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The Best Deals Today: Fantasian Neo Dimension, Tales of Graces f, and More

3 janvier 2026 à 21:36

We've rounded up the best deals for Saturday, January 3, below. Don't miss your chance to save on these deals!

Fantasian Neo Dimension for $26.70

Fantasian Neo Dimension is the latest game from a legendary creator who needs no introduction: Hironobu Sakaguchi. This incredible turn-based RPG is a joy to play through, featuring a great story with music from the all-time great Nobuo Uematsu. Pick up a Nintendo Switch copy today and add it to your collection for only $26.70.

Samsung P9 Express microSD Express Card for $32.99

If you're a Nintendo Switch 2 owner, a microSD Express Card is an absolutely essential purchase. The internal 256GB of storage is nowhere near enough for most players, especially with huge games like Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade set to take up over a third of that space later this month. You can save $20 off this 256GB microSD Express Card at Amazon and instantly double your Switch 2 storage.

Tales of Graces f for $19.79

Tales of Graces f was one of Bandai Namco's earliest 2025 releases, marking one of the first initiatives in the Tales of Remastered Project. At $19.79, you're getting a classic RPG that has been remastered for modern times, featuring a dash button, autosave, accessibility features, and much more. It's perfect for anyone who wasn't able to experience the original in 2012.

Resident Evil 2 for $14.99

Resident Evil 2 is one of the greatest remakes ever made, and you can take home a physical copy of its best version today on PS5 for only $14.99. This legendary game released in 2019, and it's going to be essential to experience it before the arrival of Resident Evil Requiem next month.

Gears of War: Reloaded for $24.99

Gears of War shockingly hit PlayStation for the first time in its history as part of Xbox's multiplatform approach earlier this year. This enhanced and remastered edition of the first game is the perfect entry point for PlayStation players, and you can save $15 off a physical copy today at Target.

Logitech G309 Lightspeed Wireless Gaming Mouse for $59.99

If you're on the hunt for an excellent gaming mouse, look no further than the Logitech G309 Lightspeed for $59.99 today at Amazon. This wireless mouse features a 300 plus hour battery life with AA battery, with unlimited battery using the Powerplay mousepad. The included HERO 25K sensor is perfect for tracking at maximum precision, and the lightweight nature is great for competitive gaming.

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora From The Ashes Edition for $29.99

Avatar has taken over the world once again with the release of Avatar: Fire and Ash, the third film in the Avatar saga thus far. If you're itching to experience more of Pandora, Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora from Ubisoft was a sleeper hit that's on sale this weekend. This edition of the game features both the base game and its expansion, which is perfect for new players.

What to Expect From Xbox in 2026

3 janvier 2026 à 18:00

Well, I can confidently say one thing about being “the Xbox guy” at IGN: it’s never boring. Granted, it is often frustrating, depressing, weird, and occasionally shocking. But there’s almost never a dull moment. So went Xbox’s 2025. As I looked back on last year’s version of this column, I found that I got plenty of my forecasting right, a few things wrong, and there was some stuff I could’ve never predicted. And so as I look ahead to Xbox’s 2026, I will once again expect the unexpected – but I’ll also dig into everything we can reasonably surmise about what could maybe, possibly be the last full calendar year of the Xbox Series generation before Microsoft seemingly gears up to release a console/PC hybrid.

The thing is, a month ago, this piece would’ve been a heck of a lot easier to write. It would’ve been all about Microsoft’s Big Four – Halo, Gears of War, Fable, and Forza – all returning in the same year for the first time in over a decade(!) to deliver Xbox’s biggest and possibly best lineup since the Xbox 360 days. But then Galactus, aka Grand Theft Auto 6, showed up to consume everything in its path, as it’s been delayed from May to November of 2026 and will now effectively have November onwards – a key holiday-shopping window of Q4 every year – all to itself. Any game company executive that willingly ships a game anywhere near GTA 6 should be fired and institutionalized. It’s not just a bad idea, it’s business suicide.

Clash of the Titans

And yes, nearly every major publisher will be affected by this to some degree; Sony has the long-anticipated Marvel’s Wolverine slated for the Fall, and Nintendo…well, maybe Nintendo is the exception to the Grand Theft Auto rule. But Microsoft is potentially the most screwed by Rockstar’s shifted timeline. Halo: Campaign Evolved is surely intended to ship right near Halo’s 25th anniversary on November 15. Uh-oh. Meanwhile, Gears of War: E-Day was almost certainly scheduled for the Fall (to wit: none of the five mainline Gears games has ever shipped outside of the Fall season), Fable’s hugely anticipated revival was probably penciled in for the holiday season after Playground Games delayed it, and Forza Horizon 6? OK, I’d bet on that one dropping sooner rather than later, because a Forza Horizon game doesn’t need a big public relations or marketing campaign. It’s such a powerhouse franchise with a sterling reputation that all fans need to know is where it’s set (Japan), what new cars are in it (TBD), and how soon they can play it. Once Forza Horizon 6 was announced at the Tokyo Game Show in late September, I figured it would probably be out within six months. And I still think that.

