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Severance May Have Just Laid the Groundwork For the Greatest Betrayal Yet

Streaming Wars is a weekly opinion column by IGN’s Streaming Editor, Amelia Emberwing. Check out the last entry Yellowjackets Season 3 Premiere: Why Nothing Is What It Seems and the Trees Are Angry.

This column contains spoilers for Severance Season 2.

Severance Season 2’s major theme has revolved heavily around the idea of consent and autonomy between the Innies and Outies, expanding further on the idea of just how split a person can be when severing their work and personal personas. This line of thinking has already led to major betrayals, with Mark S. sleeping with who he believed to be Helly R. but actually ended up being Helena Eagan. It’s a jarring scene once you really know what’s going on, and hits even harder once Helena’s Innie, Helly, is given time to sit with the news. But Episode 6 features a potential of an entirely separate betrayal. One that, if true, will blow the lid off Season 2 and one of fans’ favorite romances.

Burt (Christopher Walken) and Irving (John Turturro) enamored fans in Season 1 with their courtship, ripping our hearts out when they were seemingly separated for good as a result of Burt’s retirement. Due to the overtime protocol in the Season 1 finale and his extensive research of Lumon employees when not on the severed floor, Irving’s innie was able to sprint to Burt’s house just in time to see him with his husband.

Despite the crushing blow, fans held out hope that their office romance would find a way to make its way into the real world. Season 2 has potentially made those dreams a reality, but not without the proverbial monkey’s paw moment that could mean ultimate devastation for Irving.

Episode 6 involves a dinner date with Irving, Burt, and Burt’s husband Cecil Fields (John Noble) who Burt curiously refers to by his last name, calling him only “Fields” in conversation throughout the evening. The dinner is a nightmare for folks who suffer from second-hand embarrassment — myself included — but there may be something more nefarious woven into the uncomfortable dinner discussions.

Toward the end of their meal, Fields lets slip that Burt has been with Lumon for 20 years. Burt laughs it off and tells his partner that perhaps it’s time to step back from the wine, as Lumon’s severed division has only been around for a little over half that time, but there’s something unspoken between the two. Burt’s expression isn’t one of a concerned spouse thinking their partner needs to slow down on the wine, but of a man who has just been outed in front of a former Lumon employee who had previously sued the company and was recently let go not once, but twice.

It’d be one thing if it only went as far as Burt’s outie being a longtime company man, but my concerns run deeper than that. The fact that Severance just went out of its way to make it narratively clear that you can be on the severed floor as an Outie with Helena masquerading as Helly for several days and then immediately followed it with this episode has me alarmed. Have both versions of Burt just been a singular Lumon lackey this whole time? Was all of this to get close to the Innie of the man who has been fighting them for years both through the courts and his own internal investigation?

Let’s not forget that Burt magically appeared outside of the phone booth when Irving was having his mysterious phone call several episodes ago. And the fact that Drummond (Darri Ólafsson) is seen breaking into Irving’s home to look at the evidence he has on Lumon at the exact time Irving is eating dinner with Burt? It’s sus, fam. It’s all sus.

There is, of course, the off chance that all of this is a coincidence. The writers wanted our line of thinking to follow the Helena of it all, Drummond was only there because they were already actively investigating him after his attempted murder of an Eagan, etc., but to what end? There’s a whole lot of evidence stacked up against Burt at the moment and all of it sucks.

We were rooting for you crazy kids!

This Movie Ripped off Stephen King's The Monkey Long Before Its Official Adaptation

What if I told you Oz Perkins' The Monkey isn't the first to adapt Stephen King's short story? While Neon's 2025 goreganza is the approved and licensed adaptation, there's a lesser-known 80s horror movie with eerie similarities to King's short story “The Monkey.” Kenneth J. Berton's The Devil's Gift was released in 1984, four years after King's bite-sized tale was published in Gallery magazine. For those who've read King's fiction, it's hard to watch The Devil's Gift and ignore comparisons to "The Monkey" despite the production never acknowledging King in any manner.

Let's start with the resemblances, which are glaring. In King's story and Berton's film, a cymbal-banging monkey causes fatalities after it clangs. They're also supernatural situations intertwined with Death's plans. There are murderous doll movies aplenty, and you can trace cymbal-banging monkey toys back to 1932's Hoppo the Waltzing Monkey—but King's imaginative blend of The Twilight Zone and Final Destination is unique. You can't ignore how The Devil's Gift borrows King's specific focal point and narrative mechanisms.

Berton and the film's two credited co-writers (José Vergelin and Hayden O'Hara) eek past plagiarism complaints based on a few tweaks. Kings' The Monkey features Hal's family finding the monkey in a Ralston-Purina box, where The Devil's Gift suggests its monkey has been possessed thanks to a Ouija board. This leads to a more demonic version of the killer monkey versus King’s, which is a stand-in for Death—or at least Death's right hand. Also, King's time-jumpy story follows brothers Hal and Bill (but primarily Hal), whereas The Devil's Gift makes actor Bob Mendelsohn's father figure, David Andrews, the central character. Finally, in the ‘84 film, you can survive Mr. Monkey's impending doom if you stop his clattering or escape its trap, unlike King's cruel finality.

The swapability of pawn shops and antique stores links Perkins' The Monkey and Berton's The Devil's Gift. It's the scene of the first crime (we see) in The Monkey, where Hal and Bill's delinquent father tries to sell his beady-eyed monkey. But in The Devil's Gift, it's where David's current partner Susan (Vicki Saputo) buys a cheeky monkey percussionist for David's son, Micahel (Struan Robertson). Both locations are frequently the cornerstone of stories about a malevolent trinket. King stays focused on familial hand-me-downs and inescapable curses, but when building a case that connects The Devil's Gift and "The Monkey," Perkins' adaptation only adds fuel to the fire.

If you hadn't read King's story, you wouldn't think twice after watching Vestron Video's VHS release in the 80s. But with Perkins' direct adaptation (and expansion to feature length) coming out this weekend, The Devil's Gift's cover might be blown. It's a bizarre concept, almost too bizarre to be replicated. This isn't 1997's conundrum of Volcano and Dante's Peak hitting theaters only months apart—volcanos are standard natural disaster fare. We're talking about cymbal-banging, drum-beating monkeys acting as Angels of Death.

About the monkey itself, King writes: "It grinned at him with its murky amber eyes, doll's eyes, filled with idiot glee, its brass cymbals poised as if to strike up a march for some band from hell." Is it a coincidence that Berton keeps opting for close-up shots of the monkey's deviant grin, allowing shiny amber eyes to glisten? Even funnier is how Perkins chooses to trash the traditional cymbal monkey prototype recognized by pop culture in favor of a drum. The Monkey, the direct adaption of King's "The Monkey," opts to differentiate where The Devil's Gift stays with the common brass discs. Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, they say.

The Devil's Gift’s legacy is much stranger than possibly (probably) ripping off Stephen King.

The Devil's Gift’s legacy is much stranger than possibly (probably) ripping off Stephen King. If you're a Mystery Science Theater 3000 fan, you may have already seen The Devil's Gift—or, more appropriately, parts of The Devil's Gift. Berton would direct a film in 1996 titled Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders, featuring Ernest Borgnine "as a grandfather telling his grandson a story about the wizard Merlin opening up a store in the modern-day United States." It's an anthology with two segments, but instead of shooting a brand new second story, Berton recycled The Devil's Gift. He cleaved out story chunks, added a few sequences where Merlin chases the monkey toy, and voilà! You've got the back half of some oddball fantasy flick where Merlin ruins people's lives with his magical creations.

MST3K would eventually dedicate an episode to Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders, where Merlin's interference would taint Berton's butchered version of The Devil's Gift. Instead of a Ouija board unleashing evils powerful enough to blow up a house, doofy criminals steal The Monkey, and that's how it ends up in a small town's pawn shop. None of the beginning exposition matters, nor "boring" scenes between the monkey's horrors. What's left of The Devil's Gift is a deceased goldfish, a dead dog (boo, R.I.P. Sparkles), and David's frantic attempt to discard his son’s devilish birthday gift before it kills again.

The Merlin Cut of The Devil's Gift is prime MST3K fodder. Berton's full-length version of The Devil's Gift from 1984 never made waves, but at least attempted some semblance of storytelling. Oh, you replaced what little coherent plot that existed with Merlin running around America, trying to collect misfit objects? Yeah, the MST3K crew had a field day between "Rock and Roll Martian" and a fortune teller’s "Bethagram" necklace (whatever that means, but it looks like a knock-off sheriff’s star). Berton's attempt at double-dipping backfires, especially considering how the original film at least dared to end things on a bleak-as-heck note. Merlin's version wraps on a cutesy little button-up where everything's just dandy.

So I guess there are technically two unofficial movies that beat Perkins' The Monkey to the punch? And one involves Merlin. And they’re both technically the same movie. Ish. Kinda?

As of today, there are no definitive answers as to whether The Devil's Gift wanted to be an adaptation of "The Monkey" or not. It's easy to speculate about unmissable influences, and many have (many, in this case, being relative to the very few people who have seen the film). King was never involved, nor was the property cited, and "The Monkey" wasn't even published outside Gallery pages until 1985's Skeleton Crew—but c'mon. The empirical evidence is everywhere. People recognize Child's Play as one of the killer doll subgenre's crowning achievements, but even its imitators found ways around outright duplication. Why not make your figurine an elephant instead of keeping it a monkey and highlighting the elephant in the room?

The Devil's Gift is one of those video store rentals from the ‘80s worth checking out for its audacity alone. It's not fooling anyone (re: The Monkey), which is suspiciously charming. Although, it's hard not to recommend MST3K's Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders episode instead. Who needs all that pesky exposition, endless dad chores, and random costumed creatures? If all you want are the down-and-dirty highlights of this Stephen King imposter, trust in Tom Servo and Crow T. Robot. It's the primer for Perkins’ The Monkey you never knew existed—separated at birth but tethered nonetheless.

UK Deals: MTG - Final Fantasy Is Still In Stock On Amazon And I'm Buying Now

Against all expectations, Magic: The Gathering – Final Fantasy is still available on Amazon. Given the way The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth set disappeared faster than Texas draft beer at Tifa's bar, you'd expect these to be long gone by now. For now you can still grab a box without emptying Materia slots on the secondary market. It won't last, though. We all know how this goes.

UK Deals: MTG Final Fantasy Is Still Available

Launching globally on June 13, 2025, this set is the latest in Magic's Universes Beyond series. Bringing Cloud, Squall, Terra, Aerith, and the rest of Final Fantasy's biggest names into the world of cardboard combat. It covers every mainline Final Fantasy game from I to XVI, so if you grew up on pixel sprites, PS1 polygons, or you're still pretending to understand the plot of Final Fantasy XV, there's something in here for you.

Yes, these are Standard legal. Show up to Friday Night Magic and drop Sephiroth, Planet's Heir on some poor unsuspecting soul. It probably won't make you any friends, but we don't suffer the weak either.

MTG FF Commander Pre-Built Decks

If you prefer Commander, the set has four pre-con decks, each led by a Final Fantasy icon. There's Cloud's Limit Break deck (Final Fantasy VII), Terra's Revival Trance deck (Final Fantasy VI), Tidus' Counter Blitz deck (Final Fantasy X), and Y'shtola's Scions & Spellcraft deck (Final Fantasy XIV). And if that's not flashy enough, there are Collector's Edition versions where every card gets the Surge Foil treatment because we all know shiny cardboard is the real endgame.

MTG FF Boosters and Boxes

It doesn't stop there. The set also packs Borderless Character cards with 55 Final Fantasy legends, Woodblock-inspired art for Final Fantasy IX, and Through the Ages reprints, where classic Magic cards get reimagined with Final Fantasy artwork. There are also serialized cards in the Collector Boosters, but no one knows what they are yet. It's something ridiculous that'll sell for the price of a second-hand car no doubt.

For now, Magic: The Gathering – Final Fantasy is still up on Amazon, but let's be honest, it's only a matter of time before it's gone and people start whinging about scalpers. So, if you fancy getting in at a reasonable price instead of paying double in a month, now's your chance.

Christian Wait is a contributing freelancer for IGN covering everything collectable and deals. Christian has over 7 years of experience in the Gaming and Tech industry with bylines at Mashable and Pocket-Tactics. Christian also makes hand-painted collectibles for Saber Miniatures. Christian is also the author of "Pokemon Ultimate Unofficial Gaming Guide by GamesWarrior". Find Christian on X @ChrisReggieWait.

Old Guy Review

They don’t make them like Danny Dolinski anymore. As played with characteristic off-kilter charisma by Christoph Waltz, the aging contract killer at the center of Old Guy swaggers around in a vintage leather jacket, exchanges playfully cutting banter with his criminal associates, and sports a shaggy coiffure. That all prompts a disappointing indicator of this crime-comedy’s joke-telling ability: “The ’90s called: They want your haircut back.” In short: Dolinski is another era’s idea of cool, something that’s made abundantly clear when he’s assigned to train the overzealous upstart (Cooper Hoffman) who could take his place as London’s top hired gun. And once our homicidal odd couple picks up a third wheel played by Lucy Liu, Old Guy starts to feel like a bygone era’s idea of a cool movie, the sort of thing Quentin Tarantino or Steven Soderbergh would’ve populated with underworld smart alecks and crate-digging needle drops when Dolinski was at his peak. And I say this as someone of the age to have a sense of nostalgia for such things. This just doesn’t land.

The throwback vibes are subtle, but the exploration of aging is not: Just as Old Guy director Simon West has fewer opportunities to pull out his old Con Air flash these days, Dolinski is frustrated by his employer’s lowered expectations and a bum shooting hand. That seems like it should be enough for a diverting-but-unmemorable caper, but this one unfortunately crams in a whole buddy-movie arc and a halfhearted romance, too. And even then, it needs to pad out a plot involving an ill-fated trip to Belfast and a hostile mob takeover to get across the 90-minute mark.

There are times when Old Guy mimics the rope-a-dope tactics of its protagonist, its outward doddering giving way to a level of surprise and impact it doesn’t seem capable of – a target’s relative pulled out of the line of fire with a little How the Grinch Stole Christmas routine, or a briefly pulse-elevating car chase. But scenes like these are exceptions; so many others are driven by characters and relationships, and those are dragged down by Dolinski's failure to convincingly or meaningfully click with Hoffman’s Wihlborg or Liu’s Anata. (You have to hand it to screenwriter Greg Johnson: His script may not be particularly novel or memorable, but the character names sure are.)

At least Old Guy has a firm grasp on its actual old guy. Much of that credit goes to Waltz, who’s in his element – and sporting an immaculate mustache – as the underestimated charmer talking his way through sticky situations. There’s a lot of work put in to earn our sympathy for him, which makes sense given his line of work: He’s a professional murderer, but he’s a professional murderer in a vulnerable state, recovering from surgery and threatened by the presence of young gun Wihlborg. In one of Old Guy’s few moments of filmmaking panache, West breaks the slow-motion, party-hearty euphoria of Dolinski’s post-work drinks, drugs, and dancing routine to show us what he looks like from an outsider’s perspective. As Wihlborg approaches his reluctant partner in a bar, what we see is a rhythmless boob dancing with women half his age. It’s a funny image, but it’s also a little sad. But the script keeps such emotions in reserve, turning them off and on with a plot-centric inconsistency that’s also applied to Dolinski’s supposedly debilitating injury. Sometimes he’s hobbled, sometimes he’s an action hero, and it makes no sense.

But Old Guy just can’t settle for being a decent character study of a GOAT in decline. In the scenes between hit men, I heard a yearning for (and, in the case of Waltz, the voice of) the downtime banter of Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Jackie Brown. The love story in the midst of all this aspires to the fireworks of the George Clooney-Jennifer Lopez scenes in Out of Sight, but only gives off a few sparks – the chemistry just isn’t there between Waltz and Liu or their characters.

Old Guy is at least aware enough of its limitations to keep its action sequences sensible, showing Dolinski’s particular set of skills through on-the-fly ingenuity rather than any superhuman gun-fu. It doesn’t make for the most thrilling shootouts, and his deadly accuracy eventually robs any standoff of its suspense, but it is amusing to see him take out multiple adversaries at once by applying his skills with munitions in the kitchen.

At least Old Guy has a firm grasp on its actual old guy.

The generational warfare, meanwhile, has all the depth and heat of a newspaper op-ed about millennials’ financially ruinous appetite for avocado toast. Dolinski debates whether Wihlborg is a member of that touchy-feely cohort, or if his strident teetotaling and hypebeast fashions mark him as a member of Gen Z – a quasi-quip that only emphasizes Old Guy’s sweaty uncertainty about its wunderkind assassin. It’s possible that the hardline stances he spouts are signs of someone who’s not sure who he is, either, but for all of the sincerity Hoffman lends to his character’s unearned convictions, Wihlborg never really comes into focus. It’s fitting, then, that our first glimpse of his killer instincts takes place in the fuzzed-out background of a close-up on Waltz.

Pity poor Lucy Liu, stranded in an extraneous subplot that’s only there to deliver her character – one who runs a karaoke joint and into Dolinski’s arms. Around the midway point, Old Guy bafflingly mucks with its own momentum by cutting between Dolinski and Wihlborg’s most trying job and Anata’s date with a nice doctor. What could possibly be going on here that’s as important as the high-stakes hit on one of their rival organization’s top men? Whatever the reason, it speaks to the amount of filler bulking up the story because it has precious little to say. The dancefloor interludes really pile up across this hour-and-a-half, though none are as flagrantly drawn out as Dolinski and Wihlborg’s arrival at their handler’s dog-track HQ, where they pause to watch a hairy metaphor for their relationship do a slo-mo lap through the dirt.

There’s no real tension here, just inevitability: When Dolinski instructs an injured colleague to look at a picture postcard of a tropical paradise, a clock ought to pop up onscreen, counting down to the shot of that mope’s blood splattering across the postcard because there’s no subversion of cliche to be found here. Uneasy alliances will be struck, fragile trusts will be betrayed, and the full range of our main hitman’s righteous fury will be uncorked.

It’s certainly not impossible for these previously loved puzzle pieces to be taken out from the box and arranged in such a way that they can still come together into something cohesive. But here it’s hard to get too invested in the outcome, or what happens to any of these characters, when most of their interactions are stitched together from hermetically framed shots that seal Waltz, Hoffman, and Liu off from one another. It’s just one more facet of Old Guy that makes this ensemble piece feel like several parallel one-man shows.

Surface Season 2 Review

Surface season 2 premieres Friday, February 21 on Apple TV+. New episodes debut through April 11.

Considering Surface is an amnesia thriller, it’s on theme (and maybe a tad on the nose) if you can’t remember what happened in the first season finale. After all, it aired over two and a half years ago. Struggling to recall plot points would be a detriment to other shows, but this one stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw as a woman trying to figure out her past – add to that a change of setting from San Francisco to London, and this second season counts as both a soft reboot and a worthy jumping-on point.

Back in 2022, Surface fell into the meandering traps that affect so many streaming series, treating its first season like one long pilot episode. Thankfully, its sophomore outing is more urgent in its quest for the truth – and much less forgettable as a result. Memory loss from the accident that kick-started Surface still clouds a lot about Sophie, but the mystery stretches back to her childhood; she’s gone to England to crack the mystery of her mother’s death and its connection to a beautiful heiress. In London, where she goes by Tess, Sophie still travels in the same upper-class circles, and leaving behind the rich, Californian embezzlement victims of season 1 in favor of the ultra-wealthy Huntley family ups the ante for season 2 considerably. The money here is old, and the sizable closets are stuffed with skeletons. When Sophie’s ongoing probe intersects with a reporter’s investigation of abuses tied to the Huntleys, the puzzle at the heart of Surface takes on a new weight..

Having stolen millions of dollars from her husband, James (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), Sophie doesn’t have to ditch her life of luxury: Plush hotels, designer clothing, exclusive clubs, and expensive booze are still on the menu. How quickly she reconnects with the youngest Huntley sibling, Eliza (Millie Brady), reminds us of how good Sophie is at faking it until she makes it, and Mbatha-Raw expertly walks the line between drawing attention and slipping beneath the radar. While Brady portrays Eliza like a frayed nerve, Ted Lasso’s Phil Dunster plays troubled Huntley scion Quinn with a sinister edge, ditching the lovable-idiot aura that made him an AFC Richmond fan favorite – and showcasing his range in the process.

The Huntleys are preparing for Quinn’s lavish wedding, and his relationship with fiancée Grace (Freida Pinto) takes some surprising turns throughout the eight episodes. Grace’s uncertainty about becoming a permanent member of the family stirs up some conflict, but Pinto’s time on screen ebbs and flows and the role ultimately feels like a wasted opportunity. (What brief flashes we see of her complexities are far too fleeting.) Pinto isn’t the only one to get a short shift story-wise: the material for family members played by Joely Richardson and Tara Fitzgerald is similarly meager, but the actors make the most of it. Dunster gets the meatier part, juggling Quinn’s own follies and those of his father and grandfather.

Giving Sophie a part-ally, part-foil in the form of journalist Callum Walsh (Gavin Drea) brings us closer to the truth about what happened to her mother. Sophie’s amnesia means we’re learning everything at the same time she is, and vital information is frustratingly withheld until later in the season. You might be able to figure out the broad brushstrokes from the clues strewn about season 2, but it isn’t an entirely predictable outcome, fortunately – the finale culminates in some unexpected twists

Sophie had her therapist to confide in in season 1, but the keepers of her secrets are more fluid this time around. Considering Eliza hasn’t seen Sophie for a decade, it’s hardly surprising that she’s less than thrilled to see her former friend. The push-pull between the two is explored in some depth, but this thread unravels as the season progresses – disappointingly lost amid other, flashier developments like the fallout of Sophie fleeing San Francisco. Jackson-Cohen is listed as a season regular and appears briefly in the season 2 trailer, so it’s no spoiler to say that James eventually re-enters the picture. When he does, the season kicks up a gear, because it isn’t immediately clear whether he’ll be friend or foe to Sophie. The actor has a knack for playing a menacing husband with layers, and once again, he hits different notes between arrogance and vulnerability.

Surface's sophomore outing is more urgent in its quest for the truth.

Having seen the whole season, I can assure you that answers are forthcoming, and there’s far less withholding and fewer bloated misdirects on the horizon. The second season improves on the first, and another tantalizing cliffhanger promises there’s still more of this story to be told. There’s more to Surface than its slick and seductive appearance, and Mbatha-Raw mines Sophie’s potent mix of grief and rage to new, satisfying depths in season 2.

Spider-Man 4 Gets Small Delay to Move Clear of Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey

The next Tom Holland Spider-Man has been delayed by one week, and probably for good reason.

Sony updated its release calendar today and shared that the fourth Spider-Man movie will now be released on July 31, 2026, a week later than its previously announced July 24, 2026 release. The likely reason is to give the next Spider-Man movie some breathing room from Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey.

Thanks to the date shift, the fourth Spider-Man movie is now coming out two weeks after The Odyssey hits theaters, whereas before it would only be one week removed. Not that Tom Holland would complain considering he’s starring in both movies.

This buffer will give both films a chance to premiere on Imax screens, something we know Christopher Nolan loves to do.

Marvel announced that a fourth Spider-Man movie starring Tom Holland is officially in the works and will be the next Marvel movie following Avengers: Doomsday which is coming out on May 1, 2026. The next Spider-Man film will be directed by Destin Daniel Cretton who directed Shang-Chi for Marvel and was previously set to direct the next Avengers movie before storylines changed as a result of the situation around the Kang character.

Now the Russo Brothers are back to direct Avengers: Doomsday with Robert Downey Jr. stepping in as Doctor Doom. Wild. Check out our complete list of upcoming MCU projects here and get ready for the Oddy-Man 4 or whatever combo word people will come up for The Odyssey Spider-Man 4 double feature.

Matt Kim is IGN's Senior Features Editor.

The 13 Best Stephen King Movies of All Time

Iconic horror novelist Stephen King has had a ton movies adapted from his work -- and that's not counting TV shows and miniseries. And there's simply no sign of slowing down, what with the recent Salem's Lot movie, the new adaptation The Monkey, and more adaptations in the pipeline.

With so many films to choose from, what are the best Stephen King adaptations? We've whittled this massive catalogue down to 13 movies. From ghosts to psychics to... ghosts wanting to feed on psychics, these are truly the movies that not only captured the best of King's work, but also became cinema classics in their own right.

Here are the top Stephen King movies ever, ranked from #13 counting down to #1. Keep scrolling for the list or view the slideshow for a visual countdown!

How Many Stephen King Movies Are There?

There are 54 film adaptations of Stephen King stories, according to the author's official website. The first King adaptation was Carrie in 1976, while the most recent is The Monkey.

The Best Stephen King Movies, Ranked

13. The Dead Zone (1983)

Director: David Cronenberg

Long before Stephen King's 1979 novel The Dead Zone served as fodder for a TV series, it inspired a 1983 film from director David Cronenberg. Cronenberg, who'd already made a name for himself with surreal horror films like Videodrome and Shivers, brought that signature touch to this gripping psychological drama.

The Dead Zone starred Christopher Walken as Johnny Smith, a humble school teacher who is injured in a car accident, trapped in a coma for five years, and awakens to discover he can psychically glimpse into a person's past, present, and future with a mere touch. Less grotesque and violent than many of Cronenberg's horror efforts of the day, Dead Zone was a bleak and unsettling film that made full use of Walken's peculiar presence and gravity as an actor.

12. Gerald's Game (2017)

Director: Mike Flanagan

For years it was thought King's 1992 outing Gerald's Game, which involves a woman handcuffed to a bed fighting to free herself after her husband has a heart attack, was un-adaptable. But then writer/director Mike Flanagan (The Haunting of Hill House, Midnight Mass) came along and knocked it out of the park. Starring Carla Gugino as the trapped, desperate Jessie, Flanagan's Netflix horror movie is superb small-scale suspense and features an immensely captivating performance by Gugino. Taking place mostly in one room, Gerald's Game is a set of tightly wound gears that cranks out dread.

