Today's Wordle answer for Tuesday, May 6
© Nurphoto via Getty
© Nurphoto via Getty
Amazon is offering a 50% discount off the popular Beats Solo 4 wireless on-ear headphones just in time for Mother's Day, which lands on May 11, Currently all four of the classic colorways - Black & Gold, Cloud Pink, Matte Black, and Slate Blue - are on sale for just $99.99 with free shipping (normally $200). If you're looking for a more unique coloway for mom, Target is also offering 50% off its exclusive Warm White model as well.
The Beats Solo 4 is a very compact and lightweight headphone that can still pack a punch when you need it. It features 40mm drivers, Spatial Audio with Dynamic Head Tracking, Lossless audio via USB Type-C, and up to 50 hours of battery life. The Solo 4 doesn't have built-in active noise cancellation, but the headphone's design keeps the earcups securely on the head, aiding in excellent passive noise isolation. Because Apple owns Beats, the Solo 4 is one of the few headphones that supports seamless integration with iPhones and, unlike AirPods, is a good option for Android users.
We picked the Beats Solo 4 as the best wireless headphones for Apple users. "If you’re not fully in the AirPods camp but want headphones that work seamlessly with your iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch, the Beats Solo 4 is the way to go. Rather than going with an Apple chip like in previous models, the Solo 4 is powered by Beats' own processor, which supports Google Fast Pair for an easy connection to Android devices as well. But you can still link these headphones to an iCloud account for speedy pairing and auto-switching between Apple devices. However, the spatial audio with head tracking is exclusive to Apple users."
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.
The weather’s cooling down, but these digital deals are heating up across every major platform. Whether you’re nursing a post-payday itch or plotting your next backlog binge, there’s a stack of pixel-packed gems going for a song this week. From cult classics and long-awaited sequels to a few industry oddities, there’s something here to make you equip your wallet.
In retro news, I'm celebrating the 10th anniversary of Project C.A.R.S., a series which, sadly, seems to have put the hazards on and parked. It began here as a serious, deep, and demanding racing sim for motorsport purists. It bore no pop punk soundtrack, or explosive takedowns, or generous rewinds. Slightly Mad Studios just set out to capture the experience of manhandling a real racing car around the world’s most famous racing circuits, and mostly succeeded.
- EVE Online (PC) 2003. Get
- Project CARS (PC,PS4,XO) 2015. Get
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PS4
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Audiophilia for less
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Spoilers follow for Thunderbolts.
Some MCU fans had assumed that Marvel’s Thunderbolts – which you may have heard is now Marvel’s The New Avengers – would kill off at least a few of its (seemingly) mostly disposable team of anti-heroes. But when the “directors chair” Avengers: Doomsday announcement in March revealed the metric ton of characters who are returning for that film included most of the Thunderbolts, the fan theories were forced to go in another direction. Still, one character was conspicuous by their absence in that reveal: Olga Kurylenko’s Antonia Dreykov, aka Taskmaster.
Around the same time, the ever-watchful fans also kind of figured out that Taskmaster was doomed due to her disappearance from key moments in the trailers. And indeed, the character is in fact unceremoniously killed off early on in Thunderbolts/The New Avengers.
The thing is, according to the film’s co-writer Eric Pearson, Taskmaster was originally intended to have a much bigger part in the movie. And she was meant to have an important connection to fellow team member Hannah John-Kamen’s Ava Starr/Ghost too.
“That's one of the biggest changes from my final draft, because in the last version that I did, [Taskmaster] lived out the whole movie and there was a pretty big subplot of her and Ava connecting as two characters that were raised in labs and being controlled by other people,” explains Pearson.
It makes sense considering Ghost’s Ant-Man and the Wasp backstory is one of secret experimentation and forced acts of violence. “Ava having earned her autonomy a little bit earlier, Antonia was big-sistering her a little bit through the movie,” says the writer.
But the nature of the MCU movie factory – and big-budget blockbusters in general, really – means that Pearson eventually moved on to other projects, particularly with the delays in production on Thunderbolts caused by the Hollywood strikes. And so other writers continued work on the film, including his credited co-writer Joanna Calo.
“When I came back and watched the first cut, that was the biggest shock to me,” recalls Pearson. “Everything else was in the same place, but I was like, ‘Oh my God, you guys just killed the Taskmaster right there.’ So being able to not know what's coming and feel that shock, I understood why they did it, but yeah.”
Pearson says that even though he was surprised by the character’s fate, he understands why the changes to the script were made. (“The journey was even more emotional than I expected it to be,” he says. “I was just thrilled.”) He also confirms that most of the additional material he wrote about Taskmaster was never actually filmed. There was, however, a version of the elevator shaft scene that was different from the one in the finished film where John Walker tries to jump up to escape the shaft. In his script, the scene involved Taskmaster.
“I think they shot it with actually Ava doing the Taskmaster role,” he recalls. “Taskmaster was supposed to pull the bow and arrow [out] and shoot a grappling hook straight up. … And the idea that they all just stand there and look, waiting for the thing to cling, to stick in, and then one of them notices that the rope is coiling up and the thing is coming back down and they all just panic and have to run around like headless chickens because they know this arrow is coming down and they don't know where. And it sticks right in the middle of them. I loved that moment. I missed it, but I can't complain. The movie is spiritually everything that I wanted it to be.”
What do you think? Would Thunderbolts/The New Avengers have been better if Taskmaster hadn’t been killed off so early in the story? Vote in our poll and let’s discuss in the comments.
Here's a rare chance to pick up a well-sized OLED TV at an affordable price and from a trusted retailer. Starting this week, Amazon has discounted the 2024 65" Panasonic Z85 4K OLED Smart TV with Amazon Fire TV for just $999.99 with free delivery. This is an excellent TV to pair up with your PlayStation 5 since it has HDMI 2.1 inputs and a 120Hz refresh rate.
The Panasonic Z85 TV uses a W-OLED panel so image quality is comparable to the Samsung S85C/D/F, Sony Bravia 8/A80, and LG B4/B3 models. Since this is a true OLED panel, the Z85 boasts near instantaneous response time, near infinite contrast ratio, and true blacks. It's superior to any other panel type in nearly every scenario except for one: super bright rooms with no light control (OLEDs aren't as bright as Mini LED or LED LCD TVs).
The Z85 is an excellent future-proof gaming TV because it has a native 120Hz refresh rate and HDMI 2.1 ports. That means it is capable of running games in 4K at up to 120fps on both the PS5 and Xbox Series X consoles. It's a great TV for the upcoming Switch 2 as well, since the console is locked at 60fps when running games in 4K. The Z85 also has other convenient gaming features like variable refresh rate and auto low latency mode.
This is the best price I can find for a brand new 65" OLED TV with a full warranty. Panasonic is a well-known brand with a solid TV history. Although they had been out of the game for a while, they've recently returned, targeting the higher-end market with Mini-LED and OLED offerings.
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.
Ahead of Mother's Day, which lands on May 11, Amazon has dropped the price of the Apple iPad Mini (A17 Pro) to $399 shipped. That's a $100 price drop for the newest Mini. If you're looking for a pocketable, the iPad Mini will be your best pick; because of its compact size, there's no better iPad to take along when you're travelling.
The iPad Mini may be the most diminutive tablet of the bunch, but that doesn't mean it's hindered in any way. In fact, the iPad Mini has a more powerful processor than the standard iPad and a sharper display (326ppi vs 264ppi) with wide color gamut. The newest iPad Mini was released on October of 2024 and features some pretty significant improvements over its predecessor, including a more powerful A17 Pro processor, double the base storage, Wi-Fi 6e, a USB Type-C port, compatibility with the Apple Pencil Pro and Apple Pencil (USB-C), and Apple Intelligence support.
If you're not sure which iPad is best for you, we have an iPad guide which details which iPad is ideal for which use case. If you intend want to get an iPad for schoolwork, we have an iPad guide for students as well. If you're looking for options outside of iOS, check out the best Android tablets of 2025.
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.
© Netflix
HP is offering the lowest price we've seen for an RTX 5080 equipped gaming laptop with its new 2025 Omen Max 16. Right now you can pick up a pretty decked out model for just $2,609.99 shipped after you apply coupon code "PC10DEAL". This is the only RTX 5080 laptop I've found so far for under $3,000. The Omen Max is HP's new gaming laptop that replaces the now discontinued HP Omen 16. It is upgraded with a beefier cooling system to accommodate more powerful hardware.
Follow these directions to get the config I mention:
The HP Omen Max 16 is equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor, which boasts a max turbo frequency of 5.4GHz with 24 cores and 40MB total L2 cache. According to Passmark, this is the fastest laptop processor on the market, with a healthy 7% lead over the AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX3D.
According to Tom's Hardware, the RTX 5080 mobile GPU is roughly 15%-20% more powerful than the RTX 4080 mobile GPU that it replaces. It also happens to be about 5% more powerful than the RTX 4090, which was the previous generation's flagship card. The RTX 5080 appears to be a better value than the much pricier RTX 5090 as well. It only lags by about 15% despite being nearly $1,000 cheaper. Since the Alienware Area-51 uses a QHD+ (2560x1600) instead of 4K display, this GPU should be able to run new and upcoming games at high framerates, quadruply so if DLSS 4 is supported.
Razer's new 2025 lineup of Razer Blade 16 and Razer Blade 18 gaming laptops, which are currently exclusively available only at Razer.com and Razer stores, are now shipping. Prices for the Razer Blade 16 start at $2,999.99 for the RTX 5070 Ti configuration, $3,499.99 for the RTX 5080 configuration, and $4,499.99 for the RTX 5090 configuration.
Razer Blade laptops are well known for their impeccable build quality. The chassis is built from a single piece of aluminum and is designed to be exceptionally thin and light for a gaming laptop. In order to get away with the svelte form factor, Razer employs its own proprietary cooling design, which incorporates a vacuum-sealed, liquid-filled, copper vapor chamber to effectively whisk away the heat. Much like Apple MacBook Pros, a lot of engineering goes into a Razer Blade laptop, which is why they command a premium price compared to other mainstream brands.
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.
The Nintendo Switch 2 is coming out incredibly soon, and while we know a lot about it, its steep $449.99 price tag and $79.99 games make me less likely to invest than expected. After all, I’ve barely used my Nintendo Switch since getting an Asus ROG Ally, and my problems with the original console are only exacerbated in its successor, especially in a post-handheld gaming PCs world.
I’ve been a handheld gamer since childhood, having jumped between the Game Boy, Nintendo DS, and PlayStation Portable. It's still my favorite way to play games, as there’s nothing cozier than snuggling beneath a layer of blankets and playing from the comfort of my bed. I was even among the painfully few PlayStation Vita believers, and played it during my college train commute every day.
The Nintendo Switch blew my mind in 2017, yet even though I bought mine close to launch, I only used it for exclusives. Playing on PC isn’t comfortable, so when a game seemed mechanically or graphically suited for handheld, I wanted it on the Switch. Those games entered a mental drawer in my head labeled “Reserved for handheld,” and it’s as if my brain was incapable of letting me play them elsewhere.
But if that game was available for free on Epic Games Store, Game Pass, PlayStation Plus, or Humble Choice, I felt guilty repurchasing it on Nintendo Switch. It didn’t help that Switch games are notoriously less likely to receive discounts, and when they do, they’re nowhere near as steep as on other storefronts. This painful cycle of “Why waste money on a game I already own” into “I want to play this on a handheld” yielded the same result every time: I wouldn’t play the game at all.
The launch of the Asus ROG Ally in 2023 broke my curse. It’s a handheld gaming PC that runs on Windows 11, so it has access to Steam, Game Pass, Epic Games, and more. Those games I’d never play on PC due to discomfort could now be enjoyed from the comfort of my own bed.
Nowadays, I play a treasure trove of indie games on my Ally, and I’m still catching up on my backlog. If it wasn’t for the Ally, I would’ve never played Celeste, Little Nightmares II, or Resident Evil Remake. Those are now amongst my favorite games ever, and I didn’t need to spend additional money on any of them, whereas I would have had to repurchase them on Switch. The Ally has become my go-to handheld of choice and has saved me tons of money.
Regardless, I was still excited for the Nintendo Switch 2 announcement, as Nintendo games hold a special place in my heart. But after the Switch 2 Direct, I’m uncertain where the console fits in my life anymore.
When the original Switch launched, it held significance beyond exclusives. The versatility of its design and lower price of entry compared to the competition made it an excellent ecosystem to get into. It was the only viable handheld at the time: It was cheap, had great exclusives, and nothing else like it existed.
Priced at $449 (to start), the Nintendo Switch 2 finds itself in competitive waters. That launch price brings it close to the $499 PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X. In fact, the PS5 technically launched cheaper with its $399 digital edition. What’s worse, in the last eight years since the Switch’s launch, its design has inspired competition. Steam Deck started the trend in 2022, but manufacturers have released handheld gaming PCs like the Asus ROG Ally, Lenovo Legion Go, and MSI Claw. There are even rumors that Xbox is working on its own handheld. Switch 2 is no longer one-of-a-kind, and it’s only a great investment if you don’t already own another handheld, and I do.
Handheld gaming PCs have powerful hardware, and are more than capable of playing indies and third-party games. With a far larger library, and the ability to access all of the games you already own, it’s an excellent place for everything. The chipsets powering handheld gaming PCs are only getting better with time, too. The AMD Ryzen Z2 Extreme is waiting to be implemented into something powerful, and it won’t take long before Switch 2 finds itself outmatched by the competition.
Handheld gaming PC owners who want to play new Nintendo exclusives are faced with a steep price of entry and the promise of little use. If a machine like the Asus ROG Ally is more than capable of playing everything from third-parties to indies, then handheld gaming PC owners investing in a Switch 2 are only going to use it for first-party games.
The high price of exclusives makes the Switch 2 an even more painful endeavor, with Mario Kart World and Donkey Kong Bananza launching at $79.99 and $69.99 respectively. Considering Nintendo Switch games, especially first-party games, are rarely discounted, it’s hard to get excited about the prospect of having to buy them.
To be fair, there is plenty of value to be found in Nintendo exclusives. The company is responsible for some of the greatest games in history, and for many, there will be plenty of Switch 2 games over the next few years to make the system worth its high price. But for handheld gaming PC owners like me, we just need a little more.
The Nintendo Switch 2 isn’t a worthwhile investment for everyone, especially if you already have a handheld gaming PC. Systems like the Legion Go deliver excellent performance, and an enormous library of indie and third-party games. My Asus ROG Ally does everything I used to need a Switch for, and with a wide range of storefronts available, it’s just a better place to play games.
Claire finds joy in impassioned ramblings about her closeness to video games. She has a bachelor’s degree in Journalism & Media Studies from Brooklyn College and seven years of experience in entertainment journalism. Claire is a stalwart defender of games as an artform and spends most days overwhelmed with excitement for its past, present and future. When she isn't writing or playing Dark Souls, she can be found eating chicken fettuccine alfredo and gushing about handheld gaming PCs.
A great laptop allows you to take high-quality computing on the go. That's an appealing prospect no matter what kind of user you are, but there's a breathtaking amount of options to choose from. For many of us, a versatile all-arounder like my top pick, the MacBook Air, is going to be all you need. Or, if you're a student that's interested in blending portability with performance and a dash of entertainment on the side, the Microsoft Surface Pro 11, may be a better pick. I review laptops for a living, so whether you're looking for something to enhance your workday, carry to classes, or something to play the latest games at high settings, I'm here to help you cut through the noise and find the right pick for you. These are the best laptops of 2025.
Laptops come in many different forms and have designs that cater to a wide range of needs. The best seamlessly integrate into your day without constantly reminding you that you're carrying them. They offer great battery life and performance that won't leave you disappointed after making such a large investment.
No matter what you're looking for, I've done the testing to make sure you get the best value, and best performance, for your money.
Apple's MacBook may just be the most ubiquitous laptop of all time, and year after year, it earns top marks for performance, portability, and battery life. This year, the company released its latest iteration on the ultra-portable MacBook Air, featuring its latest and most powerful processor, the M4. This new chip powers the experience, allowing users to do everything from crank out projects for work or school to creative work, and it does these things faster, using less battery than competing Windows laptops around its price.
All of the most appealing qualities of the MacBook Air line make their return here. We once again see Apple challenge convention by offering reliably great performance and battery life in such a thin and light body. Apple even managed to shave a smidge of weight off of this year's release even while improving its capability. It only weighs 2.7lbs, too, making it almost effortless to carry.
As we've come to expect from Apple, the Air is all about evolutional refinement. In her review, our own Jackie Thomas dubbed it an "oldie but a goodie" in the most loving way possible. It has the same fanless internal design that relies entirely on passive cooling (in part through its metal frame). This allows it to run completely silently while also adopting a clean aesthetic, unbroken by fan vents.
This does mean that it won't compete with the MacBook Pro in the kind of performance it's able to put out, which does have active cooling, but you wouldn't expect it to. The MacBook Air is about being a daily companion and all the computer that you'll need this side of being a creative professional or gamer.
That doesn't mean it's a slouch in the performance department. The prior M3 MacBook Air, released in March of last year, already offered impressive performance in benchmarks and real world use, and the M4 chip is a step ahead by roughly 20%. Groundbreaking? No, but it does mean that the MacBook Air can handle just about anything you might throw at it on an average day.
