Diablo 4's lead live game designer says difficulty is 'a tricky balance,' but Season 8 should pack more of a punch: 'If there isn't enough challenge, then it just feels like you're getting candy for free'
Š Blizzard
Š Blizzard
Š e-frontier
Š Jagex
Š Bethesda
Š Valve
Š Blizzard
Š Aggro Crab
Š Warner Bros.
Š Subset Games
June feels so far away, at least for Magic fans eagerly awaiting the upcoming Final Fantasy set. But to tide everyone over, today Wizards of the Coast just offered a first look at over a dozen never-before-seen new cards from the set, including Sephiroth, Yuffie, Cecil, Garland, Chaos, and more.
This new look includes a number of new cards and a handful of art variations, alongside the four commander cards we've already gotten a look at: Tidus, Cloud, Y'shtola, and Terra. In addition to various powerful legendaries like Sephiroth and Cecil, we also get a look at a new Food token art, and art variations on cards such as Stilzkin, Moogle Merchant; Sin, Spira's Punishment; and Summon: Shiva. You can see the full gallery below:
Today's reveal also shows off some special features of the set, including Summons, a part of Magic's first-ever Saga creatures that players can call upon for aid in battle (see Summon: Shiva in the gallery). Additionally, double-faced cards make a return, as seen with Cecil's two sides: Dark Knight and Redeemed Paladin.
In total, the Final Fantasy set will feature over 100 legendary creature cards, including 55 legendary borderless cards, some of which are drawn by fan-favorite artists from across Final Fantasy history.
Magic: The Gathering's Final Fantasy set will be a fully draftable, Standard-legal set that will release alongside four preconstructed Commander decks, one themed after each of four Final Fantasy games: 6, 7, 10, and 14. Each deck consists of 100 cards, a mix of both new Final Fantasy cards, as well as existing cards with new Final Fantasy art. The set launches on June 13.
Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.
Š Blizzard Entertainment
Max is home to some incredibly high-quality films and shows, including House of the Dragon, Succession, The Penguin, The White Lotus, and The Last of Us, which just started season 2. You can read our spoiler free The Last of Us season 2 review to see our thoughts.
If you've been hoping to start up an account to dig into that library, we're here to help. We're keeping track of the best price right now for Max subscriptions, along with any deals as they appear. This includes bundle deals like the Max, Hulu, and Disney+ bundle, which is one you absolutely don't want to miss out on. This mega bundle starts at just $16.99/month, which is an astonishing price to have three very popular streaming services right in the palm of your hand. You can learn more about that bundle deal and Max's subscription plans below.
The Disney Plus, Hulu, and Max streaming bundle can be purchased on any of the three streaming services and starts at $16.99/month for the ad-supported tier or $29.99/month for ad-free access across all three platforms. If you're looking to cut down on streaming costs and currently own all three of these, this is an excellent bundle to invest in. It'll save you quite a bit compared to what you'd pay for the three of them separately per month â 43% on the ad-supported plan and 42% on the ad-free plan.
To learn more about how to get started with this bundle as a new or existing subscriber, head to our guide on how to get (or switch over to) the Disney+/Hulu/Max streaming bundle. It's worth signing up for this right now as well, given Hulu and Disney Plus have increased their prices, so you'll ultimately be saving money with this bundle.
If you're a student, you can score the Max Basic With Ads plan for just $4.99/month. That's 50% off the usual price, which is a very nice deal to take advantage of. In order to get the discount, you'll need to verify your student status with UNiDAYS, then you'll get a unique code that you can use to redeem the discounted plan.
If you're just looking to sign up for a Max subscription, there are a few different options to choose from. At the moment, Max also has a limited time offer going on with its yearly plans that'll set you up at a discounted price for your first year. You can see those deals and the monthly plans below.
The Standard tier also allows users to download shows and movies to watch on the go. Both of the tiers allow up to two concurrent streams.
Max also has an additional Premium tier. The details are as follows:
There is currently no Max free trial available as of April 2025.
Alongside the big Max/Hulu/Disney+ bundle deal, Hulu also offers its own bundle deal with Max if you just want to have those two services. Simply pick out your Hulu base plan, which starts at $9.99/month, and then add Max to your account for an additional $9.99/month with the ad-supported plan or $16.99/month for the ad-free plan. If you'd like to learn more about Hulu's bundles, visit our page on Hulu's best bundles and deals right now.
Max brings together content from the old HBO Max service and Discovery+ under one roof. From Discovery, this includes programming from brands like HGTV, Food Network, TLC, Magnolia Network, and more. Some of the shows include Property Brothers, House Hunters, Fixer Upper, among others.
The service also maintains much of the content from HBO Max, including its slate of HBO Originals like The Last of Us (now airing Season 2), Euphoria, Succession, Barry, Curb Your Enthusiasm, White Lotus, House of the Dragon, and more. It also includes DC's slate of movies like Black Adam and The Batman, as well as other popular films like Dune: Part Two and Barbie. Plus, Max continues to house popular streaming series like Friends, Full House, and the Harry Potter movie collection.
In our updated review of Max, we gave it an 8/10, stating that, "For all its problems and an app that still runs a little too heavy, the extensive selection of well-curated choices make Max a worthwhile investment for cinema and TV lovers."
Hannah Hoolihan is a freelance writer who works with the Guides and Commerce teams here at IGN.
Original article from Logan Plant.
IGN's RuneScape: Dragonwilds map is here! Our interactive map tracks essential locations across Ashenfall, including Primary and Secondary Quests (Side Quests), recipes for Masterwork equipment such as the Staff of Light, and resources such as Anima-Infused Bark and Blightwood Root.
The available map filters for our RuneScape: Dragonwilds interactive map include:
There's a lot to do in RuneScape: Dragonwilds, whether that's tracking down materials like Ram Horns or crafting rare weapons like the Abyssal Whip. IGN's Game Help is here to help with informative guides. Our coverage includes:
Visit our RuneScape: Dragonwilds wiki for more game help.
Meg Koepp is a Guides Editor on the IGN Guides team, with a focus on trends. When she's not working, you can find her playing an RPG or spending time with her corgi.
The PlayStation Portal has never been discounted, but at least you can save on a used one. Amazon Resale (a rebranded Amazon Warehouse) currently has Used: Like New condition PS Portals in stock for only $149.88 shipped. It retails for $199 new, so that's a substantial 25% in savings. A Sony warranty may or may not be included, but Amazon Resale items benefit from the same 30-day return policy you get for buying a new item. We expect this item to sell out pretty quickly.
Make sure to select the "Save with Used - Like New" option
The PS Portal, Sony's handheld gaming accessory for the PS5 console, looks very much like an extended split-pad DualSense controller with an 8-inch 1080p LCD screen in the middle of it. It turns your PS5 into a gaming handheld by letting you stream games from your console at up to 60fps. The controller mirrors the same features found on the DualSense, including haptic feedback, adaptive triggers, and a touchscreen interface that replaces the Dualsense's touchpad. The Portal can stream your games even when you're outside of your home, with the caveat that you have access to very stable, very fast internet connection. Keep in mind that the PS Portal is not a standalone device. This is strictly a remote player for the PlayStation 5, so you will need a PS5 to use it.
You no longer need a PS5 to play games on the PS Portal. Now, rather than being limited to simply streaming games from a $500 console to a $200 handheld, Sony has introduced a feature that lets owners stream games directly from its PlayStation Now cloud streaming service. No PS5 required. Portal owners can either connect the Portal to their PS5 or directly to Sonyâs cloud servers (with some new quality of life beta updates that just launched in April). Choose the latter and suddenly you have access to a library of more than 120 games, including Ghost of Tsushima, Resident Evil 3 Remake, The Last of Us Part 1 Remastered, and Marvelâs Spider-Man: Miles Morales. Itâs worth noting you must be a subscriber to the highest tier of PlayStation Plus, but $18 a month is much more attractive that splashing out $500 upfront plus an extra $70 a game.
It should be said that the PlayStation Portal isnât the only way to stream your PS5 games over Wi-Fi within your home. You can mimic its functionality by downloading the PS Remote Play app on a mobile device, including other gaming handhelds like the Steam Deck. That said, it's more complicated to set up and you'll lose out on some of the Dualsense's features.
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
Š Bethesda Softworks
Theyâre really mining that money fast, arenât they? A Minecraft Movie has officially surpassed $700 million at the worldwide box office, and itâs clear the film is questing to be the highest grossing video game movie of all time â but at this rate, it might just be there by next weekend, its fourth weekend in theaters.
The film, directed by Napoleon Dynamite filmmaker Jared Hess, brought in a cool $41 million at the domestic box office for Easter weekend, grossing $16 million on Friday and $15.8 million on Saturday. The movie had a steep drop off in ticket sales on Sunday, only about $9.5 million, but considering it was a holiday in the United States, that still isnât too bad despite it being a 40% loss from the previous nights. But all in all, the film continues to excel when it comes to the numbers, according to Box Office Mojo.
At this point, that means A Minecraft Movie has grossed $345 million in the United States and another $375 million internationally â putting the film at about $721 million total gross right now. However, it still has another $279 million or so before it overtakes 2023âs The Super Mario Bros. Movie as the highest grossing video game movie to date. The Illumination production grossed over $1.3 billion during its original theatrical run two years ago, but A Minecraft Movie does have room on the runway to potentially do better. For example, A Minecraft Movie outsold The Super Mario Bros. Movieâs opening weekend â it grossed a whopping $157 million domestically during the April 4th weekend, whereas Super Mario Bros only brought home $146 million during its opening weekend. So really, itâs anyoneâs game at this point, and A Minecraft Movie is certainly playing for keeps.
A Minecraft Movie is currently in theaters nationwide, and The Super Mario Bros. Movie is available to stream on Prime.
Lex Briscuso is a film and television critic and a freelance entertainment writer for IGN. You can follow her on Twitter at @nikonamerica.
Š Blizzard
Cassian Andor is back for a second and final season, fomenting rebellion and inching closer to the seasoned operative we first met in 2016âs Rogue One. But as good as the first season was, having the title characterâs end point firmly in sight is the exact reason why Andor is even better in the second season.
The first season of Andor took a lot of us by surprise, I think. The prequel series to a prequel movie, on paper at least, starts out in a bit of a hole thanks to the simple fact that we know how Cassian Andorâs story ends. More than that, we know what happens with the entire rebellion itself. This was always the challenge with Andor as a series. Thanks to Rogue One we know exactly whatâs going to happen to this guy and most of his friends. But instead of that making the proceedings any less interesting, Tony Gilroy and the writers and directors behind Andor use it to their advantage. Season 2 of Andor cements this series and these characters as a truly entertaining and tragic bit of drama.
Now, Star Wars of course is no stranger to prequels. Ever since George Lucas decided to call the second movie Episode V, the prequel die had been cast. Itâs been how Star Wars has done business since The Phantom Menace in 1999 and, especially with the more recent Disney era, I believe the difference between a good Star War and bad one, has been how well it handles being a prequel.
