The game has a long way to go, but Niantic continues to
promise exciting updates.
Not exact matches
Now with the steady OS
updates,
promising future and Phil Spencer taking over, I'm more
excited than ever for it.
An Assassin's Creed game set in Paris (
exciting to me because I have family in France and thus have been to Paris frequently), with a new and
promising looking parkour system, a new assassin who they said would be charming, a new combat system, an actual stealth button, and running only on PS4 and Xbox One because of the
updated graphics.
Minecraft fans were spoiled during Microsoft's E3 conference when it was announced that the game was getting a full 4k
update thanks to the Xbox One X. Even more
exciting is the
promise that the popular sandbox game will become unified across all platforms — including the Nintendo Switch — on a codebase level, allowing the possibility of cross-play.
And while Android Oreo in general will bring a slew of tweaks that we're
excited about, including some interesting features like picture - in - picture mode and faster boot times (all underlined with a
promise to make
updating easier in the future), Google hasn't made enough changes to impact tablet users in a comparably meaningful way.
Today we're
excited to announce preliminary support for H. 264 / AVC support in the real - time communications (RTC) stack in Microsoft Edge, as initially
promised in our April roadmap
update.
Promising faster Android
updates solves the sick joke of Google launching
exciting new operating system upgrades... then you waiting for them to trickle down to your specific phone (and carrier).
Before you get too
excited, let me just start by saying that this is not the
promised Nougat
update you are all waiting for.