Feeling the pinch but still itching for the best in pixels and/or polygons? My daily haul of discounted gaming delights has something for every playstyle, whether you're a trophy fiend, a couch co-op junkie, or just overdue for a solo narrative binge. The price drops are deep, the genres are varied, and the digital shelves are practically begging for your thumb.
This Day in Gaming 🎂
In retro news, I've made a big cake with a 26 on it for Ape Escape, the first game to explicitly require a DualShock controller. In these modern times where the dpad is a vestigial limb, it's difficult to explain just how exciting it was to transition from that clunky cross to twin analog sticks. Cameras could be controlled like we were Spielberg. Platforming through a 3D space could be done with a finer degree of accuracy. Using the right stick to swing our weapons was...er, way less intuitive than just pressing a button.
Nintendo fans can enjoy a brutal brawler history lesson with Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection, a pack that includes the ultra-rare Red Earth arcade release from 1996. Or revisit Sonic Frontiers, a divisive but ambitious open-world experiment that drew design inspiration from Breath of the Wild. Yes, really.
Xbox Series X users might pounce on Monster Hunter Wilds, where Capcom’s RE Engine gets another workout in lush new biomes set for 2025. Meanwhile, Death’s Door is a stylish indie gem that channels old-school Zelda vibes with a touch of Studio Ghibli weirdness.
PlayStation 5 owners can whip out the fedora for Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, which ropes in Wolfenstein dev MachineGames for its Nazi-thumping campaign. Or explore the new Elden Ring expansion, Shadow of the Erdtree, which was so jam-packed that FromSoftware had to raise the game’s file size by over 20 GB.
Over on PC, Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut makes its platform debut complete with unlocked framerates and ultrawide support. And for sheer value, it’s hard to beat Gris, a mesmerising emotional platformer that started life as a sketchbook by artist Conrad Roset.
Halloween has come and gone, but horror movies have no limit on enjoyment. As one of the most prolific and profitable subgenres in cinema, audiences are always in the mood for some spooky scaries. Fortunately, thanks to the accessibility of streaming services, places like Netflix are home to a plethora of chilling choices. Between original offerings and licensed titles, there’s a horror movie for anyone and everyone. To get you started, we’ve tracked down some of the must-see horror titles currently available to stream on Netflix.
Those original offerings are becoming more important. Netflix's horror section has eliminated many titles released before 2000, except maybe around Halloween. The platform is all-in on exclusives and international titles, which often get added with little fanfare. Netflix is letting other streamers keep their Conjurverse entries and familiar classics. We're here to try everything and let you know what's worthwhile.
Please note: This list pertains to U.S. Netflix subscribers. Some titles may not currently be available on international platforms. This article is frequently amended to remove films no longer on Netflix and to include more horror movies that are now available on the service.
Psycho (1960)
What’s there to say about Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho that hasn’t been written by eleventy-billion film scholars already? It’s a masterpiece of tension and suspense, as Marion Crane checks into the Bates Motel … but never checks out. Anthony Perkins’ charming mamma’s boy of a psychopath is the definition of creepy, all while Hitchcock toys with our minds. We hear Norman’s mother, see Norman’s mother kill a few victims—or so we believe. There’s a reason movies are described as “Hitchcockian,” because so few filmmakers have done it better.
47 Meters Down (2017)
I’ve reviewed quite a few shark movies for IGN over the years. Not to be too negative, but it’s been choppy waters to say the least. That’s why when I say 47 Meters Down is one of the better shark-based horror films of the last decade, you know I mean it. Mandy Moore and Claire Holt are divers stranded on the sea’s floor, trying to survive as sharks continually thwart their escape attempts. Filmmaker Johannes Roberts excels at tracking action underwater and delivers some expertly horrifying shark encounters, whether in almost complete darkness or lit by red flares. You better believe this fin flick has bite.
Barbarian (2022)
One of the wildest horror movies of 2022 hit Netflix this month. Zach Cregger’s Barbarian opens as a riff on Airbnb horrors, but quickly proves — again and again — to be something incredibly uncontainable. What begins as tense banter between renters, played by Georgina Campbell and Bill Skarsgård, evolves into a no-holds-barred genre buffet that’s better experienced without any reveals. Justin Long interjects as Barbarian dares to express the meanest of streaks, as Cregger explores decades of evil without any safeguards. You can check my full review for more, but I’d suggest hitting play blind to details.
Smile (2022)
Smile is a textbook definition horror movie that is scary enough, composed enough, and does pretty much everything just enough. Sosie Bacon stars in a film where haunting grins signal that you're about to become the next victim of an evil entity. Storytelling lacks a tightness as characters come and go from the absurd scenario, but the scares are all aces. Writer and director Parker Finn understands the bread and butter of most horror experiences comes down to primetime chills. Finn's movie exists to make you scream and scream you shall. I'm not sure everything about the ending works for me personally? But it's still worth the stream for the adrenaline spikes alone.