Like many of its other qualities, the display is very similar to its predecessor, but that's not a bad thing. While I would have loved to see an upgrade, it's 13- or 15-inch screen offers a 2560x1664 resolution which translates to high pixel density and a crisp, color-rich image – another point Jackie loved.
On the flip side of things, it offers limited connectivity. Sad as it is to say, it's one of the things you just have to accept with the MacBook Air series, at least so far. (It's never too late to change, Apple!) It offers two USB Type-C ports on the left, a MagSafe connector, and a headphone jack on the opposite side. If you have lots of accessories to connect, you'll need to invest in a dock.
The MacBook Air so nails the basics of being silent, satisfying, and delightfully responsive, that it truly begins to feel like a natural part of your daily life. It's no good for gaming, sure, but as a daily driver, it's the best choice for most people.
The Asus VivoBook S 15 has a temptingly low entry point for all that it offers. Beginning well below $1,000, this laptop offers many of the same benefits of the ZenBook S 16 featured later in this list. Its screen is fantastic, and its thin and light design makes it easy to slip into a bag and carry throughout the day. Just as importantly, you're not sacrificing performance for its cost.
Asus's VivoBook line is all about balancing value with accessible pricing. Looking at its overall design and spec sheet, it's clear to see the shared DNA between this year's VivoBooks and ZenBooks. While the latter has a lot to offer, there's no mistaking that you're paying extra for its more elegant design. If you don't mind losing a few frills and still getting a good-looking, high-performing laptop, the S 15 might just be the budget laptop you've been waiting for.
Coming in at just over 3lbs, it's the kind of laptop you can easily slide into a bag and forget it's there. Since it is only a touch over a half-inch at its thickest point, you won't have to worry about it taking up a lot of space in your bag.
It's not all about form factor, though. The S 15 comes with 16GB of fast LPDDR5X RAM and a 512GB NVMe SSD. It's powered by the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus X1P processor, which expertly blends power efficiency with performance.
At this price, you would expect it to skimp on its screen, but Asus has done anything but. The VivoBook comes with a gorgeous high-resolution OLED touchscreen display. It runs at 120Hz for smooth animations and scrolling long websites and has an ultra-crisp 2880x1620 resolution. All of this culminates in outstanding picture quality for productivity and entertainment alike.
I've been testing this laptop in preparation for a full review and have been impressed that it's able to offer more than 16 hours of battery life in normal use. Used intermittently, I've been able to get away with charging only twice a week instead of nightly like most Intel and AMD laptops that I've tested.
That's the benefit of the Snapdragon processor, but it also comes with a drawback: app compatibility. It uses a fundamentally different architecture, which means that app support isn't a given. Granted, it's been out long enough that most major productivity and creative apps should work fine, but it's worth taking a look at the Windows on ARM compatibility list to ensure that it will work for the actual applications you'll be using.
As long as it checks that box, this is a great value that's bound to impress most people.
This year's Razer Blade 16 is easily the best laptop the company has ever released, and I don't say that lightly. That's because it blends fantastic performance with a form factor that's more thin and light than what was previously possible. It features the latest Nvidia graphics and a powerful AMD Ryzen CPU. In sheer fps, it's not the most powerful, but when viewed as a whole package, it's nothing short of outstanding.
The Razer Blade 16 is a premium laptop in every way. It comes with a fully aluminum chassis that's been CNC milled to create its form, offering improved durability while still keeping the overall weight reasonable at only 4.7 lbs. It's lighter than you would expect a high-performance gaming laptop to be, and paradoxically, it's nowhere near the loudest either.
In my review, I was incredibly impressed at how well-balanced the system is. Running an RTX 5090, it opens the door to gaming at ultra settings, but its thinner, lighter design made it much nicer to actually use than the vast majority of other gaming laptops I've tested, despite trading some performance to get there.
To pull off its form factor, Razer decided to limit the wattage of its graphics card. Given the high price of the laptop, it's easy to be dismayed by this. Indeed, if you're looking for the highest possible fps and don't care as much about portability, this probably isn't the laptop for you. But make no mistake: At this laptop's native resolution, it's beastly.
Which brings me to its other high point in its display. The Blade 16 uses a 16-inch, 2560x1600 OLED screen. Razer could have gone for 4K here, and on paper, that may have even been better. In practice, however, its RTX 5090 is much better suited to driving 1,600p at triple-digit frame rates without needing to lower many, if any, settings in many games. Its screen is also able to clock all the way to 240Hz, so you can enjoy exceptional responsiveness and motion clarity in the process.
The overarching impression it leaves is extraordinary. It might lag a few fps behind the heavier, louder competition, but the balance of design features and performance Razer went with simply makes it a much better laptop. I didn't find myself missing that handful of extra frames. If you can afford it, the Razer Blade 16 is the best gaming laptop overall so far this year.
For productivity, portability, and even some light gaming, the Asus ZenBook S 16 is one of my all-time favorites. Between its spacious 16-inch OLED touchscreen, elegant and overtly premium design, solid battery life, and impressive performance, it should be high on your consideration list as your next laptop for work.
Compared to the majority of productivity laptops, the ZenBook S 16's screen is ever so slightly larger and uses a 16:10 aspect ratio to maximize its space. This is perfect for work because it can simply fit more on the screen, whether that's to benefit you hammering out a report or a colleague that you're showing a presentation to. It's also a touch screen for intuitive navigation in either of these tasks, allowing you to easily integrate it into your workflow or enhance what you're already doing.
When I reviewed this system, I couldn't help but make comparisons to Apple's MacBook lineup. In fact, it's pretty obvious that Asus is courting the same aesthetic with some unique and elegant touches of its own, like the durable and stylish Ceraluminum lid. This new material has the appearance of ceramic but actually blends that material with aluminum alloy to create a robust, fingerprint-resistant finish. Open it up, and you'll find a large vented area above the keyboard milled with more than 1,000 individual holes that frankly make the laptop look more expensive than it actually is.
Inside, it's running AMD's Ryzen 9 AI HX 370 CPU. It's a high-performance AI-enabled processor with 12 cores and 24 threads to easily handle demanding tasks and multitasking. While it's not quite as powerful as Apple's M3 or M4 chips, it's more than capable for the vast majority of tasks, including video editing. It's also fairly power efficient, offering around 15 hours of usable life between recharges.
As an added bonus, it's also capable of some light gaming, so long as you're willing to lower the settings or play at 1,200p resolution. The HX 370 processor is the same chip driving the majority of Windows gaming handhelds available at the time of this writing. It still won't compete with a dedicated gaming laptop like the Razer Blade 16, but it's nice to know that you'll be able to load up and play some games without needing to rely on the cloud for the privilege.
It's a great laptop overall, but it does have one drawback worth keeping in mind. After it's been running intensive tasks for a while, it can become quite warm. Some users have found that it's best to use it on a desk or with a laptop cooler to avoid that heat making its way to your legs. I didn't hit this point myself, but if you're sensitive to warmth or live in a warmer climate, it's worth considering. That said, in day-to-day productivity use that you'll typically be engaging with, this isn't a big concern. It's only when the S16 is running in its highest performance mode and processing demanding tasks over time.
Until I was forced to trade it out, this was my personal daily driver due to its great balance of form factor and performance. For work, there's little it can't do.
The Microsoft Surface Pro 11 is the best laptop for students for a multitude of reasons, but the biggest among them are its versatility and ability to deliver a great experience in a range of different situations. It's able to blend handwritten note-taking, deep work in productivity applications like Office and Google Drive, and entertainment for when the day is done, all into one compact, exceptionally portable package.
This year's Surface Pro is an impressive reinvention of Microsoft's 2-in-1 tablet PC. As I remarked in my review, the company always seemed to sacrifice performance in exchange for the form factor with the Surface line. That's just not the case any longer. The Surface Pro 11 is a high-performance PC with solid battery life, a great screen, and the ability to transform for the different facets of student life.
Inside this laptop is running your choice of a Snapdragon X Plus or Snapdragon X Elite processor. Like the Asus VivoBook S 15 above, its use here results in a responsive experience that didn't lag or stutter throughout my entire testing period – at least with the X Elite version, which I definitely recommend choosing if your budget can stretch that far.
While I'm confident that the Snapdragon X Plus will also offer satisfyingly responsive performance, based on my experience with the chip in other laptops, opting for the Snapdragon X Elite also gets you an upgraded OLED touchscreen display with a crisp resolution of 2880x1920.
For entertainment and even just general viewing, it's a big upgrade. Both versions of the Surface have similar specs on the screen. So even if you go for the LCD variant, you can count on crisp visuals, 500 nits of brightness, and a 120Hz refresh rate for smooth motion. The infinite blacks of the OLED, like the more expensive variant, offer much better contrast, dynamic range, and more vivid colors. If you plan on watching movies or shows on this laptop, it offers a significantly better viewing experience that I really enjoyed.
It's worth noting that by default, the Surface Pro only comes with the tablet and doesn't include its keyboard folio case or Surface Pen. These do add significantly onto its price. But if you'd rather not spend as much, you can easily pick up a third-party keyboard case and stylus. If you do opt for the official accessories, you can count on a satisfyingly integrated experience. The keyboard case connects magnetically with a reassuring snap and stays in place well. It also includes a compartment to hold and charge the Surface Pen, so both are always ready to go.
Like the other recommendations on this list that use Qualcomm Snapdragon X processors, app compatibility is a concern, and you'll want to double-check that the programs you use are compatible. For academic and creative use, it's not likely to be an issue, however, as app support has continually been on the up-and-up since its launch last year. At this point, it seems like the vast majority of common apps, even across specific fields, are reported to be working well. It's not Windows, though, so verify your apps before pulling the trigger.
If you're a college student, you probably want to play games every now and again too. Since this tablet is coming directly from Microsoft, you can count on easy compatibility with Xbox Cloud Gaming. In my testing, Nvidia GeForce Now also worked well. Running games locally on the Surface Pro is usually disappointing, if the games open at all, but streaming is a viable alternative if your internet can support it.
Microsoft really aimed to impress with this generation's Surface Pro 11 and stuck the landing. It's a great choice for any student that needs a versatile laptop that can last a whole day of learning and still be ready for fun at home or in the dorm.
Shopping for a new laptop can be a complicated affair if you don't know what you're looking for. Thankfully, there are key specs that can clue you in to whether or not a laptop is prepared to meet your needs. This is what to look for when choosing one of the best laptops in 2025.
While each of these questions stand on their own, they can also be addressed together when looking at which laptop is best for work or school. The things you're going to be looking for are mostly the same. You don't need to spend extra on a laptop with a dedicated GPU unless you're doing art or rendering as part of your job or curriculum. Instead, I recommend focusing on at least an 8-core processor, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. Spend more on additional RAM and storage as your budget allows.
For gaming, things get a bit more complicated. While I would still recommend the same base specs for an entry-level gaming laptop, you'll want to consider laptops with a dedicated GPU if you want to turn graphics settings up. While it's possible to play games on laptops with an integrated graphics card, dedicated GPUs simply perform better and give you more room for better visuals and higher resolutions.
This can happen for a number of different reasons. Depending on the specs of your laptop, it's possible that its hardware is no longer up to the requirements of modern Windows and applications. If that's not the case, you should look into dust buildup in the vents and fans, as heat will cause your system to throttle, lowering performance. As a rule, it's important to remember that laptops often have a lower usable lifespan than full-size desktops due to their form factor.
If you're looking for a gaming computer that you can easily take with you on the go, a laptop is a no-brainer. But if you only intend to play games at home, a desktop is probably a better choice. The portability of a laptop often comes at a higher price compared to a similarly specced desktop. Additionally, laptop hardware, even if it has a very similar name – as is the case with laptop graphics cards – often does not run as fast as the desktop version of that component. In the end, the choice comes down to how much you need a portable system versus one that can remain in a single place at home and take up more space.
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, Tom’s Hardware, Popular Science, USA Today’s Reviewed, and Popular Mechanics. Find Chris on Twitter @gamebynight.
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© Stunlock Studios
The LEGO Mario Kart: Mario & Standard Kart, available for preorder right now, is a build that everyone can love. Casual builders will appreciate its bright primary colors and its big, chunky parts, which make for a surefire crowd-pleaser. Experienced LEGO builders will appreciate the intricacy of the Kart's construction and the absence of stickers; every piece of visual flair is printed directly onto the bricks themselves.
The new set's long, official name – LEGO Mario Kart: Mario & Standard Kart – denotes that LEGO Mario Kart is a subgenre under the larger LEGO Mario banner. By that logic, can we hope for more Kart sets of this size and scope? Yes, there are playset-scaled Kart sets (see at Amazon). But surely, there's an audience for a large Luigi in a Sports Coupe or a large Princess Peach on a Cat Cruiser.
Divided across 17 bags, Mario & Standard Kart is two separate builds. The first build is the Standard Kart. You construct a LEGO Technic mesh, held together by pins and reinforced by bricks, to form the Kart's floorboard. Then you attach the individual parts of the body shell via rods and clamps, including its rockets/exhaust pipes, its side panels, and its steering mechanism, which also forms the Kart's front exterior.
The steering mechanism deserves special mention because of how it marries form to function. One end fastens to the front of the set via clamps, and then you 'fold' it onto the hood, as if it were a storm door on a hinge. You rig it so that when you turn the steering wheel, the front wheels also turn accordingly.
The Kart construction process is more involved and detail-oriented than you might think. The build looks simple, but it takes a lot of tiny, little steps to create that big cumulative effect. It's a delightful contradiction that the build manages to look sophisticated – like labor went into its creation – despite its inherent childishness and whimsy.
Once you're done with the Kart, you build Mario, whose construction follows the same general procedure as The Mighty Bowser's from three years ago. First, you build the torso, with ball-and-socket connections at its extremities. Then you build two legs, which attach at the bottom. Then two arms, which you attach at the sides. And finally, the head and hat, which you attach at the top. Interestingly, the hat is the most complex part of the Mario build; you attach two separate, smaller builds to the top of Mario's head to create its signature, bent appearance.
Mario is ubiquitous, but building him meant that I also had to flesh out his smaller, less iconic details – the hair sticking out from under his hat, the marking on his gloves, the rolled up cuffs on his jeans. My 10-year-old son and I love building jigsaw puzzles together, and whenever we put together a famous painting, we notice colors and brushstrokes that we wouldn't otherwise notice or appreciate. That's what it's like to build Mario out of LEGO – you see little things that contribute to the whole, even if they don't stand out on their own.
Unfortunately, Mario is not separable from the Kart. He has no butt; his torso anchors directly onto a gray plate, which in turn attaches to the Kart seat. It is both frustrating and understandable why LEGO did this. A solo Mario build, with fully articulable limbs, would sell like hotcakes, and LEGO and Nintendo wouldn't give it away so easily.
No doubt, thousands of LEGO fans will figure out a way to modify this model and make it stand independently of the Kart. But for now, there is no official way to make this happen. Maybe it would be a good DIY project for a rainy weekend?
Regardless, the final result looks fantastic. The Kart mounts on a buildable stand, which you can tilt upwards or downwards and rotate 360 degrees. This gives you some flexibility; you can pose the Kart any way you wish, whether going uphill, or going downhill, or sliding into a banked turn. I pose my Mario by having him grip the steering wheel with his left hand and pump the air with his right hand. You can almost hear the "Whoo-hoo!"
If this is the direction LEGO's heading? I'm all for it. Two of the most impressive LEGO sets from the past three years have been Mario-themed. The Mighty Bowser debuted in 2022. The Piranha Plant debuted in 2003. The Mario & Standard Kart reaches that same high standard by balancing build quality with visual presentation. And the more big replicas of Mario iconography that we get, the better.
LEGO Mario Kart: Mario & Standard Kart, Set #72037, retails for $169.99, and it is composed of 1972 pieces. It will launch exclusively at the LEGO Store on May 15. Preorder now.
Kevin Wong is a contributing freelancer for IGN, specializing in LEGO. He's also been published in Complex, Engadget, Gamespot, Kotaku, and more. Follow him on Twitter at @kevinjameswong.
LEGO has released a lot of realy cool Disney and Star Wars sets over the years, but never has there been a crossover quite like this. A LEGO fan has decided to take the seemingly innocent young Simba set and turn it into a Millennium Falcon.
Reddit user Minute_Food_2881 (Brad Barber) took to Reddit last week to unveil his creation, which takes the fairly cheep LEGO Simba set and turns it into a Millennium Falcon. It's a rather impressive build considering the Disney set he's working with is only 222 pieces and costs less than $20. Although the finished set looks like some sort of sci-fi horror where flesh meets spacecraft, it is undeniably shaped like a Millennium Falcon and is priced incredibly reasonably compared to other Millennium Falcon LEGO sets (though the most recent one happens to be on sale right now for $67.99 at Amazon).
You can currently pick up the same set this guy used for only $15.99 on Amazon. He has also provided detailed instructions about how to build it yourself via the Rebrickable website for only $3. If you have a love for both Star Wars and The Lion King, now is your chance to combine those two things into something much worse.
