Recommended Posts

It is also important to remember that the Nazi party was the minority party, and they ruled and came to power through fear, intimidation, and murder. They eliminated all opposition.

Many german citizens saved many lives at risk to their own and their families, and their stories will be untold. Once a dictatorship like that is in place, it's difficult to judge those who don't fight against said regime. That is difficult to judge. There is a human instinct to survive and protect your families and children, so once evil is in power ... they are hard to unseat.

Plus, Nazi's were able to evolve their ideology so far uninterrupted because of support and being modeled after similar beliefs in the US (American Racism, Eugenesis. Hitler had the support of Joe Kennedy, the Rockefellers, Henry Ford and many other powerful Americans) and Russia (Marxism, the part that believed lower classes should be exterminated to allow the superior classes to prosper). Before the Nazi's invaded Russia, Russia starved what, over 7 million lower class people to make room for the upper classes to prosper? The prison camps Russia liberated were not shut down, Russia filled them and used them for the same purpose for many years after the war. Most pictures you see of bodies being removed, are Russia removing them to make room for their prisoners.

It's not racism, or nationalism, it's good vs. evil. Thus the world will never tire of killin', stabbin', stranglin' Nazis. And I think that is a good thing.

 

Very true and well said. Very few instances of human wrongdoing exist in a vacuum or in isolation. Nazi Germany was the result of a small group of idiots and lunatics allowed to run wild through a very particular set of circumstances, and other groups of people saying we don't care unless they cross certain lines. Once they crossed those lines it became clear just how wrong it all was hence even people that formerly didn't mind or even supported Hitler and Co. taking action against them in self defense and in defense of decency (i do believe most people know right from wrong, they just choose to forget when it's convenient).

 

As for gaming, it's all tongue in cheek, but i think we know there's an element of racism to it. I don't want to be too much of a hypocrite, buying Wolfy day one and will likely laugh my ass off the 20 hours of playing the campaign or whatever it is. But there is an aspect of it that says it's OK to do all these things to these people "because they're nazis, not human". That's wrong to me. Anyway, it seems like many others this Wolfenstein gets around the issue by (quite accurately) portraying most Germans as victims themselves, as much of the resistance appears to be German volk, i mean people :laugh:

Strange how the first and second Wolfensteins, including censoring, where so immensely popular in Germany.

What did that have to do with my post? Besides nothing?

SPACE NAZIS!

Did they come from the G?tterd?mmerung?

  • Like 1

What did that have to do with my post? Besides nothing?

Did they come from the G?tterd?mmerung?

That a Wolfenstein game without swastika's (the censoring part) that its suddenly a bad game. Hard time reading your own posts?

That a Wolfenstein game without swastika's (the censoring part) that its suddenly a bad game. Hard time reading your own posts?

What are you smoking? Do you know what you are writing or what your even reading?

My point was, and also what I posted several times, that wether the game has actual swastikas it faux swastikas and real or faux nazis doesn't make the game good or bad. A good or bad game does, the rest is styling.

  • Like 1

Before I read this, I was going to say that Schindler's List must have been a really confusing movie in Germany if Nazi iconography is outlawed.

 

Context matters. Outlawing pro-Nazi propaganda would be easier to defend than Nazi symbolism in a game where you play as a soldier fighting against Nazis.

As was Inglourious Basterds, any Hitler/3rd Reich, Ken Burns documentary, etc, etc.

As was Inglourious Basterds, any Hitler/3rd Reich, Ken Burns documentary, etc, etc.

 

Yeah. but seeing as movies are excempt, it's kind of irrelevant.

 

btw, before the mods gets a jump on you, I suggest you get yoru sig in accordance with forum rules. 

It is also important to remember that the Nazi party was the minority party, and they ruled and came to power through fear, intimidation, and murder. They eliminated all opposition.

Many german citizens saved many lives at risk to their own and their families, and their stories will be untold. Once a dictatorship like that is in place, it's difficult to judge those who don't fight against said regime. That is difficult to judge. There is a human instinct to survive and protect your families and children, so once evil is in power ... they are hard to unseat.

Plus, Nazi's were able to evolve their ideology so far uninterrupted because of support and being modeled after similar beliefs in the US (American Racism, Eugenesis. Hitler had the support of Joe Kennedy, the Rockefellers, Henry Ford and many other powerful Americans) and Russia (Marxism, the part that believed lower classes should be exterminated to allow the superior classes to prosper). Before the Nazi's invaded Russia, Russia starved what, over 7 million lower class people to make room for the upper classes to prosper? The prison camps Russia liberated were not shut down, Russia filled them and used them for the same purpose for many years after the war. Most pictures you see of bodies being removed, are Russia removing them to make room for their prisoners.