Andor handled it very well in season 1 and in season 2, itâs an absolute master class. Not only does this season create a really engaging story around characters whose fates have already played out on screen, the writers use that fact to their advantage, writing it into the actual plot of season 2. Where season 1 talks about the price that needs to be paid to overthrow the Galactic Empire, season 2 very actively shows it â and how itâs starting to feel too expensive for some. Thereâs an exhaustion thatâs very present and on the surface. Losses are felt more heavily. An inevitability begins to seep in, one these characters canât escape, and that is where Andor season 2 is truly successful where other prequels in the Star Wars universe might not have been.
Because we know that most of these people are doomed, focusing on just the nuts and bolts of their story is the biggest mistake Andorâs creators could have made. The show, of course does that too â but first and foremost, Andor is about what itâs like to be doomed and continuing to fight anyway. The first season did an admirable job touching on that, but the second season does an excellent job of focusing on it.
For example, we know that Cassian and K-2S0 are in Rogue One, so yeah, of course we know that they get out of this or that scrape, and will survive any trap they walk into. Ditto any time we think Mon Mothma might be in danger. But these moments are, frankly, the least interesting parts of this series. There are a few spots that feel like itâs just action for action's sake, but nearly always those scenes are centered around a character of whose fate we arenât as sure. Thatâs the kind of thing the creators of Andor clearly kept in mind in order to keep the outcomes of these scenes at least somewhat up in the air â and the proof of that is in just how much weâre made to care about these new characters.
The impact of the Empire and the rebellion is made personal at every turn. Everybody we meet, for even a scene or two, has something invested in this conflict, whether itâs how the rebellion impacts business interests or the banality of Coruscant politicians carrying on as though nothing out of the ordinary is happening. That makes for a great juxtaposition in the season, by the way. On one hand thereâs a scrappy and not all-together rebellion struggling to survive; on the other, thereâs the persistence of the status quo among the galaxyâs rulers. It points the rebellionâs fight toward minds that need changing as well as military victories that need winning.
As a small, but I think important aside, Andor season 2 picks up a thread that was started in the very beginning of season 1, where the first episode included a title card for BBY 5. Andor season 2 picks up a year later with a similar title card reading BBY 4. Before the Battle of Yavin is a dating system thatâs used only for our benefit, as a way for us real-worlders to keep track of how many years before the destruction of the first Death Star these episodes take place. BBY 5 is meaningless to the characters that exist within Star Wars. Now this may seem like a small and âno duhâ sort of point, but this detail is not insignificant. Itâs a part of the whole, contributing to how effectively Andor navigates the challenges of existing in a canon thatâs as thoroughly fleshed out as Star Wars. It also adds to the anxiety of knowing how things end for Cassian. As we move from BBY 4 to BBY 3, weâre not just able to fix the point in time during which the series takes place, but itâs also a countdown to the events of Rogue One.
Small but meaningful title cards, however, are not the only thing Season 2 continues successfully from season 1. The structure of the 12 episodes, treating it more or less like 3 or 4 different arcs, is cleaner and more delineated in season 2. In fact, itâs a little hard to even call this a 12-episode season, actually. Itâs not quite 4 movies, either. Disney knows it, too â itâs why theyâre releasing Season 2 in 3 episode chunks. I think the most accurate way to talk about it is like itâs just 4 episodes, since thatâs how youâll be watching it anyway.
The biggest effect of very cleanly splitting these episode drops is the year that takes place in between each. We see things happen to characters one week, then the following week weâll see how those things have subtly changed those characters over the course of an entire year. So nearly all of those changes happen off screen, which does a couple things. One is that it gives the struggle of the rebellion a real sense of scale. The rebellion is playing the long game and itâs wearing down the heroes and villains of Andor. Secondly, that structure really highlights just how good the performances in this series are.
Cassianâs growth from a petty thief to a leader of the rebellion doesnât happen gradually. It takes big leaps in the intervening time between episodes, and that comes through in the way Diego Luna plays him. The changes we see in Cassian are bigger, thereâs no transitional phase of his character growth and that, again, feeds into the vibe of how much of a grind this rebellion is.
Stellan Skarsgaardâs Luthien Rael and Genevieve OâReillyâs Mon Mothma are particularly interesting in this regard as well. Both of them are obliged to wear two faces and the weight of those masks affects them both in different ways throughout the 4 years depicted in this season. But where Season 2âs performances really stand out for me are the villains. Denise Gough and Kyle Soller as Dedra Meero and Syril Karn â two incredibly ambitious, but still wildly different people â are getting to do some incredibly interesting work as their characters begin to see behind the Empireâs curtain a bit and understand the nature of their role in it.
Now, having said all that, the closer Andor gets to its final destination, the more season 2 loses me just a little bit. There are some moments towards the end of the season that become more concerned with setting the table for Rogue One than completing the stories of the characters that have gotten us this far. In that sense, itâs hard to say it comes to a satisfying ending because, well, itâs not the ending. Rogue One is the end of Andor, effectively becoming season 3 of the show. Which means the two seasons of the Disney+ series have largely left its resolution up to how you felt about Rogue One.
Again, this is kind of the cost of doing business where prequels of prequels are concerned. At some point, you just have to manage that. For Andor, itâs only bits and pieces though, mostly concentrated in the final acts of the season, where some of the storytelling starts to feel a little more business-like than the rest.
I found myself seeing where the show was going and not wanting it to get there. Some of that I chalk up to my own preference for stories that donât rely too much on connections to existing canon, but more than that, I just really liked this story and these people.
A new season full of anime is here to check out! A miracle drug mystery, fighting with fire, and the unlikeliest of heroes are what you can expect this Spring anime season. There's a new season full of anime to check out this Spring like the return of Fire Force's Company 8, ShinichirĹ Watanabeâs Lazarus, and the visually vibrant Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX. Across Crunchyroll, HIDIVE, Hulu, and Netflix, as well as others, there are a lot of places to enjoy anime at the moment.
Check out some anticipated series in the video above or the slideshow gallery below, followed by the full list of new Spring season 2025 anime and where to watch them in the U.S. and their respective streaming platforms. Anime listed are available now unless otherwise stated.
A new hero series is hitting this spring with To Be Hero X. The series follows Lin, a nobody who, through unforeseen circumstances, takes the place of an existing hero. The world of To Be Hero X is interesting with this Peter Pan-like belief in their heroes, which gives them their abilities. Hero story aside, the visuals for this series are surprising in a good way. LAN Studio alongside Pb Animation and Paper Plane Animation use 3D and 2D in quite a refreshing way. Itâs reminiscent of Arcane, but To Be Hero X jumps between both purposefully in its storytelling. The series just premiered, but the visuals plus the mysteries already have me intrigued about what the rest of the season is going to look like. To Be Hero X is available now on Crunchyroll.
Speaking of heroes, My Hero Academia: Vigilantes drops this spring season! The new series follows Koichi, an aspiring hero who helps strangers with small menial tasks. He runs into some trouble when a mysterious vigilante intervenes and looks to take Koichi under his wing. This story takes place years before Deku and the gang become heroes in the main series, so itâs great for fans interested in the world-building. Bones Film, an offshoot of studio Bones which worked on the main series, is handling animation production on this spinoff, so fans can expect more of the My Hero Academia they love. My Hero Academia: Vigilantes is available now on Crunchyroll.
The school of protective misfits is back with Wind Breaker Season 2. Last we saw our protagonist, Sakura, he volunteered to help a fellow classmate whose childhood friend is involved with a gang. The new season jumps back right where we left off, and chaos ensues soon after. CloverWorks, the studio known for Bocchi the Rock! and The Elusive Samurai, returns to helm animation production for Season 2, so expect more amazing fight choreography and action sequences for the eyes. Wind Breaker Season 2 is available now on Crunchyroll.
The hiatus is finally over for One Piece fans! After the big cliffhanger and lore drops in the middle of the highly anticipated Egghead Arc, the series returns right where it left off. Out of the frying pan and into the fire as more Marines encroach on Luffy and the gang. As seen during the previous Wano arc, Toei Animation has really stepped up their game, so itâs exciting to see how the rest of the Egghead Arc goes after a somewhat brief break. One Piece Egghead Arc Part 2 is available now on Crunchyroll.
Another anticipated series returning after a large chunk of time is Fire Force with Season 3! Itâs been almost five years since we last saw Shinra and friends of Company 8. After some training alongside some unfortunate news, a major battle looks to be on the horizon. David Production, the studio well known for JoJoâs Bizarre Adventure and Cells at Work!, returns to helm animation this season. If youâre a fan of Atsushi Ohkuboâs other work like Soul Eater, nowâs the time to get into this fiery, action-packed series. Fire Force Season 3 is available now on Crunchyroll, Hulu, and Disney+.
One of the most highly anticipated anime of the year is here with ShinichirĹ Watanabeâs Lazarus! The series follows Axel, the smooth-talking protagonist with a penchant for escaping prisons. He is forcibly recruited into a suicide squad-like team after a world-renowned scientist revealed that a miracle drug that the population has been using for years is a death sentence. With a limited amount of time, this group of specialized individuals must find this doctor and get the cure. MAPPA, known for Chainsaw Man and Jujutsu Kaisen, is leading animation production for this series, and it shows! The premiere alone showcases snazzy fight choreography alongside some fun chase sequences that Watanabe fans are familiar with. There are some high expectations for this series so itâll be interesting to see how the rest of the season progresses. Lazarus is available now on Max and Adult Swim.
Looking for a fun supernatural series this spring season? Witch Watch may be the anime for you! The series follows Nico, a young witch who reconnects with a childhood friend who happens to be an ogre. In typical comedy fashion, the two end up living together while trying to navigate Nicoâs new magical powers. Bibury Animation Studios, known for The Quintessential Quintuplets Season 2 and The 100 Girlfriends Who Really Really, Really, Really, Really Love You, is leading animation production on the series. So far, the premiere and trailers have shown some hilarious predicaments that these two face, so itâll be fun to see how the rest of the season pans out. Witch Watch is available now on Crunchyroll, Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+.
A nice surprise this season is a new adaptation of the period piece novel Anne of Green Gables. The series follows Anne Shirley, an imaginative orphan who is mistakenly brought to a new family. Even though it wasnât planned, the family has chosen to take her in for now. The Answer Studio, which has worked on Tower of God Season 2, will be at the helm of animation production. There is already an Anne of Green Gables anime from back in 1979, produced by some Studio Ghibli veterans like Hayao Miyazaki, so itâs nice to see the return of Anne Shirley for a new audience. If you want a change of pace this season with a grounded and wholesome story, this series may be a good fit for you. Anne Shirley is available now on Crunchyroll.
