Prodeus is the first person shooter of old, re-imagined using modern rendering techniques. Get ready for a throwback to FPS heaven with Prodeus, courtesy of Humble Games. The game is set to be released sometime in the Summer of 2020, but for now, enjoy the latest trailer. You can read all about what they've been working on below as they originally started this game up in Kickstarter and got it funded with a little extra to bring some added content to the game. The game is being developed by the two-man team of Michael Voeller and Jason Mojica at Bounding Box Software Inc., who have mixed their talents together to bring a little nostalgia back to PC gaming. A first-person shooter where you are thrown head-first into the bowels of evil as you have to run and gun your way through multiple levels of enemies that have no remorse and just keep on coming until they're all eradicated. The game has been in development for a while now as it is basically a throwback to the classic games like Quake and DOOM. Many hope the deal will help resolve the country’s longstanding energy woes, attract international investors and reduce its reliance on imports.Humble Games had a bit of a surprise during the PC Gaming Show as we got a better look at their upcoming game Prodeus. Last month, Iraq signed a $27bn agreement with France’s TotalEnergies, the largest foreign investment in Iraq’s history, to generate power using natural gas. Saturday’s outages also come on the Shia religious holiday of Ashura, a mourning period when many public gatherings are held. Peak temperatures are expected to near 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) in the coming days. But ministry figures say it still lacks the capacity to meet an estimated demand of 32,000 megawatts a day in the country. In addition to importing electricity from neighbouring countries like Iran, the government has been expanding its electricity generation capacity. Protests over unreliable power supplies have been common in Iraq, with the most recent taking place earlier this month. Iraq is an oil-rich country, but its dilapidated power grid remains incapable of meeting peak demand during hot summers, leaving many without electricity as temperatures rise. Many households subscribe to neighbourhood generators for emergency supplies, if they can afford it, as the country suffers regular outages during the summer. The Baghdad municipality said the outage caused by the fire in Basra had an effect on other services, like a disruption in the tap water supply, and that it was trying to run water pumps using generators to limit the impact on citizens. There were also reports and a video online purporting to show a fire burning at night at the electricity station in the Jamila neighbourhood, located within Sadr City in eastern Baghdad. It did not say who was responsible for the attack, but ISIL (ISIS) fighters and other armed groups have been known to be active in the area. Three electricity towers in the north were also reportedly hit by sabotage attacks on Saturday, according to a local transmission company which said they were hit by improvised explosive devices, temporarily cutting off service. The AFP news agency quoted ministry spokesman Ahmed Moussa as saying the outage at some point affected the main supply to “all of Iraq”. This led to the separation of transmission lines linking southern and central regions, and resulted in a “total shutdown” of the electrical system in the area, it said. A fire at a power station in southern Iraq and several explosions have affected the country’s ailing national electricity grid as temperatures rise.Ī statement by Iraq’s Ministry of Electricity on Saturday said a fire broke out shortly after noon at the Al-Bkir station in the southern city of Basra.
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