It's not racism, or nationalism, it's good vs. evil. Thus the world will never tire of killin', stabbin', stranglin' Nazis. And I think that is a good thing.

The National Socialist party were old-fashioned nationalists - not new OR news, even in terms of Europe.

Consider the similar rise (in Italy) of Mussolini, or even that of Stalin in the Soviet Union even earlier.

All three leaders were, at their core, ethnic nationalists - which has ALWAYS been popular.  (Said popularity didn't wane any after Hiter and wife Eva did their final exits, either - look at world history merely since.)

Comparisons have ALWAYS been made - individual, national, ethnic, etc. - it goes back to (if you consider the Bible's Old Testament as history) no less than the Tower of Babel, and, specifically, God's Curse of Babel.  (The Curse of Babel, simply put, was the introduction of conflict where there had not been any - this is the direct genesis of ALL warfare.)  Note that God's Opposition had nothing to do with it - this curse was delivered directly by God.  Prior to the Curse, there were NO different ethnicities, belief systems, etc.

 

The other reason for the return to reliance on genocides has a LOT to do with (like it or not) the founding of the United States.  The United States was originally a bunch of colonies where England and other colonial empires couild export their malcontents to leave the core of the empires free of conflict.  Then, the United States - the group of "European rejects and exportees" - started whacking those European empires on what they perceived as their turf - and that was despite the Civil War.  Suddenly, the idea of colonialism - and colonies - didn't look so attractive to those in power - why would it when it could result in your own destruction?  Hence a return to genocide. (India was both an aberration AND an exception - however, India was also colonized by the British - the SAME nation directly responsible for the founding of the United States; however, even British rule in India was not always peaceful.)

 

I'm not making light of the atrocities committed by Hitler - I'm not that crazy.  However, what Stalin did merely prior to HItler's invasion of Russia was actually worse, just in terms of the impact on the Soviet Union as a country.  The reason it took a long time to uncover made all sort of POLITICAL (specifically, geopolitical) sense - you don't whack your allies.  Was opinion on the "evils" of German atrocities being "unparalleled" universal?  Not only no, but HECK no, and the opinion was split in the general-officer corps of even the United States Army - consider both Patton AND MacArthur; while neither was a fan of the SS, both despised the Soviet Union, and never had a kind thing to say about the Red Army.

 

Call it what you will - genocides, pogroms, exterminations, etc., - the real reason for all of it is power-retention.

My copy arrived today. First impressions:

- That day-one patch. Wow. :(

- Graphics: actually pretty good. The videos make it look awful but on PS4 on my TV it actually looks good. Some good lighting and particle effects. Feels very smooth as well.

- Gameplay - very wolfenstein. I like the old school feel. For nostalgia I like the return to medpacks for example mixed with being a bit up to date where it regenerates if you get too low but only up to I think 20%.

Overall, I've only spent about half an hour with it so far but it has pleasantly surprised me. Hearing what some people were saying (clearly based off videos and not hands on) had me regretting the pre order but so far am very glad I kept it. Seems like it will be a lot of fun.

My copy arrived today. First impressions:

- That day-one patch. Wow. :(

- Graphics: actually pretty good. The videos make it look awful but on PS4 on my TV it actually looks good. Some good lighting and particle effects. Feels very smooth as well.

- Gameplay - very wolfenstein. I like the old school feel. For nostalgia I like the return to medpacks for example mixed with being a bit up to date where it regenerates if you get too low but only up to I think 20%.

Overall, I've only spent about half an hour with it so far but it has pleasantly surprised me. Hearing what some people were saying (clearly based off videos and not hands on) had me regretting the pre order but so far am very glad I kept it. Seems like it will be a lot of fun.

 

Thanks for posting this man, sounds good, can't wait to play it

Yeah. but seeing as movies are excempt, it's kind of irrelevant.

 

 

 

There's a lot of hypocrisy in Germany when it comes to WWII-related topics. Games are entertainment and not strictly artistic expression, so they're censored. But museums and movies are in context and therefore can depict pretty much anything. Even for movies, stuff that's deemed historic is OK, like any "serious" WWII movie. But get Uwe Boll to make Nazi Zombie Army - the Movie, and see how far the authorities there let it go before crushing it under their boot.

Reviews are out.

 

  • Like 4

Thanks for posting this, seems like most people at least like it. Read the Eurogamer review and not sure exactly what the person didn't like...otherwise very much psyched for trying this out soon.