Read IGN's review of Gerald's Game.

11. The Monkey (2025)

Director: Osgood Perkins

A premise as deceptively simple as “if you wind up the monkey, someone brutally dies” leaves a lot of room for error, or for the gnarly kills to be the only things anyone remembers. But from that setup, director Osgood Perkins builds a multifaceted rollercoaster of a midnight movie that elicits as many laughs as shocks or gross-out gags, and succeeds at both animating and skewering the power that death holds over us all.

The Monkey marches to the beat of its own bloodstained drum – and it’s an irresistible rhythm to groove to. Perkins and cast balance the horror and comedy inherent in the movie’s silly premise exceptionally well, and the surreal, absurd touches the Longlegs director adds to a world sketched out by Stephen King only help to set it apart from less imaginative, body-count-obsessed movies. The evil influence of the titular, cursed toy results in blockbuster showcases for fantastic gore effects that, when paired with the film’s surprisingly gentle stance on the inevitability of death, affirm how potent horror-comedy can be when executed with a strong perspective and a willingness to get weird.

Read IGN's review of The Monkey.

10. The Mist (2007)

Director: Frank Darabont

The Mist is based on a King short story found in the 1985 collection Skeleton Crew. Ostensibly a monster movie, The Mist finds a group of people trapped in a remote grocery store after a strange fog envelops the region and terrifying, dinosaur-like creatures begin appearing. But the core of this horror/sci-fi fusion is survival, and the lengths some will go to ensure theirs.

The movie benefited from a solid cast (including stars Tom Jane and Marcia Gay Harden) and director Frank Darabont -- who's one of three directors on this list who've had the most success with King's work -- actually garnered praise with a revised ending that deepened the dark tone of the story.

Read IGN's review of The Mist.

9. Creepshow (1982)

Director: George A. Romero

Horror legends Stephen King and George Romero teamed up for 1982's Creepshow, which was conceived as an homage to the Golden Age of horror comics in the 1950's, including E.C. Comics' infamous releases and DC books like House of Secrets and House of Mystery.

That anthology legacy is reflected in the execution of Creepshow, which revels in its juvenile, B-movie status. The film also has the distinction of featuring original material written by King, rather than a script wholly adapted from his prose work. While two of the five vignettes are based on his short stories, the remaining three are unique to Creepshow. These vignettes are cleverly glued together with animated sequences and a framing sequence starring King's son, Joe (now an accomplished horror writer in his own right).

8. The Green Mile (1999)

Director: Frank Darabont

Because director Frank Darabont had crafted what many consider to be the definitive Stephen King movie with The Shawshank Redemption (more on that film later) some feared he was revisiting overly familiar territory when he returned to adapt another of King's prison dramas, The Green Mile.

Like Shawshank, The Green Mile is a period piece set largely within a prison and centered on a wrongly convicted felon. In this case, the prison is the Depression-era Cold Mountain Penitentiary, and the felon is John Coffey (Michael Clarke Duncan). The corrections officer in charge of the death row inmates (Tom Hanks) is enthralled by Coffey's gentle nature and apparently supernatural healing powers, causing great emotional turmoil as he debates whether he can allow such a marvelous and obviously innocent man to be executed. The Green Mile is easily one of the most emotionally gripping King films (or books, for that matter) and further proof that his non-horror tales are often the ones most ideally suited for film.

Read IGN's review of The Green Mile.

7. Stand By Me (1986)

Director: Rob Reiner

Frank Darabont isn't the only director with a real knack for bringing Stephen King tales to life on screen. Before Misery, Rob Reiner also directed this coming-of-age tale based on King's novella "The Body", collected in the 1982 book Different Seasons.

Stand By Me featured narration by Richard Dreyfuss and a "who's who?" lineup of up-and-coming teen actors at the time - including Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, and Jerry O'Connell. This quartet played a group of friends who hear a rumor about a dead body being discovered and venture out to track it down and find small-town glory. Along the way, they battle some ruthless bullies and learn a thing or two about each other. This was another King film with a deceptively simple formula that really thrived on the strength of the performances. King himself even labeled it as the first truly successful adaptation of his work.

6. It: Chapter One (2017)

Director: Andy Muschietti

Fittingly, one of King's most iconic novels is also one of his most successful adaptations, shattering box office records. But more than just being a moneymaker, IT is a very effective horror film that pits a group of intrepid middle schoolers against the terrifying, inhuman killer lurking beneath the streets of an idyllic Maine town. It's filled with ample spookiness, devilish scares, and a horrifying performance by Bill Skarsgard as Pennywise the Dancing Clown.

It's first chapter works well not just because it's frightening, but because it does something that so few horror films ever manage - it makes audiences care for these heroes as they face down the unimaginable. Just like the book, the half of the story featuring our main characters as kids is the more engrossing part, which is why only Chapter One is here on our list.

Read IGN's review of It: Chapter One.

5. Doctor Sleep (2019)

Director: Mike Flanagan

Mike Flanagan's Doctor Sleep is a modern horror miracle. Adapting King's sequel novel to The Shining, about a grown-up Danny Torrence (Ewan McGregor), Flanagan had to merge the world of King's prose and Kubrick's cinematic vision. Since Kubrick's The Shining took many liberties with King's book -- so much so that King himself disavowed the film -- Flanagan had to bring both worlds together in a way that felt genuine, gripping, and scary.

Visually, most everything we associate with The Shining comes from Kubrick (the hedge maze, the "twins," the various ghouls, etc) and Doctor Sleep is a beautiful, brutal blend of it all. On top of that, it's a fantastic film created by one of the best new masters in the horror game. Also see our video for Doctor Sleep: How the Shining Sequel Handles the Legacy of Jack Torrance

Read IGN's review of Doctor Sleep.

4. Carrie (1976)

Director: Brian De Palma

"If you've got a taste for terror... invite Carrie to the prom!"

That was the Grindhouse-worthy tagline for Carrie, and it said all that needed to be said about this teen horror drama. Carrie was King's big break as a writer in 1974, and a mere two years later, it also became fodder for one of the best films based on his work. The titular character -- Sissy Spacek -- a prototypical awkward teenage girl who suffers from bullying at school and an overbearing, fanatically religious mother (Piper Laurie) at home. She also happens to manifest destructive, psychokinetic powers when she's upset, so you can imagine what happens when Carrie becomes the victim of a cruel prank at her prom.

Carrie was praised both because of its terrifying qualities and its serious exploration of a very troubled character, easily still ranking as one of the very best of the traditional Stephen King horror movies.

3. Misery (1990)

Director: Rob Reiner

Misery operates on a very simple formula. It features only two main characters who spend most of the film locked away in a remote cabin in winter. But both the 1987 novel and Rob Reiner's 1990 adaptation really made the most of this formula.

As with so many of King's stories, Misery features a troubled writer as the lead protagonist. James Caan starred as novelist Paul Sheldon, a man who is rescued from a car crash by a nurse named Annie Wilkes (Kathy Bates). Unfortunately, as Sheldon's "number one fan" Wilkes uses her unique opportunity to trap Sheldon in her cabin and force him to write a new book that will resurrect his most famous character, Misery Chastain. It was a great premise that allowed for Hitchcock levels of tension as Sheldon struggled to placate his demanding host and find a way to escape her clutches. Bates won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Wilkes, a character who still ranks as one of the all-time great horror villains.

2. The Shining (1980)

Director: Stanley Kubrick

Stanley Kubrick's The Shining was born from what might be King's most famous novel, which told the tale of a man named Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) - another of King's struggling writers with a pronounced dark side. Torrance serves as winter caretaker for the remote, luxurious Overlook Hotel in Colorado's Rocky Mountains. A combination of cabin fever and a strong supernatural influence compels Jack to try and murder his family and join the many restless souls trapped within the Overlook's walls. The only thing standing in the hotel's way is Jack's young son, Danny (Danny Lloyd), whose psychic gifts the hotel both craves and fears.

In a twist, King has always been very adamant in his dislike of this adaptation, which he chalks up to Kubrick downplaying the family themes and the supernatural nature of the hotel, but both elements are now among the film's more praised qualities. The Shining is a technically brilliant film, with innovative camera work (particularly the tracking shots of Danny on his tricycle) and the use of physically impossible building layouts to create a subtle but very unsettling feeling. The Shining is so good that it manages to almost remain separate from King's name, ranking simply as one the best horror movies of all time.

1. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Director: Frank Darabont

The first of Frank Darabont's feature-length Stephen King adaptations, The Shawshank Redemption also remains his best. The movie was adapted from the lesser-known novella "Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption" (also Different Seasons collection that spawned Stand By Me). The movie starred Tim Robbins as Andy Dufresne, a banker convicted of murdering his wife and her lover based on circumstantial evidence and doomed to spend the rest of his days within the cold walls of Shawshank Penitentiary. Morgan Freeman co-starred as Red, the wise, world-weary smuggler of contraband.

While Shawshank often veered into dark territory, the movie was ultimately an uplifting tale about one man's refusal to give up hope in even the most depressing circumstances. Robbins played a capable everyman hero, but often it was Freeman who stole the show, both in person and through his now iconic narration.

Upcoming Stephen King Movies

We love the classics, but you may be anticipating what Stephen King releases are coming next. For movies, you can look forward to:

  • The Running Man - Release Date: Nov. 7, 2025
  • The Long Walk - Release Date: TBD

What are your fav Stephen King movies ever? Let us know in the comments.

This article has been updated with streaming information and upcoming Stephen King release information for 2025.

The New Hunger Games Novel Breaks Into Amazon's Top Five Best Sellers Ahead of Its Release Date

There are very few young adult novels as successful as the Hunger Games books. Suzanne Collins released the first book in 2008 and has since released three more books and a total of five movies. And it doesn't stop there as just last year Collins announced yet another book in the series with a movie already in the works.

The next Hunger games book, titled Sunrise on the Reaping, is set to come out on March 18, 2025. Despite only being a preorder, the hardcover edition has already jumped into the top five on Amazon's best-sellers list of books. It has officially surpassed Onyx Storm on this list, which had a wildly successful debut last month and topped last year's Amazon charts ahead of its release.

The hardcover edition of Sunrise on the Reaping is currently receiving a 30% discount on Amazon, dropping the price under $20. You can find a similar discount on the Kindle version of the book.

Sunrise on the Reaping Preorder Deal

The new Hunger Games novel is the fifth book in the series, but it will be taking place in an entirely different place on the timeline. Sunrise on the Reaping is set about 40 years after the events of The Ballad of Songbird and Snakes and 24 years before we reach Katniss' story in the original Hunger Games novel. The story will be taking place during the Second Quarter Quell, which was won by Haymitch Abernathy. If you've read the original novels, you'll know that Haymitch was the mentor for District 12 and portrayed by Woody Harrelson in the films.

If you'd prefer to wait for the film adaptation of this novel, it already has a release date of November 20, 2026.

See more Hunger Games books:

What Is Amazon's Preorder Price Guarantee?

If you've never actually preordered anything from Amazon before, it's worth noting that if you purchase this book, it includes Amazon's preorder price guarantee. According to Amazon's own help page, this means that if the price decreases between now and when the item ships, you'll pay the lowest price. So in this case, if there ends up being an even bigger discount than the one we're seeing right now, that's what you'll pay. Though, it is unlikely that the preorder price will drop much lower than it is right now with the 30% discount.

The Best VR Headsets for PC Gaming

When you want to escape to virtual worlds, having a VR headset that connects to a great gaming PC can unlock even more possibilities. Some of the top VR games work on standalone headsets, but those devices are few and far between. Most games look and play better if your VR headset is hooked up to a capable PC.

TL;DR - The Best VR Headsets for PC:

The best VR headsets for PC offer sharp displays, comfortable designs, accurate tracking, and a seamless connection to a gaming PC or gaming laptop. Admittedly, finding a headset with all these capabilities doesn’t come cheap. However, the Meta 3S, an alternative to the Meta Quest 3, is a great cheap VR headset for PC for those on a tighter budget. But if you have a little more wiggle room, the Valve Index is the simplest option for Steam integration and even PS VR2 supports PC VR with minimal caveats.

Unfortunately, you often don’t get to try out these headsets for fit and functionality before purchasing. So, our experts have done the hands-on testing and research for you, ensuring you get the best VR headset for PC that suits your needs. Whether you’re after versatility or something ready to push graphics to the extreme, one of our five picks will fit your PC VR needs.

1. Valve Index

Best VR Headset for PC

Our review of the Valve Index might be a few years old, but we still stand by our opinion that it is one of the most uncompromising PC VR headsets on the market. The 120Hz refresh rate and 1440x1600 resolution mean apps and games look crisp as you move around and turn your head – super handy when you’re dodging headcrabs in Half-Life Alyx or spotting sneaky xenomorphs in Alien: Rogue Incursion. The Index is also flush with premium padding and comfort dials that you can manipulate to create a snug fit. Even though it weighs 1.79lb, you rarely feel uncomfortable thanks to the well-constructed frame and ergonomic considerations.

Convenient and comfortable flip-down speakers flank your ears, and an easy-to-use passthrough system lets you quickly dip in and out of VR at will. The Index’s ties to Steam also make it a formidable choice for serious VR gamers who want access to an enormous library of games.

Unlike other options on our list, the Valve Index uses external ‘lighthouse’ towers to map the room for hyper-accurate tracking and roomscale VR. Naturally, this summons extra playspace considerations, but the results are worth it. Valve’s ‘Knuckles’ controller solution also deserves praise, offering peerless hands-free immersion finger tracking. The only downside is the price point, but in this case, you certainly get what you pay for – and the platform’s system seller (Half-Life: Alyx) comes bundled in.

2. Meta Quest 3S

Best Budget VR Headset for PC

VR gaming on PC doesn’t always need to be prohibitively expensive, and the Meta Quest 3S is proof of this. The Meta Quest 3S takes the Meta Quest 3 – which we reviewed and loved – and drops a few features along with the price while keeping everything else intact. Of course, the headset is primarily used as a standalone device that works seamlessly with games and entertainment found on Meta, making it seem like an odd pick for PC VR. But access to a Steam VR library or other PC VR titles is as simple as purchasing a link cable or using streaming apps like Steam Link or Air Link with a solid home Wi-Fi connection.

Furthering the case for using the Meta Quest 3S as a PC VR headset is its lighter, slimmer design, weighing a nimble 1.13lbs. It’s also easy to manipulate the headset’s fit using a fabric Y-strap. However, in IGN’s Meta Quest 3S testing, our reviewer found the strap would come a little loose with too much movement. Still, it’s comfortable enough on the head for longer periods.

The lenses are the biggest downgrade when comparing the Quest 3 to the Quest 3S. Rather than pancake lenses, the Quest 3S has 1832x1920, 20ppd Fresnel lenses, sacrificing clarity and causing distortion. At least full-color passthrough, well-balanced controllers, and top-notch head tracking are major upgrades over the Quest 2 (and a whole slew of other headsets). Given the Quest 3S is equipped with the same GPU, CPU, and RAM as the Quest 3, its performance is also similar, if not better for a seamless and snappy VR experience on a PC or standalone.

3. HTC Vive Pro 2

Best VR Visuals

The HTC Vive Pro 2 keeps everything looking sharp and detailed with minimal screen door effect thanks to its 2448x2448 per-eye resolution. That’s paired with a butter-smooth 90 to 120Hz refresh rate ready to make the most of vibrant vistas and realism in Microsoft Flight Simulator. Its fast-switch LCD panels even support a 120-degree field of view for deeper immersion in all the action. However, these optics are demanding, so a beefy gaming PC is required to keep up.

The HTC Vive Pro may offer an impressive 5K resolution, but its design isn’t as revolutionary. Don’t get us wrong: This VR headset is comfortable enough, keeping weight well-balanced and offering supportive cushioning, an excellent adjustable head strap, and the ability to tweak the distance between lenses; it’s just a little bit clunky and a pain to set up. The headset requires two base stations and several cords just to get it powered on and working with your PC. Guess that’s the price you pay for unmatched fidelity.

Though the main focus of a VR headset may be visual, the HTC Vive Pro also excels in audio performance, so investing in a gaming headset isn’t necessary. Instead, headphones are built-in, producing booming hi-res audio to place you at the center of the action.

Although we haven't reviewed the HTC Vive Pro 2 ourselves, we did go hands-on with the original HTC Vive Pro and were overall impresed by the image quality and comfort it provided.

4. HTC Vive XR Elite

Best VR Headset for Work and Play

Adaptability is a massive bonus when picking a PC VR headset, and the HTC Vive XR Elite is a smart choice if you’re looking for an HMD that suits both professional and casual settings and offers virtual, augmented, and mixed-reality experiences. If you want to get some work done at a virtual desk and experience the intensity of PC VR gaming, the XR Elite is worth considering.

The main caveat with the XR Elite is that you’ll have to use a link cable or the Vive Streaming app to access the PC VR library. The tradeoff here is the device's portability and viability for working environments versus the raw power offered by true PC VR headsets like the Valve Index.

The HTC Vive XR Elite’s wireless design and unobtrusive speakers make it a great traveling companion, a solution for business trips and play sessions on the road. Although it's not best in class, the 1920x1920 resolution per eye and 110-degree field of view provide bright and clear visuals. Like its HTC Vive Pro sibling, the XR Elite also offers multiple lens and band adjustments for a secure fit.

5. PlayStation VR2

Best VR for Console and PC

That’s right: The PlayStation VR2 works on PC. The VR headset, once exclusively for PlayStation 5, now can connect to another device with a PC adapter for $59.99. The setup is fairly simple: You just need to connect the adapter to the single USB-C cord that comes on the PS VR2. A DisplayPort 1.4 cable is also required and, like most headsets, you’ll need a gaming PC that meets the minimum requirements to run. Luckily, most budget gaming PCs fit the bill. From there, with a Steam account, you can play Steam’s impressive library of VR games.

There is a catch, as not all of the PS VR2 features will work when playing on PC. You will no longer get HDR support on the 2000x2040 per-eye OLED panels, but action should still look crisp in 4K with no screen door effect and feel immersive with the 120Hz refresh rate and 110-degree FOV. Other features like eye-tracking, adaptive triggers, headset feedback, and controller haptics won’t be available. Though these extras would be nice, we don’t think they're deal breakers. You can still enjoy a comfortable fit, finger-touch detection, rumble, 3D audio, and see-through view when PC gaming.

Beyond a few caveats, our hands-on testing of PS VR2 shows that it's a great option for PC VR. If you’ve got a PS5 and are on the fence about buying the VR headset, we think this new functionality makes a great case for the purchase. It’s expensive, costing over $600 with the adapter, but it’s still a steal compared to many of our other PC VR headset picks.

How to Choose the Best VR Headsets for PC

We’ve chosen these PC VR Headsets based on our expertise and experience with VR, as well as IGN reviews and consumer feedback. When buying a VR headset, there are more than just digital specifications to consider, with physical comfort being an essential facet of the experience. For example, comfort dials, airflow, and build quality impact how the headset will feel when used. However, it’s also necessary to consider the technology under the hood, with the efficacy of a headset’s parts correlating with performance in the games you wish to play.

Then there are quality-of-life features to consider, like the efficacy and style of a headset’s tracking solution or passthrough and refresh rate, which governs the fluidity you experience inside a given game.

PC VR FAQ

Do I need a powerful PC to use VR?

Like PC games, VR headsets and VR games have minimum and recommended system requirements that you’ll need to meet to get the associated applications working smoothly. If you’re jumping into PC VR to play a specific set of games, it’s worth investigating the system requirements before making any big purchases to ensure you’ll be able to make the most of your proposed headset. Generally speaking, you will need high-end hardware in your gaming rig, such as potent graphics cards and processors, to play the most demanding VR games. If building a gaming rig for PC VR is out of your budget, it’s worth considering some of the standalone headsets on the market, which work wirelessly without needing an external computer.

What VR headsets don’t require a PC?

VR headsets for PC are mighty capable, but if you’d like to play away from home or even in a different room from your computer, you’ll need to find another option. The Meta Quest 3S and the entire Quest lineup are great hybrid options that excel as standalone VR headsets. The Pico 4 works similarly to the Meta Quest and is great for those who don’t want a tether. We’d be remiss not to mention the Apple Vision Pro; it’s wildly powerful solo, and it seamlessly integrates into the Apple ecosystem, proving an innovative way to work on the best MacBooks.

PlayStation VR2 doesn’t require a PC. However, you’ll need the PS5 to enjoy the truly spectacular VR experience. Some ultra-cheap VR headsets also use the screen of your smartphone for a fun, more immersive experience that’s especially well-suited for children.

How do you ensure the best VR headset for PC experience?

Beyond having a powerful gaming PC and a capable, comfortable VR headset, consider these other factors too. A well-lit space ensures you have the most accurate tracking. You’ll also want the freedom to move around the area you’re playing in, so the space should be free of obstacles or furniture that could trip you up or get tangled in wires. It may be helpful to place a rug or other objects that indicate when you’re leaving the dedicated play area. Luckily, some headsets come with their own indicators.

When do VR headsets usually go on sale?

Almost all of the best VR headsets that are PC compatible will drop in prices a few different times every year. One of the overall best shopping events for VR discounts is Amazon Prime Day, which takes place in July every year. After that, Black Friday and Cyber Monday tend to have the best overall deals consistently. Both events tend to primarily offer Meta Quest deals, but sometimes other headsets are available at a discount.

Sarah Thwaites is a freelance tech writer at IGN, with bylines at GameInformer, TrustedReviews, NME and more.

Danielle Abraham is a Tech freelance writer based in Los Angeles who spends her free time creating videos and geeking out over music history.

Score a New Nintendo Switch OLED Console for Only $224 with Free Shipping

If you're in the market for a new Switch console, here's a deal worth consideration. AliExpress is currently offering a Nintendo Switch OLED console for only $223.61 after coupon code: USAFF30 is applied during checkout. This product is also stocked in a US warehouse, so it ships free and arrives within about a week. AliExpress has a 15-day free return policy and guarantees a refund if your order doesn't arrive within 20 days.

This is a brand new, genuine Nintendo Switch console, but keep in mind that it is imported from either Japan or Hong Kong. What that means is that the warranty it comes with will most not likely be valid in the United States. The packaging and materials (like the manual) might also be written in another language). Functionally, however, Switch consoles are region unlocked so you'll be able to play them in the US without any problems. You'll be able to select English as your default language just like any console you buy here. A US power plug adapter is also supplied.

Nintendo Switch OLED for $223.61

If you can afford the small price premium of the Switch OLED over the non-OLED model, then I think it's worth the upgrade. The Nintendo Switch OLED features an OLED display that offers better image quality than the original LCD display. That includes deeper blacks, more vibrant colors, and a better color gradient. The text is sharper and easier to read as well. The screen isn't that much bigger (7" on the OLED vs 6.2" on the non-OLED), but it does feel a lot bigger thanks to a thinner bezel. Other upgrades worth mentioning are a new and improved kickstand, a hard-wired ethernet port on the docking station, and an exclusive white Switch shell and matching Joy-Cons.

$39.99 Nintendo Switch Video Games

Best Buy has dropped several must-have Nintendo Switch video games from $59.99 to $39.99, a savings of 33%. Several of them are available in your choice of a physical copy or digital download. You won't lose out even if you plan to upgrade to the Switch 2, since the new console has been confirmed to be backwards compatible with nearly all Switch games.

The "Switch 2" Isn't Out Until June or Later

If you're holding out on the next generation Switch 2 console, be prepared to wait for a while longer. It's possible that the console update might not be released until after June of 2025. We suspect the price of the Switch will be at least $400, so you'd be paying hundreds more than a Switch OLED console right now. Basically, if you don't own a Switch, now is still a good time to join the family. The games are still as amazing as when they were first released, and they're on sale more often than ever before. If you're looking for deals on accessories, check out the best Switch deals of 2024.

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.

Best GPU 2025: Pick the Best Graphics Card for Your Gaming PC

When you’re setting out to build or upgrade your gaming PC, the best graphics cards are often the first thing that comes to mind. There’s a simple reason for that: When it comes to PC games, GPUs are the most impactful component in determining your rig's raw frame rates. Quite simply, most of the time, a better graphics card directly results in better performance – at least up to a point. With Nvidia's RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 cards out now (though it's nearly impossible to actually get one), here are the best graphics cards on the market.

TL;DR: These Are the Best Graphics Cards:

These days, GPUs have legitimately become a luxury good. With graphics cards like the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 costing upwards of $1,999, you can expect to pay top dollar for top performance. Prices are still way higher than they were when the GTX 970 blew my mind in 2014 – even when adjusted for inflation. However, if you temper your expectations, you can still get a solid gaming experience for a fraction of that price, especially if you're okay with gaming at 1440p or 1080p.

I’ve been reviewing graphics cards for the last four generations, and I’ve personally benchmarked, built with, and played games using every GPU on this list. However, if none of these strike your fancy, feel free to comment below what kind of gaming experience you’re looking for, and I’d be happy to help you find the perfect card for your build.

What to Look for in a Graphics Card

While it would be easy to just tell you to get the most powerful graphics card on the market for the best gaming experience, the truth is that picking a GPU is something you need to put a bit more thought into. not all graphics cards are created equal, you see, and everyone is going to need something a little different out of their PCI-E brick.

The resolution you play games at is going to be the first thing you want to figure out. Whether you already have a gaming monitor you love or you're looking to build up an entire gaming battlestation, decide on your resolution first. This is because a graphics card that's great at 4K isn't exactly going to translate to an amazing 1080p graphics card. Just take a look at the Nvidia RTX 5090. While the new flagship flies at 4K, it can actually be slower than much cheaper graphics cards at 1080p, due to CPU bottlenecking. Instead, if you're playing at 1080p, something like the Intel Arc B580 is going to be a much better fit. You're still going to get solid gaming performance, but at a much lower price, which you can use to, well, buy more games. Likewise, 1440p gamers are probably best off buying something like the AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT or the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super.