Outside of this weird creation, LEGO actually did release a bunch of new Star Wars sets this month for May the Fourth. While there were no Millenium Falcons in this lineup, there was a new Jango Fett ship, a Star Wars logo build, and several cool new helmet. You can find a list of all of the new Star Wars builds available below or dive into our larger list of new LEGO sets for May for all of the latest options.
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© Saber Interactive/Astartes Team
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A big part of the fun with Star Wars Day each year is seeing a new wave of toys and collectibles revealed by companies like Hasbro, Sideshow, and Hot Toys. This year's event certainly didn't disappoint, as we got glimpses of a wide range of upcoming products, ranging from less than $20 to over $1500. What can we say? Being a Star Wars collector is nothing if not an expensive hobby.
From Sideshow's epic Luke Skywalker Red 5 statue to Hasbro's nostalgia-heavy Episode III figures to Hot Toys' mind-bogglingly detailed Jar Jar Binks figure, these were the coolest figures and collectibles revealed during Star Wars Day 2025.
Hot Toys revealed quite the impressive lineup of 1:6 scale figures for Star Wars Day, including a couple of major characters who have surprisingly never gotten the Hot Toys treatment before now. The real surprise is definitely the Jar Jar Binks figure. Love him or hate him, there's no denying that this Jar Jar looks like he walked right off the screen. He's even got seamless arm joints and two swappable face sculpts for recreating all those wacky poses.
Hot Toys is also filling a glaring hole in the Sequel Trilogy lineup by finally releasing a Poe Dameron figure. Fittingly, Poe is wearing his Resistance X-Wing jumpsuit. We're also getting another of the fan-favorite Republic Commandos in the form of Clone Commando Boss, and the company's new Star Wars Rebels-inspired line of animated figures is getting a Darth Vader to accompany the previously announced Stormtrooper figures.
Hasbro revealed a number of new figures in both the 6-inch Black Series line and 3 3/4-inch Vintage Collection line. Hasbro continues to capitalize on the 20th anniversary of Revenge of the Sith by releasing new Black Series figures in packaging based on the classic RotS toy line. Next up are Aayla Secura and a Magnaguard droid. Black Series collectors can also augment their Imperial trooper collections with a Rogue One-themed 2-pack that includes both a Shoretrooper and a Death Trooper.
On the Vintage Collection front, Hasbro has a couple very interesting multi-pack releases in the works. The "Stormtroopers of the Empire 3-Pack" features a Snowtrooper, Scouttrooper and a Sandtrooper. The "Cantina Adventure 4-Pack" includes four aliens from the iconic Mos Eisley sequence, including Hammerhead, Walrus Man, Greedo, and Snaggletooth. It should go great with Hasbro's crowdfunded Mos Eisley Cantina playset.
Finally, Star Wars prop collectors will be happy to know that a new ForceFX Elite lightsaber based on the weapon used by Rebels' star Ezra Bridger is in the works.
Not to be outdone,. Sideshow Collectibles had a wide lineup of figures, statues, and art prints to reveal. Undoubtedly the showpiece of their Star Wars Day lineup is the Luke Skywalker: Red Five, Standing By Premium Format Figure. This massive 1:4 scale, mixed media statue features Luke decked out in his X-Wing jumpsuit and climbing up the ladder to his trusty ship. What really makes this piece special (and especially expensive) is that Sideshow went to the trouble of actually sculpting a portion of the X-Wing so that it hangs in mid-air.
Sideshow is also continuing to release 1:6 scale figures alongside distributing Hot Toys' releases. Sideshow is focusing on its "Scum and Villainy" line, which highlights the many aliens and creatures that don't necessarily receive attention from Hot Toys. The second wave of Scum and Villainy figures is focused on characters from Jabba's Palace in Return of the Jedi, like Bib Fortuna, Klaatu, and Vizam.
Finally, Sideshow showed off the latest 1:10 statue from Iron Studios, which happens to be a shrunken-down version of their 1:4 scale Darth Vader statue. This Empire Strikes Back-inspired piece still looks mighty cool in the new, smaller scale.
Let us know in the comments below what your favorite Star Wars Day 2025 reveal was, and why it's Hot Toys Jar Jar.
For more Star Wars collecting fun, check out our ultimate guide to Star Wars figures, and check out the many Star Wars Collectibles available on the IGN Store.
Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on BlueSky.
With streaming prices going up and movies and TV shows hopping from one service to another without warning, it's a good time to own your favorites on physical media. Whether it's to ensure you can always watch them regardless of what streaming services you subscribe to, or you just enjoy the act of collecting, it's good to know when the newest releases are coming out on 4K UHD and Blu-ray. You know, as long as you have a good way to play them (see our list of the best Blu-ray players for help on that front). Below, you'll find a full rundown of release dates and buy links for all the upcoming home releases you're likely to care about.
If you want a TL;DR of the biggest upcoming home movie and TV show releases, look no further than the list above. We keep it updated and change out the featured items regularly. Below, you'll find all the notable upcoming release sorted by release date.
May has some big home releases of movies both new and old. On the new front are Captain America: Brave New World, which releases alongside a new Captain America 4-movie collection. Soderbergh's Black Bag is also out this month, as is Woman in the Yard. Tons of classics are also getting the 4K treatment this month, including the OG animaged Lilo & Stitch (ahead of the upcoming live-action version), as well as Zemeckis's creepy What Lies Beneath, Jason Goes to Hell, Wayne's World 2, and more.
May 6
May 13
May 20
May 27
The entire Jurassic Park/World series is getting new 4K steelbook editions, divided into the Park and World trilogies. Speaking of Spielberg, Jaws is getting a big 50th anniversary release, complete with a 4K steelbook. Also out this month are Longlegs, The Monkey, and A Working Man.
June 3
June 10
June 17
June 24
July 1
July 8
July 15
July 22
July 29
August 5
Want more release dates? Check out our mega-post of all the biggest video game release dates to see what's coming to consoles and PC this year and beyond.
If you're looking to buy a new TV that will make your 4K movies shine, you'll definitely want to take a look at our favorites. Our tech editors have selected the best 4K TVs for gaming, which will also work great for movie-watching. And since both the PS5 and Xbox Series X have 4K Blu-ray play-back built in, you'll probably be doing plenty of gaming on them as well.
The LG G4 is currently our top pick for a gaming TV, but the price on those refelcts their quality. Which is to say they're really expensive. If you want a deal on a terrific TV in a more reasonable price range, you might want to consider picking an LG C3, which costs significantly less for the same size TV. Get the one that best fits your needs and your budget.
Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert at IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @_chrislreed.
The best Alienware high-end gaming monitor deal just got even better is on sale for this week. The 32" Alienware AW3225QF 4K QD OLED gaming monitor has just dropped to $899.99 with free shipping after a $300 off instant discount. If you're looking for the best 4K gaming monitor, this should definitely be on your short list.
The Alienware AW3225QF was first announced during CES 2024 and is Dell's one of only two OLED monitors that combines a 4K resolution with an OLED panel (the other being the 27" Alienware AW2725Q that was released earlier this year). This monitor incorporates Samsung's QD OLED technology; QD OLED panels are brighter than traditional OLED panels while maintaining near infinite response time, contrast ratio, and black levels that OLEDs are generally known for. The Alienware AW3225QF is HDR True Black 400 certified with up to 1,000 nits of peak brightness. It also boasts a factory calibrated 99.3% DCI-P3 color range, 1700R curve, 240Hz refresh rate, and G-Sync certification.
Connectivity-wise, the AW3225QF has two HDMI 2.1 ports (one with eARC) and one DisplayPort 1.4 port, all of which are capable of 4K at up to 240Hz. There are also a couple of USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports for attaching peripherals and a single USB Type-C port for charging. Dell backs this monitor up with a three-year warranty that includes burn-in protection.
Something to keep in mind is that 4K monitors require a pretty powerful GPU. 4K resolution has 2.25 times more pixels than QHD; if you want to play games in 4K, especially at frame rates of up to 240fps, you'll want a gaming PC equipped with an GeForce RTX 4070 at the minimum. If your PC is equipped with something as powerful as an RTX 4080 Super, RTX 4090, or RX 7900XTX, then this monitor would be the perfect complement.
Check out the best Alienware deals if you're looking for a good gaming PC deal to complement your purchase.
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.
Peacock TV just launched another seasonal coupon code. Get one year of the ad-supported Peacock Premium plan for only $24.99 - or about $2.08 per month - when you apply promo code: "SPRINGSAVINGS". That's 70% off the normal annual price of $79.99. Anyone who isn't currently subscribed to Peacock TV is eligible, and that includes past subscribers with expired accounts. This actually beats out its previous winter sale promotional price of $29.99.
In our recently updated Peacock TV streaming service review, Rosie Knight wrote, "When it comes to growth and evolution since its launch, Peacock has really had an impressive journey. In 2024 it feels like the service has found its niche as an affordable platform with a wide range of viewing options. When every other service is edging closer towards $20 a month, Peacock offers new straight-from-the-theater movies, an untouchable TV back catalog, and even live sports. It's a selection that keeps Peacock in the streaming conversation, while the affordability raises it up to one of the best options."
Since Peacock TV is owned and operated by NBC (Peacock, after all, is named after the NBC logo), you get access to NFL Sunday Night football games. Unfortunately, you will not be able to stream this year's Super Bowl LIX (Eagles and Chiefs) since it is being televised by Fox. You also get access to other live sports like Premier League, Big Ten Football, and WWE.
Peacock has a couple of other big wins. This is the only platform where you're able to stream all episodes of The Office for no additional fee. If you aren't familiar with the inter-work relationships between Michael Scott and Dwight Schrute, you are seriously missing out. If that still doesn't tickle your fancy, Yellowstone is another outstanding TV series that just recently ended with its fifth season. (This was a Paramount original that Peacock had the streaming rights to because Paramount made a deal with Peacock before Paramount+ existed. Complicated!) Video game aficionados will find plenty of things to like here as well, like the superbly animated new Super Mario Bros. kids' flick, the Five Night At Freddies supernatural horror, or the Twisted Metal TV series.
Check out more of the best streaming service free trials that are going on right now.
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.
Rockstar Games has revealed that Grand Theft Auto 6's release date is May 26, 2026, and indie game publisher Devolver Digital says it’s already making plans to be there with a new game of its own.
The company took a lighthearted shot at what is indisputably set up to be the biggest game launch of 2026 with a release date announcement of its own on X/Twitter. Now that GTA 6 has a proper release date, Devolver Digital has announced plans to release a mystery title on that same May 26 date. It’s a chaotic marketing strategy that Devolver Digital seems serious about following through on at least for now.
The mystery game’s release date arrives after the company previously made the promise to launch a game of its own when Rockstar finally announced its long-awaited GTA 6 release date. We now know that date to be May 26 of next year, so naturally, Devolver Digital has a message: “You can’t escape us.”
You can’t escape us.
— Devolver Digital (@devolverdigital) May 2, 2025
May 26, 2026 it is then. https://t.co/eVa5bB1vrh
Devolver Digital has an extensive library of smaller-scale titles such as Hotline Miami, Enter the Gungeon, The Messenger, Katana Zero, Cult of the Lamb, and more. Whether the company plans to release a follow-up to an existing series or something new entirely remains to be seen. Upcoming entries in its catalog of games include Baby Steps and Stick It to the Stickman, two projects that are due out before 2025 comes to an end. There’s also Enter the Gungeon 2 and Human Fall Flat 2, which are both expected to arrive sometime in 2026, though developer No Brakes Games has already assured fans that it has no intention of releasing the latter on May 26.
We can confirm that Human Fall Flat 2 will NOT be releasing on May 26, 2026 https://t.co/zl3GbjSmia
— Human Fall Flat (@HumanFallFlat) May 2, 2025
More than a year out from launch, GTA 6 is already positioned to be a juggernaut video game. It’ll be Rockstar’s first numbered entry in its critically acclaimed sandbox series since 2013, with many doing everything they can to ensure they’ll be able to play on day one. Devolver Digital is doing its best to get a slice of that pie in a very Devolver Digital way, but we’ll have to wait to see exactly how it will do so.
For more, you can read up on Rockstar’s history of delaying it big-budget releases. You can also learn more about how a game like GTA 6 affects more than just Rockstar’s plans by clicking here.
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).
Spoilers ahead for Marvel’s Thunderbolts*.
Marvel Studios has officially retitled Thunderbolts* as The New Avengers. The studio made the announcement on social media Monday with a change to the title on the film’s poster. And lest you think this is just a social media stunt on Marvel’s part, the New Avengers poster is already being used by AMC Theaters and Fandango to promote Thunderbolts ticket sales.
Marvel also posted a video of the cast peeling the Thunderbolts title off the poster to reveal The New Avengers underneath it at last week's Hollywood premiere as well as a video of Sebastian Stan changing posters at a bus stop.
The asterisk in the title of Thunderbolts had long been a matter of speculation until the ending of Thunderbolts revealed that Yelena Belova, Bucky Barnes, Red Guardian, Ghost, U.S. Agent and Sentry/Bob Reynolds were the New Avengers lineup spontaneously announced by Valentina Allegra de Fontaine.
Marvel Studios' #̶T̶h̶u̶n̶d̶e̶r̶b̶o̶l̶t̶s̶* #TheNewAvengers is now playing only in theaters.
— Marvel Studios* (@MarvelStudios) May 5, 2025
Get tickets: https://t.co/bFq0RNfp6K pic.twitter.com/HWfzmFBANq
Rebranding Thunderbolts as The New Avengers in its second week of release is a shrewd commercial calculation by Marvel Studios and Disney. While Thunderbolts performed well in its opening weekend, topping the domestic box office with $76 million, the Avengers films were billion dollar-grossing blockbusters.
Perhaps the movie will perform even better in the coming weeks now that general audiences know that the film is really a restart of the Avengers franchise.
The New Avengers – along with Sam Wilson/Captain America, the Fantastic Four and the X-Men – will return in Avengers: Doomsday, which is now filming in London. Doctor Doom star Robert Downey Jr. let the New Avengers reveal slip in an Instagram post over the weekend about him and his Doomsday co-stars going to see Thunderbolts but he later deleted the “New Avengers” mention from it.
What do you think of Marvel officially retitling Thunderbolts* as The New Avengers? Let us know in the comments.
Happy Monday! Microsoft just announced Gears of War: Reloaded, a remaster of the original 2006 game that will launch on August 26 on Xbox, PC and PlayStation. The shiny new version will come with improved visuals and audio, cross-play and cross-progression, and all the DLC from the Gears of War: Ultimate Edition.
"As we approach the 20th anniversary of Gears of War in 2026, we’re reflecting on what this franchise means. It’s about the stories we’ve told, the friendships we’ve built, and the unforgettable moments we’ve shared together. With Gears of War: Reloaded, we’re opening that door to more players than ever," said Mike Crump, Studio Head at The Coalition in the announcement post.
Not only do PlayStation owners get to play, the love can be shared across the console barricades.
"Gears of War: Reloaded is built for shared play — whether you’re teaming up in split-screen or jumping online. The Campaign supports two-player co-op, and Versus Multiplayer allows up to 8 players. With cross-play across all platforms, you and your friends can squad up no matter where you play — no Microsoft account required," confirmed Crump.
However, signing in with a Microsoft account unlocks full cross-platform functionality. It enables cross-progression, so your Campaign and multiplayer progress carries across devices. It also allows you to send invites and play with friends across platforms — like Xbox to PlayStation or Steam to Xbox."
Microsoft also delivered a full list of the improvements that all players - whatever the console - can expect to see:
As a little treat for the Gears of War faithful, Gears of War: Reloaded will be a free upgrade for any players who purchased the digital version of Gears of War: Ultimate Edition ahead of today's announcement. If you're one of the special ones expect a code via Xbox DM ahead of the release.
Rachel Weber is the Senior Editorial Director of Games at IGN and an elder millennial. She's been a professional nerd since 2006 when she got her start on Official PlayStation Magazine in the UK, and has since worked for GamesIndustry.Biz, Rolling Stone and GamesRadar. She loves horror, horror movies, horror games, and French Bulldogs. Those extra wrinkles on her face are thanks to going time blind and staying up too late finishing every sidequest in RPGs like Fallout and Witcher 3.
Ubisoft has just released Title Update 1.0.4 for Assassin’s Creed: Shadows, and shared its full patch notes. So, let’s see what this new update brings to the table. Patch 1.0.4 is 17GB in size on Ubisoft Connect and 8.5GB on Steam. This update adds new free story content to the game. To be more precise, … Continue reading Assassin’s Creed: Shadows Title Update 1.0.4 Released & Detailed →
The post Assassin’s Creed: Shadows Title Update 1.0.4 Released & Detailed appeared first on DSOGaming.
Microsoft has just announced a new remaster of the first Gears of War, Gears of War: Reloaded. This is the second remaster of Gears of War, as the first one was the Ultimate Edition. So, let’s see what Reloaded brings to the table. Gears of War: Reloaded will have 4K assets. It will also have … Continue reading Gears of War: Reloaded Announced, Coming to PC This Summer →
The post Gears of War: Reloaded Announced, Coming to PC This Summer appeared first on DSOGaming.
The Pokémon Trading Card Game singles market has taken a sharp dive, making it an ideal time to pick up high-value cards for less. With prices on many chase cards falling below recent norms, collectors can now complete sets or grab favorites without relying on luck from booster packs.
