Payday 3 Crossplay Guide: Is Payday 3 Cross Platform?

Payday 3 is back for players to engage in high-stakes gameplay with a new bunch of missions and stories. With this new installment of this renowned shooter series, fans will be looking to team up together and pull off amazing heists with their buddies, be rich, and live the high life. One of the key aspects of Payday 3 is teamwork, so having a feature like crossplay could be really beneficial for those who are not on the same platform as their other friends. So, let’s take a look at whether Payday 3 supports the crossplay feature or not.

Is There Crossplay in Payday 3?

Fortunately, Payday 3 owners will be able to enjoy the crossplay feature in the game. This means players will be able to play with their friends across the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. In addition to this, there is also cross-progression, where players will be able to transfer progress. So, players will be able to play Payday 3 together with their friends no matter what console they are on. Teamwork is key in Payday 3, and having the crossplay feature is a big plus for all the players. This will help in pulling off heists successfully.

To enable cross-progression, players will need to create a Starbreeze account and sign in on their preferred platform. This will make sure your progress is saved whenever you play, and you can then transfer that to any other platform.

To enable Crossplay, you will need to go into the Settings section and turn on Crossplay. If you prefer to play without Crossplay, you will simply have to turn off the crossplay feature. Generally, the Crossplay feature will provide faster matchmaking, but sometimes players prefer to play with people on the same platform as them.

Payday 3 is now available on the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. If you’d rather play a new single-player RPG, check out our Starfield guides hub!

The Top 30 Games to Play Before You’re Born

The video game canon may be young, but boy, is it mighty. There are titles that have stood the test of time and call for at least one playthrough over the course of your life: your Metal Gears, your Portals, your Fumito Ueda games. Well, forget about those! We’re not here for them.

We’re here to talk about the titles that, if you haven’t played, gamers won’t even look at you for. We’re talking about the games you better damn well have an opinion on fresh out of the womb. You plebeian. We can’t believe you consider yourself “born,” let alone a gamer.

#1. Super Mario Bros.

This goes without saying, but you need to have played a Mario game before you do anything else. Start by memorizing 1-1. You don’t want to be the jackass wearing Mario merch your aunt got you while knowing nothing about Mario, do you? 

#2. Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island

On second thoughts, play this one. Mario’s a baby in it. It’ll give you a better understanding of how much of a burden you’ll be the first few years.

#3. The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild

It’s commonly believed that real-life took heavy inspiration from Breath of the Wild. There’s grass outside, and weather, and you can usually pick a direction and walk in it. By seeing these elements in their original form, you’ll develop a true appreciation for your hometown’s open world design — and you can talk all the other dumb babies’ ears off about it.

#4. Dark Souls

You can be 60 years old and gamers will still call you a baby if you haven’t played Souls. Or, you can “Git gud” as an infant and be crowned the realest adult of all.

#5. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe

This one’s for the lil’ siblings out there. Get some practice rounds in, ’cause big sib’s not gonna hold back. 

#6. Ultimate Marvel Vs. Capcom 3

Same deal as above, but for fighting games. I think Super Smash Bros. would be too overwhelming; there’s way more characters and franchises than you can be expected to know at your age. An MvC game, on the other hand, will introduce you to a bunch of Marvel heroes you’ll be expected to know by first grade — and a bunch of game options to look into after birth. 

#7. Final Fantasy VII

Final Fantasy is an anthology series, meaning every numbered entry is self-contained and you can start with any one. WRONG! Before you start, you need to have an encyclopedic knowledge of VII. In fact, you should know everything about VII before you even play VII: What happens to Aerith? Is Gaia Spira? Do we still know Sephiroth?

(Also: It’ll make Remake wayyy cooler, trust me.)

#8. Super Mario 64

Mario 64 was revolutionary for its time — and continues to be a cornerstone for 3D platformer game design to this day. If you’re coming into this world and picking up the hot new game your kindergarten friends are into or some shit, you won’t be able to appreciate how it draws from the OG — which is, of course, essential to the experience. 