Another series making its anime return in a new form and after so many years is YAIBA: Samurai Legend! With this new adaptation, it will be over 25 years since the long-running series first aired in 1993. Wit Studio, known for Attack on Titan and Vinland Saga, is taking on YAIBA: Samurai Legend. Just from the premiere alone, the stunning movement and action sequences will get any shonen fan interested in the series. Itâll be very exciting to see how the rest of the season goes for this new take on a classic. YAIBA: Samurai Legend is available now on Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+.
Finally, the ever popular mecha series returns with Mobile Suit Gundam GquuuuuuX! This new series follows Amate, a young girl who finds herself in the middle of a mobile suit fight on a space colony. With courage and luck, she ends up in a Gundam unit, linking perfectly to the suit. Studio Sunrise and Khara are producing the rest of the episodic series just like they did for the special movie GQuuuuuuX Beginning. The designs of the characters and Gundam are very refreshing, bringing in a more playful vibe than the more dramatic storylines that came before. With that said, the visuals are quite amazing and itâll be interesting to see how this all shakes out as the season continues. Mobile Suit Gundam GquuuuuuX is available now on Amazon Prime.
Those are some anticipated new and returning anime available to watch this spring 2025 season. If you want more anime, check out our list of the Biggest Anime Coming in 2025 and also our list of the winter 2025 anime in case you missed the last batch of new series.
Hereâs the full list of anime coming out in Spring 2025 that will be available to watch in the US:
What anime are you watching this Spring? Let's discuss in the comments!
Destruction has been a hallmark of Battlefield over the years, and for the next Battlefield game, DICE looks to be amping up the rubble-producing chaos even more.
The developer recently dropped a video and Battlefield Labs Community Update, to spotlight what's in store for the next entry in the Battlefield series. In the pre-alpha footage, we can see some of the destruction designed by DICE, as an explosive takes down the side of a building, opening up a new pathway through the structure.
Weâre back with another Battlefield Labs Community Update focused on destruction! Check out an early pre-alpha example of destruction that showcases the ability to destroy a wall to quickly traverse through the building. Read the full article now! #Battlefield pic.twitter.com/bgDcPgZRbg
â Battlefield (@Battlefield) April 18, 2025
Destruction can lead to creative solutions for players, and in the Community Update, DICE said it is working to add more gameplay depth by letting players reshape the environment around them. Whether you bring down a wall to launch an ambush or open a new path towards a critical point, sometimes getting those pesky buildings out of your way can help.
"We're designing destruction around easily identifiable visual and audio language that lets you understand what can be destroyed, altered, or transformed through gameplay," DICE said. "We aim to make destruction an integral part of your Battlefield experience to create an intuitive, fun, and rewarding environment where you feel empowered to shape the world around you."
Different impacts will affect structures like walls; while explosions obviously work, bullets will also chip away, so players can shoot through them. Audio VFX cues will let players know that their efforts are working.
The aftermath of all this destruction also leaves tangible effects on the battlefield. Rubble created by destroying a piece of a building, for example, will remain on the field, and could be used as cover. The next Battlefield certainly seems to have destruction on the mind.
The next Battlefield game, colloquially "Battlefield 6," is slowly taking shape. Not too much has been officially confirmed, though there have been some gameplay leaks that have received positive responses from Battlefield fans. It's heading to a modern setting for the series and it's expected to arrive sometime in Electronic Arts' fiscal year 2026, or between April 2025 and March 2026. Of course, things could change if certain massive, industry dominating competitors lock in a date.
With a lot of effort behind this next entry, this new Battlefield seems to be pulling out all the stops. Getting all the level destruction right certainly feels like a step in the right direction.
Eric is a freelance writer for IGN.
As one HBO primetime show ends (farewell, The White Lotus), another must rise to take its spot. Two years after The Last of Us first aired on Max, the video game adaptation starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey is returning for a second season.
The Last of Us game and the first season of the show both end with a cliffhanger that has... consequences. Anyone whoâs already played The Last of Us Part 2, myself included, is probably feeling as much terror as excitement at the thought of witnessing what comes next on screen. In IGNâs review of Season 2, Simon Cardy acknowledges that it was âalways going to be a challenge to adapt The Last of Us Part 2âs sprawling, twisting story into a television show," so it makes sense that the story will continue over a third season.
If youâre planning to tune in for the premiere of The Last of Us Season 2 or still need to catch up on Season 1, check out the details below.
The Last of Us Season 2 premiered on Max on Sunday, April 13, 2025. Standalone Max subscriptions start at $9.99 and can be bundled with Hulu and Disney+. Max is also offering a limited time discount with up to 20% off its annual subscription plans.
The Last of Us Season 2 will run for seven episodes total, two fewer episodes than Season 1. New episodes will be released on Max every Sunday at 9pm EST/6pm CST. Hereâs the full release schedule:
The entire first season of The Last of Us is streaming on Max, with individual episodes available to rent or purchase through Prime Video. HBO also released a limited edition 4K steelbook of Season 1:
Sony and HBO have already confirmed that The Last of Us has been renewed for Season 3. Thereâs no official word on a release date, but production on the next season kicks off this summer. The studio has also reminded viewers that this does NOT mean there will be a third Last of Us game. As far as we know, Naughty Dog is wholly focused on its next project, Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet.
The first season of The Last of Us show adapted the entirety of the first game with some creative liberties. Season 2 brings us to the storylines of The Last of Us sequel, which will be split up across the next two seasons.
Both Naughty Dog games have been remastered, with new edition of The Last of Us Part 2 arriving on PC just last week. This is Naughty Dog, so a new "Complete" edition of both games has also been announced, with a physical release arriving this summer. Aside from the games themselves, Sony also released a special edition DualSense controller to celebrate the series.
The Last of Us Season 2 is led by the original gameâs creator, Neil Druckmann, and Craig Mazin (Chernobyl), both of whom feature as writers alongside Haley Gross, who co-wrote The Last of Us Part 2 game. Each individual episode has its own director, with the full list including Mark Mylod (Succession, The Menu, Game of Thrones), Peter Hoar (It's a Sin, Daredevil, Doctor Who), and Stephen Williams (Lost).
Hereâs the main cast starring in the new season of The Last of Us:
Don't be surprised if you don't recognize some of these names; several original characters are being introduced in the new season. You can check out our full breakdown of which characters are new or returning for more details.
After months of rumors and leaks, it looks like Bethesda is finally ready to make its remaster of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion a real announcement tomorrow.
Tomorrow, 11:00 am EST. https://t.co/CKo7HKjs7j and https://t.co/dgz4EnloQ0 pic.twitter.com/K36jZmFUO9
â Bethesda (@bethesda) April 21, 2025
In a post on Twitter/X today, the official Bethesda account announced an announcement for tomorrow at 8am PT/11am ET across both YouTube and Twitch. While they didn't specify exactly what the announcement would be, the big "IV" in the center of the image and the background that looks suspiciously like a well-known piece of official Oblivion art kiiiiiind of gives it away.
A remake of Oblivion has been rumored for it seems like forever now, with rumors turning to leaks in more recent weeks. We first learned it might be in the works thanks to a 2020 Bethesda release schedule that leaked as part of the FTC vs. Microsoft trial in 2023, which said an Oblivion remaster was planned for fiscal year 2022. At the time, the document was old enough (and the release window long past) that it was possible to write this off as a canceled project. But then, in January of this year, another leak dropped, this time painting the remaster as a full-blown remake being made by Bethesda alongside support studio Virtuos. And just last week, those leaks were all-but-confirmed when even more leaks, this time from Virtuos' website, showed up, including images of the remake in action.
If the leaks from last week remain true, The Elder Scrolls: Oblivion Remastered will launch on PC, Xbox, and PlayStation, and will include a Deluxe Edition release with horse armor alongside the basic version.
Tune in tomorrow to, hopefully, hear all this confirmed and more details besides.
Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.
Within the PC gaming community, 1440p and 4K monitors dominate the conversation. But, according to Steam's Hardware Survey, the majority of gamers enjoy 1080p. There's a lot of reasons for this, cost and ease of performance ranking high among them. If you're shopping for a new monitor, this also means that you'll find the market flooded with new monitors with options and no clear answer about which is best.
Well, fear not, because that's exactly what I'm here for. I've been covering gaming monitors for years and know exactly what it takes for a monitor to rise from merely acceptable to legendary, like my top pick here, the Asus TUF Gaming VG279QM. If you're ready to save time shopping and instead devote that to having a great gaming experience, look no further. These are the best 1080p gaming monitors of 2025.
Opting for a 1080p gaming monitor comes with several advantages. They tend to cost significantly less than their 1440p and 4K competitors, can offer high refresh rates all the way up to 500Hz (and inching higher all the time), and can still offer support for things like AMD FreeSync and Nvidia G-Sync.
One of their biggest advantages is simply that they are easier to run and don't require high-powered and high-priced graphics cards to push to their limits since they have fewer pixels overall. It's possible to have a great gaming experience even on an entry-level GPU.
They're not as crisp, however, and can look noticeably soft above 27 inches. If you're looking for something with a higher resolution, be sure to check out our list of the best gaming monitors of 2025.
The best 1080p gaming monitor for most people is the Asus TUF Gaming VG279QM. For less than $300, you get a fast and deliciously colorful screen that's able to run at a rapid 280Hz. It comes with low input lag, variable refresh rate support, and a high peak brightness to ensure that your games always look their best and that you can enjoy a great picture with crisp motion clarity when you need it the most.
I didn't review this monitor personally, but our reviewer was very impressed at how well it balances its features. Whether you're running an AMD or an Nvidia GPU, you can count on variable refresh rate support with AMD FreeSync or Nvidia G-Sync. Screen tearing isn't an issue because of these features, but you can also count on near instantaneous response time thanks to its exceptionally fast 280Hz refresh rate.
It's also the perfect size for its resolution: 27 inches is big enough to feel spacious without making the image look noticeably soft or revealing individual pixels. Its brightness is also quite good at 400 nits, so you can use it in a brightly lit room, even if you're not gaming in direct sunlight. Its high peak brightness allows it to offer improved dynamic range and makes colors pop off the screen.
It's also DisplayHDR 400 certified, though you shouldn't count on the kind of dynamic range "true" HDR typically requires 1,000 nits, so it's best to keep your expectations in check.
The VG279QM is truly the sum of its parts. Between its price, features, and performance, it sits as king of the hill so far in 2025.
Shopping for a gaming monitor on a budget can feel perilous. There are lots of brands, usually that you've never heard of before, all promising great things. In cases like this, I recommend the Samsung Odyssey G30D. It's a very affordable 24-inch monitor from a major brand that promises good colors and solid responsiveness for about $120.
For this cost, you're getting an IPS panel that offers vibrant colors and a gaming-grade 1ms response time. It's also able to run at a high 180Hz refresh rate for even better responsiveness and motion clarity. At the same time, it offers variable refresh rate support with compatibility with AMD FreeSync and Nvidia G-Sync. The combination of high refresh rate and VRR support means that gameplay will not only be smooth, it will be free of any tearing, and will still offer an enjoyable experience between 30 and 60fps if you're running an older GPU.