Interested in sealed products? Amazon is discounting a selection of TCG boxes and bundles. From legacy boxes to recent releases, many of these products are coming in over MSRP, which is why I want to let readers know that retailers putting pricing up isn't their only option during Pokémania 2025. TCG Player is a secondary marketplace that is widely used in the US for the gold standard on current Pokémon TCG values thanks to its value tracking across the secondary market. Let's get into it, regardless of ripping open booster packs or finding that dream chase card:
This set comes with four booster packs, a foil Infernape V, a foil Empoleon, and a jumbo-sized Infernape V card. It's a compact product with good display value and a steady mix of packs. This big box set is one of the only ways to buy Sword and Shield era booster packs at retail, and it's cheaper than the secondary market right now. Looking for Fusion Strike or Lost Origins singles and sealed product? I've got you covered there too:
This five-pack tin includes a random promo card featuring Kyogre ex, Xerneas ex, or Dialga ex. Two of the packs are from Surging Sparks expansion which is nice to see amongst the mix of Stellar Crown and Temporal Forces. If you're only after some illustration rares and nothing too expensive, you'll find plenty of single cards for you binder for less below:
The IGN Store has launched exclusive merchandise for Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. The collection includes prints, hoodies, t-shirts, mugs, and other themed gear. Prices start at $15 with a wide range of characters and designs represented.
This full booster box contains 36 packs from Surging Sparks. For players who want 36 packs to open in one sitting, this works out the cheapest, but it's still around $60 above MSRP. Most of the chase cards from this set can be bought for less:
Humble’s latest bundle features fifteen games and bonuses from id Software, including DOOM Eternal, DOOM 64, and multiple Wolfenstein titles. It also includes a coupon for 10% off DOOM: The Dark Ages. For $28, the value is strong across retro and modern releases, making this a savage deal for FPS fans.
This includes 18 booster packs, three exclusive promo cards, a magnetic card holder, a playmat, and a deck box. It's built for collectors who want full presentation value. Once again, if you just wasnt a certain card, take a look at the singles market before you buy:
This box includes nine booster packs, a full-art Eevee promo, 65 themed sleeves, and a wide array of gameplay accessories. This is also nearly three times the MSRP, which is crazy. If you really want to box and contents, go for it, but there's better options on the secondary market right now:
This ETB focuses on Pecharunt with a sweet looking promo and comes with nine booster packs, themed card sleeves, dice, condition markers, and a collector’s box with dividers. Same situation here, it's a cool addition to your collection, but this has gone up by around $10 from last week. Meanwhile the singles market is crashing:
This six-pack bundle features cards from the Paldean Fates line, which centers on Shiny Pokémon. The pricing puts it just under the typical cost of buying packs individually, but it's still expensive compared to the cards that can be bought right now in this set:
Each box includes four booster packs and one foil promo featuring a random Eevee evolution. The included storage box has built-in dividers, which helps keep growing collections organized.If you fancy paying $15 per booster and want the stamped regular ex eeveelution card, go for it. The stamped cards go anywhere from $15 to nearly $60, so there's arguably value in this box when considering the promo.
Each bundle includes three collectible tins, nine total booster packs, and sticker sheets. This box in particular contains Poké Ball, Premier Ball, and Moon Ball tins.
The same situation here, but trainers will get Poké Ball, Great Ball, and Ultra Ball tins instead.
One of the cheaper ways to get Surging Sparks boosters right now, albiet overpriced (again). There's only five cards in Surging Sparks that can't be bought for under $50, check it out:
If you want to keep this sealed for your collection, go for it. Otherwise, this is a waste of money for three booster packs. Here's some cool single card options:
Elden Ring Nightreign is IGN's cover story for the month of May. We got to spend two days at From Software's office in Tokyo, and came back with a heaping of reveals, interviews, hands-on impressions, and more.
To kick things off though, we've got the exclusive reveal of one of the eight Nightlords players will be facing off against at the end of a run in Nightreign. Introducing Libra: Creature of Night. This madness inducing boss packs some really interesting mechanics, including a decision you must make at the beginning of the fight where you can decide whether or not to make a deal with the boss to gain some sort of benefit, like gaining more strength, or more elemental resistance, or a very powerful weapon. Be careful, because the better the deal, the steeper the price, and the cost of the deal is never known until you actually take it.
Check it out in the gameplay video above, and stay tuned all May long for more exclusive Elden Ring Nightreign IGN First coverage!
Mitchell Saltzman is an editorial producer at IGN. You can find him on twitter @JurassicRabbit
Actor Tony Todd, who died last November at age 69, makes his last screen appearance in Final Destination Bloodlines wherein the horror icon reprises his franchise role as the enigmatic William Bludworth. IGN has an exclusive clip from Todd’s scene in the new film, which can be viewed via the player above or the embed below.
“It's actually a really special moment in the movie. A lot of people who've seen the film talk about how surprised they are, the level of emotion they feel during that scene,” Zach Lipovsky, who directed Final Destination Bloodlines with Adam Stein, told IGN last week.
Tony Todd made his first appearance as the mysterious undertaker and later coroner William Bludworth in the original Final Destination in 2000. He reprised the role in Final Destination 2 and Final Destination 5 (only Todd’s voice is heard in Final Destination 3). Bloodlines will reveal new information about Bludworth's past.
Bludworth’s function in the series has been to explain the rules of death and the consequences of trying to cheat it to the doomed protagonists, and it’s what he does for the characters in this exclusive clip from Final Destination Bloodlines. But this time there’s a poignancy to Bludworth’s inclusion as the ailing Todd appears visibly frail and thin. Working with the filmmakers, Todd helped craft what would be his farewell to the franchise and his fans.
“We're really grateful that we had the ability to, from the beginning, design that experience for the audience with Tony and with all the writers and everybody. We knew he was ill for quite a while and he was extremely excited to be in the movie,” said Lipovsky.
“He was very grateful for the ability to participate in the film and he was so joyful on set when he was there and he was cracking jokes and really excited to just have his ability to be in the film and give his character a lot more backstory. We give a lot of answers to who Bludworth is in the film, which is something that during the franchise, people have been clamoring for for a really long time. But we also knew, like you said, that this was also going to be a goodbye of the character. And that's something that we worked very closely with him to figure out really the best way of doing that because these films are about death and his mortality was very present as we were working with him.”
Lipovsky continued: “One of the unique opportunities that came up was as he is at near the end of that scene, we asked him to actually throw away the script for a moment and just speak from the heart as to everything that he was thinking about as far as what the movie was about, what the franchise has been about, but also just what life's about and what is it all about in the end.
And the take that's in the film where he says, ‘Life is precious. Cherish every second because you never know when.’ And the earnestness that he says that with [it] all came in the moment from him. And I think you really feel that when you watch the movie that he's obviously speaking as a character who knows that their death is coming, but he's also speaking as an actor who's speaking to the audience as far as what's important in life. And that was a really powerful moment on set when we filmed that with him.”
(L-R) Owen Patrick Joyner as “Bobby”, Kaitlyn Santa Juana as “Stefanie”, Director Adam Stein, Tony Todd as “William Bludworth”, Teo Briones as “Charlie”, Director Zach Lipovsky, Rya Kihlstedt as “Darlene”, and Richard Harmon as “Erik” in New Line Cinema’s “Final Destination Bloodlines,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. (Photo By Eric Milner)
Fellow director Adam Stein said that Todd “relished” the chance to inject some dark wit into the scene and that those on set that day were moved to tears watching the terminally ill actor deliver what everyone knew would be his final big screen performance.
“A lot of the actors, ourselves, the crew, everyone was tearing up in that moment, except for him,” Stein recalled. “He sort of relished it. He had this sort of mischievous smile and even when he delivers that line and then says, ‘Good luck’ in the way that he has, that sort of dark, mischievous way as he goes out the door. He knew exactly what he was doing and he relished the opportunity to kind of have that goodbye and have that bit of a wink and have that message work on multiple levels. And it was a lot of fun. But I think he also really was excited about the opportunity to have a platform to say goodbye to his fans.”
Final Destination Bloodlines opens in theaters on May 16th.
When it comes to PC gaming, 4K is the wave of the future. You no longer need an ultra-powerful PC to enjoy it thanks to features like Nvidia DLSS and AMD Fluid Motion Frames. Monitors like the Asus ROG Swift PG32UCDM, my number one pick, can display extremely detailed images, incredible colors, and high frame rates all while still offering excellent responsiveness. And if you look and find that the price or PC requirements are too high, there are a ton of great gaming monitors out there.
A 4K gaming monitor is the ultimate way to experience your favorite PC games, providing incredible sharpness with four times the resolution of a 1080p gaming monitor. I've been reviewing more and more displays featuring this high resolution, and more graphics cards are able to run it well, making it more accessible than ever. They also make for some of the best monitors for PS5. To help narrow your search, we’ve tested and researched dozens of options, bringing you our top five 4K gaming monitors.
Additional contributions by Danielle Abraham and Matthew S. Smith.
If you're looking for the best of the best and don't mind paying for it, the Asus ROG Swift PG32UCDP is the monitor for you. At 32 inches, it's the perfect size to take in all of the details of its crisp 4K resolution. Its WOLED – that's white OLED, not to be confused with QD, or Quantum Dot OLED – panel is exceptionally bright and offers incredible colors that are factory calibrated, making it a great choice for creative work as well as top-tier gaming. And because it has a dedicated white LED, it's more power efficient and should last longer than competing QD-OLED monitors.
As I noted in my review of this Asus ROG Swift monitor, what truly sets this monitor apart is its versatility. You're able to game in 4K in exquisite detail up to 240Hz, but it also offers a special 480Hz mode for next level clarity and responsiveness. This mode drops the resolution to 1080p, allowing more graphics cards to achieve that frame rate and enjoy its benefits. It also offers Extreme Low Motion Blur (ELMB) that improves motion blur even further. It's one of the only monitors on this list that offers a measureable improvement to motion blur and clarity so much that you'll be able to tell the difference right away even if you're a casual gamer. I've been a longtime Battlefield player but far from a pro and the difference was immediately noticeable, even without pixel-peeping.
There's also a massive suite of gaming features that can also offer an advantage in competitive matches. Some even push the line on what's ethical to use, like the Sniper Mode, which gives you a reticle and a zoomed in window, right in the center of your screen. We'll leave that up to you, but the Asus ROG Swift PG32UCDP is easily the best 4K monitor right now.
Remember the days when 4K high refresh rate monitors cost hundreds, if not well over $1,000? Well, with the Arzopa M3RC, I think it's safe to say that less expensive 4K monitors have finally arrived. Coming in right around $300, this display offers a whole lot at an affordable price, and finally makes this gaming experience accessible to the masses.
If the brand name sounds familiar, that's because it has been one of the up-and-coming manufacturers of quality portable monitors. It has received quite a bit of attention for balancing features with affordability and is clearly applying those same principles here in its venture into the full-size gaming monitor market. Looking at the specs, it seems designed to make a splash and prove it has what it takes to level up to the current, more demanding requirements of PC gaming.
This display offers a native 4K resolution with a 144Hz refresh rate. Games look crisp and run smoothly, enhanced by its support for AMD FreeSync and Nvidia G-Sync compatibility. It uses a color-rich IPS panel that's surprisingly accurate right out of the box, which isn't something I can typically say about lower-priced monitors in traditionally more expensive categories.
In my experience, monitors that enter a space and challenge conventional pricing typically cut corners. While this monitor isn't without trade-offs, it does offer more than what I would otherwise expect to see. For example, it includes a USB Type-C video input, as well as a two-port USB hub, both of which are usually the first features left on the cutting room floor.
So, what exactly do you sacrifice for this accessible pricing? Brightness, though not as much as you might expect. Arzopa rates this at 350 nits, which is middle of the road instead of outright low. More concerning is how well the brand will continue to support the monitor should anything go wrong. While it comes with a 1-year limited warranty and there aren't widespread reports of support being a problem, it's worth keeping in mind with any smaller brand establishing itself in a market.
For it's asking price, it's worth considering either way. Especially considering how many early adopters appear to love it.
The Gigabyte M27U may stretch the definition of "budget," but not by much. Compared to most 4K gaming monitors around this price, it offers a better picture and great HDR experience thanks to its high peak brightness and edge-lit local dimming.
Picture quality is what you're after with a 4K gaming monitor and the Gigabyte M27U is best in class at this price point. In SDR, it tops out right around 400 nits, but turn on HDR and that jumps to just under 700 nits. That means brighter highlights and colors that jump off the screen for a more enjoyable gaming experience. It also features an array of local dimming zones which help improve contrast beyond what typical IPS panels are capable of.
The monitor also has a delightful range of gaming features. You can turn on an on-screen reticle for games that lack them, peek into the shadows with Shadow Boost, and more. It's impressively easy to access these features, and all of its picture settings, using Gigabyte's OSD Sidekick software, saving you from fumbling through menus with its physical controls. It's also a great choice if you plan to use it with more than one system or enjoy swapping to a console, as a built-in KVM allows you to switch inputs and take your mouse and keyboard with you with a push of a button. I often use this feature to quickly change between my laptop and desktop, work and play.
The only downside is that you'll have to choose between those local dimming zones and peak brightness. With the local dimming feature enabled, full screen brightness is reduced and you'll only see those high figures in highlights. Turning off local dimming unlocks it for the whole screen. In my opinion, it's a fair trade-off but you can count on a great gaming experience either way.
If you can't live without an ultrawide gaming monitor but also want the best resolution you can find for the 21:9 aspect ratio, look no further than the LG UltraGear GX9. It's a massive 45-inch display with a deep 800R curvature, great brightness, and even offers dual resolutions and refresh rates so you can tailor exactly the kind of gaming experience you want to receive.
Apart from its stunning 5120x2160 resolution, this monitor's 45-inch diagonal width is wide enough to reach into your peripheral vision and create the effect of drawing you into the middle of the screen. It's a recipe for immersion, especially with the fluidity afforded by its high native refresh rate of 165Hz.
While that might be perfectly fine for most games, if you are a competitive esports player, 165Hz just won't cut it. LG has an answer. Like my No. 1 pick on this list, gamers can toggle an FHD mode that lowers the resolution but allows you to turn the refresh rate all the way up to 330Hz. Paired with the naturally low latency of its OLED panel, it's able to offer top-tier responsiveness and motion clarity when you need it most.
If you've never gamed on an OLED gaming monitor before, you're in for a treat. This panel technology allows each pixel to be independently controlled for brightness, right down to turning it off. In practice, this gives you infinite contrast, so even without turning HDR mode on within Windows, you can enjoy a stellar high contrast, vivid colors, and a wider dynamic range than other panel types are able to provide. Turn on HDR, and it gets even better. This also applies to movies and other types of content, so even your entertainment outside of gaming will get a nice boost in picture quality.
Moving to a monitor of this caliber does carry a couple of trade-offs. The biggest is that you're going to need a powerful GPU to run games anywhere near its refresh rate. Remember, 4K at an ultrawide resolution is actually significantly higher than native 4K and harder to run. Its deep curve also isn't for everyone and can be distracting outside of gaming for some users.
If you can accept those caveats, this is an excellent pick and one of the few choices for a premium 4K ultrawide offering a high refresh rate available today.
Flat panels have been in vogue, but the Alienware AW3225QF steps in as the best choice for gamers who can't live without the curve. Its 32-inch size and 240Hz resolution ensure a gameplay experience that is immersive and smooth. With its quantum dot panel, colors are as rich as they are accurate. Its curve is gentle but works to draw you into your game without distorting text like deeper curves might. It's well-rounded and excellent.
The monitor features a 240Hz refresh rate which, when paired with its 0.3ms response time, makes it a great choice for competitive gamers. When I tested it, I found absolutely no ghosting, both in synthetic tests and real world games, so that won't be a concern as you frag enemies to pull in a last-minute win. And thanks to its wide VRR support and frame rate range, you can confidently jump into games knowing that your experience will be smooth and tear-free.
The above is true for most new flagship OLEDs, but what sets the AW3225QF is its HDR experience. In SDR, brightness usually hovers around 250 nits, but highlights can pop all the way to 1,000 nits in HDR. Unlike most competing monitors, it also supports Dolby Vision for streaming movies and TV shows, and also supports eARC for connecting a soundbar.
Whether you're a dedicated PC gamer or a console gamer looking to level up your experience with a gentle but noticeable curve, the Alienware AW3225QF is a killer choice.
If you're in the market for a new 4K gaming monitor, consider the features and type of image you hope to enjoy and compare that with your budget. Over the last couple of years, 4K gaming monitors have really come into their own. Ultra HD displays with high refresh rates are easy to find when they used to be rarities. Today, you can find options well below $400 and still enjoy refresh rates up to 144Hz with support for gaming features like Nvidia G-Sync and HDR support. While all decent 4K gaming monitors should deliver a crisp image, if you're willing to pay more, you can expect better image quality, brightness, features and settings, and panel types. Depending on what you're looking for, it can be wise to wait and save just a little longer than you planned to acquire the best monitor for your particular needs.
While 4K gaming monitors can deliver stunning visuals and will be a good choice for many gamers, they're not the best choice for everyone by default. If your PC is aging and has an entry-level graphics card, trying to play in 4K will likely result in games with unplayably low frame rates. There's no way around the higher demand such a high resolution places on your PC.