Budget is also a huge concern, and graphics cards are only getting more expensive these days. It would be awesome if everyone could afford an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090, but that's just not the world we live in. These days, the floor sits around $200-$250. For that price you can get a solid 1080p graphics card, without having to go back to a previous generation. If you have a bit more cash, something like the Nvidia RTX 4060 will unlock all of Nvidia's exclusive bells and whistles – though they're much less important on a lower-end GPU.

If you really want to go all-out, you can get an amazing graphics card for around $1,000. Both the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX and Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 will provide an awesome 4K gaming experience, and the one you choose should ultimately depend on how much you care about ray tracing. For most people that just want raw gaming performance, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX is probably going to be a better option, but you're going to want to wait a minute for AMD's next-generation offering. I don't know how well the Radeon RX 9070 XT is going to perform until I benchmark it, but it should prove to be great for 4K gaming, especially with the upcoming FSR 4.

Luckily, it looks like this generation of graphics cards is going to make 4K gaming much more accessible. When I reviewed the Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti, I found that it had no problem breaking 60 fps in even demanding games like Black Myth Wukong. However, more expensive and powerful cards like the RTX 5080 and 5090 are going to give you more breathing room for future PC games.

With more expensive graphics cards, however, power is going to be a big concern. You're going to want to make sure you check which power supply you have, and check it against the power requirements for the graphics card you're looking at. Something like the Intel Arc B580 can get away with a 450W PSU, but you're going to want to make sure you have something much more powerful for the Radeon RX 7800 XT, for instance. You don't need to go overboard and fork over the cash for a power supply that offers twice the recommended power, just make sure you have enough juice to keep your GPU going.

1. Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super

The Best Graphics Card for Most People

While it kind of hurts to call any GPU that costs $599 affordable, that’s kind of what the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super is going for. For a mid-range price, you’re getting an extremely solid graphics card that can pump out 1440p-ready gaming performance, and can even stretch into 4K in certain games. It’s not the most powerful graphics card out there right now, but this would be Goldilocks’ choice.

When I reviewed the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super, I found it to be an extremely strong contender, and probably the best of the mid-generation refresh cards that Nvidia launched at CES 2024. While it still has the same 12GB of VRAM that held the original RTX 4070 back, the RTX 4070 Super is packed with 7,168 CUDA cores, compared to 5,888 in the original model. That’s a 21% jump in shading cores, and this difference is reflected in gaming performance.

Just looking at a game like Cyberpunk 2077, which absolutely loves CUDA, you can see a 12% jump in performance over the RTX 4070 at 1440p. And, at 4K, the RTX 4070 Super is 13% faster than its predecessor in CD Projekt Red’s demanding RPG. Likewise, when running a game like Forza Horizon 5 at 4K, the RTX 4070 Super manages an impressive 123 fps, compared to the 94 fps of the original RTX 4070. That’s a 30% increase in performance at the same launch price.

No matter which game you play at 1440p, you’re going to get extremely good performance out of the RTX 4070 Super, and that’ll translate into 4K gaming more often than not. And with 1440p gaming growing in popularity, there’s never been a better time to upgrade to a card that can really soar at that resolution.

2. Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti

The Best Mainstream Graphics Card If You Want to Spend a Bit More

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is a lesson in pricing. At its suggested price of $749, it is one of the best bang-for-your-buck graphics cards of this entire generation. However, with the graphics card just having launched recently, it remains to be seen how available it will be at that suggested price. It is distinctly possible that the only RTX 5070 Ti graphics cards that are available will cost much more than the suggested price, which will make it much harder to recommend.

If you can find the RTX 5070 Ti at $749, or even up to $800, it is one of the best 4K graphics cards for most people. When I reviewed the 5070 Ti, I found that it stayed within reaching distance of the RTX 5080, consistently sitting just 13-15% behind it, while having a 33% lower asking price. It's not hard to see why it's the best value high-end graphics card of this generation, so far at least.

The elephant in the room, however, is Blackwell's tepid generation-on-generation improvement over the RTX 4000 graphics cards. The Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti has the best generational gain out of any of the RTX 5000 cards, and its still limited to being just 11% faster than the RTX 4070 Super and 21% faster than the original RTX 4070. That's not a huge jump, but its still a bigger improvement than the RTX 5080, which is just 15% faster than the RTX 4080 in the same test suite.

3. Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090

The Best Nvidia Graphics Card

There's no way around it, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 is the most powerful graphics card on the market right now. Full stop. While it doesn't mark the same kind of generational growth that the RTX 4090 or even the RTX 3090 did, there's no getting around the fact that it provides the best gaming performance you can get right now – especially when you take DLSS multi-frame generation into account.

Not only is the RTX 5090 bigger than the 4090, now coming with 21,760 CUDA cores and 32GB of GDDR7 memory, but it also has a much higher power budget. When I reviewed the RTX 5090, I found the next-gen graphics flagship would peak at a staggering 578W, a huge increase from the 448W of the RTX 4090. With all that extra power, Nvidia needed to find a better way to dissipate heat, and introduced a new cooler for its Founders Edition. Instead of doubling down on the triple-fan design of the last couple of generations, Team Green actually found a way to slim the design back down to a dual slot cooler, something I haven't seen in a flagship Nvidia graphics card since the RTX 2080 Ti.

The company was able to do this by shrinking down the circuit board where the GPU is located, placing it at the center of the card. Each side of that PCB is bookended by pass-through heatsinks, where fans pull cool air through the bottom of the card, and shoot it straight through to the top of your PC case. The thermal engineering of it all is a bit more complicated than that, but even with all that extra power, I only ever saw the RTX 5090 reach up to 87°C. That's a high temperature, but its still low enough to game at full blast.

On average, I found the RTX 5090 to be about 26% faster than the RTX 4090, when looking at 4K games and synthetic 3DMark benchmarks. That number does diminish at lower resolutions, of course, and you really shouldn't be forking over the $1,999 (or more!) for this GPU if you're not going to play at 4K. Even at 4K, there were certain games that simply didn't have much of a performance uplift due to the limitations of the CPU – and I used the Ryzen 7 9800X3D. For better or worse, then, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 shines in the exact kind of workload it's designed for. No holds barred, everything maxed out at 4K, and with minimal upscaling. Gone are the days where DLSS on 'Performance' mode is necessary at 4K – at least for this beastly GPU.

4. AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX

The Best AMD Graphics Card

While AMD doesn’t really have a GPU that can go blow-for-blow with the RTX 4090, it does have one that is extremely competitive with the RTX 4080 Super, Nvidia’s next-best and more attainable card: The AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX. Our hands-on testing of the Radeon RX 7900 XTX made it clear that this GPU is an absolute beast at 4K that can keep up with Nvidia, even beating Team Green in some games.

Even in games that are traditionally hard on AMD graphics cards, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX can handle at 4K. Just take a look at Cyberpunk 2077 – it’s able to manage an average of 58 fps at 4K with the ray tracing ultra preset, with FSR enabled. Obviously that’s not quite as good as the RTX 4080 in the same test, but frankly it was never going to be. However, in games with lighter ray tracing loads, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX fares a lot better.

For instance, in Forza Horizon 5 with everything cranked, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX manages an impressive 158fps at 4K, basically matching the RTX 4080 Super at 159fps. Likewise, in Far Cry 6, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX can deliver an incredible 154fps average, beating out the RTX 4080 Super, which can do 151fps.

Like with any graphics card, it’s important to know what kind of games you want to play. But if you’re playing a lot of games with little to no ray tracing, the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX is an extremely potent 4K graphics card. Plus with DisplayPort 2.1, it’s better equipped for higher resolution ultrawide monitors.

5. AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT

The Best GPU for 1440p

When you think of the perfect resolution for games, it’s easy to jump to 4K and say “more pixels is better." However, 1440p really is the sweet spot for PC gaming, and the Radeon RX 7700 XT is the star of the show, thanks to the performance you get for the money. AMD has lowered the price on the Radeon RX 7700 XT from its launch price of $449 down to $419, but you can easily find it for around $399 on Amazon. At this price, it goes head to head against the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti, and that’s not a fight that looks good for Nvidia. And while I didn't do a standalone review for the 7700 XT, I tested it alongside the Radeon RX 7800 XT, its big sibling.

While the RTX 4060 Ti does beat out the 7700 XT in Cyberpunk 2077, it’s not by much. The RTX 4060 Ti gets 62fps at 1440p, and the Radeon RX 7700 XT gets 49fps. And that’s on the ray tracing ultra preset. Nvidia’s lead disappears in other games, though.

For instance, in Forza Horizon 5, maxed out at 1440p, the RX 7700 XT manages 118fps, compared to 107 from the RTX 4060 Ti. Likewise, in Total War: Warhammer 3, which doesn’t have any fancy ray tracing tech, the RTX 4060 Ti gets smoked, with it scoring 68 fps to AMD’s 85. That’s a 20% lead at about the same price.

There is a catch, though. While the Radeon RX 7700 XT is more powerful than the RTX 4060 Ti, it’s also more power-hungry, drawing up to 312W from the wall in my testing. Compared to the 159W that the RTX 4060 Ti eats up, that’s a pretty huge gap. However, if you have a power supply that can handle it – AMD recommends 550W – you get a much more powerful card at the same price. Whether or not it affects your power bill down the line is a future issue.

6. Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060

The Best GPU for 1080p

According to the Steam Hardware Survey, 1080p gaming displays are still the most popular monitors out there, and it's not close. So, despite how hyped up 4K displays are, if you’re comfortable with 1080p, you don’t need an extremely powerful graphics card to play even the most demanding games. That’s where the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 really shines.

The RTX 4060 can power any game at 1080p, even with all the fancy ray tracing settings that are coming out these days. And thanks to DLSS, it can even stretch to higher resolutions in certain games. And for a current-generation graphics card that you can find under $300, that’s not a bad deal.

When I reviewed the RTX 4060, I found that it was able to run most games extremely well at 1080p with all the settings cranked at more than 60fps, even if it just barely got there in some games. For instance, in Cyberpunk 2077 on the ray tracing ultra preset, the RTX 4060 scored just 62fps at 1080p. That is the golden frame rate, but you’re not going to be doing much high-refresh gaming on this card.

The RTX 4060 does have a weak side, though, and that’s how it compares to the RTX 3060 Ti that came out before it. You can still find the RTX 3060 Ti at most retailers, and for a comparable price, but yet it manages to beat out the RTX 4060 in most of my tests. There are some features you’d be giving up by going with a last-generation card, DLSS 3.0 being chief among them, but that may be worth it for the slight edge in performance you can get. However, at this price range, a feature like DLSS 3.0 that can stretch performance out in supported games is worth it, and can really stretch out the value of the card.

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 isn’t perfect, but if you want a current-generation graphics card for under $300 that runs any PC game above 60fps, I’d have a hard time coming up with an alternative – certainly not the Radeon RX 7600.

Upcoming GPUs

Now that the latest generation of Nvidia graphics cards is out, starting with the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, 2025 seems to be a packed year for graphics cards. Team Green followed up its flagship-level cards with the RTX 5070 Ti, which really helps bridge the gap between the mid-range and the high end. However, because this is still an expensive 4K card, anyone looking for 1440p gaming is probably better off waiting for either the Nvidia RTX 5070 or AMD's upcoming cards.

Because Nvidia isn't alone in new graphics cards. AMD's Radeon RX 9070 and RX 9070 XT are right around the corner, launching in March 2025. I got a chance to sneak in a benchmark of the 9070 at AMD's CES 2025 booth, and while those are preliminary results you should take with a heaping of salt, it looks like it's going to give the Radeon RX 7900 XT and RTX 4080 a run for their money.

Best Graphics Cards FAQ

AMD or Nvidia? Or Intel?

When it comes to which brand of graphics card you should get, it ultimately comes down to your personal preference – even if each brand has its own unique advantages. Intel graphics cards are the most affordable option on the market right now, but its graphics cards aren’t exactly the fastest in the land. On the other hand, Nvidia makes the most powerful GPUs around, but you’re going to have to pay out the nose for that performance.

AMD graphics cards strike a pretty good balance between the two, but while the company loves to use open-source graphics APIs, it means you don’t get access to some of the exclusive features that Nvidia owners enjoy – features like DLSS (and the new DLSS 4). AMD has alternatives for literally every Nvidia software feature, but some of them simply aren’t as good. See our guide to AMD vs. Nvidia GPUs for more info.

What power supply should I get?

Graphics cards, especially high-end ones, are sucking up more electricity with every passing year. If you’re looking to build a new gaming PC, or even upgrade from an older graphics card, you should really consider upgrading to one of the best power supplies.

Some of the graphics cards out there right now can take upwards of 450W of power by themselves, so you may want to consider a 1,000W power supply – especially if you’re going for the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090.

GTX vs. RTX

Nvidia has both an RTX, or Ray Tracing Texel eXtreme, and GTX, Giga Texel Shader eXtreme graphics cards series, with the RTX offerings being newer, more powerful, and more expensive.

That boosted performance is thanks to the architecture of RTX cards, which offer both Tensor and RT cores alongside CUDA cores for better graphics and rendering. Tensor cores enable AI and high-performance computing tasks bringing support for DLSS tech to help with upscaling and sharpening. RT cores are dedicated to ray tracing, allowing for more realistic lighting and shadows in scenes. Nvidia’s GTX graphics cards have a much simpler architecture and don’t offer Tensor or RT cores. Though they still work for budget builds, GTX cards will soon be obsolete.

Where to Get the Best Graphics Cards in the UK

There aren't too many differences when it comes to the graphics cards you can pick up in the UK, but the main takeaway is where you can purchase them. All of the following links have been updated with UK vendors, saving you some time and money if you're interested in picking up any of the graphics cards we've mentioned.

Jacqueline Thomas is the Hardware and Buying Guides Editor at IGN. When she's not helping her friends and family buy computers, you can usually find her tinkering with her own PC.

Nintendo Sound Clock: Alarmo Is Now Available at Best Buy

The Mario company's latest hardware release is Nintendo Sound Clock: Alarmo. Previously exclusive to the Nintendo Store and only available for Nintendo Switch Online members, it’s now available to everyone. You can purchase your very own Alarmo at Best Buy right now for $99.99.

Where to Buy Alarmo

Alarmo is an interactive Nintendo-themed alarm clock. From a hardware perspective, it looks nice and cartoony, like something straight out of the Mushroom Kingdom. It has a full-color display that shows you the date, day, and time in a font and style based on your choice of five (or more) games.

Nintendo Sound Clock: Alarmo Games

Here are the games whose themes come pre-loaded:

  • Super Mario Odyssey
  • The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
  • Splatoon 3
  • Pikmin 4
  • Ring Fit Adventure

If you connect your Nintendo account to your Alarmo, you can download additional game themes for free, including Mario Kart 8 Deluxe.

To set it, you pick the game you want for the display, select a “scene,” and set the time and an alarm. When it’s time for the alarm to go off, you’ll hear music and sounds based on the game and scene you picked.

You can use Alarmo like a normal alarm clock, pressing the button to turn it off. Or you can use the interactive features, which make sounds play and characters on the screen react as you move around in bed after the alarm goes off. In this mode, getting out of bed turns the alarm off automatically.

In addition to setting alarms, you can have Alarmo play music from your chosen game every hour. Or, if you like to use sleep sounds, you can have it play calming music when you go to bed.

More Nintendo Hardware

This isn’t the first weird Nintendo release by a long shot. You can still buy a Pokemon Go Plus+ at some retailers, and you can go to bed with it, too. We're also following every development about Nintendo's next piece of hardware: the Switch 2.

Chris Reed is a deals expert and commerce editor for IGN. You can follow him on Bluesky @chrislreed.com.

What to Watch This Weekend (February 21-February 23)

Entertainment has hit critical mass over the last decade, with more shows and movies being produced and released than ever before. It’s impossible to keep up with everything hitting the digital space, whether it be Premium Video on Demand (PVOD) or a traditional streaming network. With that in mind, we figured it was well past time for us to whip up a little something to help you keep up (and catch up) with all there is to watch in the big, wide world of digital viewing. And thus, the Streaming Rewind was born!

We’ll update this list at the end of each week so you can check out what you may have missed, and what’s coming up on the weekend. We’ll keep it a mix of popular releases and noteworthy lesser-known titles to help you find what’s worth taking the risk on as well as dive into a few things that we loved and why we loved ‘em, or just break down a show or movie that left us with some opinions. Sometimes, we’ll even have guest entries from other members of the IGN staff. If you’re not interested in all that and just want to see a bulleted list of what’s out there, pop on down to the New and Noteworthy and ICYMI sections.

It’s a Big Week for Digital and Demand

Lots and lots of rentals (or digital purchases) are coming your way this week, with Oscar nominees continuing to flood the digital market as The Brutalist joins last week’s The Seed of the Sacred Fig, Better Man and Hard Truths. While it was snubbed despite predictions favoring Pamela Anderson for a leading actress nomination, The Last Showgirl is also available for your at-home viewing pleasure. Mufasa, the sequel to the “live action” Lion King adaptation hits digital this week as well (but will also eventually end up on Disney+).

Gotta Go Fast to Paramount+ For Sonic 3

If you missed the little blue speedster during his theatrical run, you can now check out Sonic, Knuckles, Shadow and multiple Jim Carreys in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 on Paramount+. Sonic and his friends face their greatest challenge yet as they square up with Shadow, tragic past and all. Fair warning for those unfamiliar with Shadow’s backstory: this Sonic entry might require some tissues.

Suits L.A. Continues the Phenomenon on NBC

While Suits was never a particularly remarkable show, it was always incredibly watchable. This is something younger audiences discovered in 2023 as the series saw a resurgence on Netflix, leading to this new spin-off starring The [expletive] Green Arrow himself, Stephen Amell. Tune in this weekend if the coastal change works for the series, and see how the former super hero holds up in court.

New and Noteworthy This Week:

  • Mufasa: The Lion King, February 18 — Digital and demand
  • Sonic the Hedgehog 3, February 18 — Paramount+
  • The Last Showgirl, February 18 — Digital and demand
  • The Brutalist, February 18 — Digital and demand
  • Companion, February 18 — Digital and demand
  • Reacher, February 20 — Prime Video
  • Zero Day, February 20 — Netflix
  • The SAG Awards, February 23 — Netflix
  • Suits LA, February 23 — NBC

ICYMI:

If you had too much going on last week, here are some of the notable things that premiered or debuted on streaming and digital that you may have missed.

  • The Witcher: Sirens of the Deep, February 11 — Netflix
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig, February 11 — Digital and demand
  • Nickel Boys, February 11 — Digital and demand
  • Hard Truths, February 11 — Digital and demand
  • Better Man, February 11 — Digital and demand
  • The Simpsons, The Past and the Furious, February 12 — Disney+
  • Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, February 13 — Peacock
  • Cobra Kai’s final season, February 13 — Netflix
  • The Gorge, February 14 — Apple TV+
  • SNL50: The Homecoming Concert, February 14 — Peacock
  • Yellowjackets Season 3, February 14 — Paramount+ w/ Showtime
  • The BAFTAs, February 16 — BritBox
  • SNL 50: The Anniversary Special, February 16 — NBC/Peacock
  • The White Lotus, February 16 — Max

How to Read the Hunger Games Books in Order

2025 marks 17 years since Suzanne Collins debuted the brutal world of The Hunger Games and its heroic rebel leader, Katniss Everdeen. With a new prequel set to release in just a couple of weeks, now is the perfect time to revisit the original books that started it all.

Set in a dystopian world where kids kill each other annually as a way to quell a rebellious and fractured nation, The Hunger Games sparked a YA frenzy and inspired women all over the world to take up archery. If you're feeling like you want to revisit the franchise but don't know where to start, we're here to guide you through the Hunger Games books in order. You can also check out our guide to The Hunger Games movies as well as our list of the best books like The Hunger Games.

How to Read the Hunger Games Books in Order

While the newest edition to the series, The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, is set before the original trilogy, the context provided by the three Hunger Games books is key to truly enjoying the prequel. With that in mind, we recommend reading the originals before that entry. But if you want a chronological journey through Panem, then feel free to begin with Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes before hitting the others.

1. The Hunger Games

It was this dramatic YA hit that launched the epic Hunger Games franchise. After author Suzanne Collins found herself flicking between coverage of the ongoing war in Iraq and reality TV late at night, she was inspired to create her bestselling novel about a world where kids must fight each other to the death for the entertainment of their fellow countrymen. It's a brutal entry into the dystopian YA canon that launched 1,000 imitators and a smash-hit box office franchise that's still going strong today.

The story of this first novel follows Katniss, a young woman in the impoverished District 12, who scavenges to help her family survive far from the watchful eye of the Capitol. But when the annual reaping ceremony sees Katniss's young sister picked as a Tribute for that year's Hunger Games, Katniss volunteers, sending herself on a nightmarish journey of survival. Fighting against other children from Panem and alongside her fellow District 12 tribute, the sweet-hearted baker Peeta, she must outsmart not only her competitors but also the maniacal government that sent them there.

2. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

Following their shocking survival in the Hunger Games, Peeta and Katniss should be living a peaceful life as champions. But after tricking the Capitol into letting them both survive, the pair are in more danger than ever. Their radical survival has inspired cells of resistance across Panem, and President Snow blames Katniss, threatening death to her loved ones if she doesn't play along with the Capitol narrative. But Katniss can't help but be inspired by the bravery of the Districts that she and Peeta visit on their "Victory Tour," and soon the pair finds themselves in the arena of the Hunger Games once again. Taking her bestselling formula and expanding the world and lore while introducing new fan-fave characters like Finnick Odair and Johanna Mason, the second entry in the series sets up the shocking finale brilliantly with a world-shifting twist that changes everything we know about Panem.

3. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay

In the action-packed finale of the original Hunger Games trilogy, Katniss and her rebellion friends are flung into a nightmarish war against the Capitol. As they aim to take down President Snow and install their own leader, Alma Coin, Katniss finds herself the reluctant face of a battle that puts her loved ones in the crosshairs. Instead of a return to the Hunger Games arena, Snow brings the Hunger Games to the streets of the Capitol, where Katniss and her crew must battle through nightmarish traps and horrific violence in order to achieve their goal of bringing freedom to Panem. But, as she learns, nothing is what it seems, and some people don't want to change the system so much as take control of it. This trilogy-ender stands out as a surprisingly depressing and realistic end to a blockbuster series.

Note: The theatrical version of this final book was split into two films, Mockingjay - Part 1 and Part 2.

4. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

As noted above, this prequel is set 64 years before the original book, though Collins wrote it with audiences who were familiar with her series in mind. That's why the prequel ends up at the end of our list, so you can fully enjoy the context and worldbuilding of the original trilogy before having your heart broken by the origin story of the villainous President Snow.

Chronicling the origins of the Hunger Games as we know them, this story centers on the planning of the 10th edition of the Games and the impoverished 18-year-old Coriolanus Snow, who is chosen as a mentor for District 12. It's there he meets their female tribute, Lucy Gray Baird, who becomes an influential part in the history of the Games, thanks to the way she utilizes her skills as a musician to engage the audience. As Snow and Lucy grow closer, both their lives change forever as they prepare for the Hunger Games and fall for each other in the process. This is an intriguing look at the early days of the Games and how both Lucy and Snow shaped them. If you're already a fan, it's an expansion filled with Easter eggs. And if you're a newcomer, it's an interesting jumping-on point that'll change how you read the series.

Will There Be More Hunger Games Books?

Four years after the initial book release of The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Suzanne Collins announced her plans for a new installment in the Hunger Games series. "Sunrise on the Reaping," another prequel to the original trilogy, will be published on March 18, 2025. According to the Associated Press, the new book will take place 40 years after the story of Lucy Gray and 24 years before the original novel, featuring fan favorite Haymitch Abernathy and the infamous Second Quarter Quell. A movie adaptation is already in the works, set for release on November 20, 2026.

Book Deals Happening Now

Rosie Knight is a contributing freelancer for IGN covering everything from anime to comic books to kaiju to kids movies to horror flicks. You can find her on social at @rosiemarx.

The 6 Best Portable Projectors in 2025

The best projectors let you enjoy a cinematic viewing experience at home. The only problem is most projectors are large, bulky, and sometimes require mounting, making them difficult to move around. Not all projectors are so limiting; plenty of portable options exist for a movie night under the stars during a camping trip or some binge-watching in a cramped dorm room.

Many portable projectors come with streaming apps and Wi-Fi built in for simple setup. Even when you’re away from an internet connection, with Bluetooth and HDMI support found on most projectors, streaming from a phone, tablet, or laptop could be a viable option. You might not even need a wall outlet, as the top portable projectors often include a battery ready to last through an entire feature-length film, or can at least be powered by the best power banks.

TL;DR – The Best Portable Projectors:

With all the good, a few caveats come with grabbing a compact option. A smaller projector’s brightness and picture quality typically just can’t compete with their larger counterparts, so it’s best to use these devices in dark environments with minimal ambient light. High refresh rates, low input lag, and specialized modes that come with the best gaming projectors also won’t be available. Still, when you’re tight on space but are after big-screen viewing, nothing competes with a portable projector.

Take a look at our favorites below. Whether you’re after something tiny and cheap or a slightly bulkier option ready to deliver rich details and accurate color, we've chosen some top-tier portable projectors.

1. Xgimi Halo+

Best Portable Projector Overall

With everything from a battery that lasts up to two hours to two 5W Harman Kardon stereo speakers (and more), the Xgimi Halo+ is among the most complete portable projectors available. The projector is able to produce 1080p resolution that shines at up to 900 ANSI lumens, which is ideal for nighttime outdoor viewing. An onboard Android interface with Chromecast, plus 2GB of memory and 16GB of flash storage, nearly completes the package.

Finally, the automatic keystone adjustment, auto focus, and Intelligent Obstacle Avoidance features together make setting this projector up in just about any environment super easy. It even has a low-latency (26.5ms) gaming mode for portable tourneys.