And what about Call of Duty for 2026, which the franchise’s alternating development timeline suggests is probably Modern Warfare 4 from Infinity Ward? Historically, Activision’s annual juggernaut always arrives within a two-week window between the last week of October and the first week of November. Considering how much overlap I’d guess there is between Call of Duty and GTA in the Venn Diagram of Casual-Leaning Gamers Who Only Buy a Couple Games a Year, which one do you think those people are going to choose if they can only afford to buy one of them (particularly given that they’re each likely to cost at least $80)? I know which one I’d pick…

Step Up or Back Off?

In fact, what happens to all of Microsoft’s big presumed Fall plans now that Rockstar has planted its flag in the ground for November 19? The short answer is that I’m not sure all five of Xbox’s biggest first-party games can ship in 2026 anymore. Not if Microsoft wants to make any money on them, anyway. The good news is that all of these games have a great chance to be fantastic titles that score big with critics and fans alike. Microsoft just has to make sure they don’t get squashed like bugs under Grand Theft Auto 6’s Godzilla-sized feet. It’s reasonable to expect one or both of Fable and Gears of War: E-Day to push into the first half of 2027, while I’d bet on Call of Duty being moved up as much as possible – mid-October might be as far forward as they can pull it without crunching all of its developers to death. And if Forza Horizon 6 isn’t already planned for the first half of 2026 (and again, I’m confident that it is), I’d guess that somewhere around August is the new plan.

And that’s not even everything. State of Decay 3, Clockwork Revolution, and Hideo Kojima’s OD feel like they’re a little further out than next year, but there’s one lesser-known game that might stand toe-to-toe with anything else Xbox has coming up: promising pixel-art potential masterpiece Replaced. The debut game from Sad Cat Studios will finally land as an Xbox exclusive in 2026. I’ve played it, and it sets off my Spidey Sense as something that could be truly special – a possible generation-defining indie game, like how Limbo and Braid were for the Xbox 360 and Inside was for the Xbox One.

The Cavalry Has Arrived

Regardless of exactly when each of Xbox’s blockbusters finally drop, though, the Xbox’s Big Four couldn’t be lining up to land at a better time, because the Xbox brand image is in tatters. Repeated mass layoffs. Game cancellations. Studio closures. Halo heading to PS5, which was the biggest, clearest white flag Microsoft waved to tell gamers, “It’s fine, you don’t need an Xbox; you can play any and all of our games on other platforms if you want to.” It was a Covenant energy sword through the heart for long-loyal Xbox fans.

All Xbox gamers have ever wanted is a Sony-like pipeline of awesome games on a consistent basis. It would seem we’ve finally got what we’ve wanted – over the past 12 or so months, Xbox has shipped Black Ops 6 and 7, STALKER 2, Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, Avowed, South of Midnight, Flight Simulator 2024, Doom: The Dark Ages, Ninja Gaiden 2 Black and Ninja Gaiden 4, Gears of War Reloaded, The Outer Worlds 2, and The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered — but not without the monkey’s paw curling in the process.

Split Personality

And so as we look ahead to what to expect from Xbox in 2026, software shines brighter than ever. Hardware…well, rumors of the next-gen Xbox/PC hybrid are flying fast and furious, so could that mean an official announcement at the 2026 Xbox Showcase in June followed by a release in Fall 2027? And as for the platform? I'm not sure what, if anything, can be done to revive excitement in that.

So where does that leave Xbox heading into Year 6 of the Series X|S generation? Paradoxically, it is both better and worse off than it’s ever been, for all of the reasons I’ve already gone over. Exclusives are dead, but great games are plentiful. Hardware is more expensive than it was at launch, but there’s a pretty sweet handheld now. Life as an Xbox fan is both awesome and terrible, and I’m not sure I can sum it up any better than that.

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN's executive editor of previews and host of both IGN's weekly Xbox show, Podcast Unlocked, as well as our monthly(-ish) interview show, IGN Unfiltered. He's a North Jersey guy, so it's "Taylor ham," not "pork roll." Debate it with him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan.

