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Warhammer 40K: Inquisitor-Martyr HEADPACE

GRANT NELSON Staff Writer

A game worth the time is “Warhammer 40K: InquisitorMartyr.” This game puts you into the boots of an Imperial demon hunter as you travel the dark border world of the Imperium hunting down cults, demons and aliens races to keep the empire safe from the shadows.

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You get your own ship and face all sorts of quests and role-playing elements.

The game is very similar to “Diablo 3,” as you can travel space with a party of other players and dungeon dive and get loot as well as compete in player vs. player mode. You can choose one of several classes of inquisitors that reflect the game play and tactics you will use. The game’s story is very well written and takes you across space in search of a lost ship with massive amounts of mystery and conspiracies.

This game makes you feel like an hero as you slash through hordes of demons while leading Imperial troops. Delve into the darkness of space and slay the heretic.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8 to meditation is that they have trouble sleeping.

The sleep courses include relaxing guided sessions and Sleepcasts, 45 to 55 minutes featuring audio tours of fictional realms coupled with white noise. The sleep offering also consists of a sleep radio with more than eight hours of rain, ocean or music sounds.

Move

A new offering to Headspace is “Move.” Offering low to medium-impact workouts that are 10 to 30 minutes long, it focuses on the mindbody connection.

Coached by Olympians Kim Glass and Leon Taylor, these sessions encourage breathing, reevaluating anxiety and mindfulness through either yoga or cardio workouts.

Focus

The Focus tab offers selected music and meditation playlists to help you focus on the tasks in front of you. The playlists feature artists like John Legend and Tina Guo, the composer of

“Inception” and “Wonder Woman.” Some playlists feature ambient music and lo-fi beats, while others contain soundscapes like thunderstorms and cinematic themes.

As a whole, much of Headspace’s content works, especially the Sleep, Move and Focus tabs offer various actionable steps to help user’s needs.

It is the meditation classes that can be overhauled. While they offer variety, many users say the number of clips can complicate it. Using the meditation tab involves a lot of scrolling and toggling, and I noticed many similar meditation scripts.

For example, the app uses the theme of “letting go” in several meditation clips, all with different themes and titles.

Also, the courses are offered at various speeds, like five or nine minutes. Yet when I tried to speed up the course, it was still playing at the same rate. So there are a couple of glitches that Headspace creators need to address.

Overall Headspace is still outstanding for moving, sleeping and focusing. Through audio tours, video, animation or playlists, it provides practical and specific steps to help users navigate life stressors.

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