2. ViewSonic M1X

Best Budget Portable Projector

Plenty of portable projectors are cheaper than the ViewSonic M1X, but you’ll find out all too quickly why they were so inexpensive. Slightly upping your budget means you’ll enjoy a complete package that offers tremendous value in a premium, ultra-compact form factor.

Weighing under 2lbs and offering up to four hours of battery life, the ViewSonic M1X is the perfect companion for camping or work trips. It even has a built-in stand to help reliably display a straight picture from its range of throw distances. Horizontal and vertical keystoning along with automated four-corner adjustment also make setup simple. For safekeeping when tucked away in a bag, the stand doubles as a lens cover.

Admittedly, this portable projector won’t be the best option for playing games or acting as a full-on TV replacement given the limited resolution and low brightness. Still, as a presentation aid or portable movie option, it's an excellent choice full of ways to connect to your phone and other devices thanks to Wi-Fi support and HDMI, USB-A, and USB-C ports. What makes the ViewSonic M1X even more special are the outstanding dual 3W Harman Kardon speakers, so this projector can also turn into a great Bluetooth speaker whenever.

3. Nebula Capsule 3 Laser

Best 1080p Portable Projector

Delivering a crisp 1080p resolution through a 300 ANSI lumens lens, the Nebula Capsule 3 Laser may not be the brightest projector, making it best to use at night with little ambient light. But it shines where picture quality is concerned, offering surprisingly excellent color accuracy and great contrast.

It's hard to beat its compact size too, being slightly larger than a can of coke and weighing just 2.1lbs. Somehow, it manages to squeeze in a battery, which should last as long as a 2.5-hour movie, and 8W speakers packing Dolby Digital Plus that can also act as Bluetooth speakers.

It’s also fitted with Android TV 11, making for easy TV and movie streaming or light gaming over Wi-Fi. However, the Anker Nebula Capsule 3’s Full HD resolution and ample functionality do come with an $800 price tag, putting it right on par with the Xgimi Halo+.

4. Nebula Mars 3 Air

Best Portable Projector for Sound

Sound probably isn’t top-of-mind for a portable projectors, but it should be an important factor in your final decision, especially if you’re planning to take the projector on road trips or away from access to other sound systems. Luckily, the Nebula Mars 3 Air lands right in the strike zone, offering up two 8W speakers in a compact package. These speakers deliver rich, well-rounded sound to easily hear dialogue and soundtracks. They also get plenty loud for outdoor movie nights, while the support for Dolby Audio is the final cherry on top. Even if you skip the movie, you can use this projector as a Bluetooth speaker and enjoy up to eight hours of playback compared to its usual 2.5 hours when projecting.

Audio isn’t the only thing the Mars 3 Air got right, as those speakers are packaged into a sleek and durable design. It’s not the smallest portable projector but still easy enough to cart around with a handy little carrying strap. With Google TV built-in and Wi-Fi support, you don’t even need a streaming stick, phone, or other device to enjoy movies and TV shows. An HDMI port, USB port, and Bluetooth are also included for additional connectivity options.

The picture quality of the Mars Air 3 matches its mid-range price point. It hits up to 400 ANSI Lumens, so this projector is best for viewing with little to no ambient light. Still, the Full HD picture remains crisp and detailed with excellent motion handling, even when stretching the image up to 100 inches. HDR modes are supported but pales in comparison to many TVs and brighter projectors.

5. Xgimi Horizon S Max

Best Portable Projector for Brightness

At a whopping 3,100 ISO Lumens, the XGIMI Horizon S Max is dazzlingly bright for easy viewing in just about any environment. Where ambient light wreaks havoc on the picture of most portable projectors, its picture remains vibrant. Solid contrast, accurate colors, and surprisingly sharp resolution ensure everything you watch is rich and detailed. What takes this projector even further is the support for several HDR modes. A dual light source of laser and LEDs can even be adjusted depending on personal viewing preferences.

This projector isn’t as compact and lightweight as our other projector picks, but it should still be easy enough to cart around to different rooms in your home or pack away for road trips to enjoy big-screen viewing from anywhere. A gimbal mount on the Horizon S Max makes it simple to maneuver the projector for perfect positioning. However, a built-in stand along with autofocus, auto keystone adjustments, a screen fit feature, and obstacle avoidance ensure setup is easy from just about anywhere.

Unfortunately, a battery isn’t packed into the Horizon S Max, so this projector is dependent on a wall outlet, unless you’ve got a high-powered power bank. At least Android 11 and Wi-Fi support are included for quick and simple streaming. An HDMI port is available to plug in a gaming console, while two USB ports support other devices. The dual 12W Harmon Kardon speakers sound excellent and can easily fill most rooms, so you don’t have to worry about grabbing any additional speakers.

6. Optoma ML1080

Best Laser Portable Projector

By using RGB laser technology, the Optoma ML1080 can produce accurate colors and rich details for a stunning picture quality that’s hard to find in projectors of this size. It’s also more energy efficient, as laser technology consumes less power than its lamp-based counterparts.

Even so, the projector still manages to crank out pictures at 1,200 Lumens and will shine in almost any setting, including spaces with some ambient light. When you add in a Full HD resolution and innovative features like Time-of-Flight (ToF) and four-corner correction, you’ll enjoy a perfectly projected image almost every time.

Perhaps most importantly, the Optoma ML1080 is easy to take anywhere. It doesn’t come with a battery but has a USB-C power input to use the projector with a portable charger when on the go.

What to Look for in a Portable Projector

Space: Consider your most regular viewing spaces before buying a portable projector. Look at the throw range of each model to make sure it reasonably fits the dimensions of your space for the image size that you want. For outdoor spaces, you will need to see whether you have a level enough environment for the projector to sit on, though automatic keystone correction might help with this.

Brightness and resolution: Especially for outdoor viewing, brightness is hugely important. This is difficult to gauge for indoor environments where it might be in use during daytime hours. Brightness is measured these days in ANSI lumens. We recommend a projector capable of at least 800 ANSI lumens to use outdoors at night. As for resolution, projectors support anywhere from 720p to 4K resolution. Your target resolution should account for your intended image size: The larger your image, the higher resolution you should go. That said, a 60-inch image projected at 1080p resolution, for example, would be just fine.

Battery: If you only plan on viewing in your backyard with access to your home’s outdoor DC power outlets, maybe you don’t need a battery. But, if you’re planning on taking the projector elsewhere without that kind of outlet access, consider one with a battery. Generally, these batteries will last for at least a 90-minute movie, but some can last for hours.

Joe Osborne is a writer and editor with more than a decade of experience in games and tech media. You can find his work elsewhere at Insider, TechRadar, Laptop Magazine, Tom’s Guide, and more.

The Shure MV7i is an Excellent Mic with a Built-In Audio Interface

Shure is one of the most respected audio brands and over the last few years, it's had gamers and content creators right in its sights, and it just launched its latest product for this audience: the Shure MV7i. It’s an update to its popular line of streaming mics but thanks to its built-in audio interface, excellent recording quality, and high-quality DSP audio FX, it’s easily one the best mics yet. At $349, it’s not cheap, but with everything it offers it still might wind up saving you money.

Shure MV7i – Design and Features

The MV7i looks virtually identical to the company’s other MV7 microphones. It has a sleek black cylindrical body that's half metal and half foam pop filter. There is a bright RGB strip along the middle of it indicating whether it's live or muted and what your current levels might be, though this can be configured in the software or mobile app. The whole thing is mounted on a U-bracket that can attach to any stand or microphone arm, whether it uses the smaller 3/8-inch thread or the larger 5/8-inch.

But let’s call a spade a spade. Its design is meant to evoke Shure’s legendary SM7B, one of the most popular broadcast and recording mics in the world.You’ve probably already seen it even if you didn’t know which mic it actually was as it’s seen on some of the most popular video podcasts. The MV7i differentiates itself with prominent “Shure” branding on both sides and that RGB strip, and is also a touch smaller – but there’s no doubting that the design is intentional.

Unlike that microphone, the MV7i connects through USB Type-C. You can use it plug-and-play with Windows, Mac, Android, or iOS, and there’s no need for additional hardware, unlike the SM7B. This mic is designed to be used on a computer or with a smartphone, so you’ll find that it gets plenty loud and sounds great straight out of the box.

Its claim to fame is that it features a built-in audio interface that allows it to connect to a second source. If you look at the back of the microphone, you'll find a USB Type-C port to connect to a phone, tablet, or computer and an XLR combo jack that can also accommodate a ¼-inch instrument cable. In combination with its software, this essentially makes it a microphone, audio interface, and mixer all in one package.

The majority of streaming microphones today use condenser capsules. Condensers can sound great and they have a wider frequency response which can make them sound more natural in crystalline. At the same time, they will pick up just about any sound in your room, including the clack of your keyboard, the fans on your PC, ambient reverberation, and any background noise that might exist.

The MV7i, on the other hand, uses a dynamic microphone capsule, which is much less sensitive and doesn't pick up nearly as much unintended noise. If you happen to be streaming in a room with hardwood floors or f bare walls, a condenser microphone will capture almost all of that reverberation (or room noise) and send it directly into your stream. The MV7i, with its dynamic capsule, will cut that out and minimize how much makes its way to your audience.

Don't mistake this lack of sensitivity for a lack of quality – dynamic microphones are incredibly popular for broadcast purposes for a reason. They have a more limited frequency response range that's perfect for capturing the human voice and this bit of frequency crunch allows it to deliver a classic “radio voice” type of sound signature. If you want it to, that is.

Within the Motiv Mix app, you're able to craft its sound profile using its built-in digital sound processing (DSP). This audio processor opens the door to a lot of different customizations and studio FX. I’ll dive more into this in the software section, but for starters you can choose whether you are recording speech, singing, or an instrument, set automatic gain levels, and customize the tone to be dark, natural, or bright, ensuring it matches your voice.

At $349, it’s not cheap, but with everything it offers it still might wind up saving you money.

Being able to mix two sources is a powerful bit of functionality. For example, this is great if you want to record a two-person podcast or stream, but it’s also capable if you want to record an instrument. I was able to plug my guitar directly into the microphone and then send that through to my DAW of choice (which is Reaper).

Its second channel also offers its own range of DSP customizations. Like the microphone itself, you can set it to either speech mode or singing mode, have it automatically adjust levels (or set them manually), adjust tone controls, reverb, a real-time de-noiser, pop filter, and more.

The LED strip along the center also serves a purpose. By default, it's set to indicate the levels of both sources. If you are too quiet and your second channel is too loud, you'll be able to see that visually right away. This can also be customized within the software if you'd rather have it be a static color or act as a meter for only your voice.

If you are a solo broadcaster and don't play an instrument (or don't have a need to run a second XLR or 1/4-inch source into your mix), you don't need to worry about the MV7i. If you do, however, and don’t mind doing your mixing on a PC, it will save having to buy an interface and/or mixer separately (and save desk space in the process).

The only thing you’ll need to buy is a stand. The mic only includes a U-bracket, which doesn’t support the mic alone for immediate use. Given its price, I would have liked to have seen something included, but packaged stands are usually pretty poor and leave you shopping for a better one anyway. Still, out-of-the-box usability should be a more important consideration in the microphone market.

Shure MV7i – Software and Customization

While the microphone is plug-in play across every platform, I would definitely recommend picking up the Motiv Mix software or app depending on what you’re using it for. I was able to test it on both the PC and Android and the experience was straightforward for both devices. You have access to all of the customization features for both sources right on the app, but when you download the PC version, you also get the ability to mix sources and record all in one place.

When you open the PC software, you’re greeted with a mixing board that includes your headphones and a channel specifically for the mix coming from the software. You can view all of the sound sources connected to your computer as well as the MV7i and whatever is connected to its XLR port, and then add these individually to the mix. Every channel has its own meter and gain slider. You also have the ability to monitor your mix, so you can hear what you’re sending to your stream or podcast in real time.

Despite looking similar, this doesn't have the same kind of functionality as a number of other streaming mixers like the GoXLR. While you can add different audio sources, Motiv Mix doesn't create multiple virtual devices that you can direct game audio and music toward. Instead, it only creates a single input and output for the mix that you're making. It is a mixer that can be used for streaming, but it's not necessarily a stream mixer as we've come to know them.

Clicking the gear icon next to the MV7i's panel takes you to its settings menu. This is split into three parts, one that applies to all of its audio output and separate settings menus for the mic itself and whatever audio device you have running into it. The Global Settings Menu gives you a noise gate that captures everything and limits what can make it through, an audio output method (stereo, mixdown, and multi-track), adjustments for the realtime monitoring from its headphone jack, reverb settings, and customizations for its LED strip.

Clicking through to the mic or secondary input settings reveals even more options which are largely mirrored between the two. Both offer the ability to designate whether you are looking at speech singing or recording an instrument. Selecting one of these can alter which options are available but doesn't change the function and characteristic of the recording.

Need to upgrade your audio gear?

Check out our roundup of the best gaming headsets!

The DSP is powerful and gives many different effects that go above and beyond what you'll find built into software like OBS. You can set the gain manually with up to 36dB of headroom or allow the microphone to adjust levels on its own. There’s a compressor with light, medium, or heavy settings to ensure you don't get too loud or quiet at any given time and a limiter which prevents clipping. There’s a real-time denoiser that removes white noise from the background and works in conjunction with a high-pass filter that catches low frequency noise like an HVAC unit humming in the background. There’s also a digital popper stopper which prevents the capsule from picking up the distortion of plosives. Lastly, there are tone settings, which I talked about before, to make sure your voice comes through with the character you would prefer it to have.

The only difference between the two that's worth mentioning is that the input menu has an option for phantom power. This can be necessary for condenser microphones and allows the MV7i to interface with different types of gear, even outside of Shure’s product family. If you’re not a fan of constantly using software, don’t worry. All of your settings for both inputs are saved to the mic itself. After setting it up the first time, you don’t need to use it again unless you want to make a change.

Shure MV7i – Performance

The MV7i is an excellent microphone that shouldn't come as a surprise because every MV7 so far has been very good. What does stand out, however, is that it is much more expensive than any other model in the family currently. As a flagship product at $349, it is close to perfection – close, but not quite.

First off, I love the versatility this mic offers. Its built-in DSP is excellent, and I find that its automatic level adjustment is better tuned than any of its previous models. The last generation of MV7 microphones were already very good, so the baseline going into this one was high. Either way, it’s responsive but not jarring in how it shifts, and no matter what type of content you plan on creating, a natural sound is going to be ideal and probably what you’re shooting for. If you’re sitting quite still and don’t want to risk unintended fluctuations, however, I like that you can easily turn it off and lock the gain to your preferred level.

When I first tested it, I expected it to have a dark sound signature with a wide low-end and was surprised to find that it actually sounded quite natural. That's because the tone slider defaults to its middle setting, fittingly titled “natural.” Adjusting this slider makes a meaningful difference in the character of your voice or the subject you’re recording. For a rich broadcast style, I tipped the slider to the Dark setting and touched it up about 20% to preserve some crispness to my speech. For recording my acoustic guitar, natural or bright was a better fit. I like that these aren’t toggles but that you can freely slide along its range until you settle on what sounds best to you.

Its noise rejection is very good, too. My clicky mechanical keyboard (with Kailh Box Navy switches, the clickiest of the clicky) barely made its way into my recordings and my air circulator was cut out entirely. Likewise, the sound of my kids playing downstairs – elephantine though their little bodies sound – also rarely made its way through and was quiet when it did. After testing it for a while, I did toggle the smart noise gate back on. Its default setting was effective yet remained natural and eliminated the aforementioned sounds (though did need to be tweaked depending on the situation).

My favorite feature was the real-time denoiser. It works incredibly well and has almost no impact on your voice. Turning it off didn’t seem to impact the overall quality of my vocal capture and immediately demonstrated how much room noise it actually removes – it’s impressive. Think of active noise cancelling on a gaming headset and the digital, compressed, almost nasally effect it has on quality – it imparts on your voice to limit background noise. Those detractors are completely absent here while also being way more effective.

Taken as a whole, the MV7i feels like a broadcast mic for the masses. Unless you’re recording in an echoey bathroom, it virtually eliminates the need to use sound treatment. You can worry far less about your roommate or family member making a guest (vocal) appearance on your stream; unless they’re talking at full volume in the room with you, they likely will be quiet at worst and probably not audible if you also use the noise gate. You can use a gate with a condenser mic too, sure, but even when you’re speaking and the gate isn’t in effect, the MV7i will simply block out far more than any condenser capsule microphone is able to.

The audio quality is fantastic and the versatility provided by its software and built-in DSP is next-level.

So, why isn’t it perfect? The lack of a stand is one. Second, it comes with reverb enabled and way too loud by default and you have to download the software just to turn it off. The biggest reason is that there aren’t any onboard controls outside of muting the microphone. The original MV7 allowed you to adjust gain levels with a simple swipe, but Shure has moved away from that with each model since.

While the software is fine, the mic also saves your settings to its onboard memory, so once you’re configured, you don’t need to use it again. But adjusting gain, that’s something you’ll almost certainly be doing. And without any kind of onboard controls like the original MV7 had, you just have to open the software or fiddle with settings in Windows to dial in your level.

How to Play the Metal Gear Solid Games in Chronological Order: The Full MGS Timeline

Whether it’s Snake’s elevator ascent to the rainy cliffs of Shadow Moses or the climactic battle between student and mentor in the final moments of Snake Eater, Hideo Kojima and Konami’s epic spy thriller franchise, Metal Gear, is home to some of gaming’s most iconic moments. Telling a story that spanned multiple console generations and pushed the creative capabilities of video games to their limits, Solid Snake and Big Boss’ adventures are legendary, so much so that many claim they’re among the most important releases the medium has ever produced.

Back in 2015, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain seemingly ended the franchise for good, with Kojima leaving Konami and the Metal Gear Solid IP behind to form his own studio. However, Konami has started resurrecting the series through re-releases and remakes, like Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater coming out later this year. With so many new players experiencing this world of undercover espionage, shady government conspiracy and gruff-voiced dudes with cool eyepatches for the first time, we’ve laid out the chronological order of the Metal Gear Solid series so newcomers and returning fans can catch up.

Jump to:

How Many Metal Gear Solid Games Are There?

Not including remakes, ports or remasters, there are 17 total Metal Gear games: 11 mainline games, five on handheld devices and one on mobile. Although that’s a lot of games, a decent chunk of them are considered non-canon, with their stories overriding events from the main saga and spinning off into their own unique takes on the universe.

2018’s Metal Gear Survive takes place in an apocalyptic reality where a zombie virus has overtaken the world, so it falls outside the main canon. As for the PSP’s Metal Gear: Acid and Metal Gear: Acid 2, they veer from the timeline and tell a new story, making them alternate-timeline spin-offs. Then there’s the Game Boy Color’s Metal Gear: Ghost Babel, which is an alternate-universe Metal Gear sequel that wipes away the events of Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake, thus removing it from the timeline. And finally, Metal Gear Mobile and Snake’s Revenge have since been deemed non-canon by the community and Kojima himself in interviews.

That leaves 11 games within the main storyline. Each game is considered part of the true Metal Gear Saga, spanning from a fictional alternate-history 1960s to the late 2010s. So, let’s run you through all the games in that story.

Which Metal Gear Should You Play First?

We recommend two potential starting points for Metal Gear. For those interested in the complete saga, we recommend 2023's Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Vol. 1, which includes the best available versions of Metal Gear Solid 1–3. Alternatively, for those interested in simply trying out the franchise (and for those with a lower tolerance for older games), we recommend starting with the series' most contemporary iteration, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain.

Metal Gear Games in Chronological Order

These blurbs contain mild spoilers for each game, including characters, settings, and story beats.

1. Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater

The first slot in the saga’s timeline and the next game to get a modern remake, Snake Eater follows a US Special Forces operative codenamed Naked Snake during the events of the Cold War. Sent to locate and extract a Russian scientist from the Soviet Union to prevent him from building a weapon of mass destruction known as the Shagohod, Snake’s shocked to find his former mentor, The Boss, has betrayed the US government and sided with the Soviets.

After a heated battle, Naked Snake is brutally defeated and left for dead in the jungle. Surviving the encounter, he’s tasked by his commanding officer, Zero, to return to Russia, find his mentor and kill her, all the while tracking down the Shagohod to prevent nuclear war. By the end of the story, Naked Snake adopts the moniker of Big Boss, becoming a legend among the US Special Forces. However, his battle with The Boss and the secrets he’s uncovered throughout his adventure leave him disillusioned with his duty and the government he serves.

Read our Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater Review or see updates about the Metal Gear Solid 3 remake.

2. Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops

Set six years after Big Boss’ climactic battle with his former mentor, Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops picks up the legendary soldier’s story as he goes head to head with his former squad, FOX Unit. The game begins with Big Boss learning FOX has gone rogue, betraying the CIA and staging a revolt.

Captured and tortured on a Colombian base by FOX Unit, Boss breaks free but learns he’s been accused of treason. In a bid to clear his name, he decides to hunt down his former allies and pursue their ruthless leader, Gene. By the end of the game, Big Boss learns of Gene’s desire to create a nation of mercenary soldiers known as Army’s Heaven and acquires the mass of funds and equipment saved for the project. Returning to the US, he later forms a squadron of special ops soldiers known as FOXHOUND.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops.

3. Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker

Four years after the events of Portable Ops, we catch up with Big Boss, who has left FOXHOUND and the Patriots. Since leaving, he’s formed a new band of mercenary soldiers known as Militaires Sans Frontières (or MSF) with Kazuhira Miller. Using their newfound army to protect countries that don’t have the forces or means to defend themselves, Big Boss and Miller wage war against an armed militia known as the Peace Sentinels after they invade Costa Rica.

During his investigation, Big Boss soon realizes that his former mentor, The Boss, is somehow involved in the Peace Sentinels' plans. Worse, they have access to nuclear weapons, wielding a supremely powerful mech called the Peace Walker. Rallying on an off-shore oil rig known as Motherbase, Snake and the Militaires Sans Frontières take the fight to the Peace Sentinels, attempting to discover their true motive and secrets. The game ends with Big Boss battling his former ally Paz, who turns out to be a secret agent of Zero’s shady government organization, Cipher.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker.

4. Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes

A few months following the events of Peace Walker, Ground Zeroes acts as a prologue to the fifth entry in the Metal Gear Solid series: Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. The story sees Big Boss embark on a new mission after learning that Paz survived their climactic battle during the final moments of Peace Walker and is being interrogated by Cipher at a mysterious military base known as Camp Omega. Knowing that she has crucial information about Cipher and could reveal secrets about MSF to the shadowy organization, he rushes to extract her.

While infiltrating the base, he discovers a mysterious Cipher cell known as XOF, which is led by a sadistic, severely burned commander called Skull Face. The prologue ends with Snake extracting Paz only to realize his allies are being attacked by the XOF back at Motherbase. The onslaught destroys the oil rig and eradicates Militaires Sans Frontières, leaving Big Boss on the cusp of death.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid: Ground Zeroes.

5. Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain

Nine years later, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain opens with a severely injured Big Boss waking up in a hospital in Cyprus. Evading an assassination attempt where he’s attacked by a man covered in flames, a telekinetic soldier and a master sniper, Boss is saved by Revolver Ocelot and returns to action as he leads a new mercenary group known as the Diamond Dogs.

Swearing to stop the XOF after they destroyed Militaires Sans Frontières, he adopts the codename Venom Snake and heads to Africa to pick up their trail, learning that the former-Cipher-affiliated group went rogue. Their leader, Skull Face, is instead working on a devastating parasitic weapon with the power to eradicate the Western world. The game ends with Big Boss setting in motion his plans to create a military nation known as Outer Heaven, where soldiers are free to live without being used to further shady government plans.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain.

6. Metal Gear

11 years later, the story catches up with the first entry in the series: Metal Gear. The game follows Solid Snake: a rookie soldier and member of FOXHOUND. FOXHOUND is once again run by Big Boss, who acts as Snake’s mentor and commanding officer. On his first mission, Solid Snake is sent to track down a weapon of mass destruction being constructed in a military nation known as Outer Heaven.

During his mission, he finds another agent codenamed Grey Fox, who was also sent to track the weapon. Grey Fox reveals the mysterious weapon is a mech codenamed Metal Gear, which has the power to launch nuclear bombs. The game ends with Solid Snake and Big Boss coming to blows, with the latter revealing he was behind Outer Heaven's plans.

Read our review of Metal Gear.

7. Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake

Four years later, Solid Snake returns to action after he learns Big Boss survived the events of the previous game and is currently constructing a new Metal Gear for the fictional nation of Zanzibar Land.

Teaming with various characters, Snake infiltrates Zanzibar Land and attempts to destroy the weapon of mass destruction, battling Big Boss and his army of soldiers along the way.

See more about Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake.

8. Metal Gear Solid

Six years after Metal Gear 2, Solid Snake returns in a new mission. This time he’s sent to battle his former unit, FOXHOUND, which has gone rogue, turned against the US and taken over a mysterious government facility on an island known as Shadow Moses. Shadow Moses is allegedly a test site for a secret Metal Gear, with FOXHOUND threatening to use its nuclear weapons if they aren’t supplied with Big Boss’ corpse and a large sum of money.

Snake heads to the facility and fights various members of FOXHOUND, including Revolver Ocelot, Psycho Mantis and a Cyborg version of his former ally, Greyfox. He also meets the eccentric leader of FOXHOUND, Liquid Snake. The game ends with Snake being declared killed-in-action by Colonel Campbell and presumed dead by the government after they intended to double-cross him. He flees Shadow Moses alive.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid or see more of the best PS1 games.

9. Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty

Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty opens two years later, with a now-rogue Solid Snake infiltrating an oil tanker while hunting down a new Metal Gear being transported to the US. There he discovers a prototype Metal Gear known as Metal Gear Ray, which is subsequently stolen by Revolver Ocelot. Ocelot sinks the tanker and escapes, while Snake is blamed for the tanker’s destruction.

