How to watch the Latin American Games Showcase at Summer Game Fest 2025
Summer Game Fest 2025 is just around the corner and it'll be a weekend packed with video game news. The event kicks off on June 6, with roughly a dozen livestreams scheduled to take place from then through June 8. Among them is the Latin American Games Showcase, which will highlight over 50 titles from Latin American indie developers. You can tune into the YouTube stream on Saturday, June 7 at 2PM ET (11AM PT).
Last year's Latin American Games Showcase at SGF gave us a glimpse at a ton of games to be excited about, like the recently released title, Despelote , that's both memoir and soccer game. We don't know yet what the 2025 showcase will bring, but there's sure to be some gems. Before the Latin American Games Showcase on Saturday, Summer Game Fest Live will usher in the festivities on June 6 at 5PM ET (2PM PT).
We have all the info you need to know right here ahead of Summer Game Fest and will be on the ground getting some hands-on time with many of the games you'll see featured in the showcases, so be sure to check back in for the latest news.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
'Reconnect With Your Essence' Podcast Returns With New Season in 2025
Photo Courtesy of Sara Correa Benítez MEDELLÍN, Colombia, June 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Emotional wellness coach and international speaker Sara Correa Benítez announces the return of her podcast, 'Reconnect With Your Essence'. The new season launches in early 2025 on Spotify and YouTube, continuing her mission to support clarity, self-connection, and emotional well-being. Sara began the podcast after leaving a high-profile career at ESPN to focus on more meaningful work. Since then, it has reached a wide audience, especially those seeking personal growth and balance in everyday life. Each episode features honest reflections and conversations. Drawing from her experience in journalism and wellness, Sara creates a space that feels relatable and grounded for a broad range of listeners. The new season brings a wider mix of guests—from athletes to artists to individuals with meaningful life stories. Their insights offer different views on growth, healing, and purpose, all reinforcing the show's central theme: tuning in to what truly matters. The podcast covers topics like mental health, resilience, and physical vitality. Rather than theory or abstract advice, episodes offer practical conversations that help people face real challenges. As a Spanish-speaking wellness podcast, it resonates with listeners throughout Latin America and beyond. Sara's larger work includes public talks and workshops based in Medellín. Through these platforms, she shares tools and guidance that support both individual reflection and collective well-being. 'Reconnect With Your Essence" offers a space for calm and honest dialogue. It invites listeners to step back from external noise and realign with what feels authentic. Sara's work as a Latin American wellness coach connects with people seeking inclusive, culturally relevant guidance. The new season premieres on Spotify in January 2025. Full episodes will also be available on YouTube. Listeners can find updates on guest features and releases on Sara Correa Benítez's social media or website. About Sara Correa Benítez Sara Correa Benítez is a Colombian journalist, wellness coach, and international speaker based in Medellín. She helps people reconnect with their purpose and well-being through podcasting, events, and community engagement. Media Contact Contact: Sara Correa Benítez Email: Saracorreabenitez@ Join the movement. Reconnect with your essence in 2025. A photo accompanying this announcement is available at

Engadget
2 hours ago
- Engadget
Video Games Weekly: I still don't miss E3
Welcome to Video Games Weekly on Engadget. Expect a new story every Monday, broken into two parts. The first is a space for short essays and ramblings about video game trends and related topics from me, a reporter who's covered the industry for more than 13 years. The second contains the video game stories from the past week that you need to know about, including some headlines from outside of Engadget. Please enjoy — and I'll see you next week. It's the week of Summer Game Fest, so I'm mentally wrapped up in a complex web of embargoes, meetings, schedules and cryptic invites, and I can already smell the plasticky, sanitized air that accompanies video game conventions of all sizes. Mmm, smells like pixels. This will be my third SGF and I'm looking forward to it, as usual. I appreciate the event's focus on independent projects, diverse creators and smaller-scale publishers, particularly with shows like Day of the Devs, Wholesome Direct, Women-Led Games, and the Latin American and Southeast Asian games showcases. I deeply believe that innovation in the industry stems from these untethered, experimental spaces, and SGF has consistently provided room for these types of experiences to shine. I appreciate SGF even more after spending seven years wandering the cavernous halls of the Los Angeles Convention Center, covering the Electronic Entertainment Expo. E3 was exciting in its own right and I feel privileged to