Dawn of the Dead (2004)
When I say Zack Snyder does best when directing someone else's script, I'm talking about Dawn of the Dead. It's one of the best modern zombie movies (the 2000s are still modern, right?), living up to the prestige of George A. Romero's original Dawn of the Dead. But it's also a unique take with fast-moving zombies that bring a viciousness to the subgenre. Snyder's eye for horror is cutthroat as a cast of survivors—including Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Mekhi Phifer, and Ty Burrell—try to survive zombie hordes outside their locked-down mall fortress. It's the perfect formula for a remake, standing on its own merits while respecting Romero's source material.
Dead Talent's Society (2024)
I've said it before and I'll say it again: John Hsu's Dead Talents Society is a cutesy and buoyant Taiwanese horror-comedy guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Expect shades of Monsters Inc. and Beetlejuice, as the dead compete in afterlife competitions as scare celebrities. It's partially a sports comedy as Gingle Wang's rookie specter strives to become a legendary scare master, but there are also creepy paranormal thrills and hilarious gore moments. Dead Talents Society is a bit of everything as a horror-comedy, and always for the better. Be sure to give this import a shot.
Talk To Me (2022)
The Philippou brothers made the jump from YouTube maniacs to feature-film directors with A24's efficiently creepy Talk to Me. It's a spin on traumatic horror themes told using a party game mechanic. Teens make bad decisions and allow dead souls to inhabit their bodies so they can record viral videos, which takes an appropriately devastating turn. The Philippous bring that social media energy to Talk to Me, but impress more as horror filmmakers who can nail a solid scare. It's their feature debut but hardly feels like one — Talk to Me summons the genre goods.
Death Note (2017)
Adam Wingard’s Death Note adaptation failed to start a franchise for Netflix, but I think the overall reception was a bit harsh. I don’t mind Death Note, Willem Dafoe’s Ryuk, or Wingard’s translation of manga pages to screen. Lakeith Stanfield ends up stealing the show as prodigy detective “L,” but that’s not to dismiss a cast that includes Margaret Qualley and Shea Whigham. Sure, it’s uneven when considering how gory some scenes are followed by something oddly neutered, but the overall experience is worth a watch if you’ve been avoiding Death Note since its less-than-glowing debut.
Shadow in the Cloud (2020)
So have you seen the World War II gremlin movie starring Chloë Grace Moretz yet? Why not? The majority duration takes place in a B-17 bomber, where Moretz and her co-stars must thwart a pesky gremlin from disassembling their craft. It’s a play on old wartime stories about mischievous creatures on flights, turned into a chamber piece about a crew’s best efforts to face the unexpected while flying through the sky. Moretz is the anchor here, really selling the B-Movie elements in a story that can be a little turbulent, but due to its audacity, I can’t help but urge others to give this zany thriller a shot.
Grave Torture (2024)
Joko Anwar’s been busily putting modern Indonesian horror on the map with titles like Satan’s Slaves and Impetigore (streamable on Shudder). Now he’s taking over Netflix with his latest feature film, Grave Torture. Anwar’s style blends cultural touchstones with universal horror vibes, in this case depicting Siksa Kubur (aka grave torture), a punishment inflicted on sinners after death. It’s a religiously coded nightmare complete with frightening visuals and harrowing death sequences, confronting beliefs and traditions with grim tones. It’s what Anwar does best, and while I’d rate Grave Torture on the lower end of the filmmaker’s catalog, that’s only to emphasize the quality of his other works.
Till Death (2021)
"A woman finds herself shackled to a corpse as part of a revenge plot." Megan Fox plays the previously mentioned woman handcuffed to her stone-cold dead ex in one of her recent indie horror ventures. It's not that Till Death is revolutionary; more how Fox carries a gimmick film through engaging thrills as she drags her co-star's lifeless body around a house and away from killers. Till Death knows it's only ever trying to be a chilly Friday night stream at barely ninety minutes, and that's the proper mindset. Fox's "comeback tour" raises eyebrows with Till Death, a movie worth a gamble based on the premise's better-than-expected execution.
It’s What’s Inside (2024)
I’m a sucker for “party horror” movies like Talk to Me or Bodies Bodies Bodies, where gameplay becomes a nightmare for characters. Greg Jardin’s It’s What’s Inside is the latest example, blending sci-fi ambitions with parlor entertainment for pre-wedding festivities. It’s a story that relies on twists and turns, which won’t spoiled here, so trust my praise when I say it’s one of the year’s most thrilling and addictive mysteries. Expect an existential, out-of-body whodunit, playing blame games versus pursuing bloodcurdling frights. Put this one on with a group and have a blast — those are the vibes.