Two years later, we shift to a new protagonist: Raiden. An agent of FOXHOUND, Raiden is sent on a mission to an off-shore decontamination facility known as Big Shell, which was constructed to clear the crude oil spill caused when the oil tanker was destroyed during Solid Snake’s mission. Big Shell has been hijacked by a militant group known as the Sons of Liberty, which has taken the US president hostage.

Infiltrating the facility, Raiden soon discovers things aren’t quite what they seem, looking into Big Shell’s secrets and meeting a junior lieutenant named Iroquois Pliskin, who’s clearly hiding a big secret. By the end of the game, Solid Snake joins Raiden’s mission, telling him he’s going after Ocelot (who it’s revealed is possessed by the will of Liquid Snake) and the Patriots.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty or check out more of the best PS2 games.

10. Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots

Marking the end of the main story and Solid Snake’s final mission, Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots catches up with Snake three years after the events of Sons of Liberty. Due to the cloning process used to create Snake and the rampant FOXDIE virus still coursing through his veins, we discover that his body is rapidly aging, with the protagonist being told he only has a year left to live. Donning a new nickname, Old Snake, he returns for one final mission.

He’s to assassinate Liquid Ocelot, who is currently running a new version of Outer Heaven which is comprised of some of the biggest private militaries in the Middle East. Equipping his body with nanomachines, Snake sets out to bring Ocelot down, learning that his nemesis intends to once again locate Big Boss’ corpse and execute a mysterious plan. As Snake battles his age and the lingering FOXDIE mutating in his body, he makes his way towards a final confrontation with his most ruthless enemy.

Read our review of Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots.

11. Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance

The final story in the current Metal Gear timeline, Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance focuses on Raiden who, as we learned during Guns of the Patriots, has transformed into a cyborg. The story picks up four years after Metal Gear Solid 4, revealing that Raiden now works with a private military company called Maverick Security Consulting.

During an operation in Africa, Raiden is attacked by a rival private military group known as Desperado Enforcement. Wounded and left for dead by its commander, Jet Stream Sam, Raiden continues his investigation into Desperado and learns some sinister secrets about the group and its allies. As the revelations about the private military grow darker, Raiden swears to bring them down, setting off on his own to deliver violent justice.

Read our review of Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance.

How to Play the Metal Gear Games by Release Date

  1. Metal Gear (1987)
  2. Snake’s Revenge (1990)
  3. Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake (1990)
  4. Metal Gear Solid (1998)
  5. Metal Gear Solid: Ghost Babel (2000)
  6. Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty (2001)
  7. Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater (2004)
  8. Metal Gear Solid: Acid (2004)
  9. Metal Gear Solid: Acid 2 (2005)
  10. Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops (2006)
  11. Metal Gear Solid: Mobile (2008)
  12. Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots (2008)
  13. Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker (2010)
  14. Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance (2013)
  15. Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes (2014)
  16. Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain (2015)
  17. Metal Gear Survive (2018)
  18. Metal Gear Solid Δ: Snake Eater (2025)

What’s Next for Metal Gear?

Although for many years, it seemed Metal Gear was officially finished as a series, Konami has confirmed an upcoming remake of Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater. Shown with a cinematic trailer during PlayStation’s 2023 summer showcase, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater will rebuild the game from the ground up, giving fans a modern reimagining of Naked Snake’s legendary battle with The Boss. The remake is set to release on August 28, 2025, as revealed in Sony's February 2025 State of Play.

As for potential new entries in the series, Konami hasn’t confirmed whether they plan to make original Metal Gear games without Hideo Kojima. That being said, Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater developer Virtuous Studios did tease that remakes of other Metal Gear games aren’t off the table. Speaking with IGN, the team said, “Regarding remakes of previous games in the series other than Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, we will listen to player demand and consider accordingly.”

For more lists like these, also see Assassin's Creed Games in Order and a list of Far Cry Games in order.

Callum Williams is a freelance media writer with years of experience as a game critic, news reporter, guides writer and features writer.

The Best Budget Fitness Trackers for Staying Active in 2025

Whether you’re just beginning a health journey or looking for more insight into your workouts, a fitness tracker is a way to gamify exercise and receive helpful data along the way. Luckily, many of these wearables – which are typically versions of smartwatches – aren’t prohibitively expensive. From feature-rich options offering capabilities that can rival the best smartwatches to ones that cover just the basics like step counting and heart rate monitoring, there are plenty of budget-conscious fitness trackers to choose from for all wrist sizes.

TL;DR – The Best Budget Fitness Trackers:

Contributions by Kevin Lee

1. Fitbit Inspire 3

Best Budget Fitness Tracker

Fitbit continues to show its dominance in the field of budget fitness trackers with the Fitbit Inspire 3. For under $100, you get a bright AMOLED display and durable band that's sleek, compact, and comfortable enough to sleep in. Once you’ve got the watch on, you won’t need to take it off often thanks to the 10-day battery life, though that shrinks when taking advantage of the always-on display mode – while navigating is simple using touch technology and two haptic buttons.

Of course, you purchased the Fitbit Inspire 3 for fitness tracking, and it’s full of handy features like 24/7 heart-rate monitoring, step counting, blood oxygen level measuring, and movement reminders. Beyond that, you get automatic exercise tracking, so if you’re prone to forgetting to start a workout, this is useful, and sleep monitoring helps you better understand the quality of your sleep. It’s also got some basic smartwatch features, including phone notifications and a find my phone feature when the two devices use Bluetooth, though you can’t store music or make contactless payments with this fitness tracker.

2. Xiaomi Smart Band 9

Best Ultra Cheap Fitness Tracker

The Xiaomi Smart Band 9 might be under $50, but just because it’s low-cost doesn’t mean it’s missing any of the features you expect in a fitness tracker. From a host of health monitoring to a sleek, slim design, it offers everything you could want in. In fact, it even gives Fitbit a run for its money.

The basics are packed in like a pedometer, heart rate monitor, blood oxygen saturation, and sleep monitoring. This band’s smarts go far beyond that though, as there are over 150 fitness modes, including running, HITT, kickboxing, and swimming. Each offers intel into your activity, from calories burned and average heart rate to workout time. These metrics may not be as precisely accurate as an Apple Watch or higher-end smartwatch with GPS and additional sensors. Still, the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 provides great insight into your workouts.

With the latest model of Xiaomi’s Smart Band comes a boost to battery life, so it should last a whopping three weeks with moderate usage. An increase in the screen’s brightness is also a welcome upgrade, hitting 1,200 nits for easy viewing in direct sunlight. Lacking physical buttons, the band’s colorful, 1.62-inch AMOLED display has excellent touch responsiveness for quickly finding fitness metrics or taking advantage of its few smartwatch features, like call and message notifications and music playback control. But be prepared for some finicky phone pairing.

3. Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Pro

Best Budget Fitness Tracker with GPS

Like the sound of the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 but want something slightly heavier on the features? Well, the Chinese tech giant known for making ultra-affordable alternatives to high-end gadgets has an upgraded model, the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Pro. The most obvious difference between the two bands is the larger, rectangular 1.74-inch AMOLED display on the Pro model; it gives off major Apple Watch vibes. Then, there’s the addition of a surprisingly accurate GPS to keep track of all your runs, bike rides, hikes, and more.

Of course, the Smart Band 9 Pro still comes with 24/7 heart rate and SPO₂ monitoring, sleep tracking, and stress monitoring. Health metrics are pushed even further with support for over 150 sports modes, ensuring almost any activity you do can be tracked. However, many of the more unique “modes” will only measure heart rate and time — not the most insightful information.

Although it’s not a smartwatch, this band offers a few limited smartwatch features. There’s music playback, and when connected to your phone, it can display notifications. Unfortunately, you can’t respond to those notifications, and no NFC support is on board. Still, at under $100, the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 Pro is a stylish fitness tracker with a bright, responsive screen, easy-to-master user interface, and impressive battery life.

4. Amazfit Band 7

Best Budget Fitness Tracker With Health Monitoring

Amazfit packs an impressive amount of capability into the Band 7, especially considering it's only $50. You get a large 1.47-inch always-on AMOLED display to easily view health and workout data while the actual band remains slim and comfortable on the wrist. Battery life is a boon as well, lasting eight days with typical usage and 28 days in battery-saver mode.

The Amazfit Band 7 supports over 120 sports modes with automatic smart recognition of four, and with water resistance up to 50m, it can easily handle a dip in the pool. Its health monitoring includes heart rate, blood-oxygen level, and stress, while sleep tracking delivers insight into the quality of your sleep each night. The Band 7 also offers a degree of smartwatch functionality with on-watch notifications and Amazon Alexa integration.

5. Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen)

Best Budget Apple Watch

Not every fitness tracker has to be simply dedicated to fitness, and not all the best Apple Watches need to be painfully expensive. With the 2nd-gen Apple Watch SE comes an optical heart rate sensor and a built-in GPS, so you’ll never get lost on hikes. It also automatically detects various workouts, including swimming, and if you find Apple's own fitness apps lacking, you can always download additional ones from the App Store as the watch comes with 32GB of built-in storage.

The Apple Watch SE is a full-fledged, highly capable smartwatch, so you’ll be able to answer calls, respond to messages, make contactless payments, and stream music all from your wrist. This generation of device also comes with crash detection, so it can automatically call emergency services for you when you’ve been in an accident. And all of this is packed into a slim, comfortable form factor with impressive battery life – at least by Apple Watch standards.

6. Garmin Venu 3

Best Budget Fitness Tracker for Workouts

For serious health and fitness tracking, Garmin is always an excellent option, as the company packs its watches full of insightful features. However, with all that precise information comes a higher price tag, so even Garmin’s more budget-minded Venu 3 is the highest-priced option of our cheap picks. Still, it’s worth the investment if you’re serious about your workouts.

The Venu 3 offers impressive functionality allowing it to track various exercises, including swimming, cycling, and golf. In total, over 30 preloaded sports apps work in conjunction with the hightly accurate GPS, heart rate monitor, ECG, blood oxygen, temperature, and other sensors on the watch. It even includes animated workouts to follow along with, like pilates, HIIT, and cardio. But what makes this band a real standout is its Body Battery feature, which provides helpful data into how well-rested your body is based on activity, stress, and sleep.

On top of the ample fitness data, the Garmin Venu 3 is a modestly sized smartwatch with a bright AMOLED touchscreen display. It can hit up to a lengthy 14 days of battery life, but that will diminish quickly when taking advantage of the always-on display and automatic workout detection. All the other expected smartwatch features, like receiving calls, smart assistants, and responding to texts are available when paired with the best Android phones. However, the app selection is limited compared to Apple and Google smartwatches.

What to Look for in a Budget Fitness Tracker

When evaluating fitness trackers, it's important to keep in mind they're not just about counting steps or keeping tabs on your sleep habits. The total experience includes the quality of the hardware, overall comfort, the software package, and how well it does the tracking that you bought it for in the first place.

As the price goes up, so do a tracker's features, including things like heart rate monitoring, GPS, OLED display as opposed to LCD, etc. Still, there are plenty of basic trackers that don't cost a lot of money and can still provide you with an avalanche of health data.

What kind of fitness tracker do I need?

The type of fitness tracker you need depends on how you want to use the device. You can get by with an ultracheap, compact band like the Xiaomi Smart Band 9 if you just want to track your steps, check your heart rate, and get the time. Most of these super low-cost options come with color displays and long battery life while adding different sports modes, sleep tracking, blood oxygen sensors, phone notifications, and more.

For those who plan on running, biking, and hiking, you might want to spend slightly more to get GPS support. But if you’re looking for the most functionality and features beyond fitness and health tracking, a smartwatch is for you. You’ll get a bigger screen, built-in storage, access to more apps, along with the ability to answer calls, texts, and other phone notifications.

If you're an active runner or gym-goer, you may want to also get equipped with a great pair of earbuds to ensure you're finding the perfect fit for your lifestyle.

Danielle is a Tech freelance writer based in Los Angeles who spends her free time creating videos and geeking out over music history.

The Bond Franchise Sale to Amazon MGM Is Probably Bad News... But Here Are Some Ways It Could Work

In landmark entertainment news that left James Bond fans feeling shaken, not stirred, Amazon MGM Studios has taken full control of the 007 franchise from long-time producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli. While there are plenty of reasons to worry here, the fact of the matter is that there are already spinoff books, games, comics, etc, etc, not to mention the original novels by Ian Fleming. Dozens of writers, actors, artists, and more have tackled James Bond and his extended cast. And with Amazon’s reported ambitions to turn James Bond into a “universe,” a la Marvel and Star Wars, and billions of dollars at stake, the Bond franchise has no time to die.

Naturally, this was one of Broccoli’s concerns in giving up the rights, that Amazon MGM would try to expand too quickly or cast a name actor in the role of the secret agent. Will Amazon hold true to these ideals, or are we about to get Timothée Chalamet as the next 007? Likely not the latter (all apologies to Chalamet), but Amazon has already tried to create their own spy franchise with the Russo Brothers produced Citadel, and international spinoffs Citadel: Diana and Citadel: Honey Bunny. Those have generally lacked critical acclaim (except for Honey Bunny), and at least domestically haven’t really broken through to audiences in the same way as other Amazon hits like The Boys.

…Or more to the point, Amazon’s dudes with guns shows like Reacher, Jack Ryan, and Bosch. In fact, one could posit this is a large part of the reasoning behind Amazon shelling out a billion dollars more to own Bond: some of their most successful series have already been white men, with guns, their names in the title, based on book series. Unlike the money Amazon plunked down for Lord of the Rings (your mileage may vary on how successful Rings of Power has been), buying James Bond outright based on the data available is one of the safest purchases Amazon could make. Prime Video audiences already flock to shows about guys like James Bond, so why not James Bond himself?

One other detail you might not be aware of: Amazon already made a James Bond TV show. Seriously. Titled 007: Road to a Million, the reality game show streamed in 2023, was hosted by Brian Cox, and was picked up for a second season before the first even hit Prime Video. Only tangentially related to Bond by the idea that Cox is playing a pseudo-Bond villain while contestants race to win one million pounds, the series wasn’t a big hit but it does show that Amazon has already played in the TV space with 007. And as just one extra funny tidbit, Cox thought he was signing up for the next Bond movie. He was not, so maybe Amazon could do right by him in the future.

But wait, there’s more! Back in 1954, an anthology series titled Climax! aired the first-ever adaptation of “Casino Royale,” the Ian Fleming novel, before it was later committed to film multiple times. Point being, there’s not much of a history of TV for James Bond, but just as the franchise has had some of its most lauded installments in video games (have you ever played GoldenEye for the N64?), comics, and more, James Bond isn’t quite the sacred cow we think of, when it comes to adaptation.

Mind you, there have been no announcements that Amazon is forgoing film entirely, and likely they won’t. MGM isn’t the studio it once was, but for every Red One that hits theaters, they still have the Oscar-nominated Nickel Boys. There’s plenty of reason to believe that even without the Broccolis, Amazon MGM will aim to do right by the Bond franchise.

And frankly, is there anything that is out of left field about the idea of a franchise extension? While perhaps cutting Bond theatrically entirely and instead doing a TV streaming version of Bond might be the ultimate nightmare of cinephiles, there is a wealth of fascinating characters who revolve around Bond that often have far more chance of character growth than the main character himself. Bond, over decades, has remained relatively static – the recent Craig movies aside – while Q, M, Moneypenny, and even Felix Leiter always seem to have a lot more going on between the scene or two Bond spends checking in with them per film.

Would a series where Q has to go out of the lab and use his own gadgets be so terrible? How about Felix having to deal with the fallout of Bond blowing up the latest supervillain plot on the American side? And given the wealth of villains and henchmen in the Bond universe who have inspired dozens of fanfics, tributes, and knockoffs, an anthology series that gave them each more time in the sun could be a lot of fun. Who hasn’t wondered how Jaws got those jaws?

There’s also an opportunity here to flesh out the character of James Bond through a serialized TV show in a way that has not, for the most part, been afforded the character on the big screen. Aside from the rare instance where Bond suffers a sprained ankle at the beginning of the movie, the character has been functionally immortal, down to switching his face like a Time Lord. It wasn’t until the recent Daniel Craig films that Bond was allowed to have some sort of growth, though even then it was relegated to “bummed about the death of his girlfriend” for the majority of the Craig movies, and “old” in the last one.

The lone exception is Skyfall, arguably the best Bond movie of all time… Because it truly challenged James emotionally and moved the series forward to almost a logical conclusion. The next movie reset things in many ways, but imagine being able to see that kind of arc over 10, 20, or even 30 episodes (we’re not going to go crazy and suggest a streaming show go a full 22 episodes a season or anything like that)? You likely won’t get 10 Skyfalls in a row, but if you can get some nods to the ambition of that film in there, viewers could be in for something truly special.

The flip side is that Amazon could not look to the obvious – i.e. their dudes with guns shows – and instead take the route of Lord of the Rings, and deliver a prequel all leading up to the birth of James Bond. To that, perhaps they need look no further than Pennyworth, a goofy show with a host of loyal fans that nevertheless confused casual viewers as to why we were getting a show about Batman’s future butler. Or, for example, The Rings of Power, a show with a hot Sauron and virtually no rings in the first season that tested the patience of even the most loyal fans.

That’s the potential nightmare scenario, that Amazon will think with their algorithm instead of their heart. Even at their worst, there’s a charm the Broccoli family and others managed to bring to the Bond franchise, with the same rhythms, the same big explosion, the same good girl gone bad and bad girl gone good, time and again. In the streaming era, we’re far from the place where you could deliver the poetry of a Bond movie on an episodic basis. To turn it into yet another serialized spy drama (or worse, a serialized prequel spy drama) risks making it lose that specialness and instead slot in with Netflix’s The Night Agent, The Diplomat, and The Recruit, or god help us Citadel, instead of being its own, unique thing.

This is the trick, really, and it is with any potential cinematic universe: what makes it different? In Bond’s case, up until now, it was that it existed mostly on the big screen, every few years, and delivered a level of action spectacle and plot comfort that TV has been creeping on for decades. If Amazon does want to turn the house Ian Fleming built into a multi-platform franchise, then they need to reckon with what makes Bond so unique. If they can figure that formula out, and perhaps build out that supporting cast, too (Ben Whishaw in a Q series? Come on!), then rather than the death sentence some fans have called this deal, the Bond franchise will die another day.

The Best Deals Today: Nintendo Switch OLED, Bargains Under $30, Xbox Elite Controller, Nerf Halo Needler

Here are best deals for Friday, February 21. The highlights today include an excellent deal on a Nintendo Switch OLED (so long as you're comfortable buying an import model), and the popular Final Fantasy Magic the Gathering crossover.

Check out "the best deals under $30" for any impulse buys on items that you never knew you needed until you visited this page. Read on lower for some great deals that cost over $30 and may require a bit more involved decision-making.

Nintendo Switch OLED for $223.61

AliExpress is currently offering a Nintendo Switch OLED console for only $223.61 after coupon code: USAFF30 is applied during checkout. This is a genuine Nintendo Switch console that's imported from either Japan or Hong Kong. Switch consoles are region unlocked so you'll be able to play them in the US without any problems. You'll also be able to select English as your default language just like any console you buy here. A US power plug adapter is supplied in the packaging. This product is also stocked in a US warehouse, so it ships free and arrives within about a week. AliExpress has a 15-day free return policy and guarantees a refund if your order doesn't arrive within 20 days.

MTG: Final Fantasy Cards up for Preorder

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Magic the Gathering's new Final Fantasy Commander series cards are now up for preorder at Amazon and Best Buy. They'll ship out starting June 13, and you won't be charged until they do. Given that there are so many Final Fantasy fans out there, these have been garnering tons of interest and will undoubtedly introduce a lot more people to the world of Magic.

Lisen 5,000mAh MagSafe Power Bank for $17.38

The Lisen 5,000mAh MagSafe power bank, which is normally listed at $49.99, is down to only $17.38 after a combined instant discount and a 42% off clippable coupon. At 0.3" thick, this is one of the slimmest MagSafe power banks we've seen, and won't add much bulk to your iPhone's profile. If you have a chonky Pro Max, then you won't even notice. Unlike most other power banks at this price point, the Lisen model is made out of a magnesium aluminum alloy that makes it feel much more premium. It delivers up to 18W of power over USB Type-C and 7.5W over wireless.

Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown for PS4, Xbox for $14.99

Prince of Persia drops to just $14.99 for PS4 and Xbox. If you get the PS4 version, you're eligible for a free download of the PS5 digital edition. he Lost Crown is one of the most underrated games of 2024. Ubisoft's return to the franchise brought new and challenging elements while still retaining what made this series so beloved. In our 8/10 review, we wrote, "Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown captures not only what made games such as The Sands of Time so good, but it irons out a lot of the little issues that plagued the 3D games in this series by opting for a 2D perspective – and owning it."

Humble Choice Games for February 2025

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If you're searching for your next new game to play, Humble Choice February is now live, and this is the perfect bundle to discover something new! This month, Immortals of Aveum headlines the bundle, with seven other games like Total War: Pharoah Dynasties, Fabledom, and more included. Instead of paying hundreds of dollars to grab these games individually, you can get all eight games for just $11.99 at Humble Bundle for this month only.

Sonic X Shadow Generations for PS5 for $26.99

Today Woot! is offering Sonic X Shadow Generations for even lower than what I saw during Black Friday. You can get it for only $26.99 (46% off) and if you're an Amazon Prime member you also get free shipping. Sonic X Shadow Generations is easily one of the best Sonic games in recent history. In our 9/10 Sonic X Shadow Generations review, Jada Griffin wrote that "Sonic X Shadow Generations takes an already excellent game and spring jumps it to new heights with a creative Shadow campaign and an appreciable graphical upgrade." This game is actually a collection of two games in one: a remaster of the 2011 Sonic Generations and - the highlight - an original campaign starring Shadow the Hedgehog.

Anker PowerExpand USB-C Hub for $12.50

Anker's handle little USB hub is 50% off for Amazon Prime members, now only $12.50 (normally $25). This versatile 6-in-1 hub features a USB Type-C port with up to 85W of passthrough charging, two USB-A 3.1 Gen 2 ports, an HDMI port (4K @ 60Hz), an SD card slot, and a 3.5mm audio output.

AstroAI L7 Tire Inflator for $17.59

You should always keep a tire inflator in your car for emergencies, but you don't need to pay a premium price for a fancy one. Right now Amazon has this AstroAI cordless tire inflator for only $17.59 after you clip both coupons on the product page. This tire inflator features a 4,000mAh power bank, enough to fill up all four tires to the proper PSI at least a few times over and has a USB Type-C input for easy charging. You can even use it to charge your smartphone in a pinch.

Hoto Electric Precision Screwdriver for $24.95

Amazon has this Hoto electric screwdriver for $24.95 (50% off) after you clip the 23% off coupon and apply coupon code "361P5KK7" during checkout. This is an excellent tool for quickly dealing with tons of small screws when you're assembling or taking apart electronics like your gaming console, mechanical keyboard, Joy-Con controller, or pretty much anything else where a real power drill is way too powerful and a manual screwdriver is too tedious. It comes with 25 bits that should cover most of the screw types out there including flathead, Philips, torx, and hex. The screwdriver can be charged via USB Type-C so no need to worry about losing a proprietary cable.

Preordered the iPhone 16E? Get a Screen Protector for $6

If you're in line to get the successor the the budget-minded Apple iPhone SE series of phones, then here's an early bird deal for you. Amazon has an amFilm iPhone 16e screen protector for only $5.99 after you apply coupon code "5PIM3OFI. Here's your chance to have a screen protector ready before your phone even arrives. AmFilm is an extremely well known and popular screen protector brand, and this particular model includes the auto alignment kit and camera lens protector.

Sabrent Docking Station and Charger for ROG Ally for $20

Steam Deck / Nintendo Switch compatible

Sabrent has a dock charger specifically designed for the Asus ROG Ally for only $19.99 after you apply coupon code "26R399DW". According to reviews, it works just fine with other gaming handhelds like the Steam Deck or Nintendo Switch. It includes a USB Type-C port for connecting to your gaming handheld, an HDMI 1.4 port for up to 4K @ 60Hz video output, a USB Type-C port with up to 95W of Power Delivery for charging your handheld, and two extra USB Type-A ports for connecting or charging extra peripherals.

2-Pack Anker Power Cubes for $15.99

This deal is exclusively for Amazon Prime members. Get a two pack of Anker Power Cubes, which is a cube-shaped power strip with three AC outlets, two USB Type-A ports, and one USB Type-C port, for only $15.99. That averages out to just $8 per cube. This power outlet is much smaller than your average power strip thanks to its ingenious cube design. The USB Type-C port delivers up to 20W of power, which is good enough to charge the Nintendo Switch at its maximum rate (18W).

4 Pack of Pen Lights for $7.99

Get a four pack of pen lights for only $8 after an instant 20% off discount. These diminutive lights feature an anodized aluminum housing and weigh in at only an ounce each. The super bright LED bulb lasts about 2 hours on two AAA batteries. These are handy to have around the house, and at $2 apiece they are practically expendable.

GE Color Changing Night Light for $4.52

Night lights are an inexpensive, efficient way to provide a bit of practical accent lighting to your home at night. This GE color changing night light goes one step further by offering eight different colors to choose from, with a color changing mode for a bit of RGB flair. The built-in light sensor means it will automatically turn itself off when it isn't needed. It's normally well-priced at just $9, but there's a 50% instant discount right now that drops it to under $5.

Craftsman Magnetic Pickup Tool for $6

A magnetic pickup too is handy to have around to pick up dropped screws, nuts, and bolts. Amazon has this Craftsman model for only $5.98 after a $2 price drop. There's not much to say about it, except that it's well built, it's magnetic, and it can telescope up to 24 inches long for extended reach.

