in some important changes for the service and its business model."You will immediately
rs3 gold see a clear breakdown of whats included with game rentals, so its easier to tell what content youre getting with your rental, especially since several Runescape games offered through PS Now include DLC that increase the value of the offering. Also, in a few weeks, you will start seeing reduced pricing on some 4-hour rentals which will appear at $1.99."Many testers expressed disappointment with the idea of renting individual Runescape games. Like me, they expected PlayStation Now to be a monthly subscription service that lets you access every game in its library. Buser said that they're currently working on a subscription option, though he couldn't share any further details.Though PlayStation Now's open beta is limited to the PS4 at the moment, the service will come to other devices in the future. Sony intends to release PS Now on PS3, PS Vita, PlayStation TV and select Sony televisions.It's unclear whether PlayStation Now's library will expand beyond PS3 Runescape games. In a recent interview, Buser didn't indicate whether that's still the case."During the open beta launch on PlayStation 4 we'll be focusing on PlayStation 3 titles," Buser told Kotaku. "We don't have anything specific to announce at this time."Weekly Recap: PS Now Vs EA Access And 5 Other Major Stories. Destiny: 5 Things I Want To See In The Final Game. Minecraft Xbox 360 Receives Guardians Of The Galaxy Skin Pack This Week. Homefront: The Revolution Salvaged By Deep Silver As Crytek Closes Two Studios. Crytek recently mentioned in a public statement that they were making a transition in how the business operates. They mentioned in the statement that details would come soon after, however it appears that Koch Media, the parent company of Deep Silver, beat them to the punch. It's been made known today that Homefront: The
RS Gold Revolution will no longer be handled by Crytek.In a press release Deep Silver made it known that the Runescape game will now be developed in-house