#9. Pokémon Red / Blue Version

You need to have the first 151 Pokémon memorized straight out of the womb. They’re on all the merch. Learn to sing the Pokérap by age 3. 

#10. Minecraft

Minecraft also has a bunch of kids’ merch you want to be able to talk about. In addition: If you can understand Minecraft early on in life, your parents will have millions of hours of YouTube to slap on an iPad to shut you up. Do it for them? 

#11. Red Dead Redemption 2

Forget about the M rating and just play it now. Trust me. Prioritize RDR or you’ll be saying “Oh yeah, it’s on my list” for your entire life.

#12. Life is Strange

See? I never got around to this one. But I wish someone had told me when I was young, ’cause the devs are totally right. Life is strange. 

#13. Kingdom Hearts

Picture this: It’s 2025. This trailer comes on for a sick new game featuring your favorite Disney characters. You’re psyched!!! But here’s the catch: You need to play ALL the older ones to understand it. I’m just trying to give you a head start here. Go in release order and you’ll be fine…

#14. Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories

No, seriously. Really get that head start. 

#15. Fortnite

I’ve heard literal eight-year-olds wax poetic about the good ol’ days of Fortnite. Bro. You are eight. How long could it have been? Unless…

#16. Five Nights at Freddy’s 

Y’all really have been gaming since infancy, huh? What does a six-year-old mean when they say FNAF “really fell off?” When were you around that it was “on?”

#17. The Last of Us Part II

Everyone and their mother is expected to have an opinion on this one. If the mother hasn’t passed that on to their child, is she even parenting?

#18. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic

If there’s two things Star Wars fans love, it’s (1) hating Star Wars, and (2) namedropping Darth Revan. Imagine how jealous the other kids will be when they pull out their Boba Fett lunchboxes and you pull out your 42-page dossier on why Revan is the GOAT.

#19. Overcooked 2

Twins in utero? No problem! Go for a 4-stars run on this one and you’ll come out as an unstoppable duo.

#20. Hollow Knight

Get in on this one early! Baristas have been extra nice to me because they’ve seen me in a Hollow Knight shirt. Being an HK fan is the closest I’ve come to experiencing what folks call “pretty privilege” — and I want that for you too while you’re growing up.

#21. Dragon Ball Z Budokai Tenkaichi 2

Trust me when I say: This is the most efficient way to gain a comprehensive understanding of Dragon Ball Z without sitting through the whole 200+ episodes. Now, this is important: You wanna make sure mom gets you 2, not 3 (You don’t have friends yet, so it’s not like you need the bigger roster). BT2 is the only one that takes its time with its story and fleshes out the details. 

#22. Donkey Kong Country

This is the definitive game for inducing nostalgia from before your time. It doesn’t matter when you came into this world; when you lived; when you left it all behind. Its soundtrack has been with you since your conception, and it will be there with you at your end.

#23. Assassin’s Creed II

Speaking of premature nostalgia: Maybe Ubisoft is onto something. Maybe genetic memory is a real thing. Maybe it’s your dad speaking, not you, when you say, “Ezio was the peak of the series. Everything after has been downhill.” 

Good. Now say it again. It doesn’t matter if it’s true or not; you’re getting so much street cred with the older kids.

#24. Yakuza 0

Here’s another head start to a long-running series for you. This one’s literally numbered 0! It’s like it was made for you. Born people can start with 1 or Kiwami. 

#25. Final Fantasy XIV

I hear it gets really good after 400 hours. This way, you can get to Heavensward as soon as you’re born!

#26. Halo 2

It doesn’t matter how “Before Your Time” this one is. Gamers will just start reminiscing about Halo 2 apropos of nothing. I did not have an Xbox growing up and never have I felt more left out than when my friends would just start… chanting. Dude.

#27.  A Google Doodle

Okay, we have a whole lot of pop culture trivia in there. Should probably invest some general knowledge in you too, eh?

#28. What Remains of Edith Finch

The first test of every person’s life is whether or not they cry the moment they’re born. Play this one, and you’re guaranteed to pass. 