77outdoor LED Rechargeable Headlamp for $17.99

Get this LED headlamp for only $17.99 on Amazon after a $12 off coupon code "40XUYLSW". 77outdoor is a sister brand of Sofirn, a well known manufacturer or affordable yet good quality flashlights and lamps. In fact, some reviewers have reported that they receive this item in a Sofirn branded box. This headlamp offers two modes: a standard 5,000K 90 CRI white light with 550 lumen output for general purpose use and a 660nm red light at night to preserve your night vision. This headlamp can be recharged using a USB Type-C cable.

30% Off Panther Vision Hand Warmers and Lighted Beanies

If you're looking for a practical Valentine's Day gift idea, Panther Vision is offering a big 30% coupon code that works sitewide. If you suffer from cold appendages, the Panther Vision 602R rechargeable hand warmer is small enough to fit in your jacket pocket. It offers three different heat settings depending on how numb your fingers are, boasts an IP67 waterproof rating, and can even double up as a 5,000mAh USB Type-C power bank for emergencies.

Pair it with the Panther Vision lighted beanie, which will keep your noggin warm while lighting up the way with a built-in LED headlamp rated for up to 150 lumens at max output. If you prioritize longevity over intensity, the 15-lumen setting will last up to 10 hours on a single charge. There are plenty of other useful gadgets on the site, including portable lamps and flashlights, so you might want to stock up to reach the $60 free shipping threshold.

Not all of the best deals are dirt cheap. Here are some excellent deals if you're willing to spend a little or a lot more depending on the items, including video games, TVs, gaming PCs, gaming handhelds, high-end chairs, and more.

Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2 for $95.99

Lenovo has dropped the price of this professional-grade Xbox Series X Elite Series 2 Core Wireless Controller in White/Black to $95.99 after you apply coupon code "MXBOXELITE". The controller itself is identical to the older generation Xbox Elite Series 2 controller that retails for $179.99. The only difference is that this "Core" model doesn't come with as many accessories, like the extra sets of paddles, thumbsticks, D-pad, and travel case.

Nerf LMTD Halo Needler for $67.18

For you Halo fans out there, have we found a deal for you. Right now you can save 33% off the NERF LMTD Halo Needler Dart-Firing Blaster. It's normally $100, but this discount drops it down to only $67.18 shipped. NERF's LMTD is a collection of fan-service weapons that are designed after iconic weapons from popular movies and video games, and the Halo Needler is definitely one of the coolest looking guns in the lineup, with a lot of cool little touches like the needles and accents that light up whenever you grip the handle, a 10-dart rotating drum (10 Elite darts included, but it will also take standard darts), and a display stand that activates all the light-up features when mounted.

4-Pack Apple AirTags for $69.99

Amazon and Best Buy are both offering a four-pack of Apple AirTags keyfinders for only $69.99. That's $30 off the retail price and only $16.50 for each AirTag. This is a very practical accessory for anyone who owns an iPhone and tends to lose small wearables like wallets, keys, or remotes.

Crucial X9 Pro 1TB Portable SSD for $69.99 (2TB for $120)

The Crucial X9 Pro is one of the fastest portable hard drives out there, thanks to a fast SSD drive and USB 3.2 interface that can deliver both read and write speeds of up to 1,050MB/s. The 2TB model is actually $10 less than the best deal we saw during Black Friday and, in my opinion, the best deal to get.

$39.99 Nintendo Switch Video Games

Best Buy has dropped several must-have Nintendo Switch video games from $59.99 to $39.99, a savings of 33%. Several of them are available in your choice of a physical copy or digital download. You won't lose out even if you plan to upgrade to the Switch 2, since the new console has been confirmed to be backwards compatible with nearly all Switch games.

65" LG Evo C3 4K OLED Smart TV for $1197

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You don't have to wait for the new 2025 LG TVs to drop to score a great deal on an older generation model. Right now as part of Amazon's Presidents' Day Sale, you can pick up a 2023 65" LG Evo C3 4K OLED TV for just $1,196.99 with free shipping on Amazon. This is a better deal than what I saw during Black Friday. The LG Evo C-series of TVs have consistently been our favorite high-end 4K TVs, especially for 4K HDR movies and gaming.

Asus ROG Ally Z1 Extreme Gaming Handheld for $449.99

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Starting this week, Best Buy is taking $200 off the Asus ROG Ally Z1 Extreme gaming handheld, now only $449.99. That's the lowest price I've seen for a brand-new unit, even during Black Friday. In addition, you get a free official ROG Ally travel case, one month of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, and two months of a Crunchyroll Mega Fan subscription. The ROG Ally This is one of the best gaming handhelds currently available, especially if you don't want to be tied to Steam's ecosystem.

Secretlab Presidents' Day Sale

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Secretlab's Presidents' Day Sale is still live for a little while longer. Save up to $139 off Secretlab's popular Titan line of gaming chairs, Magnus gaming desks (including the Magnus Pro electric standing desk model), and accessories like the Secretlab Skins upholstery covers, desk mats, cable management, and more. Unfortunately, new releases like the Titan Evo Nanogen chair and the recliner add-on are exempt from this sale.

Preorder Elden Ring: Nightreign at Best Buy, Get $10 Gift Card

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Elden Ring Nightreign is set to release for PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, and PC on May 30. A new standalone game set in the world of Elden Ring, Nightreign lets you team up with two other players to slice your way through an oppressive fantasy world. It’s kind of like a faster-paced remix of the original game. It’s available for preorder in a number of editions, so read on for the details about what comes in each one.

Preorder the HP Omen 45L RTX 5090 Prebuilt Gaming PC

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HP just added the option to add the GeForce RTX 5090 GPU as an upgrade to one of its flagship HP Omen 45L prebuilt gaming PCs and, fortunately, it is very reasonably priced for a prebuilt RTX 5090 desktop relative to what we've seen from other brands. Put your order in sooner than later because, unless HP has readily available 5090 GPUs in its inventory (unlikely), these prebuilts will probably have a bit of a lead time before they ship out.

Flexispot C7 Ergonomic Chair with Footrest for $230

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Flexispot is offering a great deal on its workhorse Flexispot C7 ergonomic chair with built-in footrest. It's normally listed at $429.99, but there's a $200 off coupon code "C7PDSALE" that drops it to only $229.99. We generally like the Flexispot brand because it includes electric standing desks and ergonomic chairs with solid build quality and a plethora of practical features at a fraction of the price compared to other more well-known models. We rated the Flexispot C7 is the best budget-friendly ergonomic chair and the Flexispot E7 Pro as the best overall standing desk of 2024.

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.

How to Watch The Monkey - Showtimes and Streaming Release Date

After the breakout success of Longlegs, writer/director Oz Perkins returns with another horror adaptation from the works of Stephen King. The Monkey stars Theo James as a pair of twins haunted by a cymbal-smacking monkey toy. Tatiana Maslany (Orphan Black), Elijah Wood (Lord of The Rings, Yellowjackets), and Adam Scott (Severance) also get roped into the creepy monkey mess.

In his review for IGN, critic Tom Jorgenson calls The Monkey “one of the best horror-comedies (and Stephen King adaptations) in recent memory, exploding off the screen with both gory kills and big laughs.” Sounds like a true horror comedy to me.

If you’re planning to catch The Monkey in theaters or wondering when it will be available to stream, check out the details below.

How to Watch The Monkey - Showtimes and Streaming Release Date

The Monkey just released in theaters on February 21. You can check out showtimes near you at the main theater links below:

The Monkey Streaming Release Date

The Monkey will eventually stream on Hulu instead of Netflix or Max. The Monkey is being distributed by Neon, which has an agreement with Hulu that gives the streaming service rights to its theatrical releases.

In contrast to the recent trend of "straight-to-streaming" movies, Neon’s independent releases take quite a while to end up on the service. For example, Oz Perkins’ previous movie, Longlegs, was released in theaters on July 12, 2024, and didn’t appear on Hulu until February 14, 2025, around seven months later.

While you might have to wait several months for The Monkey to appear on Hulu, the new Oz Perkins movie should still be available to rent or buy through digital marketplaces like Prime Video by early May.

What Is The Monkey About?

The Monkey is based on Stephen King’s short story by the same name, originally published in 1980 before being revised for the Skeleton Crew collection in 1985. Here’s the movie’s official synopsis:

Does The Monkey Have a Post-Credits Scene?

While The Monkey doesn’t technically have a post-credits scene, there’s a “surprise” worth waiting around for. Beware spoilers, but you can learn more about that in IGN’s guide to The Monkey’s ending.

The Monkey Cast

The Monkey was written and directed by Oz Perkins. The movie stars the following cast:

  • Theo James as Hal and Bill Shelburn
  • Christian Convery as young Hal and Bill
  • Tatiana Maslany as Lois Shelburn
  • Colin O'Brien as Petey
  • Rohan Campbell as Ricky
  • Sarah Levy as Ida
  • Adam Scott as Capt. Petey Shelburn
  • Elijah Wood as Ted Hammerman
  • Osgood Perkins as Chip
  • Danica Dreyer as Annie Wilkes
  • Laura Mennell as Hal's ex-wife and Petey's mother
  • Nicco Del Rio as Rookie Priest

The Monkey Rating and Runtime

The Monkey is Rated R for strong bloody violent content, gore, language throughout and some sexual references. The movie runs for a total of 1 hour and 38 minutes.

NetEase Founder Reportedly Almost Canceled Marvel Rivals Because it Didn't Use Original IP

NetEase's Marvel Rivals can't be described as anything less than a hit, netting ten million players in just three days from launch and raking in millions for developer NetEase in the weeks since. But a new report suggests that NetEase CEO and founder William Ding nearly canceled the game due to a reluctance to use licensed IP.

The report comes from Bloomberg, and describes the current situation at NetEase: Ding is actively cutting jobs, closing studios, and withdrawing from investment overseas. The goal, per the report, is a smaller, tighter portfolio that can stave off a recent growth decline and compete with rivals Tencent and MiHoYo.

Part of that shrinking, Bloomberg reports, almost included canceling Marvel Rivals. According to one source, Ding didn't want to pay for the use of licensed Marvel characters, and tried to persuade artists to use original designs instead. An attempted cancelation allegedly cost NetEase millions, but the game released anyway to its current success.

However, the shrinking continues. Just earlier this week, we learned that the Marvel Rivals Seattle team was laid off, with the company claiming this was for "organizational reasons." And over the last year, Ding has ceased investment in overseas projects, having previously invested heavily in Japanese and Western studios like Bungie, Devolver Digital, and Blizzard Entertainment. The report suggests that Ding believes games that won't generate hundreds of millions per year are not worth the company's time, though a company spokesperson told Bloomberg that NetEase doesn’t set "arbitrary blanket numbers for determining the viability of a new game."

Workers speaking to Bloomberg also painted a portrait of trouble internally at NetEase, centered around Ding's volatility as a leader. Per this account, Ding is quick to make decisions and changes his mind often, has pressured staff to work late, recently hired a number of recent graduates into prominent leadership roles, and has allegedly shut down so many projects that NetEase may not release any games in China next year at all.

NetEase's withdrawal from games investment comes at a time of ongoing uncertainty in the games industry, especially in the West. Multiple years running have seen mass layoffs, cancellations, and studio shut downs, alongside a number of expensive and high-profile games flopping despite high company expectations.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

The Toxic Avenger Is Back, and He's Teaming Up With... Jesus Christ?

AHOY Comics made waves in 2024 by reviving cult hero The Toxic Crusader in comic book form. This year, they're celebrating an event dubbed "Toxic Mess Summer" by having Toxie team up with the heroes of the AHOY Universe. And that includes Jesus Christ.

Toxic Mess Summer kicks off in May with the release of The Toxic Avenger Pinup Special, featuring various artists lending their own takes on Toxie and the gang. From there, AHOY will release the miniseries Toxie Team-Up, which pairs Toxie with Project: Cryptid's Jersey Devil, My Bad's Acid Chimp, The Wrong Earth's Dragonflyman and Stinger, Justice Warriors' Swamp Cop and Schitt, and, yes, Second Coming's Jesus Christ.

For those not familiar with this satirical superhero series, Second Coming sees Jesus return to Earth and become roommates with a superhero named Sunstar. Second Coming has garnered its fair share of both acclaim and controversy since the original series launched, and we doubt that's going to change as Jesus and Toxie join forces.

Toxie Team-Up #1 is written and drawn by Second Coming's Mark Russell and Richard Pace.

“Toxic Avenger and Jesus Christ is the team-up that everybody has been clamoring for and I am not one to stand in the way,” said Russell in Ahoy's press release. “Just as in Second Coming, Christ shows that there are more tools in the box than just violence and that Tromaville, as strange as it is, is still a place that someone who grew up bullied by the jocks in the Roman Empire would recognize.”

“Having already spawned five films, a cartoon, action figures, a musical, and a Marvel comic book series, the Toxic Avenger is a pop culture icon,” said AHOY Comics Editor-in-Chief Tom Peyer. “The only question is: why doesn’t he have a church of his own?”

The Toxic Avenger Pinup Special will be released on May 14, followed by Toxie Team-Up #1 on June 11. Matt Bors and Fred Harper's The Toxic Avenger miniseries will also be collected in a trade paperback edition on April 1. You can preorder The Toxic Avenger on Amazon.

Toxie will also be reutrning to the big screen in 2025. In IGN's review of The Toxic Avenger, Amelia Emberwing writes, "Troma and Legendary’s partnership on The Toxic Avenger’s 2023 'not remake' delivers a mixed bag. Director Macon Blair and the rest of the creative team may have more money to play with than Michael Herz and Lloyd Kaufman’s 1984 original, but it struggles to deliver on the schlocky goodness of Troma’s stronger films. Still, what it lacks in so-bad-it’s-good silliness it makes up for with its heart and mostly practical slaughterfests. Kevin Bacon and Peter Dinklage having an absolute blast in their roles doesn’t hurt, either."

Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on BlueSky.

The Best Max Deals for February 2025

Max is home to some incredibly high-quality films and shows, including House of the Dragon, Succession, The Penguin, Dune: Prophecy, and The Last of Us, which has season 2 coming this year in April. If you've been hoping to start up an account to dig into that library, we're here to help! We're keeping track of the best price right now for Max subscriptions, along with any deals as they appear.

This includes bundle deals like the Max, Hulu, and Disney+ bundle, which is one you absolutely don't want to miss out on. This mega bundle starts at just $16.99/month, which is an astonishing price to have three very popular streaming services right in the palm of your hand. You can learn more about that bundle deal and Max's subscription plans below.

How to Get the Disney Plus, Hulu, and Max Streaming Bundle

It's official, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery have launched the brand-new Disney+, Hulu, and Max streaming bundle. The bundle can be purchased on any of the three streaming services and starts at $16.99/month for the ad-supported tier or $29.99/month for ad-free access across all three platforms. If you're looking to cut down on streaming costs and currently own all three of these, this is an excellent bundle to invest in. It'll save you quite a bit compared to what you'd pay for the three of them separately – 43% on the ad-supported plan and 42% on the ad-free plan.

To learn more about how to get started with this bundle as a new or existing subscriber, head to our guide on how to get (or switch over to) the Disney+/Hulu/Max streaming bundle. It's worth signing up for this right now as well, given Hulu and Disney Plus have increased their prices, so you'll ultimately be saving money with this bundle.

Subscribe to Max

If you're just looking to sign up for a Max subscription, you have four different options to choose from:

  • $9.99/month Basic With Ads
  • $99.99/year Basic With Ads
  • $16.99/month Standard (ad-free)
  • $169.99/year Standard (ad-free)

The Standard tier also allows users to download shows and movies to watch on the go. Both of the tiers allow up to two concurrent streams.

Max also has an additional Premium tier. The details are as follows:

  • $20.99/month, ad-free with four concurrent streams
  • $209.99/year, ad-free with four concurrent streams

There is currently no Max free trial available as of February 2025.

Max: Bundle to Best

Alongside the big Max/Hulu/Disney+ bundle deal, Hulu also offers its own bundle deal with Max if you just want to have those two services. Simply pick out your Hulu base plan, which starts at $9.99/month, and then add Max to your account for an additional $9.99/month with the ad-supported plan or $16.99/month for the ad-free plan. If you'd like to learn more about Hulu's bundles, visit our page on Hulu's best bundles and deals right now.

What Is Streaming on Max?

Max brings together content from the old HBO Max service and Discovery+ under one roof. From Discovery, this includes programming from brands like HGTV, Food Network, TLC, Magnolia Network, and more. Some of the shows include Property Brothers, House Hunters, Fixer Upper, among others.

The service also maintains much of the content from HBO Max, including its slate of HBO Originals like The Last of Us, Euphoria, Succession, Barry, Curb Your Enthusiasm, White Lotus, House of the Dragon, and more. It also includes DC's slate of movies like Black Adam and The Batman, as well as other popular films like Dune: Part Two and Barbie. Plus, Max continues to house popular streaming series like Friends, Full House, and the Harry Potter movie collection.

In our updated 2024 review of Max, we gave it an 8/10, stating that, "For all its problems and an app that still runs a little too heavy, the extensive selection of well-curated choices make Max a worthwhile investment for cinema and TV lovers."

Hannah Hoolihan is a freelance writer who works with the Guides and Commerce teams here at IGN.

Original article from Logan Plant.

Back the Catan Masterpiece Series on Kickstarter To Upgrade Your Board

If you're a fan of Catan, you definitely don't want to miss out on this Kickstarter campaign for the Catan Masterpiece Series. FanRoll Dice has created official upgrades for Catan's components so you can bring your board to life. Per FanRoll Dice's Kickstarter page, "Each element has been reimagined with a range of materials including wood, metal, resin, and gemstone to provide an unforgettable gaming experience." The Catan Masterpiece Series includes upgrades for "dice, robbers, hexes, number discs, ports, and frames," bringing exciting new pieces to one of the best strategy board games of all time.

Back the Catan Masterpiece Series on Kickstarter

If these upgrades have caught your eye, you can pledge to back the project and start building out your new board. The link above will bring you to the main Catan Masterpiece Series page on Kickstarter, but if you're curious to see a breakdown of the different pledge tiers, we've included the graphic from their Kickstarter page just below as well.

In regard to pledge tiers, the Catan Masterpiece Series Kickstarter page also states that, "These curated packages offer a variety of ways to combine different pieces and save on your overall investment. But the customization doesn't stop there - once you select a tier, you can further tailor your bundle using our add-ons." This is an excellent investment if you're a Catan fan or know someone in your life with a big love of the game, allowing you to build out your board in a unique way.

More Strategy Board Game Recommendations

Outside of this Kickstarter, if you're looking for more tabletop games to add to your collection, it's worth having a look at our roundup of the best board games to play in 2025. This list features some of our favorite board games we've reviewed, including Wingspan and Cascadia.

Hannah Hoolihan is a freelancer who writes with the guides and commerce teams here at IGN.

Moroi Preview: Macabre, Weird, and Mysterious in All the Right Ways

I think the first time I really understood what Moroi was, I mean the down-in-your-bones feeling you get when you’re playing something and the lighting bolt of understanding strikes you right on the noggin, was when my character fed himself to a talking meat-grinder because “something inside [him] screams let's do it!” Admittedly, it would have probably been funnier if Moroi had flashed a game over screen, and most games might’ve as a gag, but Moroi plays it straight. Into the meat-grinder you go, head-first. It chews for a bit and spits you out. You taste terrible, you see, and the grinder’s palate for manflesh is, for whatever reason, a bit more refined. Later on, you can offer it a severed hand (don’t ask) and it’s happy about that, and to grind up the bones and turn the leftover dust over to you so you can use it to help an old woman make “soup” (again, don’t ask), but eating the hand causes it to explode. “You are on fire,” your character remarks glibly as the machine spits binary. But you have your bone dust and it’s not your job to save sentient meat grinders who have developed a taste for longpig, so off you go to break some more stuff. And I said, out loud, “Ah, it’s a game like that.” And I was intrigued.

The word moroi comes from Romanian folklore; it’s used to describe a vampire or ghost, or in some cases, a phantom that rises from the grave to draw energy from the living. I don’t know which part of the definition Moroi the game draws from. What I do know is this: your character, a bearded bear of a man, wakes up in a strange prison, in pain, with no memory of how he got there. Everyone else seems to know him, but he doesn’t recognize any of them. But maybe, as a very tall man in a very strange hat tells him, that’s for the best.

Your first order of business is to get out, and that means solving simple puzzles, many of which boil down to “acquire item, take it somewhere.” Go talk to the cannibal eating himself as performance art who asks that, if eating himself isn’t his magnum opus, lightning strikes him dead. When lightning strikes him dead, take his severed hand and bring it to the sentient meat grinder, who gives you bone dust before catching fire. Then you take that to the tall man in the funny hat, who tells you to take it to the old lady making soup (she needs some salt; you have bone dust. Same thing, right?) before reminding you that “Death will meet you soon enough” and weirdly offering up that his name is Edgar. So it’s off to the old woman, who gratefully accepts your “salt” and is pulled headfirst into the cauldron by the soup to see what’s on the other side. “I'm starting to think that wasn't soup,” your character says. Noticing a pattern here?

It’s got Doom’s Glory Kills, which quite literally teleport you across the screen for very satisfying slow-motion execution that drops health.

On and on it goes, whether it’s a toenail from an overfed corpse still being pumped full of… something, or taking the old woman’s spoon and using it to wake up the rat with the important job of running in his wheel and powering The Horrors (and the doors). But then something strange happens. Moroi gives you a sword, and throws a bunch of enemies at you, and that’s where the magic happens. Combat is simple — the top-down, twin-stick perspective seems a little weird when you’re solving puzzles, but then you get to a combat section and it’s like “Oh” — but it’s fast and hits feel weighty and satisfying and it’s got Doom’s Glory Kills, which quite literally teleport you across the screen for very satisfying slow-motion executions that drops health. And then you get a minigun that shoots harpoons. And that’s rad.

When Moroi is flipping between the two — quick, simple puzzles like using the number of corpses in a freezer to work out a door code, and combat sections against multiple enemies howling for blood like it’s Black Friday and you’ve just snatched the last George Foreman grill — it’s pretty grand. But there’s also plenty of weird stuff beyond that, too. At one point, you save a duck with human teeth from being turned into a wide variety of duck-based cuisine and he rewards you with his teeth so you can reinforce your weapon, and then explains the way out through bloody gums.

Sometimes messages pop up on-screen offering cryptic hints at something more. Other times, story details are left to collectibles scattered around the environment. I particularly liked the one that listed Duck of Eternal Torment as a type of potential meal prepared from our toothy friend, and the one where the cleaning lady resigns because the furniture is upside down every day and she’s convinced the place is cursed and/or haunted.

And it’s never afraid to be weird. One of my Moroi demo’s last segments thrust me into the role of a strange, winged doll tasked by his mother (another doll) with helping his brothers – an increasingly rude group of trees – survive some incoming horror that’s killing all of them by literally giving away pieces of himself to do it. It’s an odd segment, but a compelling one, and when the credits rolled shortly thereafter, I wasn’t quite sure what to make of it, but I am interested in seeing where it goes from here.

There are some things about Moroi that concern me: my demo was buggy (It crashed once;I got stuck between a door and a bookcase a couple times; once I fell through the floor) and some of the writing is uneven. But those are things that can be ironed out. Moroi marries the macabre and the mysterious, and it often went to places I didn’t see coming in my half-hour demo. I’m still not sure what a moroi is in this context, but I would like to find out. After all, who can resist a game with a meat grinder that lusts for the flesh of men and a duck with human teeth?

After 'Failing to Meet Expectations' at Launch, Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth Shoots to No.3 in U.S. Charts With Steam Debut

January is always a quiet month for video games, and 2025 was no exception. With only one new game release cracking the top 20 and the predictable domination of Call of Duty, there's little to crow about from last month... except, perhaps, what may be a comeback story for one of last year's alleged sales disappointments: Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth.

Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth debuted February 2024 to No.2 on Circana's charts, which rank video games by dollar sales in the U.S. It dropped to No.7 the following month, and finished out the year at No.17. While those numbers are respectable, post-launch there were numerous questions about whether or not the game had done well enough for Square Enix's tastes, or even especially well in comparison to other major RPGs in the same year like Dragon's Dogma 2 or its predecessor Final Fantasy 7: Remake. Square Enix ultimately came out saying the game failed to meet its sales expectations, and never even announced a sales figure, suggesting it hadn't done well enough to brag about.

But notably, Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth launched as a platform-exclusive on PS5, and exclusives usually face an uphill battle compared to cross-platform releases when it comes to sales. As of January 2025, Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth is exclusive no more, finally debuting on Steam and shooting up to No.3 on the Circana charts for the month from No.56 in December. The Final Fantasy 7: Remake & Rebirth Twin Pack similarly rose from No.265 in December to No.16 in January thanks to the Steam release.

That's not all. Circana analyst Mat Piscatella pointed out on Bluesky earlier this month that Rebirth had a "fantastic" Steam launch: "Across physical & tracked digital, Final Fantasy VII: Rebirth was the best-selling game of the week ending Jan 25th in the US market ($ sales), while the FFVII Remake & Rebirth Twin Pack ranked 3rd."

Now that's just the U.S., but it's likely this is emblematic of similar sales abroad, which when combined could signal to Square Enix that change is needed. This success inevitably invites speculation that swelling sales thanks to a PC launch may shift the company's plans for future Final Fantasy releases to a cross-platform launch. I asked Piscatella for his opinion on the situation, and here's what he said:

"I mean it's hard for me to say what impact the Steam release has on publisher perception of overall title success. That's subject to all kinds of internal planning and expectations I'm not privy to, of course. But purely looking at consumer response, it was a very good launch month on Steam. This launch does provide yet another benchmark that shows releasing on PC makes a ton of sense at this point regardless of genre or historical release strategies.

"For 3rd party publishers, it's looking harder and harder to release exclusively on a single platform without significant incentives provided by the platform holder."

We'll just have to wait and see what Square Enix's reaction is at its next relevant earnings call...in May. Stay tuned.