If your system is running a mid-range GPU from this generation or a high-end GPU from last generation, there's a good chance that upgrading to 4K could make a substantial difference for the better in your gaming experience. Upscaling technology has advanced a great deal over the last several years, allowing a much wider range of hardware to play well with it. You no longer need the best system on the block just to hit 60fps. If you're using an AMD or Nvidia graphics card that falls into the range described above, it's definitely worth considering.
1440p can be a better choice if you prefer higher frame rates over crisp visuals. Because it is much less demanding to run, it's possible to push games to higher frame rates on higher settings than is possible with 4K. However, with upscaling technologies like Nvidia DLSS and AMD Fluid Motion Frames, you no longer need a powerhouse PC to play many games at 4K. Those same technologies can push 1440p frame rates even higher, however, so it's wise to consider what you value most and what type of frame rate you hope to achieve.
Not necessarily. Thanks to advanced upscaling features like Nvidia DLSS and AMD Fluid Motion Frames, it's easier than ever to play games at 4K without having a top-of-the-line graphics card. If you want to play games in native 4K on ultra settings, you will still need a top-tier GPU. But, if you take advantage of either of the two technologies above, you can enjoy great visuals and frame rates with only a midrange GPU, like the AMD Radeon 7700 XT or Nvidia RTX 4070.
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, Tom’s Hardware, Popular Science, USA Today’s Reviewed, and Popular Mechanics. Find Chris on Twitter @gamebynight.
© Paradox
Developer Ice Code Games (Hard West II, Rogue Waters) have announced Nightmare Frontier, a tactical turn-based strategy game that's also an extraction looter. Think "XCOM meets Hunt: Showdown with a dash of Cthulhu thrown in." Check out the announcement trailer above and the first screenshots in the gallery below.
The developers describe the setup for Nightmare Frontier as follows: "The story of Nightmare Frontier unfolds in an alternate version of 19th-century America, shortly after a mysterious event that forever changed the world. The line between reality and an unknown horror has started to fade, and those who remain are left to uncover what truly happened that night – and what’s behind the titular Nightmare. The streets were overrun by monsters emerging from the dark abysses of the terror dimension – the survivors called these creatures Dreadweavers. These beings are the physical embodiment of people's deepest fears. Players will step into the shoes of the ringleader, who, despite overwhelming terror, finds a chance for survival in this new reality. Leading other scavengers, they venture deep into the city, risking everything they have left in search of loot."
Nightmare Frontier aims to mix turn-based "gun-n-slash" gameplay with gameplay-altering horror, an enticing risk-reward system, and alluring loot. Wishlist Nightmare Frontier on Steam if you're interested.
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.
© Marvelous Inc.
© Too Kyo
© Bethesda
This article contains spoilers for The Last of Us season 2, episode 4 and the video game The Last of Us Part 2.
The calm-yet-ruthless leader of the Washington Liberation Front was an imposing character in The Last of Us Part 2 video game. Isaac Dixon, played by the ever-fantastic Jeffrey Wright, cast a long, dark shadow over the conflict between the militaristic WLF and the religious Seraphites. But that’s largely all it was: a shadow. Isaac has very little screentime in the game, with less than a handful of scenes through which to make his required impact. The game’s restraint provides a great opportunity for HBO’s television adaptation, though, and The Last of Us season 2 leaps at the chance to delve deeper into the life of Isaac Dixon, once again played by Wright, in its strong fourth episode.
I’ve previously expressed my reservations about alterations made for the show, as I feel HBO’s depiction of Abby is an awkward half-change that only serves to weaken the story’s impact rather than strengthen the adaptation. The very opposite can be said for Isaac, who in episode four is introduced and examined across two powerful new scenes written for the show. Not only do they provide a strong introduction to Isaac for newcomers, they also open a larger window into the life of a character longtime fans have been held at arm’s length from. It’s not quite the dedicated episode treatment Bill and Frank got in season one, but it does a similar job.
Episode four cold opens in 2018, a decade and change prior to the season’s current events. In the back of a military truck, FEDRA troops laugh and joke about their brutal treatment of “voters”. It's a new term for The Last of Us, but one mournfully explained by Isaac: regular citizens are mockingly called voters because FEDRA stripped them of their democratic rights. While Isaac delivers his lines in a calm, almost reserved manner, it’s clear from his tone that he despises the group’s ruthless rule and murderous methods. And just in case that wasn’t obvious, two minutes later he locks his squad in the truck with two live hand grenades. Isaac doesn’t just disagree with FEDRA, he’s on a mission to destroy it.
Fifteen minutes later, we’re reunited with Isaac in the show’s current year of 2029, where he’s now head of the WLF. He’s still calm and collected, softly discussing how he longed for expensive cookware in the years before the quarantine. But as the scene unfolds into a brutal torture session, it becomes clear that Isaac’s cool head is no longer a sign of quiet determination, but calculated brutality. The luxury copper-bottom Mauviel pans he now owns (a “strange benefit of the apocalypse”) are used to sear the flesh of a captured Seraphite, each burn a futile attempt to release the plans hidden inside their mind.
This second scene is inspired by Isaac’s introduction in The Last of Us Part 2, in which Abby briefly sees inside a bathroom where a Seraphite is tied up. It’s clear that Isaac has been torturing him for information, but we see nothing of what is being implied. The show’s much-expanded version of that scene allows us to witness Isaac’s methods. There’s a quiet cruelty in the way Isaac has his prisoner offer out their hand to be burned. By not “succumbing” to a more classically brutal torture method – there’s no heavy-handed beatings, no aggressive waterboarding – it becomes clear that Issac sees himself as some sort of civilized interrogator. It’s an expression of his superiority over what he believes to be a sub-human enemy.
Of course, Isaac’s calm, conversational approach is no more or less effective than any other method. The Seraphite stonewalls him at every turn, even offering his hand out before being asked. This breaks Isaac’s demeanor, resulting in a deadly show of angry force. It’s a demonstration of Isaac’s frustration with the results of the interrogation, yes, but there’s something deeper here: he knows that his war against the Seraphites has only further calcified their cult mentality and galvanized their belief in The Prophet. The harder he pushes, the more immovable they become. His campaign against them has only ensured his own defeat.
The power of these two scenes is in their duality. In just two sequences, we have the entire history of Isaac: a man who stood up against oppression, only to become the oppressor himself.
A version of this story is readily available in The Last of Us Part 2, but only a true completionist will know it. Isaac’s history is revealed through snippets of dialogue and several written notes that, when pieced together, tell the tale of a revolutionary turned warmonger. A former marine, he joined the WLF during its infancy with a wish to erode FEDRA’s brutal regime. Following the murder of the group’s founders, Isaac was voted into command and established a highly efficient yet incredibly ruthless military force, eliminating FEDRA from Seattle and forming a new city-like living space within the fortified walls of the SoundView football stadium. But his goals did not stop with the removal of Seattle’s fascist rulers; his campaign saw him become obsessed with the total annihilation of the Seraphites, a local religious “death cult.” The two groups have been in perpetual conflict ever since, the Seraphites only emboldened by Isaac’s assassination of their leader, The Prophet.
Isaac’s circumstances are just another part of the game’s larger thesis on how violence begets violence. He is, ultimately, supporting background material – another dark echo of the same path both Ellie and Abby are following. As such, the fact that his story is revealed only through a handful of documents isn’t an issue. The journey of the game’s protagonists, the women controlled by the player and through whose eyes this world is experienced, is the important thing. It does mean that his story is little more than a framework of facts, though. And so the show, which isn’t locked to a specific viewpoint in the same way the game is, has the opportunity to add much more colour to that framework. By spending time with Isaac in two very significant eras of his life, we see not only his core characteristics – his calm demeanor, his determination, his focused goals – but we also see how those facets are completely recontextualised as the environment around him changes.
Isaac is, of course, a character in Abby’s side of the story rather than Ellie’s, and so I don’t expect to see much more from him in the coming weeks. Provided the show sticks to the structure of the game as closely as it thus far has, it won’t be until season three that we get to see much more of the WLF’s inner workings. Regardless of how long we have to wait, my hope is that we get more of this type of character expansion, not just for Isaac but also key members of the Seraphites, too. If one of the show’s strengths is to bring new perspectives through original writing, then a more in-depth look at the conflict between those groups – something that arguably needed further expansion in the game – would be a great angle for showrunners Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann to take. Because if the show can expand its scope beyond just Ellie and Abby to analyse these characters further, its thesis on revenge, conflict, and violence can hopefully be given additional depth and value. Something wonderfully done here with Isaac, as he’s finally given the extra time he deserves.
Matt Purslow is IGN's Senior Features Editor.
Grand Theft Auto fans, there is some good news and some bad news. The good news is finally, after all these years, we have an actual day-and-date release time for GTA 6. The bad news? It’s around six months later than the ‘Fall 2025’ we were originally told. To many in the video game industry, the new date of May 26, 2026 is a welcome sigh of relief – dozens of publishers and developers of all sizes were fearful of meticulously planning their release campaigns only to later discover they’d be releasing in the same month as this herculean title. However, there are many undated heavy-hitters due to land next year that will now be frantically searching for a new date.
What’s clear is that Grand Theft Auto 6 has found itself touted as the lynchpin to the video game industry’s near future – any news on the project’s development has a huge ripple effect. So how does a six-month delay reflect a significant change in Rockstar’s corporate culture, call into question this year’s console market revenue, and potentially affect the Switch 2?
Last year, the video game industry’s total revenue hit $184.3 billion, a 0.2% increase from 2023. Contradicting analyst predictions of a slight downturn, it prompted a sigh of relief for video game manufacturers and publishers. However, in the console space, revenue dropped by 1% – and we’re already seeing the consequences. A downturn of console hardware sales combined with a heightening technology tariff war has forced prices up for both Microsoft and Sony. This generation needs a definitive console-shifting title – it needs Grand Theft Auto 6.
Research groups estimate the crime sequel to make $1 billion off pre-orders alone and $3.2 billion in its first year of launch. It took Grand Theft Auto 5 three days to make $1 billion, could it take Grand Theft Auto 6 just 24 hours? Circana analyst Mat Piscatella believes that “there’s probably never been a more important thing to ever release in the industry,” because the game’s impact will help define our understanding of the video game industry’s potential growth over the next decade. There are rumors that it could be the first-ever $100 video game, making it a new watershed moment for the industry. That new benchmark could give the industry the shot-in-the-arm growth many analysts say it needs. However, it’s also possible Grand Theft Auto 6 is simply too much of a monolithic outlier to create progress outside of itself.
In 2018, Rockstar Games had a publicity crisis on its hands. Reports of 100 hour weeks alongside formerly mandatory overtime whilst developing Red Dead Redemption 2, plus former and current employees speaking on intense crunch periods stemming from Grand Theft Auto 4, painted a stark picture of one of gaming’s titans. Since then, the company has reportedly undergone an internal reinvention of sorts – according to a Bloomberg report, contractors being converted to full-time employees and a ‘flexitime’ policy enabling workers to take time off for every hour of overtime worked are just two of the many more compassionate policies enacted. Earlier this year, Rockstar’s old reputation threatened to rear its head as staff were made to return to the office five days a week to close out Grand Theft Auto 6’s development – a move which makes the reason behind the delay pretty clear. Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier confirmed as much on BlueSky, explaining that his own Rockstar sources said that there’s “Too much work, not enough time, and what appears to be a real desire from management to avoid brutal crunch.” Rockstar can’t properly deliver a game that will change the video gaming world if it slips back into old habits; while the delay is disappointing to those playing, it’s undeniably a huge relief to those developing.
If you’re a publisher, releasing your game at the same time as Grand Theft Auto 6 is akin to throwing a bucket of water into a tsunami. Discussing the formerly scheduled ‘Fall 2025’ release window, a report by The Game Business highlighted how such a nebulous date was affecting publishers worldwide. One studio boss called Rockstar’s game “a huge meteor and we’ll just have to stay clear of the blast zone,” while another questioned “if we move out of 2025, what if Rockstar do, too?” (An unsurprisingly predictive worry). We even have the likes of EA CEO Andrew Wilson implicitly commenting on the game’s looming shadow in the context of the new Battlefield, citing “some things happening in the year that may cause us to think differently about our launch timing.”
However, huge releases don’t always overshadow those around them. Despite launching at the same time as Bethesda’s Oblivion remake, Kepler Interactive’s original RPG Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 still sold over one million copies in just three days, with senior portfolio manager Matt Handrahan even joking that it was the video game industry’s Barbenheimer moment. It’s hard to believe such a moment can exist for Grand Theft Auto 6, of course, and so it goes unsaid that such a quirky idea will not be part of any publisher’s campaign plans. Don’t expect a Grand Theft Fable moment in 2026.
Currently, it’s unclear to what extent the new May 26, 2026 release date will shake up the plans of other publishers and developers. There are still many heavy-hitter titles that are undated including the likes of Fable, Gears of War: E-Day, EA’s new Battlefield title, Mass Effect spiritual successor Exodus and more. There will certainly be some developers now scrambling to change their internal release date plans, but the wider public will be none the wiser. However, this flag planting by Rockstar no doubt means that developers and publishers will feel more confident in announcing their release plans to the world. But they might want to hold on a minute.
It seems very unlikely that this will be the final date for Grand Theft Auto 6 for two reasons. Both Grand Theft Auto 5 and Red Dead Redemption 2 were subject to two date delays, with the first delay being to the second quarter of the next year, followed by a second delay to the third quarter of that same year. Right now, Grand Theft Auto 6 is replicating that exact same timeline, delayed from Fall 2025 to May 2026, so one more delay to October/November 2026 seems a reasonably educated prediction.
That October/November window seems even more likely when you consider the potential for both Microsoft and Sony to create a new console bundle including the crime sequel, which will surely shoot up sales around the holiday period. Sony sold 6.4 million PlayStation 4s during October - December 2014, more than double the consoles they sold between April and September of that year. Of course there would have been the classic Christmas boost, but what else happened in that time frame? Grand Theft Auto 5 released on PS4.
What could be the bigger surprise, though , is that Nintendo may be one of the parties most affected by this delay. Recently, Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick pledged full support for the Switch 2, leading fans to speculate about if Grand Theft Auto 6 may also be eyeing a Switch 2 launch. Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy’s Definitive Edition saw a surprise launch onto the Nintendo Switch, so there’s precedent for an adult franchise on a typically family-friendly console. Many believed the Switch technology wasn’t powerful enough to run a game like Grand Theft Auto, however last year modders released a video showing off an in-progress port of GTA 5 running on Switch using the game’s leaked source code. While it does seem unlikely that Nintendo would have factored Grand Theft Auto 6 into the Switch’s first-year success, there’s a clear, strong relationship between publisher Take-Two and Nintendo that shouldn’t be ignored. When looking at the console market as part of the overall video game industry, Nintendo is still a huge part of that no matter how much of an island they may seem. The Nintendo Switch was still host to an array of generation-defining games including The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, Red Dead Redemption, Metal Gear Solid, Crysis and more. And with Cyberpunk 2077 arriving on Switch 2 at launch, complete with its current gen-only Phantom Liberty expansion, we shouldn’t ignore the potential for “miracle” ports.
What’s clear is that there is a hell of a lot riding on Grand Theft Auto 6. Many different head honchos of the video game industry, from studio heads to chief analysts, believe that this generation-defining game will be the one to break the industry’s growth stagnation. It’s hard to deny the global feverish demand and anticipation for a game that has effectively been in the works for over a decade. There are impossibly high expectations on the teams at Rockstar Games to deliver something that not only single-handedly restores the video game industry back to its pre-pandemic growth, but also presents an entirely new kind of video game experience that will become the new benchmark for developers and publishers moving forward. Rockstar only has one shot to get this right – what’s six more months after 13 years?
Sab Astley is a freelance writer who has written for IGN, Polygon, TotalFilm, Rolling Stone, Radio Times, and Metro UK.
Modder ‘Canarious’ has just released the first 4K Texture Pack for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered. This pack focuses on improving the textures of armors, weapons, clothing, and jewelry. So, let’s take a closer look at it. Powered by Unreal Engine 5, Oblivion Remastered came out last month on PC. For the most part, … Continue reading First 4K Texture Pack for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered →
The post First 4K Texture Pack for The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered appeared first on DSOGaming.
Full spoilers follow for Thunderbolts.
Load out and lock in, Marvel fans, because Thunderbolts is now in theaters. The latest film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe reshuffles the MCU’s status quo in a big way in the third act, setting up a new Avengers roster that will presumably be a major part of Avengers: Doomsday and Secret Wars. We spoke with the film’s co-writer, Eric Pearson – who's worked on everything from The Consultant to Thor: Ragnarok to The Fantastic Four: First Steps – to dive into all the little details – and big spoilers – in Thunderbolts.
As Pearson – who shares a writing credit with Joanna Calo – explains, the core idea of Thunderbolts started with Florence Pugh’s Black Widow character, which then led to the inclusion of David Harbour’s Red Guardian, who was also in that 2021 film, and Hannah John-Kamen as Ghost from the Ant-Man and the Wasp side of things.
