Top Open-World PC Games for Endless Modding Fun

Open-world games, especially RPGs that offer a high degree of freedom, tend to be fan favorites on PC. Players love customizing characters, immersing themselves in vast worlds, tackling various activities, and finding fresh ways to spice up their favorite games on repeat playthroughs. Below, we’ll take a look at some of the best open-world games with thriving modding communities (sorted by the number of mods available), using the Nexus website as a reference and highlighting the most popular mods available for each title.

Unveiling the Secrets of Solo Leveling’s Ultimate Catastrophe!

There is still a lot we don’t know about the world of Solo Leveling. One day, suddenly Gates started to appear that sent magical beasts to earth, but also allowed humans to fight back as Hunters. Sung Il-Hwan was trapped in one such gate. On his return to Earth, he warned about an upcoming catastrophe. What exactly is that?

Exciting New Patent Reveals Switch 2’s Game-Changing AI Upscaling Technology!

The Nintendo Switch 2 is the successor to the original Switch console, and discussions over its power and capabilities have made it the worst-kept secret in Nintendo’s recent history before its January reveal. While it has a bigger screen than the Switch and new Joy-Con controllers, the Switch 2 will also be backward compatible with most physical and digital Switch games, barring a few exceptions. Although the original Switch will still see support from Nintendo via upcoming titles like Metroid Prime 4: Beyond and Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition, it remains to be seen if the performance of those games will be improved on the Switch 2.

Destiny 2’s Court of Blades Exposes Major Loot Problems That Bungie Needs to Fix!

Destiny 2‘s Frontiers later this year will change how some things work in the game, from its new armor system to changing the content model to smaller releases and ditching yearly expansions. Although it remains to be seen what Bungie will do about loot in Destiny 2, it’s arguably one of the most pressing issues within the game. Weapon crafting seems mostly a thing of the past now, but one of the biggest issues is that the space-magic game often fails to reward players’ time – and Court of Blades is further proof of this.

Dedicated Sekiro Player Defeats Inner Isshin Daily for a Year to Demand New Game Content!

Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice is a notoriously difficult title, but it is also a game that has left its fans craving more like it with little to fulfill the same exact kind of niche. Although games like Star Wars Jedi: Survivor and Nine Sols exist, championing parry-based gameplay in a manner that seems to carry strong Sekiro inspiration, some of FromSoft’s most faithful fans prefer the feeling of gameplay in Sekiro, refusing any substitutes. Some expect FromSoftware to eventually release more content in the form of DLC, a remaster for newer gen systems, or a sequel, and there’s one who’s been very vocal about that desire recently.

Valeyard: Doctor Who’s Greatest Villain

Current showrunner Russell T. Davies is known for taking antagonists from the Classic Series and using them to give the Doctor a show-stopping final few episodes in each series finale. Davies started this trend back in 2005, first with the Dalek Emperor. Then he brought back the Cybermen, the Master, Davros (creator of the Daleks), Rassilon, and more recently, the Toymaker in the 60th Anniversary Specials. In fact, for Series 14, Davies ran with the notion that the Toymaker was part of a larger Pantheon of Discord, gods of chaos and mischief that Gatwa’s Doctor continued to face down. All ending in a confrontation with the head of the Pantheon and Classic Series villain, Sutekh, the god of death. A roster of misbehaving gods initially sounded very intriguing, but after Sutekh’s defeat, the whole overarching plotline was closed off. Now, the only potential candidate for a season finale showdown is Mrs. Flood (Anita Dobson).

Discover the Darkest Sci-Fi Anime & Manga Where Protagonists Meet Their End!

For readers and viewers who want an exciting take on sci-fi stories, they might be interested in tales where protagonists don’t necessarily make it in the end. These can be perceived as “more realistic,” as this implies protagonists aren’t always there for a “larger” destiny, making them just as fragile as everyone else. Knowing which protagonists die in their stories also gives these titles a sense of urgency, as this means viewers and readers now have to see if the deaths of these protagonists indeed “make sense” for their plots. Just which sci-fi anime and manga best approach such a conundrum?