It's looking harder and harder to release exclusively on a single platform without significant incentives provided by the platform holder.

As for the rest of the charts, it will surprise no one that Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 was the best-selling game of the month again, followed by Madden NFL 25. The only new release cracking the top 20 in January was Donkey Kong Country: Returns on Nintendo Switch, which reached No.8 purely on the basis of physical sales (Nintendo does not share digital sales data for its eshop).

Also notable was the return of It Takes Two to the top 20, in spot No.20. There's no single reason for this, Piscatella told me. "There has been promotion happening during the month, including the last week of Jan on both the PlayStation store and eShop," he said. "But really, It Takes Two had pretty steady sales all month. But it was in December that It Takes Two really started its latest rally with both sales and engagement upticks that extended into January."

Notably, much of the promotion for It Takes Two comes ahead of the release of Hazelight Studios' next game, Split Fiction, releasing in March.

Overall, games spending numbers actually look a bit sad in January compared to last January, but there's one potential reason for that. This year's tracking period for January was four weeks long, while 2024's January was five weeks long, so that's a whole extra week to make money. But as a result, overall spending was down 15% to $4.5 billion for the month this year (it was 0.3% ahead of January 2023's four-week period). Accessories spending was down 28% year-over-year.

Content spending was down 12% compared to last year, with console content down 35%. Hardware spending was down 45%. PS5 hardware spending was down 38% year over year, Xbox Series was down 50%, and Switch was down 53%. PS5 was the best-selling hardware of the month in dollars and units, with the Xbox Series second in hardware spending, and Switch barely second in unit sales.

The top 20 best-selling games in the U.S. for the month of January 2025, based on dollar sales:

  1. Call of Duty: Black Ops 6
  2. Madden NFL 25
  3. Final Fantasy VII: Rebirth
  4. EA Sports FC 25
  5. Minecraft*
  6. Marvel's Spider-Man 2
  7. EA Sports College Football 25
  8. Donkey Kong Country Returns*
  9. Hogwarts Legacy
  10. Sonic Generations
  11. Helldivers II
  12. Astro Bot
  13. Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero
  14. Super Mario Party Jamboree*
  15. Elden Ring
  16. Final Fantasy VII Remake & Rebirth Twin Pack
  17. Mario Kart 8*
  18. The Crew: Motorfest
  19. UFC 5
  20. It Takes Two

* Indicates that some or all digital sales are not included in Circana's data. Some publishers, including Nintendo and Take-Two, do not share certain digital data for this report.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

Genshin Impact Is Getting an Official Cookbook — Here’s an Exclusive First Look

Genshin Impact is getting an official cookbook later in 2025, and IGN has an exclusive first look.

Genshin Impact Official Cookbook: Culinary Journeys Across Teyvat, by Thibaud Villanova, comes out September 2, 2025 and “invites readers to explore, taste, and experience the fantasy world of Teyvat in an entirely new way.” There are even prefaces from Michelin star chefs Paul Pairet and Mory Sacko.

As you’d expect, the cookbook lets Genshin Impact recreate dishes from the game, accompanied by cooking quest givers the Gourmet Supremos. There are 60 recipes designed to take budding chefs on a culinary journey through the first four major regions of Teyvat: Mondstadt, Liyue, Inazuma, and Sumeru.

The images, below, show recipes for ‘Dinner of Judgment,’ a speciality of Rosaria, the ‘Lighter-Than-Air Pancake,’ and the tantalisingly named Nutritious Meal (V.593). If you’re curious, Nutritious Meal (V.593) revives a character and restores 20% of Max HP, then restores an additional 1,500 HP to the target fallen character with a 120-second cooldown in Genshin Impact itself.

Chef Villanova, who goes by @gastronogeek on Instagram, is no stranger to creating recipes based on video games, and has published more than 16 cookbooks that have sold over 500,000 copies.

As for Genshin Impact, if you’re low on ingredients, take a look at our Genshin Impact codes for some freebies (in-game only, though, not actually edible). For your next trip to Teyvat, here are the current Genshin Impact banners for Version 5.4, and our guide to the best Sigewinne build if you get lucky on her banner.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Makers of Very Blatant Pokémon Copycat Video Game Forced to Make Very Public Apology, The Pokémon Company Wins ‘Substantial’ Damages

The Pokémon Company was awarded “substantial” damages as part of a settlement in a long-running lawsuit with the developers of Chinese copycat mobile game Pocket Monster: Remake.

Pocket Monster: Remake launched in 2015 and appeared fairly popular, having earned upwards of around $42 million in a single year according to The Pokémon Company, as reported by The South China Morning Post in 2022.

The game featured seemingly unaltered Pikachu artwork from the Pokémon Yellow box as the app icon, while other branding for the game featured what appeared to be Ash Ketchum, Pikachu, Tepig, and Oshawott, again unaltered. Gameplay of Pocket Monster: Remake from perezzdb on YouTube shows myriad other familiar characters and Pokémon in what appears to be intended as a remake of the original games.

Perhaps inevitably, The Pokémon Company filed a lawsuit back in 2021. Three years later, in September 2024, the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court ruled in favor of The Pokémon Company, awarding around $15 million. But both companies appealed the ruling, leading to this week’s settlement announcement.

As reported by Automaton, The Pokémon Company also published a public apology letter from Pocket Monster: Remake maker Guangzhou Maichi Network Technology Co., Ltd., which was issued across all major social media platforms. In it, the company admits ripping off Pokémon characters, promises never to do it again, and confirms it has now shut down Pocket Monster: Remake entirely.

Here’s the apology in full:

Guangzhou Maichi Network Technology Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as "the Company") has launched and operated the self-developed mobile game "Pocket Monster: Remake (口袋妖怪:复刻)" (alias “The Pocket Journey (口袋之旅)”, hereinafter referred to as "the Game") since July 2015 through the Company’s subsidiaries (including but not limited to Khorgos Fangchi Network Technology Co., Ltd., hereinafter the Company and its subsidiaries collectively referred to as "We") and various online game operators.
In December 2021, The Pokémon Company (hereinafter referred to as "TPC") filed a lawsuit with the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court in Guangzhou Province, alleging that the Company infringed its copyright and engaged in unfair competition. The first-instance judgment ruled that the Company was liable for the claimed copyright infringement and unfair competition, and ordered the Company to pay damages in the amount of 107 million Chinese yuan to TPC. The case was heard in the second instance on December 18, 2024, and under the mediation of the High People's Court of Guangdong Province, TPC and We reached a settlement on the issue of compensation.
Under the guidance of relevant precedents and judicial documents issued by the High People's Court of Guangdong Province, We have deeply realized that our acts had violated relevant laws during the second-instance trial and settlement process. The Game has extensively used design elements of the well-known Pokémon Video Game Series, infringing the copyrights related to the Pokémon Video Games, and has unfairly taken advantage of the fame and reputation of the Pokémon Video Games, thereby constituting acts of unfair competition. Our copyright infringement and acts of unfair competition have caused significant economic losses to the rights holders and severely damaged the image of the original Pokémon Video Games. We hereby sincerely apologize to TPC and other rights holders, as well as the vast number of players, consumers, and the general public.
The Game has now been completely removed from the market and operations have ceased. At the same time, We have paid a substantial economic price and incurred significant reputational damage. We have deeply reflected on it and learned our lessons. In our future operations, We will place a high priority on intellectual property protection, refrain from infringing upon any related intellectual property rights or interests of the Pokémon Video Games and their rights holders, and avoid engaging in any related acts of unfair competition.

While The Pokémon Company has found success with this copycat video game, it's still embroiled in a lawsuit with Palworld maker Pocketpair, which it sued for patent infringement last year. Pocketpair has vowed to fight the case in the Japanese courts.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Gaming Peripherals Maker Corsair Clarifies GTA 6 PC 'Early 2026' Release Date Comment

Corsair has clarified recent comments from one of its executives who claimed Grand Theft Auto 6 would release on PC early 2026.

During a financial call, Corsair Gaming’s VP of finance, Ronald van Veen, said: “Yeah, GTA 6 is probably the one everyone is talking about. And we’ll get a glimpse of that, I think, later on in the year for console. My understanding now it’s going to come out in the fall for console, and then early 2026 for PC.”

That was enough to spark a number of headlines about Corsair’s apparent insider information on GTA 6’s release window, but a representative of the company told IGN that Ronald van Veen’s comments were speculation, and confirmed Corsair does not have release dates supplied from Rockstar or Take-Two.

Take-Two recently committed to launching GTA 6 fall 2025 on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and S only, despite concern around a potential delay. But what does this mean for the PC version, which remains unannounced?

It’s an omission in keeping with developer Rockstar’s playbook for its previous games, but in 2025 feels outdated. And, given the increasing importance of the PC for a multiplatform game’s success, is GTA 6’s no-show on PC a missed opportunity or even a mistake?

IGN put that question to Take-Two boss Strauss Zelnick ahead of the company’s recent financial results, and in his response he teased GTA 6’s eventual release on PC.

“So with Civ 7 it's available on console and PC and Switch right away,” Zelnick said of Firaxis' recently launched Civilization 7. “With regard to others in our lineup, we don't always go across all platforms simultaneously. Historically, Rockstar has started with some platforms and then historically moved to other platforms.”

Rockstar fans have noted the studio's historical reluctance to release other past games on PC day-and-date with console, as well as its fraught relationship with the modding community over the years. Still, some had hoped that a game as big as GTA 6 could be a turning point for the studio's PC gaming attitude.

Big Rockstar titles tend to get to PC eventually, but the question of how long PC gamers will have to wait for what could end up being one of the biggest games ever remains. Given GTA 6’s fall 2025 release window, it seems likely PC players won’t get to play the game until 2026 at the earliest.

In December 2023, a former developer at Rockstar attempted to explain why GTA 6 is coming to PC after it hits PS5 and Xbox Series X and S, and called on PC gamers to give the studio the “benefit of the doubt” over its controversial launch plans.

We’ve got plenty more on GTA 6, including Zelnick’s response to concern about the fate of GTA Online once GTA 6 comes out.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Marvel Reportedly Pauses Work on Nova, Strange Academy, and Terror, Inc. TV Shows

Marvel Television has reportedly paused work on three shows: Nova, Strange Academy and Terror, Inc.

Sources told Deadline that the projects were never greenlit and may still come out, but Marvel has shifted its priorities.

The change in strategy comes as Marvel Studios prepares to launch Disney+ show Daredevil: Born Again. This week, Marvel Studios’ head of streaming and TV Brad Winderbaum revealed the company is exploring the opportunity of reuniting the street level heroes of Daredevil, Luke Cage, Jessica Jones, and Iron Fist, better known as The Defenders.

Marvel Studios is now taking the approach of developing more shows than it makes, but, as Winderbaum told Screen Rant last year: “We’re really being careful about what we choose to do next.”

The news about Nova is particularly surprising, given just two months ago we heard that former Criminal Minds showrunner Ed Bernero was on board as a writer and a showrunner, with Nova confirmed as a series for Disney+. Check out IGN’s article on everything you need to know about Nova for more.

Strange Academy was expected to revolve around a magic school founded by MCU mainline character Doctor Strange, with Wong in charge. There’s no information on Terror, Inc., however.

Here’s what we know for sure when it comes to Marvel TV shows: Daredevil: Born Again hits Disney+ on March 4, Ironheart, on June 24, and Wonder Man is due out in December. Three MCU films are due out this year following the launch of Captain America: Brave New World: Thunderbolts in May and The Fantastic Four: First Steps.

Image credit: Marvel via Getty Images.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

After Becoming the Worst User-Reviewed Game Ever on Steam, Overwatch 2’s Recent Reviews Jump to ‘Mixed’

Overwatch 2 Season 15 appears to be going down well, improving sentiment around what was once the worst ever user-reviewed game on Steam.

We're now nearly nine years out from the debut of Overwatch in 2016, and two-and-a-half from the launch of Overwatch 2. In August 2023, Overwatch 2 became the worst user-reviewed game on Steam ever, with most of the negative reviews focused on monetization after developer Blizzard was heavily-criticised for forcing its premium predecessor to update into a free-to-play sequel, rendering the original Overwatch unplayable back in 2022.

Overwatch 2 subsequently endured a number of controversies including the cancellation of its long-awaited PvE Hero mode — the one feature, players said, that justified the sequel's existence.

But while Overwatch 2 still has a ‘mostly negative’ user review rating on Steam for all reviews, recent reviews have shown an improvement to ‘mixed.’ That means 43% of the 5,325 user reviews left in the last 30 days were positive.

That might not sound like much to crow about, but for Overwatch 2, which has endured overwhelming negativity since its release on Valve’s platform, it’s a significant milestone.

This improvement has to do with the recent launch of Season 15, which made a number of dramatic changes to Overwatch 2. While the roadmap ahead includes much of what you'd expect to see in terms of new content, the core gameplay itself has seen a seismic shift, including the additions of hero perks and the return of loot boxes.

“They just released Overwatch 2,” reads one recent positive review. “The recent update is what the game should always have been before corporate greed got in the way.”

“For once, I must come to Overwatch's defense and say they really have stepped up their game,” reads another. “Going back to what worked in Overwatch 1 while introducing new and fun mechanics to the game. A certain game made them LOCK IN and I couldn't be happier. Now we just gotta wait for next season with an actual cooler battlepass.”

That’s a reference to the hugely popular Marvel Rivals, a similar competitive multiplayer hero shooter from NetEase that’s seen 40 million downloads since launching in December.

In a recent interview with GamesRadar, Overwatch 2 director Aaron Keller discussed the new reality Blizzard finds itself in, with Marvel Rivals now out in the wild and attracting tens of millions of players.

"We're obviously in a new competitive landscape that I think, for Overwatch, we've never really been in before, to this extent where there's another game that's so similar to the one that we've created," Keller said.

You’d think this would be a bad thing for Overwatch, then, but Keller called the situation “exciting,” and even said it was “really great” to see Marvel Rivals take ideas established by Overwatch in a “different direction.”

Still, Keller admitted Marvel Rivals’ success had forced a change in attitude within Blizzard when it comes to Overwatch 2, saying: “this is no longer about playing it safe."

Of course, it’s way too early to declare Overwatch “back,” and there is a push and pull with Overwatch 2’s Steam user reviews that suggests it’ll be extremely difficult for the game to improve upon ‘mixed,’ no matter what Blizzard does. Meanwhile, Season 15 has caused an uptick in players on Valve’s platform, with peak concurrent player numbers almost doubling to 60,000. It’s worth noting that Overwatch 2 is available on Battle.net, PlayStation, and Xbox, and neither Blizzard, Sony, nor Microsoft make player numbers publicly available.

For context, Marvel Rivals, which launched a new mid-season update itself recently, had 305,816 peak concurrent players on Steam over the last 24 hours.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

George R. R. Martin Reveals 'There Is Some Talk About Making a Movie Out of Elden Ring,' but There's One Big, Obvious Thing That Could Limit His Involvement With It – IGN Fan Fest 2025

George R. R. Martin has issued the strongest tease yet that an Elden Ring movie may come to pass, but has acknowledged a significant blocker to his potential involvement with it.

The Game of Thrones creator famously dreamed up the world and history of FromSoftware’s Elden Ring, which went on to become one of the best-selling games of 2022. FromSoftware and publisher Bandai Namco leaned heavily on Martin’s involvement in promotional material, and the game credits begin by saying the Elden Ring world was created by FromSoftware chief Hidetaki Miyazaki and George R. R. Martin.

So, would George R. R. Martin be interested in coming back for a sequel to Elden Ring, if he’s asked? That’s the question IGN put to the man himself as part of IGN Fan Fest 2025. In his response, Martin sidestepped Elden Ring 2, but did drop a big hint that an Elden Ring movie could be in the works.

“Well, I can't say too much about it, but there is some talk about making a movie out of Elden Ring,” Martin said.

This isn’t the first time he’s teased an Elden Ring movie. And indeed, FromSoftware president Hidetaka Miyazaki has said he’d be open to an adaptation of Elden Ring, but only if a “very strong partner” were to come into play.

“I don’t see any reason to deny another interpretation or adaptation of Elden Ring, a movie for example,” explained Miyazaki in an interview with The Guardian. “But I don’t think myself, or FromSoftware, have the knowledge or ability to produce something in a different medium.”

“So that’s where a very strong partner would come into play,” continued Miyazaki. “We’d have to build a lot of trust and agreement on whatever it is we’re trying to achieve, but there’s interest, for sure.”

However, speaking to IGN, George R. R. Martin acknowledged that there may be a significant blocker to any heavy involvement he may have with the Elden Ring movie: he’s still working on The Winds of Winter.

“We'll see if that [the Elden Ring movie] comes to pass and what the extent of my involvement was, I don't know,” he said. “I'm a few years behind with my latest book, so that also limits the amount of things that I can do.”

Fans of George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire fantasy novels have long, long, long, awaited the planned sixth entry in the series, The Winds of Winter. But after more than a decade of delays, even Martin is acknowledging the possibility that it may never come to be.

In December, Martin said: “Unfortunately, I am 13 years late. Every time I say that, I’m [like], ‘How could I be 13 years late?’ I don’t know, it happens a day at a time.”

“But that’s still a priority," he continued. "A lot of people are already writing obituaries for me. [They’re saying] ‘Oh, he’ll never be finished.’ Maybe they’re right. I don’t know. I’m alive right now! I seem pretty vital!”

It's only the latest in what's been an increasingly bleak wait for The Winds of Winter, with the most recent entry in the series, A Dance With Dragons, publishing in 2011. That's the same year that HBO premiered the insanely popular TV series Game of Thrones, which is based on the A Song of Ice and Fire series and drew a lot more eyes to the world of Westeros.

As for Elden Ring, Martin explained his work on the game, telling IGN how he helped FromSoftware on worldbuilding.

“... when they came to me, FromSoftware, they wanted the world. They knew the action of Elden Ring that the players would get into would be in the ‘present.’ But something had created that present, had created that world. So where did that world come from? And I've done a lot of world building, most notably on Westeros and the backgrounds of A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones. And I like doing world building. So what had happened 5,000, 10,000 years before the current day action in Elden Ring that led them to that place? And I had some ideas about the magic and the runes. There was a lot about runes. And I worked it all out.

“It was interesting that the team flew in and we had a number of sessions and they would fly back and do their magic, and then they would come back here a couple months later and show me what they had, which was always amazing to see what they came up with.”

Was everything Martin wrote used in the game, or is there more material that could be used in future installments?

“Yeah, I think especially when you're world building, there's always more that you actually see on the screen,” Martin replied.

“And that's true of any of these big epic fantasies. I mean, you look at Tolkien and there are hundreds of pages of past history before you get to even the era of the Hobbit and dozens of kings and wars and things like that.”

Photo by Amanda Edwards/WireImage.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Amazon Boss Jeff Bezos Asks Who Fans Would Pick as the Next James Bond, and the Answer Is Loud and Clear

Following the shock news that Amazon has taken full creative control over James Bond, with long-term Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G Wilson stepping back, the question on everyone’s lips is: who should be the next 007?

That’s the question Amazon boss Jeff Bezos asked his followers on X / Twitter, and the answer was loud and clear.

Yes, some are calling for the likes of Venom star Tom Hardy, the MCU's Idris Elba, Professor X actor James McAvoy, Magneto actor Michael Fassbender, and Kraven’s Aaron Taylor-Johnson (who was previously rumored to be top of the list) to be given the role. But the clear fan-favorite is Henry Cavill.

It didn’t take long after Bezos’ tweet for Henry Cavill to trend online, and that’s because of the sheer number of James Bond enthusiasts calling for the Superman and Witcher actor to take over where Daniel Craig left off.

Some are now wondering whether Cavill’s odds of playing the world’s most famous spy have risen now Amazon is pulling all the strings. Cavill signed on to star in and produce Amazon’s hotly anticipated Warhammer 40,000 project. Could he also sign on to star as Bond?

Of course, Cavill famously auditioned to play James Bond during casting for 2006’s Casino Royale (and you can even see that audition online). Casino Royale director Martin Campbell has called the audition "tremendous,” but the then 23-year-old Cavill lost out to Daniel Craig because he was deemed too young.

During a 2023 interview with The Express, Campbell said of Cavill: “He looked great in the audition. His acting was tremendous. And look, if Daniel didn’t exist Henry would have made an excellent Bond. He looked terrific, he was in great physical shape… very handsome, very chiseled. He just looked a little young at that time back then.”

“It was ultimately down to, and this is what I’ve been told, it was just down to me and Daniel, and I was the younger option,” said Cavill in an interview with Josh Horowitz.

“They obviously went with Daniel and I think it was an amazing choice to go with Daniel. I probably wasn’t ready at the time and I think Daniel did an incredible job over the past movies, so I’m happy they made that choice.”

It’s no secret that 007’s producers were on the lookout for the next James Bond after Daniel Craig left the franchise behind with No Time to Die. But could Cavill now play Bond? “By the time Daniel got to [No Time To Die] really he was at an age where one more would have been too old for him,” added Campbell.

“I think they sign on for three Bonds, I’m not absolutely 100% certain of that. I know with Pierce [Brosnan] he had to sign on to three when we did him. So, that’s going to take, what, six years of your life maybe? I suspect Daniel [had] the same deal. And the next guy’s going to have to do that.

“Henry’s 40, so by the time he’s done the third one he’s going to be 50. Anything beyond that’s two, three years per Bond. He’s in good shape Henry, he’s a good guy. He did very well in the audition, but ironically, he was too young.”

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

IGN UK Podcast 788: Singing in the Nightreign

Cardy, Matt, and Mat are back for some February Friday fun and frolicking as a range of delights are explored, including first impressions of the multiplayer spin-off Elden Ring Nightreign. There's also time for a look at awards contender The Brutalist, new Adult Swin animation Common Side Effects, and visual novel dice-roller Citizen Sleeper 2.

Remember to send us your thoughts about all the new games, TV shows, and films you're enjoying or looking forward to: ign_ukfeedback@ign.com.

IGN UK Podcast 788: Singing in the Nightreign

DC Comics to Relaunch Batman With New #1 Issue and New Costume

2025 is definitely shaping up to be a huge year for DC's flagship Batman comic. Current writer Chip Zdarsky just ended his run with Batman #157, paving the way for Jeph Loeb and Jim Lee's Hush 2 storyline in March. And once Hush 2 is over, DC will be relaunching Batman with a new #1 issue, new writer, and new costume.

As revealed at the ComicsPro retailer event, the new volume of Batman will be written by Matt Fraction (Uncanny X-Men, The Invincible Iron Man). Current Batman artist Jorge Jimenez is remaining on board, though as mentioned, he and Fraction have designed a new costume and new Batmobile to ring in the new series. Batman is trading in the black and gray suit for a more vintage-inspired blue and gray costume. Check out the new Batsuit below:

“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for Batman. It was the first comic I ever read,” said Fraction. “Jorge and I have a very superhero-forward kind of take on Batman. We’ve got a new Batmobile, we’ve got a new costume, we’ve got new characters, and we’ve got a lot of old ones too—good and bad; all the stuff that makes Batman the coolest character in comics. We want to celebrate it all.”

Batman #1 will be released in September 2025.

Alongside the Batman news, DC also shed more light on the future of the Superman line at ComicsPro, as DC's "Summer of Superman" event continues. First, Supergirl is getting a new series and a new costume (designed by Stanley "Artgerm" Lau) of her own. Sophie Campbell (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) will write and draw the new book, which brings Kara back to the city of Midvale.

“I came up in the comics industry doing mostly graphic novels that I wrote and drew myself, so doing the same with Supergirl feels like I’m returning to my storytelling roots,” said Campbell. “My main touchstones to Kara Zor-El were the stories and the wild costumes from the 70’s, the 1984 Supergirl movie, and The CW show, which I was a huge fan of. In creating this version of Supergirl, I’ll be drawing on some of those influences as the series unfolds.”

Supergirl #1 will be released on May 14.

Next, Action Comics is getting a new creative team, as Justice League Unlimited writer Mark Waid teams with Resonant artist Skylar Patridge. The series will shift focus to Clark Kent's teenage years in Smallville, exploring how he came to terms with his burgeoning powers as Superboy.

"I start the book with Clark as a 15-year-old boy, learning to be a superhero for the first time,” said Waid. “What is that like, learning to use your powers at that age? What kind of challenges are you facing? Skylar and I are also bringing Smallville a little more up to date—it still has that rustic feel to it, but farms don’t look like that anymore."

Waid and Patridge's run kicks off with Action Comics #1087 in June.

Finally, DC has decreed that Krypto is A Very Good Boy and will be getting his own five-issue miniseries as part of the DC All In initiative. Krypto: The Last Dog of Krypton is written by Ryan North (Fantastic Four) and drawn by Mike Norton (Revival). The series will explore Krypto's origin story in greater depth than ever before.

“Krypto's origin has always been done at kind of a high level," said North. "The little guy starts out on Krypton, ends up on Earth, and helps Superman fight crime. The chance to really define Krypto—to show what a little lost dog would go through if he landed all alone on a strange alien world named Earth—was really enticing. And I also fell in love with the idea of treating Krypto as the actual dog he is: he doesn't talk, and we don't cheat by reading his thoughts in balloons either. Mike Norton’s art captures exactly what needs to be ‘said’ in every scene.”

Krypto: The Last Dog of Krypton #1 will be released on June 18.

Also at ComicsPro, we learned that Marvel is relaunching Captain America this summer, with Zdarsky writing and Valerio Schiti drawing the book. You can also check out our early look at Godzilla's new interconnected comic book universe.

Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on BlueSky.

How to Connect Your PlayStation VR2 Headset to a PC: Step-by-Step Guide

If you’ve been waiting for an opportunity to plug your PlayStation VR2 headset into a proper gaming PC and dive face first into SteamVR’s rich back catalog of games, your options have been disappointingly limited. Previously console-bound PS VR2 owners are in luck, however, as Sony released a $60 adapter last fall that enables the PlayStation VR2 to be used with any modern gaming PC – that is, as long as your PC meets the headset’s minimum specs. But connecting the PS VR2 to a PC isn't as simple as just plugging in the adapter and calling it a day. Despite being marketed as a plug-and-play device, there are some tricky omissions in its built-in features that may make it require some additional setup, depending on your existing PC configuration.