Under Paris (2024)
Xavier Gens’ Under Paris reverses the curse on a recent drought of good shark horror movies. It’s a ridiculous hybrid that somehow stays afloat between Jaws themes and a Geostorm-bonkersdisaster scope. A mako shark gets loose in the Seine River just before a massive triathlon that Paris’ leadership refuses to reschedule. It’s not an all-out action flick until about two-thirds through, but that doesn’t sink the experience. For those who love Dick Maas movies like Uncaged or Amsterdamned, Under Paris flows with the same vibes. Early patience is rewarded with a high-intensity third act filled with bloody waters, frantic swimmers, and enough governmental incompetence to make Mayor Larry Vaughn blush.
Ouija: Origin of Evil (2016)
It’s wild to think how a prequel as good as Mike Flanagan’s Ouija: Origin of Evil could follow something as forgettable as 2014’s Ouija. Flanagan goes back to basics with Habro’s Ouija board storytelling, stepping in as a fixer who brings legitimate terror and tension to the series. A cast including Flanagan regulars like Kate Siegel and Henry Thomas execute a possession tale influenced by The Changeling that delivers solid 1960s genre vibes. It’s Flanagan operating within his wheelhouse - what more of a recommendation do you need?
Thanksgiving (2023)
If I’m being honest, part of me thought we’d never see a feature-length version of Eli Roth’s Thanksgiving. Kudos to the slasher filmmaker for pressing studios to make Thanksgiving until Spyglass Media Group finally caved, rewarding patient fans with a Massachusetts massacre that carves with the best of ‘em. Roth sells every delicious Thanksgiving detail and indulges holiday horror accents, utilizing everything from pilgrim costumes to corn cob holders to parade floats at ramming speed. It’s a hybrid slasher that updates the subgenre for modern tastes while remaining dedicated to the splattery golden age of horror violence, finding that sweet spot between storytelling and grotesqueries. I’ll be in line for seconds, thirds, and more if allowed.
The Conference (2023)
Work sucks, but luckily The Conference doesn’t. It’s a furious “Worksploitation” slasher that puts a knife to the throat of scummy corporate culture. Kills all have a taste of the great outdoors since the film takes place at a woodland work retreat, from machetes through hammocks to a splashy jacuzzi death. The Swedish commentary on greedy business folk comes with a nasty savageness and cheeky workplace satires, comparable to other winning work retreat horror tales like Severance.
Circle (2015)
Clever indie filmmakers can make something out of nothing. Aaron Hann and Mario Miscione’s Circle is an excellent representation of that idea, about 50 people who wake up in a dark room arranged in a circular formation. The premise is simple: someone has to die every two minutes. That’s it. Hann and Miscione turn social experimentation into a thriller about characters arguing their point about why they should be the one who lives another round, relying on dialogue to sell the existential dread at the script’s core. Minimalism is the film’s secret ingredient: getting straight to the point and keeping a quick pace in a way that never loses our attention.
Eli (2019)
Eli can feel like a horror movie Mad Libs as the story keeps evolving, but that becomes the film’s ultimate charm. It’s about a boy suffering from an auto-immune disease trapped in a quarantine environment who begins to ponder his imprisonment. The “Bubble Boy” beginning turns into a haunted house thriller that becomes an even crazier third act that I won’t spoil for you now. I’m not saying every big swing is successful, but I’ll go to bat for Eli as a horror film that loves to prove expectations wrong. Give me weird and wild over conventional any day — especially when you have the freedom of streaming releases over theatrical constraints.
Nobody Sleeps In The Woods Tonight (2020)
In the mood for a 2020s Polish slasher created by lovers of 80s American horror trends? Bartosz M. Kowalski uses the campground massacre template to execute a contemporary slasher that feels as throwback as rereleases of Crystal Pepsi. It's a familiar brand of campers meeting gruesome fates one by one with a massive emphasis on practical effects, the goriest and most obscene of which become an overall saving grace. Kowalski aims to prove that Polish slashers can hack 'em up with the best of them, even if there's not much else to praise with the same enthusiasm. If you want blood, you've got it by the truckload.
Girls With Balls (2018)
It’s killer rednecks versus a championship volleyball squad in Girls With Balls. Expect a horror comedy with exploding heads and a musical cowboy acting as a narrator who sings about the gratuitous violence on screen. Don’t expect a brilliant subversion of gender tropes in slasher movies — Girls With Balls is an effects-heavy slaughter spree that doesn’t try to be anything else. International approaches to comedy make some jokes harder to laugh at stateside, so as long as you can focus on the balls-out aggression on screen, you should find entertainment in another bloody backwoods fight for survival.