“It was always the idea to follow Yelena Belova as the lead of this, which brought in Alexei [Shostakov aka Red Guardian],” Pearson tells IGN. “Ghost, [I] just always wanted to use her.”
Laurence Fishburne’s character Bill Foster from Ant-Man and the Wasp, who has ties to Ghost, was also in an early version of the script.
“There was a version where Bill Foster was involved for a bit as part of the Ghost storyline, and there was a version at first where he was not involved and we brought him in I think in the second draft,” says Pearson. “But yeah, it was always [mostly] the same team from the beginning.”
The informal team, which is informally called the Thunderbolts, also includes Sebastian Stan’s Bucky Barnes, Wyatt Russell’s John Walker, and by the end of the film, Robert “Bob” Reynolds. The latter character is new to the MCU; altered by Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Valentina Allegra de Fontaine to have superhuman abilities, he becomes the Sentry – who Valentina intends to be a replacement for the Avengers.
One major difference in earlier versions of the script was that Sentry wasn’t always in the movie, and in fact Russell’s John Walker was intended to fill the role of, as Pearson puts it, “the punching villain” at the end of the film.
“Valentina, as part of her manipulation of him, had convinced him that his super-soldier serum needed upkeep,” recalls the writer. “She was actually implanting this time bomb in him that was going to go off at some point. … And so he, in his own way, hulks out and becomes someone that they have to fight.”
The only problem was that another Marvel movie was also in the works at that point that also featured a character hulking out: Red Hulk in Captain America: Brave New World.
“It just didn't feel right [to do that],” says Pearson. “My goal … was ending this Marvel movie with a hug, not a punch. They were going to never win a fight against a Hulk character, so they were going to have to eventually just talk him down.”
And so entered the Sentry, whose adventures Pearson remembered reading while in the Marvel Writers Program. And with the Sentry of course also comes his dark side, which is known as the Void. In the film, this dark persona is activated, attacking New York and turning everyone in his path into shadows.
“If that's just heroic ambition and self-esteem on one side and depression and self-loathing on the other side, it works the same way,” says Pearson of replacing John Walker as the antagonistic force with Sentry. “And if we do that, then Bob and the Sentry and the Void are pretty much all of our characters' emotional journey wrapped up into one entity. … He was the ultimate person that they couldn't defeat in any physical way and needed to find an emotional solution for.”
In the climactic moments of Thunderbolts, Yelena and the team willingly go into the shadow realm to stop the Void and, through the power of empathy and that good old group hug that Pearson promised, they help Bob undo all the damage he caused. This happens just in time for the team to stumble into a press conference held by Valentina where she dubs them the New Avengers, confirming a theory we at IGN posited earlier this year.
During the closing credits, we see a bunch of fun magazine covers and the like which question the validity of these “New Avengers” before a mid-credits scene where Red Guardian tries to convince a fellow shopper to buy a box of Wheaties that has the team’s picture on it. (His dream, realized!) And then the post-credits scene is set 14 months later, where we learn the New Avengers are having difficulties securing the rights to their team name because of interference from Sam Wilson, aka Captain America. Cap doesn’t show up, but Bucky mentions him by name. This would seem to indicate that Sam is working on forming his own team of Avengers, just as ex-President Ross had asked him to lead back in Brave New World.
Interestingly, the post-credits scene was not written by Pearson. As is often the case with these things, it became a post-production endeavor (in fact, Thunderbolts director Jake Schreier has confirmed that it was shot on the set of an upcoming production in the past several weeks, presumably Avengers: Doomsday).
“I'm super jealous of it because it's so fun and it's so great,” Pearson says. “And one of my favorite moments in the whole movie is just Wyatt Russell: ‘I don't know what any of these buttons do. Nobody labeled them.’ It just cracks me up.”
The post-credits scene ends with a moment fans have been waiting for for a long, long time: The New Avengers get a notification of an approaching spacecraft, and we see a ship with a big “4” emblazoned on the side. The Fantastic Four have finally arrived in the MCU!
Pearson explains that this was not always how the team were supposed to land in the so-called Sacred Timeline.
“Well, because when they started shooting Thunderbolts, I was actually in Burbank writing Fantastic Four and checking in on how Thunderbolts was going because I was just like, ‘How's my baby? Is it walking? Is it running?’” he laughs. “And everybody was saying that Thunderbolts was going really great. And from being in the Fantastic Four room, I knew that it felt very far at the time from the Thunderbolts world. So this connection came in much later and probably has some link towards what they're doing next in... Sorry, I shouldn't say probably, I'm doing total conjecture here, but just based off of how they architect these things, I'm sure that there's going to be a next step in a movie coming out soon.”
Considering that the stars of FF (Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach) have already been announced by Marvel for Avengers: Doomsday, it’s not that hard to piece together where this is all going…
Now that we know the Thunderbolts are actually the New Avengers, it makes perfect sense why the team will be major players in Avengers: Doomsday. They all got directors chairs in the big Doomsday cast announcement after all (aside from poor Taskmaster, of course, who doesn’t survive Thunderbolts). Since Sam Wilson doesn’t appear to have actually formed a new team of Avengers yet, the New Avengers will presumably be the first line of defense against Robert Downey, Jr’s Doctor Doom. And the Fantastic Four too, maybe? That’s just the tip of the helicarrier when it comes to questions we have after Thunderbolts, however.
Bucky being revealed to be a US congressman was one of the weirder beats in Brave New World, and the payoff in Thunderbolts doesn’t help matters. He trips over his words in a press interview and his political responsibilities don’t stop him from getting on his motorcycle and firing explosives at O.X.E. vehicles… so why was he even part of Congress to begin with?
In the drafts of the film Pearson worked on, it turns out Bucky had a different day job.
“That happened after me,” he explains. “That was a Kevin [Feige] idea from what I understand, because it was all the same scenes but Bucky was, he was kind of a lobbyist a bit, or a better analogy would be like when you hire an old baseball player to shake hands at a car wash. Like politicians were using him as a way to propagandize, so you're meant to meet him [and be like] ‘Oh, this is humiliating, what a terrible fall for Bucky.’ And then you're like, ‘Oh wait, he's actually infiltrated this world of politics and commerce because he's investigating Valentina and he's got this congressman who's an ally to him and they're working together and then he goes on the hunt.’”
As for whether or not he’s even still in Congress when he’s part of the New Avengers? We have no clue.
Clearly Sam Wilson is not getting along with the New Avengers and is trying to take the copyright for the team name from them. Bucky says he tried to get through to Sam but that the conversation didn’t go well. So why is Sam being a jerk about this? Doesn’t he want to build a team of superheroes? He and Bucky have worked together many times in the past, so what is his problem with the New Avengers when Bucky is on the roster? Hopefully Doomsday sheds some light on this front, because as it stands it feels out of character for Sam to act this way without a good reason.
Will we see two distinct teams of Avengers in Doomsday? Avengers and Avengers with a Z, maybe (but hopefully not)? The main plot of Thunderbolts takes place after Brave New World since Valentina references Thaddeus Ross becoming Red Hulk during her impeachment hearing, and the post-credits scene is over a year after that. What was Sam doing all that time? Will he recruit the likes of Falcon, Thor, Ant-Man, etc. to make his own team that is separate from the New Avengers, and will they battle Civil War-style before they eventually unite to face Doom? And where do the X-Men fit into all this!?
We’re only a few months away from The Fantastic Four: First Steps, which is arriving on July 25, 2025. Since the F4 are coming from an alternate reality in the multiverse and not the MCU’s Sacred Timeline, this indicates that ship has just made a reality-hopping journey. Yet wouldn’t that really only make sense as the end of First Steps? The F4 changing realities is probably the end of the film or a post-credits scene of its own. If so, we basically already know how First Steps ends. Or do we? Is Marvel playing a trick on us, and is there more to this tease than it seems?
We asked Pearson if the FF are going to be the linchpin of the MCU moving forward.
“The fans are the most important part of the MCU,” he responds. “Like what they react to and what they love helps dictate so much of what's going on. Fantastic Four … they're all of great importance. And then there is the Sue and Reed at the head of it as the most brilliant mind in the universe and the most caring heart in the universe. They're certainly going to steer the car for a bit, but the universe, the multiverse right now is pretty big, so I don't want to calculate any weight on their shoulders.”
What did you think of Thunderbolts? Let’s discuss in the comments…
Eric Pearson, who co-wrote the new Marvel movie Thunderbolts with Joanna Calo, has revealed some of the characters who were considered for the movie’s post-credits scene, among them Baron Zemo and Kang the Conqueror.
In a conversation with the writer, he explained to me that while he took a couple of stabs at post-credits scenes for Thunderbolts, the Hollywood strikes interfered with the production of the film. Things were paused for six or seven months and then had to go back into pre-production, but the Marvel landscape had changed by then. And that led to a rethinking on the post-credits front as well, which of course are typically used to tee up incoming MCU projects.
“So I was throwing together at the beginning a post-credit sequence that had to deal with Kang,” says the writer.
Of course, while the villainous Kang was being positioned to be a major bad guy in the Multiverse Saga, actor Jonathan Majors’ legal problems led to his being fired by Marvel and the character essentially dropped from the ongoing MCU story. But there were other, more surprising characters considered for Thunderbolts as well.
“[Another idea] had to deal with more of a direct relation to the fact that [Julia Louis-Dreyfus’] Valentina [Allegra de Fontaine] sent Yelena after Clint Barton, after Hawkeye, [for] the Hawkeye show,” continues Pearson. “But as time passes, you're like, well, is anyone going to make that connection still to the thing that they haven't seen in two or three years?”
Again, it makes sense that such an old reference – the Hawkeye Disney+ series debuted in 2021 – wouldn’t really fit in a 2025 movie release. But then there were also the characters who would seem to fit in the sense that they were part of the Thunderbolts comic-book landscape.
“We wanted to do something different than ‘authority figure forces criminals to work together,’” says Pearson. “And once you take that out, the people from the comics who have put them together [the team] in the past, the Baron Zemos, the Thunderbolt Rosses, they don't fit the narrative in the same way. So while we're very aware and we talked about these ideas and, hey, if there was ever a way to include them, it's great because it makes sense and it honors the comics. But we also didn't want to break our story that we were excited about just to do fan service.”
Pearson also confirmed that Thunderbolt Ross, most recently played by Harrison Ford in Captain America: Brave New World, was never considered for Thunderbolts (similar names notwithstanding). That said, Zemo, who has been played by Daniel Brühl in Avengers: Civil War and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, at least made it into a draft, albeit briefly.
“There was definitely a [post-credits] tag that I did a million years ago where Zemo is like Keyser Söze,” says Pearson, referring to the character from The Usual Suspects. “Like he's been pulling the strings from prison in some way. But I don't think that iteration lived longer than like, ‘Hey, what about this?’ ‘Nope, not that.’”
Thunderbolts is in theaters now!
The following article contains spoilers for The Last of Us season 2, episode 4.
The Last of Us season 2 hits its midway point with its strongest episode so far. It adapts one of the most memorable sections of the game – Seattle Day One – and so that means we get Ellie and Dina checking out Downtown before moving onto the Channel 13 TV studio and escaping the WLF through the subway tunnels.
There are five key sequences from the original game that are adapted for this episode. Here we’ve compared them against the original source material, analysing what’s changed and what’s stayed the same. You can see both versions in the video above, or read on below for our written explanations.
Ellie and Dina arrive in Downtown Seattle shortly after this episode begins. This section of the game was open by design, and so allowed you to look around several different buildings. We get just two of them in the show; Weston’s Pharmacy and Valiant Music Shop. The pharmacy gets only a couple of minutes of screentime but it does feature an adaptation of The Last of Us’ key gameplay mechanic: opening drawers and looking for junk.
Valiant Music Shop, meanwhile, gets more love. The show’s set has windows adorned with music-themed vinyl decorations, just as it does in the game. On the ground floor is the same red drumkit, and Dina plays around with them just as she does in the game. It’s upstairs where the main event happens, though, when Ellie discovers a guitar in an overgrown room. Bella Ramsey’s performance of A-ha’s Take On Me is very similar to that seen in the game, with a talk-y vocal style and slow melody.
Episode 4 introduces us to the leader of the WLF, Isaac Dixon. This sequence is adapted from much later in the game’s sequence of events, when you play as Abby rather than Ellie, although due to the game’s overlapping dual timeline structure it seems likely that this sequence takes place at the “correct” time in the show.
During Abby’s half of the game, we see her visit the WLF’s forward operating base. There she meets Isaac, who is briefly seen conducting a torturous interrogation on a member of the Seraphites. In the show, we see a version of this scene play out in its entirety. Similar to the game, the WLF’s captured Seraphite has been stripped completely naked, but the show sees them tortured in a kitchen rather than a bathroom. Isaac’s brutal methods of torture were only implied in the game, but in the show we see him actively injuring his prisoner in an attempt to learn more about the Seraphites’ plans.
Ellie and Dina’s trip to the Channel 13 TV studio was naturally going to be the central event of this episode. In the game this is the sequence when the duo are first confronted with the murder cult-like methods of the Seraphites, as well as marking their first move towards finding where Abby is. The show recreates the key elements of the TV studio in grisy detail; WLF soldiers are strung up above the studio floor, and the Seraphites’ symbol is drawn on the wall in blood just as it is in the game. Ellie’s investigation of the area is interrupted by members of the WLF who, as in the game, are horrified to see what has become of their comrades.
The escape from the TV studio is shown to be a little more frantic than it is in the game, and the stormy weather adds even further drama to the scene, but in general the set design and pathway Ellie and Dina take feels authentic to the game, even if it’s not a one-to-one recreation.
One of The Last of Us Part 2’s most exhilarating sequences is Ellie and Dina’s journey through the Seattle subway tunnels. Bathed in red light and infested by clickers, it’s a genuinely terrifying level. Unsurprisingly, HBO went to lengths to capture the striking visuals here, with the abandoned subway cars eerily lit by the WLF’s red flares and searching flashlights.
There are key differences between the game and the show's version of events, though. This is very much a survival horror sequence in the game, with just a small but incredibly deadly collection of infected to avoid. The show, meanwhile, makes this more action packed – rather than have the infected lurk around the subway cars, they arrive as a charging, clawing horde. This makes the sequence much more action-oriented, with Ellie and Dina scrambling to get away rather than sneaking through the tunnels.
There are changes made to the sequence’s climax, too. In the game, Ellie gets trapped in the turnstile and Dina saves her by shooting an attacking clicker in the head. In the show, both Ellie and Dina get trapped in the turnstile, and Ellie allows herself to be bitten by the attacking clicker to protect Dina. It’s this bite that results in Ellie revealing her immunity to Dina. In the game, that reveal comes a few minutes prior, when Ellie’s gas mask is shattered by an attacking runner. Because spores are not a concern in the show (at least for now), the characters do not wear masks and thus this turn of events couldn’t be used.
The last scene of this week’s episode recreates the culminating part of the game’s Seattle Day 1: Dina reveals to Ellie that she’s pregnant. In both versions, Dina shares the news at the Pinnacle Theater, which the duo has made their home base. In the game, it’s a subdued and anguished moment, with Dina looking notably stressed by the idea. The show’s take is quite different, as the reveal pretty much instantly turns into an impassioned kiss between Ellie and Dina.
For more from The Last of Us, check out our spoiler-free season two review and our spoiler-filled review of the fourth episode. You can also catch up with our comparison of the previous episode.
Matt Purslow is IGN's Senior Features Editor.
© Bethesda ANZ
© KillaSoft
United States President Donald Trump has declared he will be implementing a 100 percent tariff on movies “produced in foreign lands.” The proclamation arrived via a Sunday afternoon social media post that asserted producing movies anywhere other than within the United States represents a “national security threat.”
“The Movie Industry in America is DYING a very fast death,” wrote Trump. “Other Countries are offering all sorts of incentives to draw our filmmakers and studios away from the United States. Hollywood, and many other areas within the U.S.A., are being devastated. This is a concerted effort by other Nations and, therefore, a National Security threat. It is, in addition to everything else, messaging and propaganda! Therefore, I am authorizing the Department of Commerce, and the United States Trade Representative, to immediately begin the process of instituting a 100% Tariff on any and all Movies coming into our Country that are produced in Foreign Lands. WE WANT MOVIES MADE IN AMERICA, AGAIN!”
At this stage it’s completely unclear how such a tariff would work in a practical sense, or what productions would be specifically affected. A host of countries around the world do offer a spectrum of tax incentives that make it financially attractive for overseas productions to film in places like the UK, Australia, and a variety of European territories.
However, it’s also a reality that movies often shoot overseas because they want to transport their characters and viewers to fanciful and exotic locations. How this decree would subsequently impact the future of, say, a globetrotting action franchise like James Bond, John Wick, Extraction, or Mission: Impossible (or the production of a movie like the upcoming F1, filmed on race tracks that had the audacity to be built outside the USA) is totally unclear.
It’s also unclear how this new tariff would affect movies that are currently in production or already completed, why the plan doesn’t include TV productions, or what the fallout will be for US movies around the world if retaliation follows for penalising international productions for wanting to show their movies to US audiences.
Luke is a Senior Editor on the IGN reviews team. You can track him down on Bluesky @mrlukereilly to ask him things about stuff.
