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Posted by Joystiq May 28 2013 02:30 GMT
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Valve has introduced a new community discipline program for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive that it calls "Overwatch," designed to let players govern themselves when it comes to problem behavior.

Overwatch will deputize some players as "investigators" (based on stats like wins and hours played), who are then given a replay of a match from a reported player, and asked to rule on whether "the suspect" was cheating, griefing, or if there's "insufficient evidence" to rule. Once a collective verdict is reached, Valve will then determine if a ban needs to be given, and investigators will be rewarded if their judgments all agree.

The process sounds very much like League of Legends' Tribunal program, which Riot Games has been using recently to try and cure that game of toxic player behavior. Valve says the system is currently in beta, and that it will be adding test cases to make sure the program works correctly. Eventually, however, the plan is to make Overwatch completely driven by the community.

Posted by Kotaku May 27 2013 01:00 GMT
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Who says you need to be a newly-revealed or upcoming AAA blockbuster game to get a fancy cinematic trailer. League of Legends is neither of those things. What it is is one of the world's biggest video games, one that's able to commission something this long (and expensive) just for the hell of it.

Posted by Kotaku May 16 2013 06:00 GMT
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There are few games that require a "lore" so little as League of Legends. Pick your guy/gal/thing, ,get 'em in a lane, click a lot, give/receive abuse, game over. It's a series as dependent on narrative as a game of poker. Yet the fantasy setting, and the game's rabid following, nevertheless inspires attempts to give the universe a little more meaning. Like Rachel Cory's comic here about the hero Diana, giving life to the character's backstory. As simple as League of Legends is, it could probably do with more of this sort of stuff! Diana [Rachel Cory]

Posted by Kotaku May 14 2013 19:30 GMT
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Seventeen League of Legends champions die for every baby that is born, and many other crazy facts put just how big a game this online multiplayer is into perspective. League of Legends certainly has a huge presence online, with a robust and enthusiastic competitive community, too. But I bet you never thought one livestreamed competition could bring in as many viewers as four times the population of Lichtenstein. This video debuts a new series being hosted on Machinima, called "Graphic Content." It's like an infographic, but animated. To contact the author of this post, write to tina@kotaku.com or find her on Twitter at @tinaamini.

Posted by Joystiq May 01 2013 09:00 GMT
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Lissandra the Ice Witch, League of Legends' newest Champion, is now available as part of the game's ongoing battle for the Freljord. Lissandra's abilities favor swift movement and crowd control over excessive damage output, though she seems entirely capable of the latter when need be. The new Champion's Bloodstone skin is on sale for 1462 Riot Points (down from 1950) until the end of the weekend.

As far as the devious role Lissandra the Ice Witch plays in LoL's vast mythos, you'll have to scope out the story trailer frozen beyond the veil. In related news, the "Howling Abyss" map added last month is now included in the game's "All Random All Mid," or "ARAM" matchmaking system. A new rerolling mechanic has also been introduced, which allows players a second chance at randomly selecting a character, provided they've earned enough points in previous Howling Abyss matches.

Posted by Kotaku Apr 29 2013 01:00 GMT
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A favourite tool of hackers and other forms of online troublemaker, the DDOS - Distributed Denial of Service - attack is something we see a lot of in video games, whether it be people trying to take down a company's website or even, in some cases, crash the games themselves. But just how does a DDOS attack work? Many know that, basically, a DDOS attack is when, as Motherboard so perfectly puts it, "computers send a boatload of traffic to a site's servers until they break". Which makes sense, but it's not until you see it happening that you get an idea of how powerful these attacks can be. In these videos you can see a visualisation of a server handling visits to a website, all in the style of a game of Pong. Created by VLC developer Ludovic Fauvet, the top one shows regular sever traffic. The visits come in, and the server's "paddle" is able to meet them. The video below, though, shows a DDOS attack underway. And the paddle is on fire. Understand How DDoS Attacks Work with These Cool Visualizations [Motherboard]

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Posted by Kotaku Apr 23 2013 00:00 GMT
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This new documentary short from Machinima shares the story of Peter "Doublelift" Peng, a professional League of Legends player who was kicked out of his home and relied on pro gaming to pay his rent. (Thanks, Ryan and Zach.)

