Web3 extraction shooter Engines of Fury has announced that its official launch will be held on February 25, with the game to be made available via the Epic Games Store.
This follows The Antigen playtest in October 2024 – after which it was announced that Engines of Fury would launch before the end of 2024. This was delayed to make additional changes at the request of the players, with the planned January 2025 Cliffside playtest now coinciding with the official February 25 release.
Upon the official launch of Engines of Fury, both $FURY token and NFT collectible rewards will be live, with players able to download and play the title on PC.
Developed by an experienced team of former Blizzard, Ubisoft and EA personnel, Engines of Fury sees players team up to fight their way through challenging dungeons. Strategy, action prowess and teamwork are key to taking down hordes of enemies, facing off against huge bosses, and extracting resources from each dungeon.
Cliffside, the playtest that was originally scheduled for January 2025 but is now to go live on February 25, introduces several features. This includes quests that will reward limited-edition NFTs powered by the Immutable Passport, as well as a new mission, day and night gameplay, new crafting options and more.
Cliffside also marks the start of Season 1 Act II, which will feature a major $FURY token prize pool.
Source: Engines of Fury
How can I play Engines of Fury?
An application form has been available on the Engines of Fury website since December 2024, allowing budding players to apply for access to the planned Engines of Fury Cliffside playtest slated for January 2025.
As of writing, it has not been made clear if Engines of Fury will remain available only to invited players, or if it will open to the public on February 25. Wannabe players are encouraged to apply for playtest access via the Engines of Fury website, wishlist the game on the Epic Games Store, and check their email for an invite.
Official giveaways for playtest access have been run via the Engines of Fury socials over the past several weeks, with recipients of these codes guaranteed to be able to play the game on February 25.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.
This marker is Chrome Shitiness Mitigation mechanism for Ultrawidify. It turns out that as of 2025-01, Chrome does not correctly respect allowTransparency property on certain iframes, and will force white or black background across the entire element. It is unclear what’s causing the issue — so far, it seems to appear randomly.