." "Nelson people are very proud that he decided to live and retire here in Nelson," said Boyack. Those sentiments were shared by another politician, Minister for Arts, Culture & Heritage Paul Goldsmith. "It's a very sad day, Maurice Gee has been a greatly loved writer and novelist for many decades. "People of my generation grew up on Under the Mountain being a great local story, some of his other great novels like Plumb have had international acclaim but also being part of our literary cannon as it used to be known as," said the minister. Goldsmith said Plumb was his favourite novel written by Gee. He said parliament could look to pay tribute in some way to the late writer in the coming days, but said there had been no discussions yet. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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