© Future
The following contains full spoilers for The Last of Us Season 2 Episode 4.
“What the f*ck is wrong with Seattle?” This question, posed by Dina, may not be answered in episode 4 of season 2 of The Last of Us, but it certainly serves as a showcase for the threats lurking within it. The season’s best chapter yet blends pure horror with some of the show’s most touching moments, all whilst introducing us to an intriguing new character.
Seattle’s descent into a warzone is encapsulated in the brief looks we get at WLF leader Isaac. Jeffrey Wright reprises his role from The Last of Us Part 2 and luckily for us (though not the Seraphites), he has much more room to play around in this time. The episode’s opening serves as a stark introduction, as we see Isaac turn on the fascistic FEDRA force and defect over to the WLF in explosive style. The coldness with which Wright portrays this horrific act is chilling, and is only emphasised further when we see him 11 years later.
The torture scene is undoubtedly grim, but it’s also a standout moment. It captures everything The Last of Us does so well: In a single breath, we get insight into a character’s personal motivations and a snapshot of how the cordyceps outbreak has reshaped society. Both the camera and Wright assert dominance over the Seraphite in a subtle but striking display of superiority. The hostage and his fellow cult members are treated like a lower species: Isaac’s vitriolic dialogue is the first time we hear the WLF’s slur for the Seraphites, “scars.” Isaac is demeaning, but in a way that evidently feels natural to him.
The way Isaac plays with his captive is hypnotic, cutting a Patrick Bateman-like shape as he discusses the benefits of a well-made saucepan with him. Of course, this is all just a metaphor for how the apocalypse benefits some other overs. The decline of civilization allows for people of a certain (seemingly sociopathic) mindset to rise to the top of the pyramid. Long ago, in his former life, Isaac wanted those Mauviel saucepans, but he couldn’t afford them. But now, due to the end of the world and a willingness to abandon his morals with the drop of a grenade into a truck, his dream exists inside other people’s nightmares. Another “strange benefit of the apocalypse”, indeed.
It doesn’t look like much of Seattle is enjoying the same luxuries, however. As Ellie and Dina enter the city, they see ample evidence of endless conflict. The production design of the post-apocalyptic streets is astounding, with Capitol Hill redressed in corpses, overgrown tanks, and rust. Those streets eventually lead to a long-abandoned TV station, where the pair is greeted by a nauseating tableau: five hanged-and-disemboweled WLF soldiers. Not since the artful grotesqueries of Hannibal has such a startlingly gnarly image graced the TV screen.
It takes two to wage war, and this is the first time we’re shown that the Seraphites aren’t opposed to bloodshed. The soldiers’ intestines hanging out and dangling to the floor like extensions of the ropes their bodies hang by paint a truly gruesome image, and act as a reminder that no matter how ugly the infected are, the true monsters of this world remain human.
Speaking of infected, if there are two things we’ve learned in The Last of Us (or indeed, any scary story, show, movie, or game), it’s that going underground is never a good idea, and that red always equals danger. The episode’s steady descent into horror reaches its crescendo with the sudden arrival of runners and clickers onto the scene, as a corpse-filled carriage turns into a claustrophobic death trap. There is peril at every turn, and both Bella Ramsey and Isabela Merced do a great job at selling these louder moments through physical performance, whether they’re running frantically or standing and fighting. It’s nothing compared to the terror of witnessing Dina searching through drawers for pain meds, though – a haunting flashback for any player of the game who scrambled through desks dozens of times an hour.
But much like many of my favourite sections of The Last of Us so far in its two seasons, it's the quieter pockets that leave the most impact on me. Ellie’s rendition of “Take On Me” turns an optional character moment in the game into one that feels so crucial to the show. It really strikes a chord (pun intended) and cements Ellie and Dina’s status as a blossoming couple. It’s also beautifully lit with the blown-out hole in the wall creating a leafy frame within a frame that lets us soak in the shared looks between the two. It’s an embodiment of hope growing out of all of this devastation.
The episode as a whole is very well directed by Loki’s Kate Herron, who manages to smoothly navigate the shifts in tone over the course of the episode to great effect. This steady steering of the ship helps navigate a barrage of different emotions felt by the couple over the course of the episode’s final 10 minutes. The subway escape ending with Ellie taking a bite for Dina is a great example of adaptation for the better, further cementing their dedication to one another. Earlier we hear them describe the display of murdered bodies as “assholes killing assholes”, but this is an example that those full of heart will save those they love – even if it means taking a mushroom mouth to the wrist. Reluctantly pointing a gun at her, this is now the second time Dina has looked at Ellie with tears in her eyes. Both times with love, but now with the fear of losing it. It’s an emotional rollercoaster of a few minutes that both actors sell wonderfully, ending in the release of tension as each reveals their deepest secrets to one another and confirms their feelings.
I also enjoyed the poetic final moments of the episode greatly. It’s reminiscent of season one’s end as Gustavo Santaolalla's strings swell, but a muttering of “OK” has been replaced with “together”. It’s symbolic of a moment when Ellie and Joel walked separate ways, but here, Ellie and Dina stand hand-in-hand, ready to face what’s ahead together.
© Fantapapa
© Sobaka Studio
© Devolver
© Wētā Workshop
The weekend is officially here, and we've rounded up the best deals you can find! Discover the best deals for May 4 below:
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Ghost of Yotei is finally up for pre-order at Amazon. Set in the Hokkaido region in 1603, you'll play as Atsu to gain revenge on those who killed your family. While not much has been revealed for this game yet, we can expect Yotei to play very similarly to its predecessor, Ghost of Tsushima.
Visions of Mana released at the end of August, and it's available on sale for the first time this weekend. This is the first new Mana game in almost two decades, starring a cast of characters on a quest to save the world. In our 8/10 review, we stated, "Visions of Mana finally brings the long-dormant classic RPG series into the modern age, looking great and playing even better thanks to multi-layered class and skill systems that interact in clever ways."
You can save $70 off the Corsair K70 RGB PRO Mechanical Keyboard this weekend at Amazon. This keyboard comes with Cherry MX RGB Red Switches, which provide a linear and fast response. There's a magnetic soft-touch palm rest included that you can use if you wish, in addition to durable double-shot PBT Pro keycaps. At $99.99, this is a really solid deal.
With the recent reveal of Nintendo Switch 2 Edition games, it's no question that you are going to want to save anywhere you can. The Nintendo Switch 2 Edition of Super Mario Party Jamboree is set to cost $79.99, but you can upgrade from a Nintendo Switch copy for presumably $20. This weekend, save your cash and pick up a copy of Super Mario Party Jamboree from Woot for only $44.99.
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It's officially Star Wars Day, but it isn't just an empty celebration because there's actually a new animated Star Wars series to stream right now and we've reviewed it! Tales of the Underworld dives into the lives of assassin Asajj Ventress and the infamous bounty hunter Cad Bane as they navigate their way through the underworld of the Star Wars universe. This is the third entry in the "Tales of" anthology series following Tales of the Jedi and Tales of the Empire.
Both main characters were introduced by Dave Filoni in the Clone Wars series, and these episodes seek to develop those stories even further. If you're hoping to watch some brand new Star Wars content this weekend, we have all of the details below.
The long and short of it is that Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld is available to stream exclusively on Disney+. There was indeed a virtual watch party for the first two episodes in Fortnite on Friday, but if you missed that then the only avenue available to you is Disney+. It is the primary streaming service for all things Star Wars now that Disney owns Lucasfilm.
If you don't already have a Disney+ subscription, you actually have a number of options available to you to help you save some money. The overall best deal is the Disney+, Hulu, Max bundle that brings all three of the services into one package. There are also a variety of other Disney+ bundles to choose from if you don't want to pay for just the service by itself.
Unlike many of the other major Star Wars shows, Tales of the Underworld as a series is releasing all at once. There are a total of six episodes and you can start watching all of them right now.
If you aren't familiar with the main characters of this series, you may want to start by watching some of the best episodes of Clone Wars first. Otherwise, here is a quick synopsis of the series directly from Disney+:
"Enter the galaxy’s dangerous underworld in this six-episode journey through the experiences of two iconic villains. Former assassin and bounty hunter Asajj Ventress is given a new chance at life and must go on the run with an unexpected new ally, while outlaw Cad Bane faces his past when he confronts an old friend, now a Marshal on the opposite side of the law."
Looking for more Star Wars? Take a look at our guide to all of the upcoming Star Wars movies and shows.
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Last week, Stefano Cagnani released a demo for his fan remake of Dino Crisis 2 in Unreal Engine 5. Now, the reason I did not share this project back then was because it was put behind a pay wall. Thankfully, though, Cagnani has decided to make the demo free to everyone. Since this is created … Continue reading Free Dino Crisis 2 Fan Remake Demo in Unreal Engine 5 Released →
The post Free Dino Crisis 2 Fan Remake Demo in Unreal Engine 5 Released appeared first on DSOGaming.
© Id Software
Tales of the Underworld debuts on Disney+ in full with six episodes on May 4, 2025.
Theoretically, Lucasfilm Animation’s Tales anthology is an interesting method of expanding the stories of characters introduced in the Star Wars prequels, their animated spin-offs, and live-action Disney+ follow-ups – figures like Ahsoka Tano, Count Dooku, or Asajj Ventress, who’ve become as essential to this fictional universe as any Skywalker. In practice, though, Tales of the Jedi, Tales of the Empire, and now Tales of the Underworld have proven uneven and inconsistent. Tales of the Underworld exemplifies this more than either of its predecessors, with one storyline that mostly succeeds and one that mostly fails to bring new, meaningful dimensions to its protagonist.
This round of Tales once again focuses three of its bite-sized, approximately 15-minute-long episodes on one character, and three on another: First former Separatist assassin Asajj Ventress, then infamous bounty hunter Cad Bane. Both arcs offer bountiful treasures for your eyes and ears; Lucasfilm Animation is showing off at this point, having perfected their painterly art style. Tales of the Underworld looks even better than The Bad Batch and the other Tales series, with absolutely stunning textures, lighting, and water physics. The music also stands out: It’s not conventionally Star Wars, but it’s a welcome shift that makes Tales of the Underworld feel fresh and distinct.
It may also set a new standard for Tales voice acting, too. Corey Burton and Nika Futterman have two of the most iconic voices in the business, and they continue to make the most of their depictions of Bane and Ventress. (To the degree that it almost makes Bane’s storyline a bit confusing – more on that below.) As a fan of FX’s Reservation Dogs – and specifically Lane Factor’s performance in it – I was surprised and pleased to hear Factor making his voice-acting debut in Tales of the Underworld, bringing his endearing and honest energy to Ventress’ new friend Lyco.
Beyond its presentation, though, Tales of the Underworld under-delivers on the promise of its title. In the first three episodes centered around Ventress, we get none of that sense of seedy underbelly that’s been a quintessential component of Star Wars since Obi-Wan, Luke, C-3PO, and R2-D2 first took a walk on Mos Eisley’s wild side. Instead of plunging into the dark corners of the galaxy, Tales of the Underworld takes Ventress on a mostly lighthearted romp that teaches her an age-old lesson about the value of friendship. There is some good stuff: Inquisitorial action, a fun heist, and some heavy material involving veterans who are unable to let go of their wars. It’s not an unimportant story to tell, but it’s also one that’s already been told by The Clone Wars, Rebels, and The Bad Batch. There’s little reason to bring Ventress back from the dead just to tell it again.
That’s the other disappointment with her story: It already ended once. A canon book called Dark Disciple sees Ventress and the Jedi Quinlan Vos on a path to revenge against Count Dooku. The story was conceived for The Clone Wars, but was turned into a book after the show’s first cancellation. At the end of Dark Disciple, Ventress dies, sacrificing herself to save Vos, whom she (spoiler alert for a 10-year-old book) falls in love with. Tales of the Underworld teases that story, giving us a glimpse of its ending – but it’s in a way that explains how Ventress was almost immediately resurrected, clearing the path for her appearances here and on The Bad Batch. Ultimately it just feels like an unnecessary epilogue in a journey that already felt complete, a long-winded way to keep her on the roster of active Star Wars players without adding all that much to the character.
Bane’s episodes definitely live up to the Underworld name, though, with the scum and villainy on full display. His story is a classic western in three acts set at three successive points in his life. It’s a story of diverging paths and what comes down to a friend breakup, and all the drama that entails. Its melodrama is reminiscent of a telenovela, and it’s honestly better for it. Bane has always been about the drama and theatrics, so it fits his character well.
It’s also a story of class and poverty and the impressions they can leave on a young mind. It’s relatively unexplored territory for Star Wars, and it’s interesting to see a story like that through the franchise’s lens. I bet George Lucas would love these episodes, given the way they rhyme with Anakin’s journey in the prequels. Anakin turned to the Dark Side, but Bane was born in it, and this compelling origin story shows us how he embraced it from the start.
But it too feels a bit underdeveloped. Tales of the Underworld simply doesn’t have the time to fully flesh out the story it’s trying to tell. Bane’s growth into the child-stealing bounty hunter we’ve come to know and love (well, maybe “love” isn’t the right word, but you get the point) is generally well paced, but some of the nuances and details have to be left out.
Maybe a little more breathing room in the running time would have better explained what’s going on with Bane’s accent and voice. He goes from sounding like a normal kid in his first episode to Corey Burton doing an aged-down Bane in the second. For all of Burton’s strengths as an actor, it’s still a jarring transition, especially when none of his peers or fellow Duros share Bane’s accent or way of speaking. It made me wonder why he speaks like that at all. There’s technically a good reason for altering his voice in the first episode, which I won’t go into here. I just don’t think it’s a good enough reason, nor does it explain his unique way of speaking.
In an interview with Lex Fridman, Epic Games’ Tim Sweeney shared the first details about the next version of Unreal Engine, Unreal Engine 6. According to Sweeney, UE6 is a few years away, but we might see preview versions of it in 2 or 3 years. Epic Games is currently working on two different aspects of … Continue reading Epic’s Tim Sweeney shares first details about Unreal Engine 6 →
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© GOG.com
While nothing has yet been pitched to Marvel, Ryan Reynolds is reportedly in the "early stages" of trying to bring a Deadpool and X-Men movie to life.
As reported by THR, Reynolds' idea for this ensemble film would feature Deadpool, but not as the main character. Instead, he would share the spotlight with three of four other X-Men characters. In fact, it is said Reynolds wants these other characters to take center stage so they can be "used in unexpected ways."
This film, which would be separate from the X-Men movie Hunger Games' writer Michael Lesslie is working on, is seemingly on a similar track as Deadpool & Wolverine. Reynolds is known for working on his ideas on his own for quite some time before pitching them to Marvel, and the early stages of what would become Deadpool & Wolverine saw the film as a low-budget road trip movie.
This also isn't the first time we've heard Ryan Reynolds is working on an "ensemble" movie for Deadpool, but this does give us a bit more context as to what type of adventures the Merc With a Mouth may go on.
As to which X-Men may be joining Deadpool, that is currently anyone's guess. However, Deadpool is no stranger to working alongside X-Men and has already had some members of the team and their enemies in his films, including Wolverine, Colossus, Sabertooth, Pyro, and even Channing Tatum's Gambit.
For more, check out why Reynolds thinks Deadpool shouldn't join the Avengers of X-Men, how Deadpool & Wolverine became the highest-grossing R-Rated film of all time on its way to earning $1.33 billion worldwide, and our explainer of the film's ending so you can see where he currently stands.
Oh, and you can see how the latest MCU film did in our eyes in our Thunderbolts* review.
Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.
Adam Bankhurst is a writer for IGN. You can follow him on X/Twitter @AdamBankhurst, Instagram, and TikTok, and listen to his show, Talking Disney Magic.
It seems like there’s no shortage of compelling content to stream in 4K these days, and on Max, you’re spoiled for choice. Timothée Chalamet-verse essentials like Wonka and Denis Villeneuve’s Dune duology sit side by side with acerbic dramedies like The Righteous Gemstones and The White Lotus. But if you’re new to the platform you may be wondering how you can upgrade the viewing experience and ensure you’re watching all of your most anticipated movies and TV shows in the highest fidelity possible. If that’s you, read on, as our guide will explain the ins and outs of how to stream Max movies and shows in 4K – if you aren’t doing so already.
When it comes to picking a subscription plan for Max, there are three options available: Basic with Ads, Standard, and Premium. As with most streaming platforms (like Netflix), the only plan that allows for 4K streaming is the most expensive Premium plan. It’s also worth noting that Max also offers a bundle that includes Max, Disney+ and Hulu at a discounted price. However, while there are two bundle options – With Ads and No Ads – neither plan includes the 4K Premium Plan features at this time. This means you won’t have access to 4K streaming if you end up going with the multi-platform bundle.
Here are the current Max U.S. plans and their prices:
Once you’ve chosen your plan, you’ll need to verify that your setup can handle streaming Max’s 4K content. This means that your display, whether it be a monitor or a Smart TV, must support 4K resolution streaming. Furthermore, any external streaming devices like an Apple TV or Roku device must support 4K. Because you’re here on IGN, it’s worth pointing out that if you’re using a console like a PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X to stream content, you already have an external device that supports streaming Max in 4K. Last but certainly not least, the cables and ports you’re using to link your TV and external device need to be high quality, or this could cause issues with 4K streaming. External devices will need to be plugged into a HDCP 2.2 HDMI port using a High-Speed 4K HDMI cable to make the most of 4K streaming on Max.