have attended it so many times, but it was also a soulless kind of show. E3 was unwelcoming to independent creators and packed with corporate swag, and by the time Sony decided to stop attending in 2019, it felt like an expensive, out-of-touch misrepresentation of the video game industry as a whole. The best parts of E3 in its final years were the unaffiliated events hosted by Devolver Digital, which took place in a nearby parking lot packed with Airstream trailers, food trucks and fabulous, up-and-coming indie games. It felt a lot like SGF, in fact. I wrote about this phenomenon in 2018, in a story that questioned whether the video game industry needed E3 at all. Perhaps because I'm a witch but mostly due to the pandemic, E3 shut down in 2020 and it never re-emerged as an in-person show. The Entertainment Software Association hosted one virtual session in 2021, but nothing afterward, and E3 was officially declared dead in December 2023. Meanwhile, the video game market has continued to grow, driven by a maturing indie segment, mobile play and harsh crunch-layoff cycles at the AAA level. Now, the ESA is back with a new video game showcase called iicon, the Interactive Innovation Conference, heading to Las Vegas in April 2026. The industry's biggest names are involved, including Microsoft, Sony, Nintendo, Epic Games, Electronic Arts, Disney, Amazon and Take-Two Interactive, and the show is poised to be 'a space for visionaries across industries to come together,' according to ESA president Stanley Pierre-Louis. E3 2.0 has arrived, and it seems to be as AAA-focused as ever. For what it's worth, Summer Game Fest has its own version of a AAA thought-leader summit this year with The Game Business Live. Meanwhile, the ESA has remained silent — even when directly asked — as some of the industry's most influential companies roll back their diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, at a time when women, POC and LGBT+ employees are enduring active existential threats. And during Pride Month , no less. All of this is to say, I'm stoked for Summer Game Fest this year. It all kicks off with a live show on Friday, June 6, and we have a rundown of the full schedule right here. We'll be publishing hands-on previews, developer interviews and news directly from SGF over the weekend and beyond, so stay tuned to Engadget's Gaming hub. To view this content, you'll need to update your privacy settings. Please click here and view the "Content and social-media partners" setting to do so. Playtonic, the studio behind Yooka-Laylee , has laid off an undisclosed number of employees across multiple departments, including production, art, game design, narrative design and UI/UX. In a message shared on X, the studio's leaders said, 'This isn't simply a difficult moment, it's a period of profound change in how games are created and financed. The landscape is shifting, and with it, so must we.' Playtonic's latest game, Yooka-Replaylee , is due to come out this year. Though Playtonic is a small, privately owned company (with a minority investment from Tencent), the timing of the layoffs fits the established playbook of many AAA studios, which operate with periods of crunch and bulk layoffs baked into their business plans. Electronic Arts revealed its plans to make a single-player, third-person Black Panther game back in 2023 as part of a broader Marvel push at the studio, but apparently, things have changed. EA canceled its Black Panther project and closed the studio that was building it, Cliffhanger Games. EA Motive, the team behind the stellar Dead Space remake, is still working on an Iron Man game, as far as we know. Any time I can gas up Rollerdrome or OlliOlli World , I'm going to do it. After being delisted from Steam more than a year ago, Rollerdrome and OlliOlli World have returned to the storefront to fulfill all of your flow-state needs. Both games come from Roll7, a London-based studio that Take-Two purchased in November 2021 and shut down in May 2024, removing Rollerdrome and Olli Olli World from Steam in the process. Have we convinced you to get a Playdate yet? Whatever your answer, Playdate Season 2 is live right now, adding two new games to the crank-powered system each week until July 3. Engadget's resident Playdate expert Cheyenne Macdonald has a review of the initial batch, which includes Fulcrum Defender from Subset Games, Dig! Dig! Dino! from Dom2D and Fáyer, and Blippo+ , a fever dream masquerading as a video game. And while you're in this headspace, check out Igor Bonifacic's enlightening interview with Subset Games co-founder Jay Ma. Three former Ubisoft executives appeared in French court on June 2, accused by multiple employees at the studio of sexual harassment, bullying and, in one defendant's case, attempted sexual assault. The lawsuit alleges Serge Hascoët, Tommy François and Guillaume Patrux regularly engaged in misconduct and fostered a toxic culture at Ubisoft, and it follows a public reckoning at the studio in 2020, plus arrests in 2023. Nintendo's Switch 2 officially comes out this week, on June 5. We'll have a review of the new console as soon as we can, but in the meantime you can find all of the information you need regarding pre-orders in our handy guide.