#29. Shadow of the Colossus

Okay, I know what I said about Fumito Ueda’s stuff — but this one really is essential at any stage in life and literally ends with [Spoilers]. You can replay it after being born, and it’ll offer a fascinating perspective. Make us a video essay about it!

#30. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim


Todd Howard recently announced Skyrim: Womb Edition, so you really have no excuse anymore. This is the must-play RPG. The only reason we ranked it #30 is that it takes like the full 9 months to beat — and we want to be realistic about your time.

 

Agent 47 Misses Obvious Pass Interference While Disguised as NFL Referee

FOXBORO, Mass. — NFL fans, players, as well as officials from the International Contracts Agency were incensed that while disguised as a referee, Agent 47 missed an obvious pass interference call that not only blew his cover, but cost the New England Patriots the game as well, sources report.

“How the fuck do you not call that” a furious DeVante Parker declared during a post-game conference. “[Kader] Kohou practically tackled me before the ball even got there, any first year pee-wee ref could see that was a pass-interference. Plus, who the hell was that bald asshole anyway? One of the line-judges just inexplicably disappeared during halftime and next thing we know this creepy dude is taking over for him.” 

“Half the time he just kept walking away from the field and didn’t even seem focused on the game,” Parker added.

Officials from the ICA were also quick to denounce 47’s error and noted the Agency’s commitment to professionalism.

“I’m not at liberty to comment on an internal matter, but I assure our clients that appropriate action will be taken,” remarked Diana Burnwood, a senior official with the ICA. “Our agents are trained to act with the utmost level of professionalism and preparation. They are expected to have a rudimentary of any profession they might disguise as and to miss what, at the very least, was a defensive hold is simply unacceptable.”

Reached for comment, Agent 47 defended his behavior as within normal protocol for both the NFL and ICA.

“It was late in the 4th Quarter, whatever happened to just let them play,” the noted Assassin asked. “First of all, any contact that might have occurred during the play was incidental and not impeding the receiver. Also, it’s debatable that that was even a catchable ball anyway. As for ICA, did they forget why I was there in the first place? I think we’re being a bit pedantic here.”

Agent 47 ended his remarks by stating he stood by his call and that this had nothing to do with him being a lifelong Raiders fan. 

New Saw Movie Features Torture Device Where Victim Must Watch Entire Saw Franchise in Order to Escape

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — A five-minute sneak peek of the upcoming movie Saw X, the latest entry in the long-running horror series, revealed the premise of one of the film’s trademark torture devices.

“Hello, Karl. I’d like to play a game,” says the iconic voice of the villain Jigsaw through a taped recording. “You’ll notice the television in front of you is showing the DVD menu for my first movie. Next to it is a binder containing discs for the entire series. Any attempt to leave the room before you have watched each film, beginning to end, will trigger a bomb that has been surgically implanted in the base of your neck. There are no restraints to hold you down. There is no lock on the door. Live or die. Make your choice.”

Fan reaction to the sequence has been overwhelmingly positive.

“Normally, I don’t like when movies like this get all meta,” said Brett Pierson, who hosts a podcast dedicated to horror films. “But this is just so twisted that I can’t help but love it. It didn’t seem so intense at first, but once I realized they were including Spiral? Hoo boy! It’s an instant classic. You’re going to be hard pressed to find a Saw fan who doesn’t put this at the top of their ‘Favorite Traps’ list.”

Film critic Corey Holloway said that, while he could appreciate the craft of the scene, it hit a little too close to home.

“I’ve never seen my life depicted so accurately on screen,” said Holloway. “I have to commend the actor playing the victim for his amazing performance. He really sold it with his eyes. It’s like you could see the life and humanity leaving him each time he started a new movie. Some may think he gets a happy ending when he completes the test and escapes, but I know the awful truth. His life ended in that room. It’s a clever subversion of the franchise’s themes, but it leaves me feeling so, so hollow.”

At press time, producers revealed that viewers would experience the trap in real time and that a screening of the film would take over 13 hours to complete.