Posted by Kotaku Apr 19 2013 19:30 GMT
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According to Riot, the odds of getting a pentakill in League of Legends is one in every 1,500 matches. A pentakill is when you manage to kill the entire enemy team in a short period of time—no easy feat! Twitch user Aieron accomplished a pentakill though, and he did it without using his hands: he is a disabled gamer. Aieron's real name is Keith Knight. He has Amyoplasia Arthrogrypos, which means he was born with less muscle mass in his body than the average person, and his joints stiffen as he ages. Knight can't use his arms or hands well enough to use his computer, but he's able to play games by using his mouth, foot and elbow according to Knight's Facebook page FAQ. Knight is currently a business student on his 4th year of his BBA. Hands Free Penta Kill [Reddit via Polygon]

Posted by Kotaku Apr 19 2013 05:00 GMT
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Katie De Sousa is a concept artist who currently works at League of Legends developers Riot Games. She's been there since 2012, and has been responsible for many of the awesome splash images you see for the game's heroes. She also worked on the very pretty indie game Paper Moon. You can see more of her art at her personal site and blog. To see the larger pics in all their glory (or, if they’re big enough, so you can save them as wallpaper), click on the “expand” button in the bottom-right corner. Fine Art is a celebration of the work of video game artists, showcasing the best of both their professional and personal portfolios. If you're in the business and have some concept, environment, promotional or character art you'd like to share, drop us a line!

Posted by Rock, Paper, Shotgun Apr 04 2013 12:00 GMT
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League of Legends is notorious for a lot of things: a steep yet rewarding learning curve, a sometimes less-than-cuddly community, making all the money and stealing all your friends and leaving you painfully alone/playing Heroes of Newerth, etc. And then, of course, there’s that other thing people don’t talk about nearly enough: shamelessly exposed, highly impractical female character designs. Yes, it’s fantasy. Yes, it’s fiction. It doesn’t matter; this stuff alienates people, and that’s a fact. But while calling out people who see women exclusively as chainmail bikini stands is important, there’s an equally key flipside to the coin: encouragement. So good on Riot for beginning to take baby steps in the right direction with Sejuani. Her gigantic boar, however, continues to parade about trouser-less, a picture of frolicking filth.

(more…)


Posted by Rock, Paper, Shotgun Mar 19 2013 20:30 GMT
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I’m addicted to you, but you know that you’re toxic. And I love what you do, but you know that you’re toxic, said a woman, once, to me. She was Britney Spears, yes, although you know she looks a lot like Katarina in League of Legends in the Toxic video so maybe she was just predicting an awful lot of things that were going to go on in the future. Such as a bunch of absolute knobbers acting like knobs in League of Legends. Britney Spears has SPOKEN.(more…)


Posted by Kotaku Mar 05 2013 16:00 GMT
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#hardware When they aren't busy making tablet gaming computers, Razer has been known to toss out the odd gaming peripheral. Today the company assembles a team of official collector's edition League of Legends peripherals that, despite my hopes, did nothing to improve my in-game performance. More »

Posted by Kotaku Feb 28 2013 14:00 GMT
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#esports Competitive gaming has millions of fans. Its biggest stars earn six-figure salaries. Yet it's nowhere to be found on American television. You may happen upon bowling, lumberjack contests, or even rock-paper-scissors while channel surfing, but nary a match of StarCraft or League of Legends. More »

Posted by Kotaku Feb 20 2013 10:00 GMT
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#lol In online game League of Legends, Demacia is a city-state that stands as a symbol of justice and virtue. In China, it's a restaurant. More »

Posted by Kotaku Jan 25 2013 04:30 GMT
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#leagueoflegends The crackdown continues. League of Legends developers Riot have banned three more e-sports hopefuls from the game, this time only days away from a LoL Championship Series qualifying event in Poland. More »

Posted by Joystiq Jan 30 2013 18:00 GMT
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Ask a couple of Riot Games' employees what goes into choosing players for League of Legends' annual World Championships, and they'll rattle off a strange series of acronyms and words that represent tournaments from around the world: Major League Gaming, the IGN Pro League, ESL's Intel Extreme Masters Series, OGN, IPL, Dreamhack, Tales of the Lane, and so many more.