Tom's Guide
3 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
How to watch 'And Just Like That...' season 3 online from anywhere, Episode 2
If you're late to the party, it's just over ten years since "Sex In The City" and the girls are now dealing with life as 50somethings in "And Just Like That...: season 3. Episode 2 drops Thursday, June 5. Here's how you can watch "And Just Like That..." season 3 online and from anywhere with a VPN. ""And Just Like That..." season 3 premiered on May 29. All subsequent episodes on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT.• U.S. — HBO/Max• CAN — Crave• U.K. — Sky• AUS — Max • Watch anywhere — try NordVPN risk-free The last season ended with Carrie and Aidan in a kind of five-year long distance relationship limbo, Charlotte went back to work and Miranda got back into her stride. And this season takes it from there. Phone sex aside, Carrie and Aiden hit a bumpy patch but can they make the relationship work? A hot new neighbor gives Carrie pause for thought. And while she's thinking, she helps Charlotte take Miranda to a lesbian bar. Miranda meets a nun. Seema gets fed up with Ravi's preoccupation with his film while Lisa has work-related problems of her own to deal with (notably interfering producers). And that's all just the first of a record 12 episode season. Prepare yourself for a roller coster. Read on and discover how you can watch "And Just Like That..." season 3 online with all the streaming details you need below. "And Just Like That..." season 3 premiered in the U.S. on Thursday, May 29 on HBO's Max platform. All subsequent episodes on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT. Max prices start at $9.99/month. Or you can watch Max on Amazon Prime. Traveling outside the States? You'll need to use a VPN to unblock Max or Prime when abroad. If you're traveling overseas and "And Just Like That..." season 3 isn't airing where you're currently located, that doesn't mean you have to miss the show while you're away from home. With the right VPN (virtual private network), you can stream the show from wherever you are. We've evaluated many options, and the best VPN you can get right now is NordVPN. It meets the VPN needs of the vast majority of users, offering outstanding compatibility with most devices and impressive connection speeds. You can try it risk-free for 30 days if you take advantage of NordVPN's no-quibble money-back guarantee. There's a good reason you've heard of NordVPN. We specialize in testing and reviewing VPN services and NordVPN is the one we rate best. It's outstanding at unblocking streaming services, it's fast and it has top-level security features too. With over 7,000 servers across 110+ countries, and at a great price too, it's easy to recommend. Get over 70% off NordVPN with this deal Using a VPN is incredibly simple. 1. Install the VPN of your choice. As we've said, NordVPN is our favorite. 2. Choose the location you wish to connect to in the VPN app. For instance, if you're visiting the U.K. and want to view a U.S. service, you'd select a U.S. server from the location list. 3. Sit back and enjoy the show. Head to your streaming service app — so Max, for example — and watch "And Just Like That..." season 3 online from wherever you are in the world. You can watch "And Just Like That..." season 3 in Canada on the Crave streaming service which contains HBO's best titles. It premiered on Thursday, May 29 with all subsequent episodes on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT. Crave subscriptions start at $9.99/month for its Basic plan (720p video, includes ads) all the way up to $22/month for Premium (ad-free, 4K, downloadable shows). Those on vacation away from Canada will need one of the best VPNs to log in back home to use Crave. We recommend NordVPN. "And Just Like That..." season 3 is available on Sky Comedy in the U.K. and premiered on Friday, May 30. All subsequent episodes are available in the early hours of Friday morning (about 2 p.m. BST) the day after the U.S.. It's also available for Sky subscribers to watch via the Sky Go app, which is available on smartphones, computers, games consoles and a host of TV streaming devices. "And Just Like That..." season 3 premiered in Oz on Max (now available Down Under) on Friday May 30 at 11 a.m. AEST. New episodes will drop weekly, every Friday at the same time. Plans start at AU$11.99/month and run up to a premium version of AU$21.99. Not at home? Don't panic. You can still watch the show from your usual domestic streaming platform with a VPN. We recommend NordVPN. Here is the full episode schedule for "And Just Like That..." season 3: Season 01 Episode 01: "Outlook Good" - Carrie deals with having a long-distance relationship with Aidan; Miranda thinks about ghosting a hook-up; Charlotte attempts to redeem Mr Burton. (Thurs, May 29) S01 E02: "TBA" (Thurs, Jun 5) S01 E03: "TBA" (Thurs, Jun 12) S01 E04: "TBA" (Thurs, Jun 19) S01 E05: "TBA" (Thurs, Jun 26) S01 E06: "TBA" (Thurs, Jul 3) S01 E07: "TBA" (Thurs, Jul 10) S01 E08: "TBA" (Thurs, Jul 17) S01 E09: "TBA" (Thurs, Jul 24) S01 E10: "TBA" (Thurs, Jul 31) S01 E11: "TBA" (Thurs, Aug 7) S01 E12: "TBA" (Thurs, Aug 14) Ché Dia (played by Sara Ramirez) and Columbia law school professor Nya Wallace (Karen Pittman) will not be returning. We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.