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These Pokémon Mega Bloks Sets Are a Great Alternative to the LEGO Versions

14 janvier 2026 à 00:15

There's always been a console war-esque discussion between LEGO and Mega Bloks, although not nearly as ridiculous. Both toy brands have seen their fair share of licensed sets over the years, and it's rare when they have overlap. Starting February 2026, LEGO will release its first Pokémon-themed sets, but did you know that Mega Bloks has had its sets available for years? Popular LEGO sets often either sell out fast or are hard to find, but the Mega Bloks Pokémon sets are both a cheaper and more readily available alternative, depending on what you're looking for.

The Best Pokémon Mega Bloks Sets Available Now

The newly-announced LEGO Pokémon sets have already fallen victim to eBay scalpers and resellers, with some listings of the massive Venusaur, Charizard, and Blastoise diorama set (which MRSPs at $649.99) going for upwards of $1,600. Compared to the Mega Bloks version of Charizard by itself, which is going for just $18.65 on Amazon, the difference in price is staggering. Sure, you don't get a Venusuar or Blastoise to go along with the Fire-type starter, but with how similar the designs are, nobody would blame you for skipping the LEGO version entirely in favor of a cheaper alternative. The LEGO Eevee set is currently going for $59.99, sitting in the middle of the two Mega Bloks versions of the same Pokémon, which are $47.79 and $89.99 on Amazon, respectively.

Another issue many fans are having with the LEGO versions is the overall design. Take the Pikachu set, for example. The Mega Bloks version is a fairly faithful recreation of the creature we've grown so familiar with, while the LEGO version is admittedly a bit hard to look at. It's worth noting that the LEGO version is nearly double the piece count compared to the Mega Bloks version - it's made up of 2,050 pieces versus 1,095, so it's interesting to see that LEGO seems to have missed the mark with the design of the most iconic Pokémon to date.

While there are many LEGO purists and loyalists (I probably count myself among them), it's hard to deny the significantly better value Mega Bloks is offering when it comes to licensed Pokémon building sets. I know we've likely only just seen the tip of the iceberg with what Pokémon sets LEGO will release, but even the selection of different monsters Mega Bloks has is better. And as a die-hard Dragonite fan, I'm eagerly waiting for LEGO to catch up.

LEGO Pokémon Sets Up for Preorder

While some preorders are sold out for now, here are the LEGO Pokémon sets scheduled to release at the end of February. And with Pokémon's 30th anniversary on the horizon and a Pokémon Presents showcase likely, odds are we'll see more of what LEGO has in store.

Myles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social.

Hytale Becomes the Most-Watched Game on Twitch on Early Access Launch Day

13 janvier 2026 à 23:57

It's been a banner launch day for Hytale, the new sandbox game from the creators of popular Minecraft server Hypixel. In addition to a surge of players and a lot of positive buzz, it's shot up to become, briefly, the most popular game on Twitch, with over 420k viewers.

This was observed first by PC Gamer, who earlier today clocked that it was the most-watched game on Twitch and the second-most-watched category, only behind Just Chatting by about 43k views. At the time this piece was written, Hytale had dropped down to around 260k viewers, but is still the most-watched video game and the third-most-watched category. It's now behind both Just Chatting and football (soccer, for the Americans) league Kings League. And it seems possible that it will surge further in the coming days.

It's a heck of a comeback story for a game that, half a year ago, was thought to be canceled entirely. Hytale, made by the developers of wildly popular Minecraft server Hypixel, was first announced in 2018 with an incredibly popular trailer, and garnered plenty of buzz at the time. Riot Games took notice, invested, and in 2020 acquired it entirely. However, Hytale was delayed several times as its scope grew, and just this past year was canceled entirely by Riot. Then, in November, co-founder Simon Collins-Laflamme announced he had acquired the IP rights back from Riot, and in an incredibly fast turnaround, he and the team got the game ready for an early access release today.

In addition to its popularity on Twitch, Hytale has already made enough money to cover two more years of development, and its modding scene is already bustling day one. Someone's even got Doom running in it. Though we're still waiting for confirmation from Hypixel as to how many players are checking it out today, Collins-Laflamme made a bold prediction of one million players on day one. We'll hopefully soon see if that's come true.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

The Third Harry Potter Full-Cast Audiobook Is Now Available

13 janvier 2026 à 19:30

Audible's new Harry Potter full-cast audiobook series has already received its third entry. This new form of the Harry Potter books kicked off back in November 2025 with a unique interpretation of The Sorcerer's Stone, and you can now listen to the third book as of January 13.

If you're curious about this series, you can currently grab a free 30-day trial of Audible directly from Amazon to listen at no cost. Audible is also still running a deal that gets you three months of the service for only $0.99 until December 16. I had the chance to listen to the full audiobook for The Sorcerer's Stone when it released in November and genuinely loved it. At just over eight hours, I though it was a unique experience that landed somewhere between reading the books and watching the films. I'll definitely be listening to the rest of the series as soon as I can.

Audible has already announced release dates for the full line-up of these audiobooks. All seven of the books in the series will be getting the full-cast treatment with new releases every month from now until May 2026.

Who's in the Voice Cast?