Professor Xavier’s VHS Collection Destroyed By The Awesome Power Of Magneto

WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N.Y. — During a recent battle with the Brotherhood of Mutants at the X-Mansion, Magneto took the opportunity to use his magnetic powers to erase all of Professor Xavier’s VHS collection rendering them useless.

“This is the worst thing he’s ever done, you don’t mess with a man’s VHS collection!” said Professor X via telepathy. “My collection included compilations of local TV commercials, Z-grade exploitation movies, Dazzler karaoke videos, Latverian Star Wars knock-offs, and rare copies of Reverend William Stryker’s public access puppet shows! Now they are all gone, and I don’t exactly have a Cerebro type device for finding them at thrift stores again.”

Kitty Pryde shared her frustration.

“I never understood his obsession but he is clearly shaken,” she said.  “This is the most defeated I’ve ever seen Xavier. We have a Danger Room filled with the most realistic holograms possible and he still would complain that they lacked the aesthetic only a VHS can bring. We once fought Apocalypse over a giant pyramid made completely out of copies of Jerry Maguire tapes in the desert. The guy does not mess around.” 

Magneto, meanwhile, has shown no remorse for his tape deleting actions. 

“Charles may be angry now, but he will eventually thank me for it,” he said.  “VHS, much like the humans, is an outdated format. As homo superiors, we must only enjoy the top shelf formats such as Blu-ray with special features. And I won’t be stopping my crusade here. Very soon I will be taking my actions towards Joe Pickett and Nick Prueher of the Found Footage Festival!”

The X-Men are still rebuilding from the defeat. Fortunately, it appears that one of Professor X’s six copies of Total Recall still works.

Nintendo Direct Announcer’s Voice Changes Octave To Discuss M-Rated Game

KYOTO — During a Nintendo Direct presentation that was recorded in Japanese and dubbed over in English, the announcer’s voice reportedly shifted an entire octave when discussing an M-Rated Game.

“We hope you all look forward to the Super Mario Bros. Wonder game, coming this fall!” said the dubbed-over voice of Shinya Takahashi before immediately pitching his tone down. “And coming later this year: Alan Wake. It’s not for fucking pussies.”

The voice-actor in question, Tim O’Leary, shared some insight into the process.

“They really ask a lot from me,” said O’Leary. “You have to have incredible range just to talk about different games coming out on the Nintendo Switch. One second I’m on some farming simulator with magical elves, and then all of a sudden I’m talking about a port of some Xbox game where you cut people’s heads off with a chainsaw gun. I gotta say, I never thought my theater degree would take me here.”

Doug Bowser, the president of Nintendo of America, was confident in his presenters’ abilities.

“We know we throw a lot at our presenters for Nintendo Directs,” said Bowser. “After all, the whole world’s watching them. It’s guaranteed to trend on twitter. Millions of unemployed adults will wake up at 7am just to hear 45 minutes of game announcements for their Nintendo Switch, and we don’t want to let them down more than the world already has.”

At press time, Nintendo Switch presenters were already practicing voice training exercises in preparation for the next grueling series of announcements.

Top 50 Anime To Start And Then Never Finish

These days, there’s more content out there vying for your undivided attention than ever before. It’s overwhelming to think about your backlog of media to get to, and with more and more anime being released each season, it’s never been easier to start an anime and just never finish it. So without further ado, here’s a handy list of the top 50 anime to start and then never finish.

#1 — Fullmetal Alchemist (2003)

Now hold on, hold on, don’t grab your pitchforks and torches just yet. This series meant a lot to me growing up, I watched the new episodes on Adult Swim each and every week. But nowadays, there is a closer-to-the-manga adaptation out there with a story that, quite frankly, blows this version out of the water. It still has its merits, but let’s face it: you’re not going to watch the same show twice even if they are pretty different.

#2 — Fire Force

Soul Eater sure was great, wasn’t it? This series is by the same creator and has a very interesting premise: it’s a world full of magic users, but everyone uses different types of fire magic specifically. Never seen that before! But my god, the cringe… so much cringe. Watching a few episodes of this will make you wonder if maybe you’ve just grown out of anime entirely.