CES 2026: What We Expect To See

2 janvier 2026 à 22:32

CES 2026 is nearly here, kicking off officially on January 6th and running through January 9th, 2026. Every year, this is the show where all the latest hardware and tech goodies for the coming year are shown off – whether they're new gaming laptops or some concept that'll never actually see the light of day. There will be a lot going on, but luckily I'll be on the ground in Las Vegas, sorting through everything.

Over the next week I'll keep this article updated with all the coolest gaming and entertainment technology at the show. This year, the show probably won't be as packed as it was in 2025 – which brought us new graphics cards and all the PC gaming hardware that comes with them. Still, I do expect plenty of gaming hardware to at least be teased, especially with the Steam Machine lurking around the corner.

What to Expect At CES 2026

CES is still a few days away, but that doesn't mean we can't take some educated guesses about what'll be at the giant tech show.

Mid Generation GPUs?

CES 2025 was so huge for gaming because both AMD and Nvidia released a whole new generation of graphics cards. That's probably not going to happen this year, but it is possible that one of these companies launches some kind of mid-generation refresh. Typically, for instance, Nvidia follows its graphics cards about a year into its generation with its 'Super' series of GPUs.

However, because RAM is seeing such high prices right now, there's a good chance that neither of these manufacturers is going to rush to launch new products that'd likely need to be significantly more expensive. We're even starting to see rumors that existing graphics cards are going to see price jumps in the coming months, according to Korean tech outlet Newsis. We'll just have to see!

AI Will Be Everywhere

Love it or hate it, AI is still a huge topic in the tech world, and I don't expect that to change at CES 2026. We're probably going to see hundreds of different gadgets that implement AI in some way, ranging from ridiculous gimmicks to actually useful features. Even in the face of companies like Microsoft backing off of AI investment a bit, according to The Information (Via ExtremeTech), it's still going to be a huge topic at CES this year.

Gaming Laptops Powered By Intel Panther Lake

While it's unlikely we're going to get a new GPU generation at CES 2026, Intel has already announced its new mobile CPU generation, code-named Panther Lake. While this architecture isn't going to power the most powerful gaming laptops, it's going to be behind many lightweight gaming laptops.

I did get a chance to see these new CPUs in action back in November, and was impressed by the technology on offer. These new laptop chips will have integrated GPUs powerful enough to play games at 1080p, and offers Intel's own take on Frame Generation – all without a discrete GPU. Pair it with a discrete GPU and who knows what they'll be capable of. Either way, I'm excited to get these new laptops in the lab – whatever they are. Intel has been needing a win for a while now, maybe this will be it? We'll find out next week!

Jackie Thomas is the Hardware and Buying Guides Editor at IGN and the PC components queen. You can follow her @Jackiecobra

Score an Intel Arc B570 OC Graphics Card for Just $200 Today at Amazon

2 janvier 2026 à 21:40

If you're familiar with the world of components, it's no secret that GPU prices have been all over the place for a while now, and that likely will only increase in 2026. Rumors of NVIDIA cutting back production of GPUs by 40% continue to surface, and the demand for graphics cards has skyrocketed due to LLM/AI demand. It's a challenging time to put together the parts necessary for a PC build at a reasonable price.

Thankfully, a great deal has surfaced on Amazon for the Sparkle Intel Arc B570 Guardian OC graphics card. While this isn't a top-of-the-line model by any means, it's an excellent entry-level card that packs a punch, especially with the 10GB of VRAM available.

Sparkle Intel Arc B570 Guardian OC Graphics Card for $199.99

For $200, you're not likely to find a better bang for your buck. The Arc B570 is a great choice for 1080p gaming or for a media server, depending on what you're looking for. While it may struggle with some of the biggest games, such as Cyberpunk 2077 or Black Myth: Wukong, you can easily run most games.

Most of all, the included 10GB of GDDR6 VRAM is excellent at this price. NVIDIA's RTX 4060 and AMD's RX 7600 both only have 8GB of VRAM, and that can make a huge difference, especially as games continue to demand more VRAM. Plus, this card is significantly cheaper than both of those models, and you're still getting similar performance.

The Arc B570 also makes use of Intel's XeSS (Xe Super Sampling) technology, which is similar to DLSS or FSR. With a small form factor, you can fit this Arc B570 in almost any case. It is truly an excellent choice for budget builds, and the 10GB of VRAM gives you a little cushion for the future.

Noah Hunter is a freelance writer and reviewer with a passion for games and technology. He co-founded Final Weapon, an outlet focused on nonsense-free Japanese gaming (in 2019) and has contributed to various publishers writing about the medium.

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