I'm actually nervous, I have very fond memories of the original wolfenstein, and later on I'm going to pick up my copy, the fear I have is has it evolved into another 'generic shooter' type game living off the glory from it's predecessor..?

  • Like 3

I'm actually nervous, I have very fond memories of the original wolfenstein, and later on I'm going to pick up my copy, the fear I have is has it evolved into another 'generic shooter' type game living off the glory from it's predecessor..?

 

Well, it is a modern shooter taking after Return to Castle Wolfenstein and 2009 Wolfenstein. It's more Rage than Wolfenstein 1992, i'd wager. So if you want that kind of pure run and gun action it may not be the right choice. But i would hardly call this type of modern game generic. You shouldn't be nervous, just enjoy it, can't be that bad: it doesn't have rechargin health and there's even armor, and playing on hard appears to be really challenging.

  • Like 2

Well, it is a modern shooter taking after Return to Castle Wolfenstein and 2009 Wolfenstein. It's more Rage than Wolfenstein 1992, i'd wager. So if you want that kind of pure run and gun action it may not be the right choice. But i would hardly call this type of modern game generic. You shouldn't be nervous, just enjoy it, can't be that bad: it doesn't have rechargin health and there's even armor, and playing on hard appears to be really challenging.

yeah, I used the word 'generic' a little loosely (Y)

  • Like 1

I don't know what was going on with that eurogamer review.... That kind of thing is why I stopped trusting their reviews long ago.

Ended up spending about 4 hours playing it last night. Storytelling is very good and the game seems packed with alternate-history lore which fleshes the game out which feels unusual (and good) for a shooter.

Personally so far I would give it a solid 8.5, might even push it up to a 9 by the end of the game.

  • Like 3

I don't know what was going on with that eurogamer review.... That kind of thing is why I stopped trusting their reviews long ago.

Ended up spending about 4 hours playing it last night. Storytelling is very good and the game seems packed with alternate-history lore which fleshes the game out which feels unusual (and good) for a shooter.

Personally so far I would give it a solid 8.5, might even push it up to a 9 by the end of the game.

 

Thanks for posting this and makes sense - glad to know you liked it and in three sentences you told me more about it than Eurogamer did in a whole web page. I still like them but they do get iffy on occasion :|

  • Like 1

There's a lot of hypocrisy in Germany when it comes to WWII-related topics. Games are entertainment and not strictly artistic expression, so they're censored. But museums and movies are in context and therefore can depict pretty much anything. Even for movies, stuff that's deemed historic is OK, like any "serious" WWII movie. But get Uwe Boll to make Nazi Zombie Army - the Movie, and see how far the authorities there let it go before crushing it under their boot.

EVERYONE should should crush anything he does under their boots.