For the money, it's a surprisingly full-featured package, but there are two main sacrifices. The first is that it only offers a single HDMI port and DisplayPort each. This isn't a monitor designed to connect multiple devices at once, but if you're only using it with one computer, it's not a major drawback. Instead, much more meaningfully, is that its peak brightness isn't that high. On average, it's rated for 250 nits, which does impact its vibrancy some and your ability to use it in direct sunlight. In typical room lighting, it's fine. In low light scenarios, you aren't likely to notice it at all.
But let's be real here. Part of what you're paying for with this monitor is the assurance of buying from a well-known brand. Should anything go wrong, it comes with a one-year warranty that you'll actually be able to draw on. This model seems to be quite reliable, but that peace of mind has a value of its own.
Overall, it's a full-featured package at a very reasonable price. Its shortcomings are workable, and its gaming performance is great, making it an excellent value for gamers on a budget.
Coming in around $150, we have the AOC Gaming C27G2Z, a curved 240Hz gaming monitor that aims to redefine value for the dollar. This display features a 1500R curve, 300cd/m² of average brightness, a 240Hz refresh rate, and a 0.5ms response time. With this display, your games will not only look great, but every move will feel instantaneous for that competitive edge you crave.
The C27G2Z's 1500R curve is what I like to call the Goldilocks curve. It's a bit more pronounced than the very gentle 1800R curvature, but significantly less arched than the 800R, which seems to wrap into your peripheral vision. In other words, it offers just enough to help elicit the feeling of being drawn into the center of the screen and adding a bit more depth to your gaming experience without the drawback of text warping.
This monitor uses a VA panel. While a number of 1080p monitors use IPS panels for their richer colors, rest assured that it's no slouch. Its VA panel is still color-rich, and it offers a 3000:1 contrast ratio for improved blacks and shadows. This improved dynamic range directly translates to picture quality, and with calibration, can be quite accurate.
Its biggest selling point is easily its responsiveness. It comes with a 240Hz refresh rate, complete with VRR support for both AMD and Nvidia. AOC has also driven the panel such that it's able to offer a 0.5ms response time, enhancing its competitive capabilities. This positions the monitor squarely in the category of being competitively capable without carrying the usual premium of other esports monitors.
The most notable drawback is that its out-of-the-box settings aren't dialed in for the best picture quality. Turning it on for the first time, both colors and contrast lacked the usual pop I expected from AOC. But, this is a simple fix if you're willing to spend some time adjust its picture settings. Likewise, creative professionals will want to perform their own calibration using a colorimeter since it looks good for gaming but can be improved for creative work with additional fine tuning.
For only $150, and even if it was a bit more under the $200 mark, the AOC C27G2Z is a great value for 1080p gaming between its spacious screen, great responsiveness, and Goldilocks curve. It's an easy recommendation for me to make.
One of the newest options on this list, and also one of the best, is the Acer Nitro ED6. This monitor features a spacious 30-inch screen with an ultra-wide 21:9 aspect ratio. Its VA panel is capable of great colors and contrast, and Acer has overdriven it to run at an impressively rapid 200Hz for smooth and crystal-clear single-player and competitive gaming.
Its screen truly makes this monitor something special. At 30 inches, it's just about the perfect size for its 2560x1080 resolution. While that's technically greater than 1080p, it's the ultra-wide variant of it, and because its vertical height is close to that of a 24-inch monitor, you don't need to worry about the image appearing soft or individuals pixels being visible. In fact, this display approximates having two 24-inch monitors side-by-side without that pesky bezel in the middle.
Like many of the best gaming monitors around this price, the Acer Nitro ED6 uses a high-quality VA panel with a 3000:1 contrast ratio. Its color reproduction is very good, and its contrast is deep, paired with its 200Hz refresh rate. It checks virtually every box that you would hope for from an affordable 1080p monitor in both picture quality and performance.
Its design allows it to be versatile for different types of games. You can just as easily play a single-player RPG and get lost in a virtual world as you can play a competitive shooter at a high level. Its 1500R curve is both gentle enough and pronounced enough to make the gaming experience more engaging, and you'll experience very good motion clarity this side of 240Hz (aka dedicated esports territory).
Acer was clearly out to impress with this monitor. Its fantastic balance of design, price, and performance makes it the premier pick for a 1080p ultrawide. Since it's coming from one of the biggest brands in the business, you know that you can count on proper warranty support should you ever need it. For any 1080p gamer looking for their ultrawide fix, look no further.
In competitive gaming, speed and accuracy are everything. And that's where the BenQ Zowie XL2586X+ sweeps in to save the day. This is the 1080p monitor to choose if you're looking at the game of your life and need every advantage possible. Or â because, honestly, that's not something that happens very often â you want to remove every glass ceiling over your performance.
If you've watched competitive esports at all, then you've probably already seen a Zowie monitor. The brand has been a staple in esports tournaments for years due to its exceptional reliability and performance when it matters most. This display is its highest performing yet and a likely candidate to appear on the desks of the highest level athletes operating in esports today. But because Zowie also knows its stuff and the usual limitations, it has outfitted the XL2586X+ with additional tech and key features to make it appealing even outside of a life or death match.
The biggest selling point of this monitor is its incredibly fast 600Hz refresh rate. You thought 240Hz was fast? 360Hz? Both of those can move over because the XL2586X+ puts it to shame. 600Hz is so fast that motion blur is simply a non-issue, and its input latency is nothing short of class-leading. As of this writing, it is currently the best of the best for competitive gaming, and it really isn't even that close.
It's able to pull off such incredible responsiveness by using a fast TN panel. This usually isn't a panel type I recommend because, frankly, for most gamers, it's not the best choice. It doesn't offer the best colors, viewing angles, or contrast, and is really a technology that has seen its use case slim down dramatically over the years. But for competitive gaming, it's still the fastest panel type out there.
Still, if you're considering spending so much money on this monitor, it's only fair to expect that it offers an excellent picture inside and outside of competitive esports. To address some of the panel type shortcomings, Zowie has implemented a special VividFilm layer that enhances color reproduction in a noticeable way. It's not just a gimmick either. Zowie's TN panels simply look better than any other TN gaming monitor that I've tried.
Zowie has also implemented its DyAc2 technology into this display. Standing for Dynamic Accuracy, this technology implements dual backlights to clearly define motion on the screen. While it won't overcome pure skill, it is effective at drawing your eyes to moving objects, which is perfect for ranged battles and picking off enemy snipers.
At $999, this is an expensive monitor that isn't for everybody. But even if it were half or a quarter of that price, it still wouldn't be for everybody because not everybody needs this level of responsiveness or the other sacrifices that go with its TN panel. For competitive esports, however, it's simply the number one choice... if you can afford it.
If you're shopping for a 1080p monitor, there are a few key things you should be on the lookout for. These break down to size, panel type, refresh rate, brightness, and any additional features it may offer, increasing its value.
Size: Choose a monitor that matches your space. Going too big or too small can easily introduce barriers to an enjoyable gaming experience. To avoid visible pixels (aka the screen door effect), I recommend limiting size to no more than 27 inches.
Panel Type: These days there are two key panel types to choose from, and one less common that is best avoided unless you're aiming to play high-level competitive esports. The two primary types of panels are in-plane switching (IPS) and vertical alignment (VA). Twisted Nematic (TN) panels have largely been phased out and I suggest leaving them as relics of the past.
IPS panels offer the best colors and viewing angles at the expense of comparatively low contrast. VA panels offer good colors, if less accuracte than IPS, and much better contrast but have worse viewing angles. They also are not susceptible to backlight bleed due to how the technology handles light.
Since most gaming monitors claim 1ms or less response time, issues of ghosting or poor responsiveness are much less of a concern than they have been in the past. As long as the panels you're choosing between offer at least 1ms of response time, you can be free to choose the panel type that resonates more with your particular tastes and needs.
TN panels, on the other hand, can really only claim fast response time. Their colors tend to look washed out, and both contrast and viewing angles are lackluster. Yet, for esports, BenQ Zowie is still an incredibly popular brand for the routinely fantastic responsiveness, motion clarity, and reliability of its monitors. In general, TN isn't the best choice for most people, but for competitive esports, it's still the fastest option.
Refresh Rate: A monitor's refresh rate is how many times it updates the image on its screen per second (measured in hertz). A productivity monitor typically runs at a 60Hz refresh rate. These days, the majority of 1080p gaming monitors are able to offer 120Hz or higher refresh rates. Compared to 60Hz, this offers a significantly smoother gaming experience with better motion clarity. Anything above 200Hz tends to cost more and is best suited for competitive shooters and esports. Generally speaking, 144Hz is considered a sweet spot.
Brightness: How bright a monitor can get is measured in nits or candela per meter squared (cdm/2). The best 1080p gaming monitors are able to hit 400 nits or higher, which allows them to offer a bright, vivid picture. Many land in between 300 nits and 400 nits, which, away from direct sunlight, is still very usable. Anything below 300 nits, however, is likely to look a bit dim and isn't suited for use in direct sunlight.
Additional Features: The best gaming monitors offer additional features to increase their value. One of the most common is variable refresh rate support, which aligns the monitor's refresh rate with your in-game fps to eliminate screen tearing and create a smoother gaming experience. For AMD, this is known as FreeSync, and for Nvidia, it's G-Sync, though both accomplish the same task and at 1080p will be mostly indistinguishable from one another. Keep an eye out for other features like on-screen reticles and timers, software support, or hotkeys to quickly access its different settings.
To answer this question, we first have to understand what each of those terms means. A 1080p monitor is one with a resolution of 1920x1080 pixels. This totals 2.07 million pixels. 1440p, on the other hand, refers to a resolution of 2560x1440, or 3.69 million pixels. Naturally, a 1440p monitor is going to offer a crisper image.
There's more to the story than simple pixel count, however. The size of your monitor also makes a big difference. At 24 inches, for example, you aren't likely to notice a major difference in picture clarity. What you will notice is how much more difficult 1440p is to run.
Its ease to run and relatively low cost are the two biggest reasons most people choose a 1080p gaming monitor with most graphics cards designed to hit 1080p resolution as a baseline, and many significantly higher. It's easier to run games at high frame rates and high settings with a less expensive GPU, like an Nvidia RTX 4050. This card is comparatively cheap but is very capable of running even demanding games at 1080p resolution. An xx60 or xx70 series card or their AMD equivalents will achieve higher frame rates but at a significantly higher cost and with minimal impact on the smoothness of your actual gaming experience (depending on the game, of course).
I recommend sticking to 27 inches or below. 1080p resolution is perfectly fine for displays at this size and under. While larger monitors are available, they are likely to make individual pixels visible and lead to a screen door effect and an overall softer image. The ideal size for 1080p for crispness, clarity, and space is around 25 inches.