#3 — Gundam

Gundam? Uhhh, which one?” All of them. Just, all of them. I asked a friend once for advice on where to start for Gundam and I had to take notes just to get it all down. When you get home from work and want to chill out and watch something, it can feel a bit alienating and daunting to not be able to just click on episode 1 and begin from there.

#4 — Pokémon

“Dude, it’s actually getting pretty good! Ash won the Pokémon League finally.” Don’t fall for it, it’s a trap.

#5 — Naruto

Here’s two words that will ruin any anime fan’s day: Filler. Arc. And Naruto’s full of em. The constant flashbacks to things that literally just happened are also going to be a bit of a deterrent to get through, so unless you find some online guide to skipping all of the filler, let’s face it, you’re dropping this one hard.

#6 — Clannad

People say this is really good, but like, the art style, and just… maybe this isn’t your kind of thing, okay? That’s fine!

#7 — Slam Dunk

Maybe you’re here because you like sports. You really love basketball, and you catch every game you can. Don’t be fooled, though: Slam Dunk is about as anime as anime gets, just with free throws instead of Kamehamehas. If that’s not your thing, just turn around and walk away right now.

#8 — Highschool of the Dead

All of the fanservice will have you looking over your shoulder hoping that nobody can see you watching this, for fear that you might die of embarrassment. It’s gonna be hard to get through this show if you have to do that the whole time.

#9 — Assassination Classroom

This might be kind of hard to stomach in this day and age given the tone deaf, albeit comedically over-the-top premise. Trying to tell someone you’re watching a show called Assassination Classroom in 2023 is maybe not the best water cooler banter.

#10 — Fruits Basket

Some cultural barriers with things surrounding “cousin romance” and the like may prove to be too great of an issue to continue watching this show if you start it.

#11 — One-Punch Man

Man, they really dropped the ball with that second season. You’ll feel spoiled at first, and then completely starved by the absolute level of “mid”. It’s a real cruel bait-and-switch.

#12 — Haikyu!!

Again, if you come into this as a sports fan first and not an anime fan, you are going to be left extremely disoriented and scared.

#13 — All of the FLCL Spin-Offs

FLCL was an air-tight perfect 6-episode OVA series. It was exactly what it needed to be. Maybe you’ll start up one of the four(!) spin-offs out of some misplaced sense of nostalgia, but you’ll quickly be thinking “why does this exist?” and turn it off. Well hey, at least there’s that Pillows soundtrack.

#14 — My Hero Academia

In a world that’s flooded with superhero media, TV shows, and movies, do you really need it in your anime too?

#15 — Bleach

The same people who dropped the manga because the story got stale are insisting that the new anime is really good, despite following the exact same plot line. If you can make it this far past the numerous filler arcs of the original series, you deserve a medal.

#16 — Detective Conan

It’s really long, and it’s generally pretty episodic. The lack of large sweeping story arcs that tie everything together is going to make this tough to swallow for over 1,000 episodes.

#17 — Gintama

I’m really trying not to make any enemies with this list, I swear. I just find certain series needlessly confusing to get into. I’m sure Gintama is funny, I’m sure it’s subversive just like people say, but if you finish a season and don’t know where to go next, well you’re probably just going to watch something else.

#18 — Didn’t I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life

Man I was scrolling on Crunchyroll for anime to write about for this list, but what the fuck is this? My guess is that you clicked on this show out of morbid curiosity, but there’s no way in hell you’re getting past the first five minutes.

#19 — Berserk

One of many tragedies where a great manga has received less than stellar anime adaptations. The ’97 series is really “aesthetic” but cuts out a lot of crucial plot elements, the movie trilogy is “pretty good”, and the other series we just don’t talk about. It could not be more confusing or alienating to follow without a friend telling you exactly what order to watch it in, “if you really must watch it.”