  • Like 2
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • GitHub removes manual model selection from Copilot free and student plans by Karthik Mudaliar GitHub is removing the ability to manually select an AI model from its Copilot Free and Student plans, making its automatic routing system the default and only way to choose a model. This means users on these tiers will no longer be able to deliberately select a particular OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, or Microsoft model for a task. In its announcement, GitHub said Copilot Auto will dynamically choose what it considers the best model for each request. Free and Student accounts will retain access to models from multiple families, although the available selection will continue to depend on the restrictions attached to each plan. GitHub did not identify a fixed pool of models that Auto will always use, and its documentation warns that model availability can change over time. GitHub describes Auto as more than a random fallback system. On supported surfaces, its task-optimization technology evaluates the complexity of a request alongside real-time information about model health and availability. Straightforward prompts can be routed to faster and less expensive models, while more demanding coding tasks may be sent to higher-cost reasoning models. The company says this approach should reduce rate limiting, latency, and failed requests. Auto generally selects one model along natural prompt-caching boundaries rather than repeatedly switching models during a session, as GitHub found that mid-session changes increased costs without producing sufficient improvements in output quality. Users can still check which model generated a response. In Copilot Chat, the information appears when hovering over an answer, while Copilot CLI and the Copilot cloud agent display the selected model alongside their output. Auto is available in Copilot Chat, Copilot CLI, and the cloud agent, with the exact implementation and release status varying between supported development environments. The latest restriction follows several months of adjustments to Copilot’s individual plans. GitHub temporarily halted new Pro, Pro+, and Student subscriptions in April as it sought to manage demand and service reliability. It later introduced token-based billing and began gradually reopening individual-plan registrations on June 17. Alongside the picker change, GitHub is retiring the “Preview” label from Microsoft-developed models. It argues that the label is no longer necessary because Auto handles model routing and models are continuously updated behind the scenes.
    • Look up 'inflation' kid. Ask an AI for the numbers between both games.
    • Google reportedly set to lose two key Gemini and DeepMind researchers to Anthropic by Karthik Mudaliar Google is reportedly preparing to lose two more prominent artificial intelligence researchers, with Gemini contributors Jonas Adler and Alexander Pritzel planning to join rival AI developer Anthropic. According to a report from Bloomberg, both researchers are viewed internally as important contributors to Google’s flagship Gemini model family. Adler worked on Google’s AI coding efforts, while Pritzel was involved in the process used to train AI systems. Neither company has publicly confirmed the moves. The report also does not say when the researchers will formally leave Google or what positions they will hold at Anthropic. Training a large AI model requires decisions covering its architecture, data preparation, distributed computing infrastructure, and post-training methods that shape how the finished system behaves. Researchers with experience operating at the scale of Gemini are consequently difficult to replace quickly. Both Adler and Pritzel have previously contributed to Google DeepMind’s scientific research as well. They are listed among the authors of the company’s work on expanding AlphaFold protein-structure predictions across entire proteomes, alongside AlphaFold researchers including John Jumper. The reported departures arrive shortly after another important change within Google’s Gemini organization. Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer is leaving Google for OpenAI, after returning to the search company in 2024 through its deal with Character.AI. Shazeer is particularly well known as one of the authors of the Transformer paper, whose architecture became the foundation for most modern large language models. Anthropic, meanwhile, has been recruiting recognizable figures from other leading laboratories. OpenAI co-founder and former Tesla AI director Andrej Karpathy joined Anthropic’s pre-training team in May. His move, followed by the reported recruitment of several Google researchers, suggests Anthropic is strengthening the research teams responsible for the core capabilities of future Claude models rather than concentrating solely on product and enterprise sales. The competition is complicated by the companies’ extensive commercial relationships. Anthropic competes directly with Google’s Gemini models, but it also relies on Google as an infrastructure partner. In April, Anthropic announced an expanded agreement with Google and Broadcom covering multiple gigawatts of next-generation Tensor Processing Unit capacity. TPUs are Google-designed accelerators used to train and run large AI models. via Bloomberg
    • This article makes my head hurt. Lots of confusing words
    • Google adds built-in computer control to Gemini 3.5 flash by Karthik Mudaliar Google has added Computer Use as a built-in tool in Gemini 3.5 Flash, giving developers a single model that can reason about a task and operate graphical interfaces across browsers, mobile devices, and desktop environments. The feature is available through the Gemini API and Google’s Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, although it remains a preview feature for now. Computer Use enables an AI agent to examine screenshots and return actions such as mouse clicks, scrolling, and keyboard input. A developer’s application must execute those actions, capture the resulting screen, and send it back to Gemini, creating a continuous loop until the task is completed. Google says the integration can be used for activities including repetitive form filling, application testing, research across multiple websites, and longer enterprise workflows. Gemini 3.5 Flash can work with browser, mobile, and desktop environments, whereas Google’s earlier standalone Computer Use model was primarily positioned around browser interaction. The main change is consolidation. Computer control was previously offered through the separate Gemini 2.5 Computer Use preview model. As Neowin reported when that model was introduced, it was designed to interpret a visual interface and generate actions without requiring a website-specific API. Google later brought Computer Use to preview versions of Gemini 3 Pro and Gemini 3 Flash in January 2026. The latest release now incorporates the tool into the stable Gemini 3.5 Flash model rather than requiring developers to select a specialized model solely for interface automation. Gemini 3.5 Flash itself was announced in May as Google’s latest fast model for coding and multi-step agent workflows. It supports a one-million-token input context window and up to 65,000 output tokens, along with adjustable thinking levels that let developers trade additional reasoning for lower latency and cost. Google also added that Gemini 3.5 Flash received targeted adversarial training for computer-use scenarios. The company is also offering safeguards that can require user confirmation before sensitive or irreversible actions and automatically stop a workflow when suspected prompt injection is detected. Its developer documentation describes configurable protections for areas such as financial transactions and changes to sensitive records. Google isn't the first to bring Computer Use to its platform. Anthropic has made computer control available through Claude, while OpenAI has continued improving computer-use performance in its recent models. Microsoft has also applied the concept to business workflows, including a Computer Use capability for the Researcher agent in Microsoft 365 Copilot.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      463
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      177
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      124
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      79
    5. 5
      Xenon
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!