This depends on its size, capabilities, and features. But in general, 1080p gaming monitors should be significantly less expensive than 1440p or 4K displays. It's perfectly possible to get a very good 1080p monitor for under $200. I would suggest new PC gamers shopping for their first monitor to target this price point but allow themselves a little wiggle room for features and specs that best meet their needs.
Christopher Coke has been a regular contributor to IGN since 2019 and has been covering games and technology since 2013. He has covered tech ranging from gaming controllers to graphics cards, gaming chairs and gaming monitors, headphones, IEMs, and more for sites such as MMORPG.com, Tomâs Hardware, Popular Science, USA Todayâs Reviewed, and Popular Mechanics. Find Chris on Twitter @gamebynight.
With season two of The Last of Us in full swing (episode two only just aired), there's no better time than now to sign up for a subscription to Max. If you've been waiting for a good time to jump into its library, now's your chance with Max offering a limited time deal on its yearly plans (see here at Max). These come in three tiers: Basic With Ads, Standard, and Premium. They usually cost $99.99/year, $169.99/year, and $209.99/year, respectively, but with this deal they've dropped to $79.99/year, $139.99/year, and $169.99/year.
This discount only covers the first year of your subscription before returning to its normal price. It's also only live until May 7, so act fast to get set up with a discounted yearly plan today.
If you're curious about what each plan offers, Max has a breakdown on the sale page which we've included below:
Max Basic With Ads - $79.99/year (usually $99.99/year)
Standard - $139.99/year (usually $169.99/year)
Premium - $169.99/year (usually $209.99/year)
Signing up for a Max yearly plan is a great way to catch up on some of the best shows and films that have dropped on the streaming service. While The Last of Us is currently working through season two, there's even more that's worth checking out on the platform such as The Pitt, which got a 10/10 in our review, The White Lotus (which just finished season three), The Penguin, and House of the Dragon, which has just begun production on season three.
If you're looking to save on streaming services this year, it's worth checking out our breakdown of the best streaming deals today to see what else has been popping up lately. If you're looking for a Max subscription, specifically, it's worth considering a bundle with Disney+ and Hulu, which we consider the best streaming bundle overall.
You can also score a great discount on Apple TV+ at the moment, which is offering $2.99/month for your first three months. To see more streaming deals and bundles, we also have roundups of the best Hulu deals and the best Disney Plus deals that are worth a look, too.
Hannah Hoolihan is a freelancer who writes with the guides and commerce teams here at IGN.
The GeForce RTX 4090 is a generation older than the new Blackwell 50 series GPUs, but this doesn't change the fact that it's still one of the most powerful cards out there, eclipsing the GeForce RTX 5080 or RTX 4080 Super or the Radeon RX 9070 XT or RX 7900 XTX. Only one GPU performs better - the RTX 5090 - and you'll need to use up a lifetime of luck to find one that isn't marked up by hundreds, even thousands of dollars.
Because the RTX 4090 has been discontinued, it's getting harder to source as well. Fortunately, Dell still sells a Alienware Aurora R16 gaming PC configuration that can be equipped with a 4090 GPU. Not only is it one of the few RTX 4090 prebuilts still available - Lenovo and HP no longer carry them - it's also one of the more reasonably priced ones.
This Alienware Aurora R16 gaming PC is equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265F CPU, GeForce RTX 4090 GPU, 16GB of DDR5-5200MHz RAM, and a 1TB NVMe SSD. The processor can also be upgraded up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 285K. If you're getting system with a focus on gaming, then the upgrade is unnecessary. Gaming at higher resolutions is almost always GPU bound, and besides, the default Intel Core Ultra 7 265F is a solid processor with a max turbo frequency of 5.3GHz and a total of 20 cores. It's cooled by a robust 240mm all-in-one liquid cooler and the entire system is powered by an 1,000W 80PLUS Platinum power supply.
Dell also offers this upgraded RTX 4090 model for $3,749.99 with free shipping. It's about $750 more than the base model Alienware 4090 gaming PC, but that's because the processor has been upgraded to a much more powerful Intel Core Ultra 9 285K CPU. You also get double the RAM and storage.
The RTX 4090 is the most powerful RTX 40 series GPU on the market. Compared to the new Blackwell cards, only the $2,000 MSRP RTX 5090 is superior in performance. This card will run every game comfortably at 4K resolution; you should be hitting 60+fps even with all settings turned to the max and ray tracing enabled, doubly so if DLSS is supported. The only setting that the 4090 (as well as every other GPU) struggles with is path tracing, but no one really ever turns this on except during benchmark tests or social media flexing. The RTX 5090 might be faster, but for the vast majority of people out there, it's just wasted power since the 4090 already excels at pretty much all things gaming.
Dell is offering an Alienware Aurora R16 gaming PC equipped with the new GeForce RTX 5080 GPU for $2,399.99 shipped. The RTX 5080 is one of three new Blackwell graphics cards that are out (and impossible to find). In our Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 FE review, Jackie writes that "If you already have a high-end graphics card from the last couple of years, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 doesnât make a lot of sense â it just doesnât have much of a performance lead over the RTX 4080, though the extra frames from DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation do make things look better in games that support it. However, for gamers with an older graphics card who want a significant performance boost, the RTX 5080 absolutely provides â doubly so if youâre comfortable with Nvidiaâs AI goodies."
Check out more of the best Alienware deals.
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
I think itâs time we all collectively admit that Amazon has started acting like a scalper with a Prime badge. The PokĂŠmon TCG: Journey Together Elite Trainer Box is back in stock, but now itâs sitting at an eye-watering $99.49, more than double what it went for just days ago. And the real kicker? Itâs being sold and shipped by Amazon directly. Meanwhile, the much better-value Booster Bundle, which includes six packs and none of the fluff, is quietly buried under a separate listing and priced closer to its actual RRP at $37.97. If youâre just in it for the cards (and not the 45 energy you already have), itâs the smarter move by far. Keep an eye on the ETB though, its price seems to fluctuate more than a stressed-out Gyarados.
Beyond the Amazon pricing weirdness, there are a couple of other deals worth highlighting today. Humble dropped a massive cosplay book bundle with 40+ guides for $18, covering everything from foam armor builds to SFX makeup to pattern collections for just about every part of a costume. It's an incredible value for beginners or cosplay vets looking to up their game without spending a fortune. And over in the IGN Store, Resident Evil fans can now preorder an absurdly detailed Mother Miranda statue. Itâs massive, LED-lit, and dramatic enough to haunt your shelves through 2026 and beyond.
Amazonâs been a bit shady with this one. While the overpriced Elite Trainer Box is sitting at a wild $99.49, this six-pack bundle is actually close to MSRP and ships directly from Amazon. Itâs quietly hidden under separate listings, which feels intentional given how quickly the ETB sold out when it dipped below $40 last week.
One Journey Together pack, one total mystery. If you just want to open something without overthinking it, this gets the job done. Itâs also about as low-stakes as PokĂŠmon TCG gets unless you're picking up cards off the sidewalk.
Yes, this is the same box that was selling for around $40 days ago. Itâs now being offered at the highest price yet, and not even by resellers â this inflated price is from Amazon itself. You get nine booster packs, a promo, sleeves, and extras, but you'd be paying more than double what itâs worth. Iâd pass unless it drops again.
If youâve ever stared at a costume price and thought âI could make that,â this bundle is your chance to prove it. For $18, you get 40+ ebooks covering foamwork, LED wiring, sewing, armor templates, and even a cosplay planner. Itâs a goldmine for beginners or experienced cosplayers looking to level up.
I want to say this isnât excessive, but youâre getting 18 Stellar Crown booster packs, three promo cards, a playmat, a deck box, and a magnetic card display. Excessive, but in a good way. Itâs basically a portable shrine to Terapagos, and somehow still manages to feel worth it if you're deep in the hobby.
Three booster packs and two sticker sheets in a tin that stacks. Thatâs the whole pitch. I think itâs a fun pickup if youâre buying for a younger fan or just want your cards stored in a tiny themed cylinder for some reason.
Six packs focused on shiny PokĂŠmon, which will either be a collectorâs dream or a gamble depending on your luck. In my opinion, the price feels high unless you're chasing specific cards, but that hasnât stopped anyone before.
Six packs and two foil promos, plus acrylic standees and a sticker sheet, because Ionoâs entire personality is now available in merchandise form. I think this oneâs a solid pick if you like your collections playable, displayable, and mildly ridiculous.
This box comes with nine Shrouded Fable booster packs, a Pecharunt promo, sleeves, dice, and more organizational tools than your average office desk. Itâs one of the more practical bundles, assuming your definition of practical includes themed card sleeves.
Each bundle comes with three PokĂŠ Ball tins and nine booster packs total, plus stickers in case the PokĂŠ Balls werenât festive enough. Youâre paying for variety and presentation here, which is half the fun anyway.
Same again but includes a PokĂŠball, Great Ball and Ultra Ball. This is the OG choice and look brilliant mixed in a graded card display. All PokĂŠmon TCG should come in a PokĂŠball in my opinion!
If you donât need sleeves or dice and just want to crack open six fresh packs from Surging Sparks, this one does the job. In my opinion, itâs the most straightforward way to feed the shiny card habit without the extra clutter.
You get five packs and one of two promo cards, chosen by fate or some algorithm pretending to be fate. A decent middle ground for players who want something compact with a bit of flair and a good chance at useful pulls.
This tin is a lucky dip between Kyogre, Xerneas, and Dialga, which makes it great if you enjoy a little chaos with your collecting. Five packs and a foil promo make it pretty reasonable for the price, especially if you're not picky.
Christian Wait is a contributing freelancer for IGN covering everything collectable and deals. Christian has over 7 years of experience in the Gaming and Tech industry with bylines at Mashable and Pocket-Tactics. Christian also makes hand-painted collectibles for Saber Miniatures. Christian is also the author of "Pokemon Ultimate Unofficial Gaming Guide by GamesWarrior". Find Christian on X @ChrisReggieWait.
Š Getty Images / Cheng Xin
Š Bandai Namco
Nintendo is teasing that a new 3D Mario game may be just around the corner, but weâll have to wait to see it.
Nintendo of America president Doug Bowser addressed cries for another mainline Mario entry during a recent interview with CNN. While he stopped short of promising that there is indeed a follow-up to Super Mario Odyssey on the way, it sounds like itâs not the kind of thing fans will have to wait too long to see more of.
âStay tuned,â Bowser said. âYou know, we have a long, long catalog, and a long list of (intellectual property) that Iâm sure will make its way to the platform.â
Bowserâs comments are far from confirmation that a new 3D Mario game will be announced soon, but itâs at least something for those who were confused to see a new entry omitted from the Nintendo Switch 2 launch lineup. When Nintendo officially unveiled its hybrid console sequel earlier this month, it pulled back the curtain on standout titles like Donkey Kong Bananza, Mario Kart World, and more â but a more traditional 3D Mario platformer was nowhere to be found.