The route from just playing for free online to the top of the World Championship ladders is so confusing and circuitous that most press outlets don't cover it, most players don't follow it, and even most eSports fans couldn't explain it all. There's a jargon to it (littered with player and team names full of weird capitalization and strange spellings) that's about as complicated to understand as the notoriously complex game itself.

Riot's Vice President of eSports Dustin Beck even says that a recent tournament he attended was a big mess on its own: "The tournament kept pausing, it never started on time, you didn't have a schedule to know when your favorite teams were playing. It wasn't a fun experience, for me."

Still, eSports is one of the biggest factors in League of Legends' overwhelming popularity, with thousands of people attending these tournaments, and millions (almost ten million, in fact) watching live online. So how does Riot plan to smooth out those wrinkles that keep an even larger audience out of the game? The company will take the game into Season 3 within the next few weeks, and with it begins Riot's eSports headliner, the League of Legends Championship Series.

Posted by Kotaku Jan 31 2013 09:00 GMT
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#cosplay League of Legends is huge. Gamers love it! And when gamers love something, they love dressing up as it. More »

Posted by Kotaku Jan 21 2013 00:00 GMT
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#leagueoflegends Continuing a recent crackdown on the kind of behaviour that gives the game a bad rap (at least amongst those who don't play it religiously), League of Legends developers Riot have permanently banned two prominent eSports players for their "toxic behavior in-game". More »

Posted by Kotaku Dec 21 2012 18:00 GMT
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#guesteditorial There are three main gaming platforms. The PC, the mobile or ‘smart' device, and the dedicated games console. Looking worldwide, two out of three are now dominated by free-to-play. More »

Posted by Kotaku Dec 14 2012 20:00 GMT
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#guardiansofmiddleearth Today, The Hobbit releases in theaters. While it looks like a video game, there's an actual video game you can play: Guardians of Middle-Earth. It's a Lord of The Rings MOBA game released in tandem with the movie. I've been playing Guardians lately. More »

Posted by Kotaku Dec 10 2012 04:30 GMT
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#leagueoflegends When you have over 12 million people playing your game every single day, a lot of data is getting moved around. How much? In League of Legends' case, over 4 terabytes worth. More »

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Posted by Kotaku Dec 06 2012 19:30 GMT
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#leagueoflegends Riot has released a whopping pre-season-3 patch for League of Legends, which will doubtless make a ton of diehard players very happy. Since everyone loves massive patches that change tons of things about their favorite video games. More »

Posted by Kotaku Dec 06 2012 05:00 GMT
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#leagueoflegends League of Legends might be one of the biggest games in the world, but it's not without its share of problems. Chief among them the fact many of its players are hostile, anti-social assholes. More »

Posted by Kotaku Dec 05 2012 03:00 GMT
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#leagueoflegends Proving that professional gamers can be no different to the casual players of the same game, League of Legends pro Christian Rivera has been banned from the game for "persistent toxic behavior". More »

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Posted by darkz Nov 27 2012 20:44 GMT
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it's a rip off for those of you who don't know. most of the characters are carbon copies of characters already in league of legends

Fallen Shade
how shrektascular

Posted by Kotaku Nov 15 2012 20:45 GMT
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#leagueoflegends League of Legends is a beast. An unassailable success that every other games developer or publisher is trying to figure out. Based on hours of play, it's the most played video game in the world, notching upwards of 1 billion hours logged every month. Millions of people jump on line every day to battle it out in Riot Games' hit multiplayer title. And League of Legends' annual tournament doled out a cool million in cash this summer, after a championship round that 8 million viewers tuned in for. More »

Posted by Kotaku Nov 05 2012 17:30 GMT
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#leagueoflegends CNNMoney runs videos of people who they think have great professions. Who's in their latest batch? None other than Ryan "Morello" Scott, lead content designer on Riot Games' League of Legends. More »

Posted by Rock, Paper, Shotgun Oct 28 2012 10:00 GMT
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Our e-sports correspondent is Jeb Boone.

A dearth of tournaments outside of Asia has left western e-sports of every stripe wallowing in controversy. The StarCraft 2 community continues to cannibalize itself with vitriol and a player shake up has League of Legends fans up in arms. A few glimmers of hope have steered StarCraft fans in a more positive direction and, with any luck, an OSL finals will remind many of the reasons why a hobby became an infatuation that just wouldn’t quit.(more…)