How to Connect to Your PC With the Adapter

Before you dive into the step-by-step setup instructions, it’s important to make sure that you have everything you need. Via the adapter, the PS VR2 is fully compatible with most SteamVR games, but you’re going to want to make sure your PC has sufficient Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity, a spare DisplayPort 1.4 cable, a free AC power outlet nearby, and both the PlayStation VR2 and SteamVR apps installed on Steam. The two Sense controllers packed in with the PS VR2 are charged through USB-C, so you’ll need two USB-C charging ports and USB-C cables to keep both controllers charged between uses – though there is a Sense controller charging station available on Sony’s website for $50, which is much simpler to use.

What You'll Need

First off, we recommend taking account of whether or not your gaming PC is able to work with the PlayStation VR2 headset. An easy way to find that out is by visiting Sony’s official PS VR2 PC Adapter preparation page. Assuming your system is up to snuff, here’s everything else you’ll need:

  • A PlayStation VR2 headset
  • The PlayStation VR2 PC adapter (AC adapter and male USB 3.0 Type-A cable included)
  • A DisplayPort 1.4 cable (sold separately)
  • A free USB 3.0 Type-A port on your PC (note: Sony warns against using an extension cable or external hub in the adapter’s pack-in quickstart manual; in our review, we relied on a powered external hub which worked perfectly in practice, despite the warning)
  • Bluetooth 4.0 capability on your PC (either built-in or via an external Bluetooth adapter)
  • Steam and SteamVR installed on your PC
  • The PlayStation VR2 app installed inside of Steam

How to Connect: Step-by-Step Instructions

Once you have everything together, follow these steps to connect your PS VR2 to your PC:

  1. Install SteamVR and the PlayStation VR2 app
  2. Set up your PC’s Bluetooth and pair your Sense Controllers
    • From your PC’s start menu, navigate to Settings > Bluetooth & devices > toggle Bluetooth to “On.”
    • Now that your PC’s Bluetooth radio is activated, it’s time to pair your Sense controllers. On each controller, hold down the PlayStation button and Create button until the white light at the bottom starts to blink.
    • Once both controllers are discoverable, you can scan them into your PC’s known Bluetooth devices by clicking the “Add device” button to the right of “Devices” on the Bluetooth & devices page of your PC’s Settings menu:
      1. Select “Bluetooth” from the menu
      2. Search for PlayStation VR2 Sense Controller (L) and PlayStation VR2 Sense Controller (R) in the dropdown menu. Connect both devices.
    • If your PC doesn’t have built-in Bluetooth 4.0 or higher, you can use a compatible Bluetooth adapter like the Asus BT500:
      1. If you’re using an external Bluetooth adapter on a system with a built-in Bluetooth radio, there’s an extra process to follow. Open the Device Manager from your start menu, look under the Bluetooth tab for an internal Bluetooth driver such as “Intel(R) Wireless Bluetooth(R)”, right-click the driver, and click the “Disable device” option.
  3. Set up the adapter and connect it to your PC
    • Plug the PS VR2 adapter into an unused USB 3.0 Type-A port on your PC.
    • Use a DisplayPort 1.4 cable (sold separately) to connect the adapter to a free DisplayPort slot on your GPU.
    • Connect the AC power adapter to the PS VR2 adapter’s DC IN connector.
    • Plug the power adapter into an electrical outlet with or without a grounding port. Once powered on, the adapter’s status indicator will turn solid red.
    • Connect the PlayStation VR2 to the the PC adapter via the USB-C port on the front of the adapter.
  4. Turn off Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling (optional)
    • If your PC is equipped with a newer GPU, such as a 40-series Nvidia RTX card, it may be necessary to disable Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling for a stable experience while playing certain VR games:
      1. Navigate to Settings > System > Display > Graphics.
      2. On the Graphics page, click “Default graphics settings.”
      3. On the next page, turn the “Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling” slider to the left.
      4. Restart your PC.
  5. Launch the PlayStation VR2 App and SteamVR
    • Boot up the PlayStation VR2 headset by holding down the central button underneath the visor until you feel the headset rumble.
    • Turn on SteamVR and set it as your default OpenXR runtime.
    • From your desktop, open the PlayStation VR2 app to wirelessly update your Sense controllers’ firmware and begin the process of setting up your PS VR2 headset, including setting up your Play Area and other preferences.
    • Follow all instructions on screen and within the headset as you set up your IPD and display distance. The included instructions also help you tighten the headset’s fit to a comfortable level around your head.
    • Once the setup is complete, you’re free to play SteamVR games to your heart’s content!

Can You Connect to PC Without an Adapter?

At the moment, whether or not you can connect the PS VR2 to a PC without an adapter is a bit shaky. The short answer is: no. However, according to a report on Road to VR, some GPUs released around 2018 included a USB-C port and a feature called VirtualLink, which some users have reported allows a direct connection to the PS VR2 as long as the PlayStation VR2 app is installed, bypassing the need for the PC adapter.

Looking for other ways to play VR games on your PC? Check out our guide to the best VR headsets for PC gaming.

Atelier Yumia: The Alchemist of Memories & The Envisioned Land Might Be the Series' Coziest JRPG Yet – Hands-On Preview

After over two dozen mainline games, I can only imagine how difficult it must be to innovate and stay relevant in an era where a great game is coming out every few weeks, but that’s exactly what KOEI TECMO aims to do with the next entry in its long-running Atelier JRPG series, Atelier Yumia: The Alchemist of Memories and the Envisioned Land. After spending over six hours gathering resources, doing Sailor Moon-esque magical dancing rituals, and riding around on a motorbike, I’m inclined to believe they’ll pull off just that, yet again. With more engaging combat, improved visuals, more convenient crafting, and an entirely new building system that lets you put your own personal touch on the world, there’s quite a bit to be optimistic about, even if what I saw of the story and characters was, at least so far in the opening hours, pretty boilerplate stuff for the genre.

If you’ve played any of the recent Atelier games, then you probably won’t be shocked by Atelier Yumia at first glance. All three of the pillars that have been around since its conception are still alive and well: exploration, where you run around collecting resources and solving puzzles; combat, where you fight baddens with a party chock-full of pretty anime friends, and synthesis, where you combine your hard-won resources into alchemical creations that make you stronger. But each has been given a substantial overhaul (not to mention a serious facelift) that breathes new life into a familiar formula.

Combat seems to be getting the biggest rework, with action-based systems that let you perfect parry, dodge out of the way, and switch to different range bands depending on whether you’d like to thwack enemies in melee or take them down from a distance. At lower levels, combat seemed fairly undemanding, as I was able to just unload every ability I had, swap to other characters to do the same, then repeat it all again, ending most encounters in a matter of seconds, but later on (and especially when I wasn’t properly leveled) I seriously got rinsed if I wasn’t paying attention to enemy attack patterns and working on my timing. It never got especially challenging so long as I was properly leveled, but it was nice to see a less passive combat system that I couldn’t just steamroll through while on autopilot.

Combat seems to be getting the biggest rework.

Exploration also had some improvements, like having a gun to stun enemies and collect resources at a distance, ziplines that help you navigate the map more easily once you find and activate both sides of the line, and, crucially, a badass motorcycle for you to speed around on that makes getting around much easier. Finally, there’s Synthesis, which in typically Atelier fashion is so dang complicated, you could spend quite a bit of time customizing and min-maxing every aspect of your gear and crafting new items and attacks to use in battle. Or, if you don’t have the patience like me, you can just hit “auto mode” and it’ll automatically optimize all of it for you. Not that I don’t enjoy this aspect of the series, but it’s certainly nice to have the option of leaping back into the action quickly for times where I wasn’t in the mood to tinker.

Atelier Yumia also shakes things up by adding a fourth fairly significant activity to the list of things to do as you explore and level up: the ability to build and customize settlements throughout the world map. That’s right – Atelier Yumia seems to be leaning into the cozy craze, so now you can have a little bit of Animal Crossing or Sims with your JRPG by constructing your fantasy cottage on a patch of land and spending some quality downtime with your party members. I was only able to dabble in this a bit, given the constraint of the resources available to me in the early part of the story, but I could definitely see myself sinking quite a bit of time into taming the wilds with an elaborately decorated home.

With all Atelier has going for it, I will say that it did very little to make itself stand out in terms of story. The characters and foreshadowing of the undoubtedly epic and convoluted story that starts to develop in the opening hours aren’t bad by any means, but at least so far everything has been quite predictable and retreads a lot of ground we’ve seen from JRPGs of the past. This is especially true of the characters I met during my explorations, like the ditzy by wholesome Isla and the stoic and no-nonsense Viktor, both of whom I feel like I’ve seen half a hundred times already. But this is the beginning of a JRPG, so in all likelihood it’s just going to take a while for the story to start rolling or for characters to show their true colors to any level of satisfaction, leaving plenty of opportunity for my concerns to disappear given more time.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that Atelier Yumia marks the first time the series will appear on the Xbox platform, and as a Westerner who would quite like more JRPGs to be readily available, that’s pretty awesome to see. Achievement unlocked!

The Best Deals Today Under $30: Sonic X Shadow Generations, Power Banks, Electric Screwdrivers

Here are best deals for Thursday, February 20. Check out the best deals under $30 for any impulse buys on items that you never really knew you wanted or needed until you visited this page. Read on lower for some great deals that cost over $30 and may require a bit more involved decision-making on your part.

Sonic X Shadow Generations for PS5 for $26.99

Today Woot! is offering Sonic X Shadow Generations for even lower than what I saw during Black Friday. You can get it for only $26.99 (46% off) and if you're an Amazon Prime member you also get free shipping. Sonic X Shadow Generations is easily one of the best Sonic games in recent history. In our 9/10 Sonic X Shadow Generations review, Jada Griffin wrote that "Sonic X Shadow Generations takes an already excellent game and spring jumps it to new heights with a creative Shadow campaign and an appreciable graphical upgrade." This game is actually a collection of two games in one: a remaster of the 2011 Sonic Generations and - the highlight - an original campaign starring Shadow the Hedgehog.

INIU 20,000mAh Power Bank for $14.84

Starting this week, Amazon is offering the very popular INIU 20,000mAh 22.5W Power Bank for only $14.84 after you apply coupon code "XHXZM7W5". This is the lowest price we've seen for this exact model and just an all-around great deal for a power bank with a spacious 20,000mAh capacity and a 22.5W USB Type-C charging output that's enough to max out the charging rate on the Nintendo Switch.

Hoto Electric Precision Screwdriver for $24.95

Amazon has this Hoto electric screwdriver for $24.95 (50% off) after you clip the 23% off coupon and apply coupon code "361P5KK7" during checkout. This is an excellent tool for quickly dealing with tons of small screws when you're assembling or taking apart electronics like your gaming console, mechanical keyboard, Joy-Con controller, or pretty much anything else where a real power drill is way too powerful and a manual screwdriver is too tedious. It comes with 25 bits that should cover most of the screw types out there including flathead, Philips, torx, and hex. The screwdriver can be charged via USB Type-C so no need to worry about losing a proprietary cable.

Preordered the iPhone 16E? Get a Screen Protector for $6

If you're in line to get the successor the the budget-minded Apple iPhone SE series of phones, then here's an early bird deal for you. Amazon has an amFilm iPhone 16e screen protector for only $5.99 after you apply coupon code "5PIM3OFI. Here's your chance to have a screen protector ready before your phone even arrives. AmFilm is an extremely well known and popular screen protector brand, and this particular model includes the auto alignment kit and camera lens protector.

Sabrent Docking Station and Charger for ROG Ally for $20

Steam Deck / Nintendo Switch compatible

Sabrent has a dock charger specifically designed for the Asus ROG Ally for only $19.99 after you apply coupon code "26R399DW". According to reviews, it works just fine with other gaming handhelds like the Steam Deck or Nintendo Switch. It includes a USB Type-C port for connecting to your gaming handheld, an HDMI 1.4 port for up to 4K @ 60Hz video output, a USB Type-C port with up to 95W of Power Delivery for charging your handheld, and two extra USB Type-A ports for connecting or charging extra peripherals.

Lisen 5,000mAh MagSafe Power Bank for $17.38

The Lisen 5,000mAh MagSafe power bank, which is normally listed at $49.99, is down to only $17.38 after a combined instant discount and a 42% off clippable coupon. At 0.3" thick, this is one of the slimmest MagSafe power banks we've seen, and won't add much bulk to your iPhone's profile. If you have a chonky Pro Max, then you won't even notice. Unlike most other power banks at this price point, the Lisen model is made out of a magnesium aluminum alloy that makes it feel much more premium. It delivers up to 18W of power over USB Type-C and 7.5W over wireless.

2-Pack Anker Power Cubes for $15.99

This deal is exclusively for Amazon Prime members. Get a two pack of Anker Power Cubes, which is a cube-shaped power strip with three AC outlets, two USB Type-A ports, and one USB Type-C port, for only $15.99. That averages out to just $8 per cube. This power outlet is much smaller than your average power strip thanks to its ingenious cube design. The USB Type-C port delivers up to 20W of power, which is good enough to charge the Nintendo Switch at its maximum rate (18W).

4 Pack of Pen Lights for $7.99

Get a four pack of pen lights for only $8 after an instant 20% off discount. These diminutive lights feature an anodized aluminum housing and weigh in at only an ounce each. The super bright LED bulb lasts about 2 hours on two AAA batteries. These are handy to have around the house, and at $2 apiece they are practically expendable.

GE Color Changing Night Light for $4.52

Night lights are an inexpensive, efficient way to provide a bit of practical accent lighting to your home at night. This GE color changing night light goes one step further by offering eight different colors to choose from, with a color changing mode for a bit of RGB flair. The built-in light sensor means it will automatically turn itself off when it isn't needed. It's normally well-priced at just $9, but there's a 50% instant discount right now that drops it to under $5.

Craftsman Magnetic Pickup Tool for $6

A magnetic pickup too is handy to have around to pick up dropped screws, nuts, and bolts. Amazon has this Craftsman model for only $5.98 after a $2 price drop. There's not much to say about it, except that it's well built, it's magnetic, and it can telescope up to 24 inches long for extended reach.

77outdoor LED Rechargeable Headlamp for $17.99

Get this LED headlamp for only $17.99 on Amazon after a $12 off coupon code "40XUYLSW". 77outdoor is a sister brand of Sofirn, a well known manufacturer or affordable yet good quality flashlights and lamps. In fact, some reviewers have reported that they receive this item in a Sofirn branded box. This headlamp offers two modes: a standard 5,000K 90 CRI white light with 550 lumen output for general purpose use and a 660nm red light at night to preserve your night vision. This headlamp can be recharged using a USB Type-C cable.

MTG: Final Fantasy Cards up for Preorder

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Magic the Gathering's new Final Fantasy Commander series cards are now up for preorder at Amazon and Best Buy. They'll ship out starting June 13, and you won't be charged until they do. Given that there are so many Final Fantasy fans out there, these have been garnering tons of interest and will undoubtedly introduce a lot more people to the world of Magic.

30% Off Panther Vision Hand Warmers and Lighted Beanies

If you're looking for a practical Valentine's Day gift idea, Panther Vision is offering a big 30% coupon code that works sitewide. If you suffer from cold appendages, the Panther Vision 602R rechargeable hand warmer is small enough to fit in your jacket pocket. It offers three different heat settings depending on how numb your fingers are, boasts an IP67 waterproof rating, and can even double up as a 5,000mAh USB Type-C power bank for emergencies.

Pair it with the Panther Vision lighted beanie, which will keep your noggin warm while lighting up the way with a built-in LED headlamp rated for up to 150 lumens at max output. If you prioritize longevity over intensity, the 15-lumen setting will last up to 10 hours on a single charge. There are plenty of other useful gadgets on the site, including portable lamps and flashlights, so you might want to stock up to reach the $60 free shipping threshold.

Not all of the best deals are dirt cheap. Here are some excellent deals if you're willing to spend a little or a lot more depending on the items, including video games, TVs, gaming PCs, gaming handhelds, high-end chairs, and more.

Crucial X9 Pro 1TB Portable SSD for $69.99 (2TB for $120)

The Crucial X9 Pro is one of the fastest portable hard drives out there, thanks to a fast SSD drive and USB 3.2 interface that can deliver both read and write speeds of up to 1,050MB/s. The 2TB model is actually $10 less than the best deal we saw during Black Friday and, in my opinion, the best deal to get.

Flexispot C7 Ergonomic Chair with Footrest for $230

Make sure to select "with Footrest" option

Flexispot is offering a great deal on its workhorse Flexispot C7 ergonomic chair with built-in footrest. It's normally listed at $429.99, but there's a $200 off coupon code "C7PDSALE" that drops it to only $229.99. We generally like the Flexispot brand because it includes electric standing desks and ergonomic chairs with solid build quality and a plethora of practical features at a fraction of the price compared to other more well-known models. We rated the Flexispot C7 is the best budget-friendly ergonomic chair and the Flexispot E7 Pro as the best overall standing desk of 2024.

$39.99 Nintendo Switch Video Games

Best Buy has dropped several must-have Nintendo Switch video games from $59.99 to $39.99, a savings of 33%. Several of them are available in your choice of a physical copy or digital download. You won't lose out even if you plan to upgrade to the Switch 2, since the new console has been confirmed to be backwards compatible with nearly all Switch games.

65" LG Evo C3 4K OLED Smart TV for $1197

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You don't have to wait for the new 2025 LG TVs to drop to score a great deal on an older generation model. Right now as part of Amazon's Presidents' Day Sale, you can pick up a 2023 65" LG Evo C3 4K OLED TV for just $1,196.99 with free shipping on Amazon. This is a better deal than what I saw during Black Friday. The LG Evo C-series of TVs have consistently been our favorite high-end 4K TVs, especially for 4K HDR movies and gaming.

Asus ROG Ally Z1 Extreme Gaming Handheld for $449.99

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Starting this week, Best Buy is taking $200 off the Asus ROG Ally Z1 Extreme gaming handheld, now only $449.99. That's the lowest price I've seen for a brand-new unit, even during Black Friday. In addition, you get a free official ROG Ally travel case, one month of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, and two months of a Crunchyroll Mega Fan subscription. The ROG Ally This is one of the best gaming handhelds currently available, especially if you don't want to be tied to Steam's ecosystem.

Secretlab Presidents' Day Sale

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Secretlab's Presidents' Day Sale is still live for a little while longer. Save up to $139 off Secretlab's popular Titan line of gaming chairs, Magnus gaming desks (including the Magnus Pro electric standing desk model), and accessories like the Secretlab Skins upholstery covers, desk mats, cable management, and more. Unfortunately, new releases like the Titan Evo Nanogen chair and the recliner add-on are exempt from this sale.

Preorder Elden Ring: Nightreign at Best Buy, Get $10 Gift Card

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Elden Ring Nightreign is set to release for PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, and PC on May 30. A new standalone game set in the world of Elden Ring, Nightreign lets you team up with two other players to slice your way through an oppressive fantasy world. It’s kind of like a faster-paced remix of the original game. It’s available for preorder in a number of editions, so read on for the details about what comes in each one.

Preorder the HP Omen 45L RTX 5090 Prebuilt Gaming PC

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HP just added the option to add the GeForce RTX 5090 GPU as an upgrade to one of its flagship HP Omen 45L prebuilt gaming PCs and, fortunately, it is very reasonably priced for a prebuilt RTX 5090 desktop relative to what we've seen from other brands. Put your order in sooner than later because, unless HP has readily available 5090 GPUs in its inventory (unlikely), these prebuilts will probably have a bit of a lead time before they ship out.

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.

Zero Day Review

As our world has grown more interconnected, so too has our awareness of how fragile all of this is. Our money, our electricity, our water – they could be taken from us in the blink of an eye. Netflix’s Zero Day is ostensibly interested in how people would react to a devastating attack on that delicate web. What truths would we choose to believe? How do we keep ourselves and our people safe? Are we doomed to repeat our past mistakes in the name of justice? All of that sounds fascinating; unfortunately, it’s all surface-level themes layered on top of an incredibly dumb political thriller (with no genuine political convictions) that’s never exciting or crazy enough to justify turning off your brain enjoying the ride.

The problems present themselves early with the introduction of George Mullen, our main character and, according to the script, “the last president in modern memory who was able to consistently rally bipartisan support.” Mullen stepped down after one term to pass the torch to the current president, Evelyn Mitchell – and if that doesn’t have enough of a real-world ring to it, perhaps the fact that these characters are played by Robert De Niro and Angela Bassett will help you out. Given that De Niro has stayed away from American television his entire career, you’d assume the role that lured him to Zero Day must be pretty meaty. But even if he weren’t coming off the late-career high of Killers of the Flower Moon, his portrayal of George would be disappointing. For the majority of the six episodes, he’s phoning it in, occasionally getting the chance to turn on the charm or yell, but mostly stuck in a rote mode that gives us precious little insight into who the former president is as a person. Episode 1 has him joining a commission to investigate the titular attack, which disabled power grids, transportation and communication systems, and other critical infrastructure across the U.S. (you name it, it was hacked) and displayed the menacing message “THIS WILL HAPPEN AGAIN” on cell phones across the country.

After this initial opening blip of excitement, Zero Day slides into a default tedium. It opens up storylines that seem like they could be, if not exciting, then at least thematically engaging, but these always seem to wrap up quickly in order for something else to be thrown into the mix. There’s very little sense of discovery or even conspiracy and at their worst, the creators – Narcos showrunner Eric Newman, former NBC News head Noah Oppenheim, and national-security reporter Michael S. Schmidt – pull it directly out of their collective asses.

Perhaps the most eye-rolling thread is George’s frequent attacks of dementia and memory loss (again, with more exhaustion this time: sound familiar?), which Zero Day represents as staticky droning and the – admittedly neat – disappearing and reassembling of objects in his office. Real-world analogues aside, this actually attempts to grapple with the ideas at the show’s core: How much of George’s investigation – including the sighting of a woman killed in episode 1 – is just in his mind? Can he even admit to himself that he’s unwell, and could that affect the investigation? Unfortunately (and without going into spoilers), the show chooses the most insulting route to the answers.

Like a lot of other Netflix miniseries, Zero Day is hampered by too many characters and not enough time to devote to them. Making matters worse: They’re all played by actors who are overqualified for such a tepid potboiler. Jesse Plemons reunites with his Killers of The Flower Moon co-star De Niro as George’s right-hand man. Lizzy Caplan plays George’s daughter, a congresswoman who becomes a part of the oversight committee watching her dad – a conflict of interest that Zero Day tries to shove aside despite being almost unprecedented. Joan Allen is George’s (ex?) wife Sheila, looking into a government position on her own. Connie Britton, Matthew Modine, Bill Camp, McKinley Belcher III – none of these very talented actors turn in a bad performance, but you’ve definitely seen them do much better work elsewhere. The bigger problem is that characterization as a whole is scant, and the antagonists especially come off as confusingly drawn.

The height of that incoherence is Dan Stevens’ Evan Green: In dialogue and performance, Evan appears to be a riff on conspiracy-spouting fearmongers like Alex Jones. But he appears to be broadcasting a largely left-wing populist show on some sort of cable channel whose name positions it as an equivalent to the conservative outlet Newsmax – a conflict of worldviews that has not and will not ever exist anywhere in any reality. Without spoilers, both Evan’s storyline and that of Elon Musk stand-in Monica Kidder (Gaby Hoffmann) point to real-world issues, but that’s all they do: Get you to say “Oh, I see what you did there” without ever feeling satisfying narratively or making some actual statement in the ideological soup. (For example: The fact that power-grid sabotage is a distinctly right-wing cause seems to have entirely passed this writers’ room by.) This would all be less galling if Zero Day weren’t so baldly dedicated to a certain level of verisimilitude – news networks with their actual anchors are featured heavily, someone mentions Axios at one point – while also getting shockingly hand-wavey when it comes to the actual details of the zero-day attack.

Zero Day’s fatal flaw is that it’s lazy.

It would take an entire review full of spoilers to really catch all the ways in which no one involved with Zero Day seemingly understands how computers and technology work. Suffice it to say, Mr. Robot this ain’t. That extends beyond the depiction of hacking though; that show had its ups and downs but it was always distinctively stylish, gripping, and well-acted, interested in the ramifications of technology on the world at large and what it meant for the people having to live under the weight of capitalism. For a show that’s constantly talking about how the attack was a huge wound to the nation’s psyche, Zero Day shows very few actual impacts. There’s a train crash, a couple of riots, some fires constantly in the background – but for as big as this attack supposedly is, everything looks pretty normal.

Zero Day’s fatal flaw is that it’s lazy, both in its worldbuilding and in the plot itself. It would rather remind you of one news item or another rather than actually building a story around it, and over the course of six hours it becomes exasperating. There’s an overbearing sense of the show being written mainly by D.C. and machine insiders (which certainly aligns with Schmidt’s and Oppenheim’s claims to journalistic infamy), and often leads to the most obnoxious moments when it spinelessly tries to spread the blame for the attack (and the paranoia it spawns) across the political spectrum.

Zero Day almost seems to rally back in its second half. It’s not that it suddenly becomes good, but rather it gains something of a pulse, to the point where I actually wanted to learn the truth behind all these grand plots and conspiracies. That is, until I did, and the answers were so offensively stupid that I had to hold my head and take a deep breath. It’s not so much that it comes out of nowhere – though it kind of does – but that the villains have the absolute barest of motivations, and their plan itself is so idiotic and full of holes that it’s a wonder it didn’t implode at the very first keystroke. On top of that, it drowns itself in so much self-satisfying “both sides are bad” speechifying and stance-taking that even Aaron Sorkin would tell them to tone it down. It would be laughable if it weren’t so intent on trying to sound smart.

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