The last true flagship Mario game arrived in October 2017, just a few months removed from the launch of the original Switch. It means it's been nearly eight years since the last big Mario game released, and although something like Donkey Kong Bananza may help fill the void in the meantime, itâs not quite the Super Mario Odyssey 2 announcement many were hoping to see. Still, thereâs no doubt that Nintendoâs platforming plumber is an important part of that vast catalog Bowser mentioned, so if anything, it would be more of a shock to not see a new 3D Mario game show up sooner rather than later.
For now, a new mainline Mario adventure has yet to be revealed. While we wait for updates, you can check out Nintendoâs updated Switch 2 pre-order schedule here ahead of the consoleâs launch come June 5, 2025. You can also read up on everything revealed during last weekâs Mario Kart World Direct as well as our hands-on thoughts on Donkey Kong Bananza.
Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor with IGN. He's best known for his work at sites like The Pitch, The Escapist, and OnlySP. Be sure to give him a follow on Bluesky (@mikecripe.bsky.social) and Twitter (@MikeCripe).
Mobile Suit Gundam: GQuuuuuuX is finally here for North American audiences. The new Gundam series features a new "alternate history" storyline, a name thatâs harder than ever to pronounce (allegedly âG-Queue-xâ), and, of course, a new line of model kits. In IGN's review of the GQuuuuuuX theatrical release, critic Juan Barquin calls the new series âexactly the kind of inventive reimagining of Gundam we deserve.â
Thereâs the notable influence of another massive sci-fi series in the credits of the new Gundam anime. GQuuuuuuX is directed by Kazuya Tsurumaki (co-director of End of Evangelion), and written by Yoji Enokido â who also wrote stone-cold anime classics like FLCL, Revolutionary Girl Utena, Ouran High School Host Club, and Bungo Stray Dogs, as well as scripts for several episodes of Neon Genesis Evangelion â and the Evangelion creator himself, Hideaki Anno. One can only imagine where this series will go with these minds behind it.
If youâre wondering where to watch new episodes of Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX or catch up on the original Gundam series beforehand, Iâve listed everything you need to know below.
The new Gundam show is streaming on Prime Video instead of Netflix or Crunchyroll. Standalone Prime Video subscriptions start at $8.99/month, but are included in general Amazon Prime memberships, which cost $14.99/month and include Prime shipping benefits. Amazon Prime also offers a 30-day free trial for new subscribers.
Mobile Suit Gundam: GQuuuuuuX initially premiered in Japan as a feature film containing four individual episodes. Starting April 8, individual episodes will become available to North American viewers on Prime Video every Tuesday. The first season of GQuuuuuuX will most likely follow the same trend as the most recent Gundam anime, The Witch from Mercury, running for one cour, around three months, for 12 episodes total. Iâll be sure to update this article with any new developments.
Alternative histories arenât new concepts for the Gundam universe, but GQuuuuuuX introduces a particularly massive twist where the Principle of Zeon gets its hands on the prototype Gundam instead of Amuro and the Earth Federation. Hereâs the new show's official synopsis:
A world where Zeon secures the ultimate advantage in the One Year War leads to some distinct Gundam designs. Tons of model kits and figures inspired by the new series are already up for preorder. You can check out the full collection here.
While you can probably enjoy GQuuuuuuX regardless of your Gundam experience, the âalternativeâ history is likely best enjoyed with knowledge of, well, the original history. You can watch the original Gundam anime as well as most Gundam series on everyoneâs favorite anime streaming service Crunchyroll.
Blythe (she/her) is an SEO Coordinator at IGN who spends way too much time in character customization screens and tracking down collectibles.
The Turtle Beach VelocityOne Race wheel and pedal set, which arrived around this time last year, wouldnât necessarily be my first suggestion to eager racers looking to buy an entry-level direct drive racing wheel set-up for PC and Xbox. It is, however, a robust, all-inclusive bundle that comes with a 7.2Mn direct drive wheel and a three-pedal set WITH a load-cell brake. That combo, and a load-cell brake? Thatâs good value, right out of the box; no additional purchases necessary.
That said, a year later, one such additional purchase has arrived, in the form of the VelocityOne Multi-Shift â an add-on shifter module that can function in H-pattern mode, sequential mode, and even as a handbrake. Whether youâre looking to augment your Xbox VelocityOne set-up â or simply looking for a standalone PC shifter â it makes a strong case for being the shifter of choice at its price point thanks to its satisfying shift feel and its range of available settings.
The VelocityOne Multi-Shift can be hard-mounted to bespoke sim rigs (mounting screws are provided in the box), but it also contains an integrated table clamp for racers with desk set-ups (or otherwise custom racing seat solutions without dedicated mounting points). The metal table clamp is firm, and tightens via an allen bolt hidden beneath a small flap in the faux carbon fibre faceplate of the unitâs base. It can accommodate surfaces up to 50mm thick, which is good if your desk or tabletop is particularly chunky. Itâs an elegant and space-saving clamping solution; itâs hidden yet sturdy, and I like it more than the Thrustmaster TH8A â which essentially just has a large G-clamp attached to the base. If youâre tossing up between the Multi-Shift and the Moza HGP Shifter, consider that the latter requires a separate table clamp accessory for an additional cost.
The Multi-Shift is a good-looking unit overall. The carbon fibre-inspired faceplate brings it in line with those same accents on the VelocityOne Race wheel, the housing is understated with minimal branding, and the leather-look boot finishes it off nicely. Overall itâs the scale I find most pleasing; with the longer of the supplied shafts, itâs the first shifter of its kind that Iâve found actually feels like-for-like (in size terms) to my actual car. Logitechâs Driving Force Shifter, in particular, feels like a tiny toy in comparison.
On that note, however, know that the bespoke H-pattern knob does not come off the short shaft it comes out of the box with â despite images on Turtle Beachâs website displaying it overtly removed. The H-pattern knob comes factory aligned and tightened to the short shaft, so canât be unscrewed and actually placed on the long shaft. For this reason the Multi-Shift does come with a second short shaft, for those of you who are interested in using your own gear knob. The thread size is M12x1.75, which is a typical automotive size. It wonât fit every knob by default but, like any real car, it will only require a standard adapter to do so.
The sequential knob comes off the long shaft easily, but Iâve just been using it regardless of whether the unit is in H-pattern mode or sequential mode. It has the superior feel by far as itâs larger and heavier. Putting the H-pattern knob on is not at all a necessity; besides, needing the numbers written on the gear knob to use it is a little like needing the letters on a piano to play it. If youâre still at that point you might be better served sticking to automatic.
A manual switch on the side of the unit instantly toggles the Multi-Shift from H-pattern to sequential. Itâs a process that essentially takes one second. The shifter Iâve previously used most â the Thrustmaster TH8A â can also be switched from H-pattern to sequential, but thatâs a process that involves manually removing the faceplate and replacing it with the dedicated sequential version that holds the gear shaft in the centre. Thatâs a task that requires an allen key and takes several minutes; longer still if your son has âmisplacedâ the second faceplate in his room, beneath the large pile of cords that have steadily vanished from my office over the past 12 months.
Two further electronic switches on the top of the unit are the high and low range gear option, and the handbrake option. The high/low button is designed for heavy vehicle simulation, allowing you to use gears 1 through to 7, then hit the button and go back through the gates as gears 8 through to 14. The handbrake button turns the Multi-Shift into an analogue handbrake when in sequential mode.
The Multi-Shift doesnât feature any proprietary cables, and connects straight to the VelocityOne Race wheelbase via a short USB-C to USB-C cable, or directly to your PC via a generously long (2.5 meter) USB-C to USB-A cable. The recess for the USB-C connection on the Multi-Shift unit is nice and deep and the cable fitting sits in really snugly, so it shouldnât be susceptible to damage from bumps or tugs.
The Multi-Shift is easily at its strongest as an H-pattern shifter. Iâm really happy with the feel of it, and itâs been working well for me. With the long shaft (about 12 centimetres, excluding the threads) and the heavier knob (intended as the sequential and handbrake knob but, as I mentioned, Iâm using it for all purposes) it feels great to use. The action is firm and has a satisfying, two-stage clunk to changes, and thereâs no sloppiness while itâs in gear. If you prefer a shorter throw, the shaft can be unscrewed and changed in about 20 seconds
Seventh gear (and reverse) are reached by pushing down on the shifter and pulling right. I do feel the shifter sag a little under the weight of my hand, so I was a little concerned that shifting from fourth to fifth (or from fifth to sixth and back again) might be a bit annoying if it let me accidentally grab seventh instead â or mash up against the gate. Thatâs never been the case, though; activating seventh and reverse requires quite a firm push down, so itâs not something Iâll do by accident. I havenât had any problems downshifting from seventh to sixth, either; pulling the shifter out of seventh without any downward pressure instantly and effectively locks out reverse. Outside of heavy vehicle sims itâs not a shift youâd do much anyway, since sports cars with 7-speed manual transmissions are rarer than rocking horse crap.
As a sequential shifter, itâs okay. The return-to-centre action is strong and reliable. It does, however, have a fair bit of left and right wiggle in the neutral position â so thereâs a bit of a soggier feel to it than youâd get in an actual sequential system. Handbrake mode is functional, but it feels the least realistic, because it unavoidably feels like youâre just changing a gear rather than pulling on a progressive brake. That said, as a lover of rally games, having an admittedly imperfect handbrake I can yank to lock the rears â rather than constantly needing to map a handbrake to the face of the steering wheel rim itself â is much better than nothing. I wouldnât recommend the Multi-Shift for anyone looking to exclusively use it as a handbrake, but itâs still a great option to have in an entry-level shifter product.
Star Wars Celebration 2025 was a big show filled with some exciting announcements from that galaxy far, far away, including Star Wars: Starfighter starring Ryan Gosling, a new Darth Maul series, a first look at Rory McCann's Baylan Skoll, the news that you'll be able to take care of Grogu on Millennium Falcon: Sumgglers Run, and so much more.
There were a ton of big reveals, and we're gathering the ones you simply can't miss below and we'd love to know what you are most excited for in the world of Star Wars!
Star Wars Celebration's Ahsoka had some big reveals and fun behind-the-scenes stories for the show's second season, including a first look at Rory McCann as Baylan Skoll.
For those unfamiliar, McCann is taking over as Baylan following the death of Rey Stevenson, and the panel gave us a first-look image that you can see below. It was also confirmed that Hayden Christensen will be returning to the role of Anakin Skywalker again in Season 2.
