While you’ve always been able to customize Apple Watch workouts, the company finally added the ability to create custom interval workouts in watchOS 9. That’s clutch for any athlete itching to set a PR at their next race or just looking to switch up their training routines.
Bayonetta 3: Nintendo’s Midnight Movie Game
I have realized that maybe I’m not a Bayonetta person. That’s not to say I don’t appreciate the utterly bizarre vibe of the Bayonetta series, which now has a long-awaited third entry available on the Nintendo Switch. This is the Switch’s first made-for-Switch Bayonetta game; Bayonetta 2 was a Wii U port. Worth the wait? Sure. It’s just that I’m not sure what’s going on at all.
Then again, that’s kind of the point.
Bayonetta 3 may seem totally out of place among the rest of Nintendo’s game catalog and spirit: The series has always felt more like a classic Sega experience in a lot of ways. Chaotic action, cursing, very extended cutscenes, weird sexually suggestive outfits… this isn’t a game that holds you by the hand.
If you have a Switch and are dying for an intense fighting spectacle of the sort you’re more likely to get on Xbox or PlayStation, however, you’ve come to the right place.
Bayonetta fans, it’s OK if you stop reading here. I’m writing this for the parents and the newcomers. This is a great game in the series, even if it’s lamentably lacking the excellent voice talent of Hellena Taylor. Bayonetta 3’s challenges, its unlockable extras and hidden surprises (of which I’ve been trying to find a few), and the challenge of trying to score better on any stage give it replay value in spite of its linear story.
The spectacle of the game is utterly madcap, frequently aiming for God of War-level