If you’d like to check whether your current equipment is up to the task, Max has a list of compatible devices on their website that you can refer to.
Beyond devices and cables, your internet connection also needs to be strong enough to stream content in 4K. MAX suggests a minimum of 25Mbps, but recommends 50Mbps for the best results. It’s worth mentioning that there is no account setting to force Max to stream in 4K, and Max will just adjust its streaming quality in accordance with your ‘network bandwidth and connection speed.’ So if the requirements are met, applicable content on Max should automatically stream in 4K.
You can check whether the content you’re looking to watch is available in 4K, by selecting the film or tv show from the in-app menu and looking for the ‘4K’ or ‘4K UHD’ tag underneath the title.
HBO has a reputation for producing legendarily bingeable box sets like The Sopranos and Succession. Thanks to the popularity of said shows and their avid fan bases, many of these titles have been released physically as 4K Blu-ray box sets. George R. R. Martin acolytes can find the full Game of Thrones series in 4K, as well as the first two series of its drama-filled prequel House of the Dragon. Many of the movies available on MAX also have a physical Blu-Ray counterpart, such as 2024’s Twisters and 2021’s The Matrix Resurrections.
As we’re often reminded, we don’t actually own the digital content we pay for. This means that owning the physical versions of your favourite films or TV shows is the only way to ensure the content can be rewatched forever – regardless of a faulty internet connection or future licensing issues.
© CCP Games
The weekend is officially here, and we've rounded up the best deals you can find! Discover the best deals for May 3 below:
Monster Hunter Wilds is still one of the biggest games of 2025, and you can save $15 off the PS5 version for a limited time at Woot. This is by far the most beginner-friendly Monster Hunter to date, with new features like Focus Mode that allow you to approach fights in new ways. In our 8/10 review, we wrote, "Monster Hunter Wilds continues to smooth off the rougher corners of the series in smart ways, making for some extremely fun fights but also lacking any real challenge."
First up, you can save $50 off the newest iPad. Powered by the A16, the newest 11th-generation iPad is an exceptional addition to any workspace. You can use this device with both Apple Pencil and Magic Keyboard Folio to make the most out of it without having to go for the iPad Air or iPad Pro.
Ghost of Yotei is finally up for pre-order at Amazon. Set in the Hokkaido region in 1603, you'll play as Atsu to gain revenge on those who killed your family. While not much has been revealed for this game yet, we can expect Yotei to play very similarly to its predecessor, Ghost of Tsushima.
Visions of Mana released at the end of August, and it's available on sale for the first time this weekend. This is the first new Mana game in almost two decades, starring a cast of characters on a quest to save the world. In our 8/10 review, we stated, "Visions of Mana finally brings the long-dormant classic RPG series into the modern age, looking great and playing even better thanks to multi-layered class and skill systems that interact in clever ways."
Xbox announced this week that the Xbox Series X will increase in price by $100 in the United States. This puts the almost five-year-old console at $599.99, but you can still score an Xbox Series X for under its previous MSRP at Amazon right now. At $479.99, you're saving $120 off the new price of Xbox Series X, and there's no telling when or if we will see it this low again soon.
LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga is by far the biggest LEGO game available, with hundreds of characters to collect across numerous planets. You can pick up the game for just $10 at Amazon right now for PS4, making this a deal you won't want to pass on. All nine films are included in this game, with characters from newer Disney+ Star Wars series as well.
With the recent reveal of Nintendo Switch 2 Edition games, it's no question that you are going to want to save anywhere you can. The Nintendo Switch 2 Edition of Super Mario Party Jamboree is set to cost $79.99, but you can upgrade from a Nintendo Switch copy for presumably $20. This weekend, save your cash and pick up a copy of Super Mario Party Jamboree from Woot for only $44.99.
MindsEye is a new story-based, single-player action-adventure game. Developed by Build A Rocket Boy, it will come out on PC on June 10th. Strangely, there’s no official gameplay trailer for it yet. But luckily, YouTuber Punish shared a video showing 3 minutes of gameplay. In this game, you play as Jacob Diaz. Jacob is a … Continue reading Here are 3 minutes of new gameplay footage from MindsEye →
The post Here are 3 minutes of new gameplay footage from MindsEye appeared first on DSOGaming.
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Brian K. Vaughan's and Fiona Staples' celebrated series may not quite be finished yet, with Vaughan stating he envisions the long-running Image-published comic to run for 108 issues. Currently at issue 72, now is the perfect time to jump into Saga, and what better way to start the series than digitally? You have a handful of options to get the incredible space fantasy story on your mobile device or reading tablet, and we've broken them down for you here.
To start, get your feet wet by trying out Saga #1 for free, no strings attached. This is the perfect way to see if this kind of story is the right fit, and you also get to appreciate pages and pages of Fiona Staples' amazing art. This is available directly on Image Comic's website.
The entirety of the available Saga run is yours to read for free through Hoopla. Be aware, however, that reading through Hoopla comes with a caveat: you have to link an existing library card with your account and choose from your nearest local library. You can only check out what that library has in stock, so if you're not in a major metropolitan city, your mileage may vary. All-in-all, though, Hoopla is one of the best places to read comics for free online and it works great for free books as well.
ComiXology Unlimited through Amazon is easily the best way to read any comic book online. With Saga, you can even get the entirety of the Volume 1 collection (issues 1-6) for free with a 30-day free trial. Once you're caught up on the available story, you can switch to appointment reading by purchasing single issues as they release every month.
GlobalComix is a newer, creator-focused reading and distribution platform that helps creators track analytics and monetize their digital comics. While their overall selection is relatively sparse compared to these other avenues, they do have Saga available. Sign up is free, too!
A lot of comics fans prefer physical media, myself included. Luckily, you can purchase multiple volumes and editions of the collected story so far, and most of them are even on sale at Amazon every now and then. You can pick up the regular trade paperbacks, which are currently up to Volume 11 (Volume 12 is coming May 13), or grab the oversized Saga: Compendium 1, which collects issues 1-54, which is currently on sale.
Myles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social.
Battery life is a huge point of contention among smartwatch users right now, especially given that it’s such a hassle to have to constantly charge an ambient device that’s meant to track lifestyle patterns in the background and provide quick information cues while posing as a timepiece. After one full week of testing the OnePlus Watch 3 against my older-model Apple Watch Series 6, I've found the OnePlus Watch 3 to be a fashionable little Andoid device that excels in several big areas while stumbling in others. But even with a battery that seems to keep a charge for several days in Smart Mode, its moment-to-moment tracking capabilities didn't quite live up to the polish of its exterior… until I manually activated its workout mode, after which it held its own against the Series 6 when I tracked workout performance side-by-side.
The OnePlus Watch 3 makes a strong first impression with its big and bright 1.5-inch LTPO AMOLED display and stainless steel frame. The crown and touchscreen offer precise navigation through menus, while the dedicated workout button provides quick access to fitness functions – a thoughtful touch for active users who want to quickly jump into their routine, and it isn’t too different or unfamiliar for a longtime Apple Watch user to figure out intuitively. However, the included fluoro rubber wrist strap is a major disappointment that immediately gave me trouble upon first setup; it’s ugly and cheap-feeling, and the lugs detach too easily, making it difficult to wear securely without randomly snapping off. And that undermines the premium feel of the watch itself.
The 466 x 466-resolution AMOLED screen offers bright and crisp visuals with vibrant colors that pop even under direct sunlight, thanks to excellent contrast at 2,200 peak nits. Its bigger size and brighter screen make it easy to read notifications and workout metrics at a glance. Touch responsiveness is also snappy and precise, with smooth animations that make the interface feel fluid and slick. My Apple Watch Series 6 doesn’t have this same internal slickness anymore, and upon first setting up the Watch 3, I felt a little bit of new tech euphoria from how fast its Snapdragon W5 and BES2800 chips make it feel, even with Power Mode turned on. The haptic feedback deserves special mention: each vibration feels refined and intentional rather than buzzy or jarring.
The watch’s crown is shaped in a sharp-looking pyramid pattern designed for precise control. Once I put the watch on my wrist for the first time, it immediately felt way more sophisticated than what I’m used to, and I kept coming back to this distinction whenever I reached for words to explain why the OnePlus Watch 3 feels so premium. The pancake-shaped crown of the Series 6 is such a small detail (literally), and yet it makes the watch feel small by comparison. Like a toy rather than a timepiece. The only downside to the OnePlus Watch 3’s outward aesthetic design, aside from its wristband, is that it’s only available in Emerald Titanium and Obsidian Titanium colorways. Both of these are boring in comparison to its competitors – both the Google Pixel Watch 3 and Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 can be customized a bit, while the Apple Watch Series 10 has a much larger collection of aluminum and titanium colorways. Even the Series 6 had way more customizability in terms of size and color.
Water resistance is rated at 50 meters, which should theoretically make it shower and swim-friendly. However, I encountered issues with water on the screen triggering false inputs and causing erratic behavior, forcing me to remove it during showers – something I've never had to do with my Apple Watch. This raises questions about its practical water resistance in daily use. Of course, the Apple Watch isn’t perfect in such conditions either, but it usually stops being interactive (as in, none of my inputs or presses do anything) rather than invasive, as the OnePlus Watch 3’s touchscreen became when I tested it during a short ten-minute shower.
Battery life is where the OnePlus Watch 3 truly shines. After the average full day of use, including casually moving around my apartment and doing chores, receiving daily notifications, and tracking a light workout or two (typically walking for an hour or playing the VR fitness game Supernatural), the battery dropped by only around 15% on average. For the record, my Apple Watch was left at around 20% by the end of each day, without fail, no matter what I was doing. Given the age of my Apple Watch, its shorter battery life is somewhat expected due to predictable battery degradation over the years. Even so, the difference between what I was previously used to (only having to charge the Apple Watch every two or three days) is still remarkable when the OnePlus Watch 3 could easily last five days on a single charge. Smart Mode needs to be enabled to get the most out of this, but it’s simple to set up in the watch’s onboard interface.
The Watch 3 includes standard smartwatch sensors for heart rate, blood oxygen (SPO2), and movement tracking. It also features wrist temperature tracking, though this requires five days to establish a baseline before providing meaningful data. Wrist temperature may seem unconventional at first glance, but that data stream is incredibly useful for things like the Watch 3’s 60 Second Health Check-In feature, which gives an all-in-one contextual summary of my overall well-being. It’s a little frustrating that I need to get on the OHealth phone app to make that happen instead of doing it all on the watch – it’s decently easy to set up, but I don’t want to have to pull my phone out for something that feels like it should run easily on the watch alone. At least the results are comprehensive thanks to the Watch 3’s onboard PPG (photoplethysmography) sensor and ECG (electrocardiography) sensor working in tandem. Unlike the Apple Watch, it lacks AFib detection capabilities in the United States and Canada, which could be deal-breakers for users with specific health concerns.
For fitness enthusiasts, the OnePlus Watch 3 offers detailed workout tracking for various activities. During walks, it captures metrics like heart rate zones, pace, calorie burn, and distance traveled. Of course, not all walks count as outdoor activities – when your workouts take you outdoors, whether you’re walking or running, the Watch 3’s excellent GPS tracking creates route maps with elevation data. The GPS-routed maps look bright and detailed on the watch’s screen, and don’t seem to be reliant on proximity to the Android phone that the Watch 3 is paired to. In fact, Bluetooth connectivity between the Watch 3 and my Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra has been nothing short of excellent, seamlessly reconnecting whenever I returned home and the devices were together again.
Setup is not particularly intuitive for someone coming from the Apple ecosystem. Getting in requires downloading the OHealth companion app, and its interface feels more complex and requires deeper familiarity with Google services and Android structure that I’m still getting the hang of. Mainly because I am not the primary user of the phone – and especially since an additional OnePlus account is required to even begin pairing the watch to the phone, it was difficult to get things aligned properly. It’s not a huge deal as I was able to sort everything out in less than 20 minutes, but YMMV.
For the record, I understand that the vast majority of people who will be interested in the OnePlus Watch 3 aren’t going to feel these concerns – they’re already Android-savvy, they already know what they’re doing, and (as I imagine what the pushback in the comments section will look like) they don’t want to hear some Apple fanatic complain about complicated interface structure. Totally fair! Still, the companion app layout is organized in ways that caused me some extra frustration and took time to learn, and that probably isn’t going to attract non-core users into Android’s ecosystem if they’re not already in the mix.
Onboard UI navigation is straightforward once you learn the basics – swipe down for quick settings, up for notifications, and use the crown to scroll through menus or apps. The user interface is responsive with minimal lag when moving between screens. Using apps like Spotify and Google Calendar is also seamless, sleek, and highly responsive.
The OnePlus Watch 3 runs on Wear OS, which is basically the same thing as Apple’s watchOS by any other name. Of course, instead of tying into the Apple ecosystem it instead grants direct access to Google's ecosystem of apps and services. For example, giving the user the option to store health data in Google Fit, pushing data via notifications from Gmail, and granting access to Google-specific applets (Google Play Store, Google Maps, etc) found directly in the watch’s central menu. This is no different from any other Android smartwatch in practice, but I’d like to imagine the Watch 3 simply does a better job of running its services than all the others, due in part to its powerful battery and advanced Snapdragon 5 chipset. Upon this foundation, OnePlus has added its own layer of customization with attractive-looking exclusive watch faces and health features – like its Vascular Health check-in feature that uses several sensors to determine how close the user is to being at risk of developing severe heart disease. Fortunately, I’m still over the green line of what is considered “Normal” vascular health for a 31 year old, but I wouldn’t have known this if I hadn’t reviewed the Watch 3. It could be a powerful warning tool that informs long-term health decisions, even without Afib detection.
Sleep tracking on the OnePlus Watch 3 provides detailed breakdowns of sleep stages, including deep sleep, light sleep, REM, and awake time. It also offers a sleep score and breathing quality assessment. While these metrics seem comprehensive, I'm still evaluating their accuracy compared to other dedicated sleep trackers. For the most part, the Watch 3 seems to track closely to my Apple Watch Series 6’s readouts. Additionally, the automatic sleep mode activation is a nice touch that dims the display and reduces notifications when it detects the user has fallen asleep.
The watch's fitness interface provides impressively detailed data visualizations. After workouts, it breaks down heart rate zones with time spent in each zone, shows pace variations throughout routes, and offers insights that Apple doesn't surface as clearly. The "Wellness Curve" is a proprietary metric that attempts to measure your overall physical state based on various health parameters, though I'm still learning how to interpret its fluctuations meaningfully as someone who is still only just breaking in the Watch 3.
Notification handling is pretty standard compared to my experiences. Text messages, emails, and app alerts appear promptly, and you can respond with quick replies or voice dictation. Additionally, the watch does offer Google Assistant integration, which performs well for basic tasks like setting timers or checking weather forecasts, but at this moment it’s not all that perceptibly different from Siri.
Fitness tracking is where the OnePlus Watch 3 shows its most significant weaknesses. Step counting consistently lagged behind the Apple Watch, sometimes by dramatic margins. During one VR fitness session, the Apple Watch recorded 5,255 steps while the OnePlus only registered 1,612 – a massive discrepancy that I’m still trying to wrap my head around, as this was a pretty consistent occurrence. On one hand, I use Supernatural for my primary VR workouts, which is attuned to my Series 6 and (from my understanding) feeds in extra contextual data to Apple Health. But on the other hand, this pattern continued throughout testing, with the OnePlus Watch typically recording about 25-30% fewer steps than the Apple Watch whether I was working out in Supernatural, doing a core workout, or playing some other high-intensity VR game like The Thrill of the Fight. When not in workout mode, the Watch 3 also seems to update step counts in bursts rather than in real-time, sometimes missing passive movement entirely.
At one point I saw the number of recorded steps suddenly drop from around 2,500 to 1,700, only for the step count to level out later in the day and become nearly equal to the Series 6’s step count after recording an outdoor walk. This is bizarre, considering that I wore both watches at the same time, at all times. It’s highly possible that the Watch 3’s fitness tracking mechanisms need time to calibrate to the user, but it seems like the only way to get the Watch 3 to accurately track daily steps is by taking it on long stretches of outdoor activity where it can deliberately track movement over a longer period of time.
In fact, workout tracking showed way more consistency with calories burned and heart rate measurements generally aligning with the Apple Watch's readings. During a brief core training session, both watches reported similar calorie burns (30 vs. 27 active calories) and average heart rates (120 vs. 115 BPM). The OnePlus Watch did provide more detailed heart rate zone analysis than I’m typically used to, breaking down time spent in warm-up, fat burning, and endurance zones.
GPS accuracy during outdoor activities was pretty good, with the OnePlus Watch recording slightly longer distances than the Apple Watch (4.04 vs. 3.94 miles on one walk). This could be due to different sampling rates or algorithms, but the difference wasn't significant enough to be concerning. What was impressive was the battery efficiency during GPS tracking, with minimal drain even after stacking a longer outdoor session together with a full VR workout routine on the same day, dealing with notifications, and so forth. All of that activity still rounded up to no more than 16% battery drain on that day, which is exceptional.