Speaking of Season 2, we got a few teases of what we can expect when it arrives in the future, including that such fan-favorite characters like Sabine, Ezra, Zeb, and Chopper will be back. It was also revealed that Admiral Ackbar will have a big part to play and will face off against Grand Admiral Thrawn, that there will be incredibly adorable Loth-Kittens, and that, according to Dave Filoni, there will be "X-Wings, A-Wings, and Wings I can't tell you about."
Following the reveal that he'd be returning for Ahsoka Season 2, we spoke to Hayden Christensen about playing Anakin Skywalker again after nearly 20 years, why he likes when Star Wars goes dark, and even which Anakin meme is his favorite.
We had the chance to speak to Rosario Dawson, Dave Filoni, and Jon Favreau about Ahsoka, and they revealed a funny story about how Dawson didn't know Mark Hamill was returning as Luke Skywalker until he walked onto the set of The Book of Boba Fett one day. As it turns out, she, like many others, thought Plo Koon was going to be the mysterious Jedi to save the day in the Season 2 finale as Filoni and Favreau used him as a decoy in the scripts.
The Mandalorian & Grogu is headed to theaters on May 22, 2026, and will be the first Star Wars film to be released on the big screen since 2019's The Rise of Skywalker. It was also the first major panel that kicked off Star Wars Celebration, and it included teases for the film and, perhaps most surprisingly, the reveal of the Shawn Levy-directed Star Wars: Starfighter that will star Ryan Gosling when it is released in theaters on May 28, 2027.
The footage of The Mandalorian & Grogu was shown for those in the crowd and included shots of an Imperial ship prepared to engage, Mando taking on Flame Troopers, AT-AT walkers collapsing in the snow, and our first look at Sigourney Weaver's character. And of course, Grogu was seen being adorable and chaotic while swimming, making objects levitate, and more.
We had the chance to speak to Sigourney Weaver at Star Wars Celebration about joining The Mandalorian & Grogu, how she hadn't watched an episode of The Mandalorian before being cast, how Grogu stole her heart, and even if she thinks Grogu is more powerful than a Xenomorph.
Star Wars: Starfighter was announced at Star Wars Celebration and it was confirmed that Ryan Gosling would star in this upcoming film that takes place five years after the events of The Rise of Skywalker. We didn't learn much more about the film besides that Gosling will be playing a brand-new character, but this film will join the likes of those by The Mandalorian & Grogu, movies from Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy, James Mangold, and Taika Waititi, and a trilogy from Simon Kinberg.
For more, you can check out everything we know about Star Wars: Starfighter's plot and timeline.
We had the chance to speak to Walt Disney Imagineering's Asa Kalama and Disney Live Entertainment's Michael Serna about the future of Star Wars experiences at Disney Parks and beyond, including The Mandalorian & Grogu-themed update headed to Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run, the impossibly adorable BDX droids headed to Disney Parks, and so much more. Alongside that, they gave us a look into how they bring this Disney Magic to us and allow to us experience some of our favorite stories and characters in real life.
Alongside The Mandalorian & Grogu arriving in theaters on May 22, 2026, Din Djarin and Grogu will be headed to Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run at Walt Disney World and Disneyland for a new story-based mission that will follow a "different path" from the movie.
In this new story, Hondo Ohnaka "catches wind of a deal on Tatooine between ex-Imperial officers and
pirates, setting the stage for a high-stakes chase across the galaxy. Guests will team up with Mando and Grogu to track them down and claim a bounty in a dynamic, galaxy-spanning adventure."
It was also revealed Engineers will not only get to take care of Grogu during the ride, but they'll also get to choose where our adventure takes us by plotting a course to Bespin, the Death Star wreckage above Endor, or the newly-revealed Coruscant during a special moment.
Andor's second and final season is set to debut on April 22 on Disney+ and the series had one final appearance at Star Wars Celebration before the highly anticipated epsiodes arrive. Some of the highlights include Diego Luna teasing that fans should watch Rogue One after Andor Season 2 as he believes we will all see it as a "different film."
It was also shared that this new season will be "more ambitious" than the first and will feature 140 sets across seven stages, two backlots, 700 costumes for principals, 150 creatures, 30 droids, and 4,100 VFX shots.
For more, including deep dives into the beloved characters of Andor, check out our recap of the Andor panel right here.
Star Wars Celebration saw the announcement of Star Wars: Maul - Shadow Lord, a new animated series headed to Disney+ in 2026 that will follow Sam Witwer's Darth Maul after the events of the final season of The Clone Wars. We will see Maul "plotting to rebuild his criminal syndicate on a planet untouched by the Empire."
We learned at Star Wars Celebration that Volume 3 of Star Wars: Visions will be released on October 29, 2025, and that the series is getting a new spin-off that will debut with the next chapter of The Ninth Jedi story that began back in Volume 1.
Star Wars Outlaws fans will be able to undertake a brand-new story on May 15 as A Pirate's Fortune will be released and will see Kay Vess and Nix teaming up with beloved pirate Hondo Ohnaka. The new team will need to take on Stinger Tash and her gang, the Rokana Raiders, and do some smuggling for the Miyuki Trade League. This story takes place after the events of Star Wars Outlaws, so make sure to finish the campaign so you can be ready for this second story pack.
Ubisoft's Star Wars Outlaws will officially be released on the Nintendo Switch 2 on September 4, 2025, meaning it won't make the console's launch on June 5 but will be arriving not too much longer after.
Fans of Dash Rendar will be delighted to know a brand-new figure of the character will be released from Hasbro alongside an impressive lineup of figures based on Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, including of Nightsister Merrin, a three-pack of Cal Kestis, Turgle, and Skoova Stev, a smaller Merrin figure and a Rocket Launch Trooper in the Vintage Collection line, and more.
You can check out all of these figures and more in the slideshow below.
Hasbro revealed two exciting new figures from The Mandalorian of Moff Gideon and Cobb Vanth at Star Wars Celebration and confirmed they would be joining the Star Wars: The Vintage Collection lineup. Like other figures in the collection, these figures are designed at a 3.75-inch scale and feature packaging inspired by the classic Kenner Star Wars figures.
You can check out our exclusive images below of the Moff Gideon figure inspired by his Dark Trooper armor and Cobb Vanth with his look from The Book of Boba Fett. Also, both of these figures will be $16.99 and will be available for pre-order on April 18 at 3pm ET/12pm PT.
Monopoly Go is taking a trip to that galaxy far, far away as it will be launching a Star Wars event inspired by the Skywalker Saga and The Mandalorian from May 1 - July 2. There will be Star Wars character getting a Monopoly-style look, a Star Wars Go sticker album to fill, podracing in the Mos Espa Grand Arena, collectible in-game items like token, shields, and emojis, and much more.
Adam Bankhurst is a writer for IGN. You can follow him on X/Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on TikTok.
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is set to release on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC on April 24. Itâs a turn-based RPG, but it also incorporates real-time mechanics sort of like the Mario RPG series. But the tone is way more serious, weird, and artsy. It looks great. Itâs coming out in standard and deluxe editions, and theyâre all available for preorder now (see it at Amazon). Letâs dive in to see what comes in each.
PS5
Xbox Series X|S
PC
If all you want is the base game, grab the standard edition. It doesnât come with any extras, but it has the game and thatâs all you really need.
The deluxe edition comes with the base game, plus the following extras:
The standard edition of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 will be available on day one for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass subscribers. Above, youâll find the best current deal on a three-month subscription to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate.
If you have Xbox Game Pass, but you want the extras that come in the digital deluxe edition, you can buy the deluxe edition upgrade on the Xbox Store with the link above. It does exactly what it sounds like: turns your standard edition into a deluxe edition.
While there are no universal preorder bonuses available, Best Buy is giving away free $10 Best Buy gift cards with purchase. Nice.
Clair Obscur is a turn-based RPG developed by the French studio Sandfall Interactive that uses real-time elements during battles. Itâs set in a dark fantasy world in which, once a year, a powerful being called the Paintress wakes and paints a number on her monolith. When she does, everyone of that age vanishes from the earth. As the game kicks off, the Paintress is going to wake soon and paint the number 33. You plays as Expedition 33, a group of 33-year-olds who plan to kill the Paintress.
The combat sounds like a real selling point for the game. Itâs turn-based, but you do a lot of other things besides choosing attacks for your expeditioners. You can dodge, parry, and counter incoming attacks. You can chain combos together by pressing buttons in a rhythm, and you can use a free-aim system to target enemy weak points. It looks pretty cool. Check out our Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 preview for more info.
Chris Reed is a deals expert and commerce editor for IGN. You can follow him on Bluesky @chrislreed.com.
Š Bungie
YouTubeâs âPunishâ has shared a video, showcasing 19 minutes of gameplay footage from La Quimera. La Quimera is a new futuristic sci-fi shooter from former Metro: Exodus devs. So, if you are a fan of Metro, Killzone and Crysis, you should check it out. This gameplay video is from a recent closed beta test. Since ⌠Continue reading Here are 19 minutes of gameplay footage from La Quimera â
The post Here are 19 minutes of gameplay footage from La Quimera appeared first on DSOGaming.
Š Id Software
Sony has announced that all the improvements and tweaks of the remastered version of Days Gone will be available to PC for free. So, letâs see whatâs in store for all Days Gone PC owners. As Sony noted, on April 25th, it will release a new patch for the PC version of Days Gone. This ⌠Continue reading Days Gone Remasteredâs new tech features coming to PC for free â
The post Days Gone Remasteredâs new tech features coming to PC for free appeared first on DSOGaming.
Three years ago, LEGO released Lord of the Rings Rivendell â a 6,000-piece tribute to Peter Jackson's vision of Middle-Earth and the J.R.R. Tolkien-written books that inspired it. You can check it out on Amazon. I reviewed the set for IGN and interviewed the designer in a follow-up feature. It is one of the best, most detail-oriented builds of the past five years.
In 2024, LEGO released another massive Lord of the Rings set, this time of Barad-dĂťr, the massive tower in Mordor that's topped with the Eye of Sauron. Similar to Rivendell, it is laden with numerous, movie-accurate details. And now, 2025 has brought us The Shire, another rich, albeit smaller, build
But aside from these three sets , there are no other Lord of the Rings sets on sale. This wasn't always the case. LEGO and Lord of the Rings first partnered in June 2012, and between June 2012 and October 2014, LEGO released numerous sets that celebrated both the original Lord of the Rings film trilogy and the subsequent Hobbit trilogy. The last of these went out of print in July 2015; the only way to obtain them now would be to go on the expensive secondary market.
Here is a showcase of the major LEGO Lord of the Rings sets over the past decade plus: what was released and subsequently retired; what is currently on sale; and what we might expect to see in the future.
This set captured the moment when Aragorn defended Frodo and the Hobbits from the Ringwraiths. It included the key details, such as the spiral stone staircase that led to the top of the watchpoint, as well as the black horses that the Ringwraiths rode as they searched the realm for the One True Ring. This was part of the first wave of LEGO Lord of the Rings sets in June 2012, along with the second entry on this list.