#20 — Lupin the 3rd

I want to get into this series. I really do. And hey, if you can help me out let me know in the comments below. But something about the segmented parts that are seemingly only vaguely connected, has always been confusing to me. I loved Castle of Cagliostro, and I loved the handful of episodes I saw growing up on TV. This is the one you want to start, but never quite know how, so you never finish it. Though can you even “finish” watching Lupin?

#21 — Trigun Stampede

The original series holds a special place in your heart, but watching the remake isn’t exactly the same as reliving your youth.

#22 — The Promised Neverland

Similar to what happened with One-Punch Man, The Promised Neverland’s second season was botched in a way that is completely irreparable. The first season will hook you, the second season will slap you in the face and pull your pants down in front of everyone.

#23 — Yu-Gi-Oh!

Maybe you are feeling a little nostalgic for this one and want to come back to see what’s happened over the years. Well, there are numerous sequels and spin-offs that become increasingly more confusing to follow or even pronounce. No thanks.

#24 — Claymore

One of those anime that was really good, but just never got a second season or any kind of conclusion. That’s gonna hurt, and you know it, so you’re probably just not gonna bother even finishing it.

#25 — Dragon Ball Z

Let’s be honest with ourselves: we don’t have the time we did as kids to watch each and every episode of this series that is padded out to high heaven. Thankfully there are a couple of abridged versions out there (not just comedic parody ones) that can help save some time if you really need it, but at the end of the day, it’s pretty old, and times have changed a lot. We’ve been spoiled by too many great seasonal adaptations.

Starfield Best Ship Engine Guide: What are the Best Engines?

You’ve finally got a great ship, bristling with the best ship weapons, and all of the unique modules your heart desires, so maybe it’s time to find the best engines and give yourself the thrust you really need in Starfield space dogfights. With more than 60 Engine modules to choose from, it won’t just be your budget that determines your selection. This Starfield guide will shortlist the best ship Engine parts, not just based on pure forward thrust, but also mass and thrust-to-power ratio, since power load is something to keep a weather eye on.

Keep in mind that your Reactor’s class also limits the class of other ship modules in your build, including the Engine. And while you can certainly buy a ship Engine as soon as you attain the required level to unlock it at a vendor, actually installing it will depend on your Starship Design skill rank.

Poseidon DT230 Engine: Starfield Best Class C Ship Engine Module

The absolute pinnacle of Engine modules, a single DT230 delivers a staggering 34,520 Engine Thrust and 11,600 Maneuvering Thrust. The next nearest Engine is several thousand units behind it in performance. It may be stocked by the following vendors:

  1. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of New Homestead, on Saturn’s moon Titan in the Sol System.
  2. Ship Services Technician in the city of Cydonia, on Mars in the Sol System.
  3. Nikau Henderson aboard the Deimos Staryard in the orbit of Mars’ moon Deimos, in the Sol System.
  4. Ship Services Technician aboard The Den StarStation in the orbit of Chthonia, in the Wolf System.
  5. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  6. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  7. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Gagarin Landing, on Gagarin in the Alpha Centauri System.
  8. Ship Services Technician in the city of New Atlantis, on Jemison in the Alpha Centauri System.
  9. Veronica Young in the Taiyo Astroneering Store inside Ryujin Tower, in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
  10. Ship Services Technician in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
  11. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  12. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  13. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  14. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
C 4 34,520 11,600 334 140 Starship Design 4 57 42K

Amun Dunn X-300 Engine: Starfield Best Ship Engines

Amun Dunn X-300, one of the best engines in Starfield.

