James Harden’s baseball cap tease is nothing new for ‘Call of Duty’

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Few things in life are certain. The sun will always rise in the morning and set in the evening. Dogs will always be better than cats. And a new Call of Duty will always, always come out every year.

It’s a little early for a formal reveal, but suspicions about what’s next for the series are running high thanks to James Harden. The Houston Rockets star was spotted wearing a baseball cap featuring a minimalistic logo that apes the style of previous logos in the Call of Duty: Black Ops series.

See it here:

Is that NBA player – James Harden wearing a #BlackOps4 hat 🤔 pic.twitter.com/nu4uW40cjs

— Call of Duty (@CallOfDutyUnite) March 7, 2018 Read more…

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‘Call of Duty: WWII’ takes one step forward, many steps back in its handling of the Holocaust

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SPOILER ALERT: This post contains plot details from the ending and epilogue in Call of Duty: WWII.

Maybe there are places that certain games should never really go.

I’ve been struggling to gather my thoughts on Call of Duty: WWII and its handling of the Holocaust since I completed the campaign last week. It’s a tough topic, and one that Call of Duty — for all its past trips to the World War II setting — has never tackled until this game. 

Maybe that’s for the best.

Let’s be clear: Sledgehammer Games didn’t wholly fuck it up. The campaign mode has its own issues, but at least this is a World War II game that acknowledges the Holocaust as something that happened. Read more…

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Call of Duty WWII Review: A stunning return to the beaches of Normandy

 For folks who have played Call of Duty since the beginning, this is a welcome return to the game they fell in love with. Soldiers appear more human, instead of looking like some futuristic, cyber-mutant Marine. And because the soldiers’ physical ability is limited — they can’t sprint too long before tiring or jump more than a few feet — strategy is now a priority. For… Read More

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