This Mines of Moria sequence is one of the coolest parts of the Lord of the Ring movies. The set based on it included a massive cave troll and several freestanding elements to represent Balin's Tomb. The LEGO designers rigged the tomb to fall apart at the press of a lever, and you could also recreate the scene where Pippin knocked the skeleton into the well (via a trap door), thereby alerting everyone to the Fellowship's presence.
A small but richly detailed build, the Orc Forge was a blacksmith forge with fanciful elements, with a chain lift and bucket to transport ore, and a chute that fed into a cauldron to melt the ore down. It also included an anvil and a light brick to make the fire glow.
Based on the climactic siege that concluded The Two Towers, this was a massive castle set. It had the Horn of Helm Hammerhand at the top of its tallest tower, and its signature, curved outer wall, including a breakaway portion so you could recreate the moment when the orcs breached the defenses.
A charming build of Bilbo's home, An Unexpected Gathering included Gandalf, Bilbo, and 4 of the 12 dwarves who imposed themselves on his hospitality. Green was the predominant color of the set's exterior, which gave it the fertile, bountiful atmosphere that we associate with the Shire.
Obviously, the Battle of Black Gate, which was the climax to the entire LOTR trilogy, was much grander than what could be accomplished with 656 LEGO pieces. This is the exact sort of build that would most benefit from a modern reimagining. Can you picture what the LEGO designers could do with 3000 or even 4000 pieces? Still, there was lots to appreciate about this set, especially the Mouth of Sauron Minifigure, the Great Eagle, and the angular severity of the Gate itself.
This model of Saruman's massive tower was two-and-a-half feet tall, and it was as imposing as the LEGO designers had hoped. But as intimidating as the exterior was, the interior was equally impressive and included a throne room (where Gandalf and Saruman had their wizard duel), a dungeon, a library, and an alchemy room. It also comes with a massive Ent and a Great Eagle, so that Gandalf can hitch a ride off the roof.
This was Bilbo's big moment, when he discovered the entrance to the Lonely Mountain on Durin's Day. And this set includes the secret door, Smaug's lair, the mountain of gold, and a number of play mechanisms the dwarves' battle with Smaug, when they try to submerge him in liquid gold. This set was part of the last wave of Lord of the Rings sets from 2012-2014. We wouldn't get another set in the series until January 2023.
In January 2023, LEGO released several LOTR-themed pairings as part of their collectible Blockheadz line. There were four different sets available for purchase, each for $20: Gandalf the Grey & Balrog, Aragorn & Arwen, and Frodo & Gollum. LEGO retired them at the end of 2024.
And that brings us to the present day. On sale now exclusively at the LEGO Store, Rivendell sets a bar for the level of delicate detail that can exist in a single set. It is beautiful, but it is fragile, with some elements hanging on by single connections. Other details, like the leaves on the trees and the patterning of the roofs, create a cumulative intricacy. And many more details are enclosed, meant to be cast in shadow by the exterior elements. This is a set that you admire with your eyes and not with your hands, and is one of our picks for the best LEGO sets for adults.
We built this at launch. The most recently released set on this list, the LEGO rendition of Barad-dĂťr is nearly three feet tall and covered with menacing, black spikes. The interior includes a dungeon, Saruman's throne room, and a armory for the orcs and goblins to gird themselves for battle. On top is the glowing Eye of Sauron, which is backlit with a red light brick.
The latest Lord of the Rings set depicts The Shire on the evening of Bilbo's 111th Birthday. Go through the circular door into Bilbo's hobbit hole, and you'll see all sorts of cool details â food on every available surface, a study with an inkpot and quill, and an open foyer that is instantly recognizable from the first film. The coolest bit is the fireplace; turn a crank, and the wax-sealed envelope 'burns away' to reveal the One True Ring.
According to the official LEGO Store, there are three Lord of the Rings sets available for purchase as of April 2025. Based on the past three years, one can assume that more sets, on the scale of Rivenedell and Barad-dĂťr, will be on their own way. But perhaps the comparatively smaller Shire set means that we'll get some variety in piece count. The current rumors point to a smaller set depicting Gandalf fighting the Balrog. Are they true? We'll have to wait and see.
The following article contains spoilers for both Episode 2 of The Last of Us Season 2 and the video game The Last of Us Part 2.
Abby kills Joel. Itâs the inciting incident of The Last of Us Part 2, developer Naughty Dogâs darkly violent sequel to its fungal zombie apocalypse hit. Unsurprisingly for a project that mostly adheres to its source material like industrial strength super glue, HBOâs television adaptation also features this shocking moment rendered in live action. Itâs the crescendo of the second seasonâs second episode, and so occurs exactly where it needs to in order to set the wheels of Ellieâs quest for vengeance in motion. But the showâs recreation of Joel Millerâs final moments falls short of the gameâs brutal, shocking sequence due to several creative decisions that weaken the bloody blow.
The problems begin an episode prior. Season 2 opens with the reveal that Abby (Kaitlyn Dever) is seeking revenge on Joel (Pedro Pascal) following his rampage through the Firefliesâ Salt Lake City hospital in the finale of season one. As the first episodeâs opening scene, this acts as the seasonâs mission statement: this story is about Abbyâs pledge to kill Joel. Thereâs an unspoken promise that weâll learn more about her motives, more about her past, and build empathy with a character who wants to kill the lead protagonist. Thereâs a lot the show needs to do to get us on board with her quest, but hey, this will be an interesting ride towards whatâs sure to be a shocking season finale.
One week later, Joel is dead. Itâs as if we hit the end of the line before weâd even started.
The timing of Joelâs demise may be faithful to the video gameâs timeline, but the context in which it is delivered changes everything. In the game, Joelâs death comes with no warning. You have no idea who Abby is, nor why she hates Joel with such venom. Itâs a confusing, shocking moment that sets up Ellieâs mission to kill the evil woman who took away her father figure for reasons unknown. Itâs only at the gameâs midpoint, when the perspective shifts and youâre forced to play as the âvillainâ, do you learn that Abby has sympathetic motivations for her actions â Joel killed her father when he rescued Ellie from the Fireflies. Itâs an ingenious twist that challenges you to empathise with a character youâve learned to hate over ten hours of play.
In this weekâs episode of the show, Abby plainly explains her motivations to Joel moments before she kills him. Bringing such revelations to the forefront is not inherently a mistake, but it does change the shape of the story. Rather than a straight-up villain, Abby is introduced as something closer to the protagonist she eventually becomes in the second half of the game, and as a result, the moment of Joelâs murder is transformed into a much more complex event. In theory, this setup should have us torn between two conflicting viewpoints. But for that to work, those viewpoints need to be whole. And by killing Joel in episode two, showrunners Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann have failed to solidify those viewpoints. Had this season delayed Joelâs death by introducing more original material, weâd have had the opportunity to learn more about Abbyâs journey toward this moment. As it stands, Abby has so far had less than a handful of scenes to establish her character, while Joel has had an entire season and change. When the golf club strikes, thereâs no escaping it: Abby is the villain here, despite what you know of her motives.
Season 1 offers up a good example of what could have been. âLong, Long Time,â arguably the seasonâs strongest episode, depicts the turbulent romantic life of Bill and Frank. Itâs all brand new material, showcasing a period of time not explored by the game. A similar episode illustrating Abbyâs life during the five-year time gap between seasons may well exist further down the line, but its inclusion before Joelâs death would have better supported the creative decision to make Abbyâs motives clear ahead of the incident.
Such an episode would also help address the issue of Abbyâs physique. In The Last of Us Part 2, Abby is built like an MMA fighter. Sheâs tall and incredibly muscular. In the show, sheâs played by Kaitlyn Dever and looks just like Kaitlyn Dever. Talking to Entertainment Weekly, Neil Druckmann explained that Dever had not bulked up for the role because Abbyâs size was related to gameplay rather than story: âAbby was meant to play more like Joel in that she's almost like a brute in the way she can physically manhandle certain things,â he said. âThat doesn't play as big of a role in this version of the story because there's not as much violent action moment to moment. It's more about the drama.â
Iâm surprised by Druckmannâs comments because Abbyâs physique doesnât really provide any meaningful gameplay contrast between herself and Ellie in the game, aside from being able to wield slightly heavier weaponry. It does, however, play a significant role in the dramatic heft of the story. During the first half of the game, her stature preys on gender stereotypes; the story assumes youâll buy into the idea that a woman with masculine features must be evil. When the story flips, Abbyâs physique tells the tale of a woman who has spent five years sculpting herself into a weapon with a singular purpose. She has sacrificed everything in order to kill Joel. Itâs a physical marker of what the thirst for revenge will do to a person, and represents just how concrete Abbyâs dedication to her goal is.
Had the showâs version of Abby been of the same build as her video game counterpart, it would have helped illustrate what happened in the five years between the seasonâs first scene and Joelâs death. Sure, it wouldnât be a detailed illustration, but it would be clear that Joelâs actions took their toll and heâs about to pay the price. In the absence of Abbyâs physical transformation, what we ideally need is a depiction of how the character mentally sculpted herself into a weapon. Again, this may well exist further into the season, but including it ahead of Joelâs death would better capitalise on the showâs changes to how it presents Abby.
Mazin and Druckmannâs new approach to Abby isnât the only issue with the showâs version of this tragic event, though. Much of this second episode is dedicated to a Game of Thrones-scale assault on Jackson, with hundreds of infected breaking through the townâs walls. In isolation, this is an incredible piece of television, and a fantastic example of the show introducing original material to the story. But the impact of this event is so strong that it almost overshadows Joelâs death, which is uncontestably the more important moment. The inciting incident of Ellieâs journey shouldnât be fighting for space, and the time leading into it would have been better served by building tension rather than burning bloaters.
My hope for this season of The Last of Us was that it would have more conviction to tread its own path. As strong as Season 1 was, for much of its runtime it had the air of some (very well-funded) cosplayers performing reenactments of the gameâs cinematic cutscenes. Season 2 certainly feels bolder than its predecessor so far, but the changes being made feel rooted in a lack of confidence in the material being adapted rather than the bravery to tread its own path. The gameâs unforgettable mid-story twist is exchanged for a cards-on-the-table opening in the name of making sure viewers feel the ârightâ things about Abby, but the subsequent story beats throughout the first two episodes are not rewritten to make the most of that change. The result is a rendition of Joelâs death that, while practically a facsimile of the original version in terms of the physical events, feels morally confused and dramatically stunted.
For fans of the game, it will be immediately clear which version of this story offers the stronger depiction of this event. But the real issue is not Joelâs death itself, but everything that happens around it. If the season has bungled the framing of its vital inciting incident, will the story threads that spiral out of it stand up to scrutiny? When it comes to Abby, The Last of Us Season 2âs remaining episodes will need to tread a smart path in order to justify its new design, not just to old players, but to new audiences, too.
Matt Purslow is IGN's Senior Features Editor.
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