This topline Amun Dunn Engine can deliver a comparable thrust per power as the Poseidon DT230. Available at:

  1. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of New Homestead, on Saturn’s moon Titan in the Sol System.
  2. Ship Services Technician in the city of Cydonia, on Mars in the Sol System.
  3. Nikau Henderson aboard the Deimos Staryard in the orbit of Mars’ moon Deimos, in the Sol System.
  4. Ship Services Technician aboard The Den StarStation in the orbit of Chthonia, in the Wolf System.
  5. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  6. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  7. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  8. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  9. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  10. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
  11. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Gagarin Landing, on Gagarin in the Alpha Centauri System.
  12. Ship Services Technician in the city of New Atlantis, on Jemison in the Alpha Centauri System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
C 3 25,890 8,400 336 156 Starship Design 4 60 45K

SAL-6830 Engine: Best Ship Engine Part In Starfield

This ship Engine has the best thrust to power rating across all Engine classes, and forgoes all Skill and Level requirements. The SAL-6830 can only be unlocked by completing the Walter Stroud mission “All That Money Can Buy” in Neon, and taking the diplomatic route. Sold by:

  1. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  2. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  3. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  4. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  5. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  6. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
  7. Veronica Young in the Taiyo Astroneering Store inside Ryujin Tower, in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
  8. Ship Services Technician in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
C 2 18,000 8,800 330 180 N/A 1 70K

Dunn-71 Engine: Starfield Best Class B Ship Engine Module

The Dunn-71 stands toe to toe with every single Class C Engine mentioned previously, in terms of thrust to power, but with less than half their mass. You can find it at:

  1. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of New Homestead, on Saturn’s moon Titan in the Sol System.
  2. Ship Services Technician in the city of Cydonia, on Mars in the Sol System.
  3. Nikau Henderson aboard the Deimos Staryard in the orbit of Mars’ moon Deimos, in the Sol System.
  4. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  5. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  6. Ship Services Technician aboard The Den StarStation in the orbit of Chthonia, in the Wolf System.
  7. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  8. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  9. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  10. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
  11. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Gagarin Landing, on Gagarin in the Alpha Centauri System.
  12. Ship Services Technician in the city of New Atlantis, on Jemison in the Alpha Centauri System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
B 3 26,580 5,250 144 133 Starship Design 4 56 41K

Amun-7 Engine: Starfield Best Class A Ship Engine Module

The Amun-7 Engine, one of the best engines in Starfield.

Requiring minimal power to reach its maximum specification, the Amun-7 is a better choice than its technically superior Class A counterpart, the White Dwarf 3030. Stocked by:

  1. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of New Homestead, on Saturn’s moon Titan in the Sol System.
  2. Ship Services Technician in the city of Cydonia, on Mars in the Sol System.
  3. Nikau Henderson aboard the Deimos Staryard in the orbit of Mars’ moon Deimos, in the Sol System.
  4. Ship Services Technician aboard The Den StarStation in the orbit of Chthonia, in the Wolf System.
  5. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  6. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  7. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  8. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  9. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  10. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
  11. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Gagarin Landing, on Gagarin in the Alpha Centauri System.
  12. Ship Services Technician in the city of New Atlantis, on Jemison in the Alpha Centauri System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
A 2 15,400 2,200 94 97 Starship Design 3 38 24K

White Dwarf 3000: Starfield Best Ship Engine Low Level Class A

A widely available Engine with no level or skill requirements to install and fly, the White Dwarf 3000 has an excellent thrust to power ratio, low mass, and is dirt cheap to buy from:

  1. Jasmine Durand of the Crimson Fleet aboard The Key StarStation in the orbit of Suvorov, in the Kryx System.
  2. Ship Services Technician in The Eleos Retreat, on Ixyll II in the Ixyll System.
  3. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of New Homestead, on Saturn’s moon Titan in the Sol System.
  4. Ship Services Technician in the city of Cydonia, on Mars in the Sol System.
  5. Nikau Henderson aboard the Deimos Staryard in the orbit of Mars’ moon Deimos, in the Sol System.
  6. Ship Services Technician aboard The Den StarStation in the orbit of Chthonia, in the Wolf System.
  7. Havershaw aboard the Stroud-Eklund Staryard in the orbit of Deepala’s moon Dalvik, in the Narion System.
  8. Ship Services Technician aboard The Clinic StarStation in the orbit of Deepala, in the Narion System.
  9. Inaya Rehman in the HopeTech building, in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  10. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of HopeTown, on Polvo in the Valo System.
  11. Lon Anderssen in the Red Mile facility, on Porrima III in the Porrima System.
  12. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Paradiso, on Porrima II in the Porrima System.
  13. Ship Services Technician in Akila City, on Akila in the Cheyenne System.
  14. Ship Services Technician in the settlement of Gagarin Landing, on Gagarin in the Alpha Centauri System.
  15. Ship Services Technician in the city of New Atlantis, on Jemison in the Alpha Centauri System.
  16. Veronica Young in the Taiyo Astroneering Store inside Ryujin Tower, in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
  17. Ship Services Technician in the city of Neon, on Volii Alpha in the Volii System.
Class Max Power Engine Thrust Maneuvering Thrust Mass Engine Health Required Skills Required Level Credits
A 3 15,270 2,820 96 75 Starship Design 1 1 10K