The official Harry Potter website released a full list of voice actors we know about after the first audiobook. More cast announcements are on there way as the series progresses, but here's the core list of names we know so far:

  • Hugh Laurie as Dumbledore
  • Matthew Macfadyen as Voldemort
  • Riz Ahmed as Snape
  • Michelle Gomez as McGonagall
  • Mark Addy as Rubeus Hargrid
  • Adeel Akhtar as Argus Filch
  • Jude Farant as Draco Malfoy
  • Cush Jumbo as Narrator
  • Frankie Treadway as Harry (Books 1-3)
  • Max Lester as Ron (Books 1-3)
  • Arabella Stanton as Hermione (Books 1-3)
  • Jaxon Knopf as Harry (Books 4-7)
  • Rhys Mulligan as Ron (Books 4-7)
  • Nina Barker-Francis (Books 4-7)

As you may have noticed, the voice actors for Harry, Ron, and Hermione are the same for the first three books and then shift to new people. This is due to Audible launching all of these audiobooks within the span of seven months rather than over years of time. We don't yet know what these character's voices will sound like in the jump between The Prisoner of Azkaban and The Goblet of Fire, but we can assume that they will be more mature.

Jacob Kienlen is a Senior Audience Development Strategist and Writer for IGN. Born and raised in Portland, Oregon, he has considered the Northwest his home for his entire life. With a bachelor's degree in communication and over 8 years of professional writing experience, his expertise is spread across a variety of different pop culture topics -- from TV series to indie games and books.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms: Season 1 Spoiler-Free Review

13 janvier 2026 à 23:00

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms debuts Sunday, January 18 at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and will be available to stream on HBO Max. New episodes will debut on subsequent Sundays.

Although House of the Dragon largely stemmed the widespread fan disappointment caused by the final seasons of Game of Thrones, it has still generated its own share of frustrations that have kept it from being a full return to glory for HBO’s flagship franchise. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms doesn’t aspire to be the franchise’s redeemer. Still, it is the most purely enjoyable and heartfelt excursion to Westeros in some time, and one that can serve as an entry point to the franchise for viewers who may feel they are too far behind on all the lore to join now.

Set almost 100 years before the events depicted in Game of Thrones and based on The Hedge Knight, the first entry in George R.R. Martin’s novella series Tales of Dunk and Egg, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms follows the towering, dim-witted Dunk (played with lovable oafishness by Peter Claffey), the squire to a recently deceased hedge knight. Dunk travels the backroads of Westeros as he looks to compete in a jousting tourney so that he can become a knight.

Along the way, Dunk encounters Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell, small of stature but commanding in screen presence), a precocious bald child who wants nothing more than to become Dunk’s squire. These two oddballs soon cross paths with an assortment of rough-and-tumble characters bearing some of Westeros’ most legendary surnames.

Dunk initially rebuffs Egg, suspecting the mouthy kid is just a thief, but he eventually sees more of his younger self in this strange boy who’s determined to be his squire. The insolent Egg is mysteriously wise in the ways of knighthood and in how things in Westeros operate for reasons that will not become clear until later in the first season. Dunk and Egg are two young people just trying to find their way in this gloomy, life-is-cheap world where the disparity between the haves and have-nots could not be more, ahem, stark.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms doesn’t require one to know the past Game of Thrones shows, to have read any of the source material, or to have any extensive knowledge of the franchise’s fantasy lore. While dragons remain a not-too-distant memory in this period and the Targaryens still hold the Iron Throne, this is a Westeros without magic, White Walkers, or any of the genre trappings many viewers may have come to expect and appreciate from the franchise. (There may not be any dragons, but A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms still offers the whoring, violence, dark humor, and occasional full-frontal nudity the franchise is also notable for.)

While that lack of fantasy might seem like a deficit to some, this grounded approach recenters viewers’ attention on the very human characters inhabiting this particular time and place in Westeros.

Rather than going the sword & sorcery route, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms instead blends aspects from underdog sports movies, rites of passage sagas, and archetypal badass and child pairings that the likes of Lone Wolf and Cub, Logan and X-23, the T-800 and John Connor, and the Mandalorian and Grogu have all employed to great effect. (Dunk, though, is far from being the badass any of those characters are.)

Dunk is an Everyman looking to make his mark in a field dominated by the Great Houses; all he has going for him is his size and sheer force of will. He is a Rocky-like palooka who can endure a beating and keep going, as evidenced by the show’s violent jousting tourneys, realized with a grimy brutality not seen since Ridley Scott’s The Last Duel.

Thanks to its compact storytelling – Season 1 is just six episodes, with most running roughly 30 minutes long, the first three directed by Owen Harris and the latter three by Sarah Adina Smith – A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms never feels bloated or like it's spinning its wheels waiting to get to some big payoff the way that House of the Dragons and Game of Thrones sometimes did. Some flashbacks aside, the first season takes place over just a few days, so it’s pretty close to a real-time adventure in Westeros, where friendships and rivalries are forged quickly but deeply due to life-or-death circumstances.

Smaller both in scale and ambition than its predecessors, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms never quite plumbs the moral depths – and entirely forgoes the dragon-riding fantasy highs – of the previous two Game of Thrones series. Still, it provides the viewer with core protagonists one can remain emotionally invested in, something the overall franchise has occasionally lost sight of in favor of spectacle.

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