Those are the best ship Engine modules to be acquired in Starfield. With a perfected ship design at your command, learn to use its targeting systems more effectively in space combat.

Hideki Kamiya Announces Emotional Departure From Platinum Games That We Can’t Read Because We’re Blocked

OSAKA — In a shocking turn of events, prolific game director and Platinum Games’ co-founder Hideki Kamiya announced this morning that he will no longer be with the company as of next month, or at least that’s what we’re led to believe because he has us blocked.

“This is a surprising change for our company and for the industry in general,” stated Atsushi Inaba, the current CEO of Platinum Games. “I mean, at least I think so. He has me blocked too, so I’m honestly a little in the dark on whether or not he’s still an employee of ours.”

Fan outcry across the internet ran rampant after the announcement was allegedly made public.

“Oh no, I think,” said twitter user BayonettaFan93. “This is a potentially big blow to my favorite video game developers. No one else understands the raw sexual appeal of an action heroine with large boots perfect for being stepped on quite like Hideki Kamiya. I wish I could have conveyed that to him before he blocked me for whatever reason.”

Hideki Kamiya personally responded to one of our burner accounts when reached out for comment on the news.

“Go ask your mom,” said Kamiya.

At press time, Hideki Kamiya may or may not have announced his plans moving forward, though unblocked sources who could confirm this grow more limited by the hour.

Mortal Kombat 1 Best Character Tier List: The Best MK1 Fighters

Mortal Kombat 1 has taken the world by storm with its reset timeline and newfound relationships between characters. The iconic franchise is back and bigger than ever with the latest iteration, which means there is a whole new set of characters to discover. With the release of Mortal Kombat 1, there’s never been a better time to check out a tier list to see where your favorite characters land. 

Our tier list is comprised of our opinions while extensively testing the game. In our experience, this is where these characters should line up. Here’s our September 2023 tier list for all fighters in MK1

Mortal Kombat 1 Tier List

All confirmed characters on the Mortal Kombat 1 roster.

S-Tier: Kenshi, Johnny Cage, Raiden, Baraka

A-Tier: Scorpion, Liu Kang, Geras, Li Mei, Shang Tsung, Sindel, Smoke

B-Tier: Sub-Zero, Kung Lao, General Shao, Mileena, Kitana, Havik

C-Tier: Tanya, Reptile, Nitara, Rain, Ashrah

The S-Tier characters are clear-cut above everyone else. You could make a case for Scorpion to join the S-Tier rank, but he just falls short and headlines the A-Tier group of fighters. So, it’s best to stick with the S-Tier characters if you’re looking for the best of the best. That’s not to say you can’t make work with a lower-tiered character, though. If you’re an experienced player, you can make even a C-Tier character competitive when fighting online or against your friends. 

Naturally, this list will shift as DLC fighters are released. Kombat Pack 1 is set to include Peacemaker, Omni-Man, Homelander, Quan Chi, Ermac, and Takahashi Takeda. These fighters will each bring plenty new to the table. So, expect this Mortal Kombat 1 tier list to shift as they release across the next year or so. Finally, you can learn more about this upcoming DLC here.

That’s all you need to know that the best characters in Mortal Kombat 1! Wondering which Kameo fighters you should be using alongside your fighter of choice? Check out our Kameo Tier List here!

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