The Block Island Sound (2020)
Kevin McManus and Matthew McManus summon a creepy coastal caper from the depths of Rhode Island waters. It’s more eerie than aggressive as multiple subgenres swirl together in this unsettling waterlogged mystery. You can expect psychological horror, eco-horror, aquatic horror, even possession horror as Block Island community members try to understand the unexplainable events washing upon their shores. The Block Island Sound weaponizes the idea of "siren songs," toys with out-of-body nightmares, and mixes a spoonful of grief into the batter as storytelling churns like a storm that won’t pass.
Before I Wake (2016)
It’s the Mike Flanagan movie that gets talked about the least — in my experience — yet deserves the world. Flanagan does what he does best: tell a powerfully emotional story using fear, family, and creatures. Jacob Tremblay plays an adopted child who’s terrified of falling asleep because of a ghoulish figure known as “The Canker Man.” Butterflies and fantasy worlds don’t detail the scariest horror experience, as Flanagan leans on childhood imaginations that turn traumatic memories into inescapable boogeymen. Maybe it’s that softness of scare volumes — coupled with unfortunate studio bankruptcies that forced an unceremonious Netflix dump premiere — that caused such comparatively little fanfare over the years (considering Flanagan’s hype elsewhere). Hopefully my recommendation can help Before I Wake find new streaming life.
Under The Shadow (2016)
Babak Anvari’s Under the Shadow is a phenomenal cross section of national trauma invaded by nightmare demons. A family in war-torn Iran is plagued by visits from djinns as if exploding bombs outside and military threats weren’t enough. Anvari manipulates shadows and creates haunted architectures under Iraq-Iran conflict conditions, highlighting the terrors of both. There are some extremely effective scares and fresh deliveries of otherwise common fright-flick molds because, when in doubt, turn to international flavors for something original.
Incantation (2022)
Kevin Ko’s Taiwanese found footage flick Incantation speaks in clichés, but that doesn’t make them any less frightening. You’ll get a few good jolts as a mother must protect her daughter from evils she called upon by breaking religious taboos. Translation: foolish viral video ghost hunters defy the unknown and pay consequences both then and later. The script is murky on the camera’s rules regarding who is filming from a found footage sense and taboo happenings around the entity’s curse. Nevertheless, there’s an interesting concept around interactive found footage horror that smacks of the Ring franchise in its social media focuses, and you’ll yip a few scared noises — you could do way worse on Netflix.
Patrick Brice’s slasher adaptation accomplishes two massive feats for modern horror flicks: keeps us guessing and slaughters without restraint. It’s another film about teenagers getting sliced and diced by a masked killer, but it’s stylish and fierce enough to carve its own path. Situational misdirects keep audiences guessing who could be guilty of mass murder as characters point fingers while blood runneth everywhere from church confessional booths to aflame corn mazes. Don’t expect the next Scream or anything, just a solid contemporary slasher that succeeds when it matters most.
Cargo (2017)
One of Netflix's first original horror films is still one of my favorites. Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke's Cargo stars Martin Freeman as a father traversing the Australian outback with his daughter — also, there are zombies. Think The Walking Dead as an undead film that's more about its human characters facing survival drama than zombie action, except this one packs sturdy emotional stakes. Freeman's traveler encounters psychos, ferocious walkers, and weather elements that add thrills to Cargo, but what's unexpected is how a baby doesn't weigh the narrative down. Child subplots in horror are a tricky formula to crack that Cargo gets right, as the fears of protective parents translate into a hearty zombie experience.
Does The Babysitter indulge McG’s tendencies as a director who loves popular needle drops and quotes pop culture like a middle schooler who discovered HBO? Yes. Is it also written by Brian Duffield of Spontaneous fame — a magnificent young adult dark comedy – and does it star modern scream queen in the making, Samara Weaving? Thankfully, these saving graces play into McG’s bounce-about take on horrific humor as a child realizes his babysitter is performing a cult ritual while mom and dad are out for the night. A supporting cast including Robbie Amell, Bella Thorne, Hana Mae Lee, and Andrew Bachelor all have their moments subverting specific “hunted home alone” tropes — still, The Babysitter is Samara Weaving’s showcase. Tune in, share some laughs, soak in a devilish Weaving performance, and check out Netflix’s funniest spooky original so far.
Netflix's original horror game rose to another level with The Ritual, David Bruckner's directorial debut outside segments in The Signal, V/H/S, and Southbound. Four friends take a northern Swedish hiking trip in memory of their deceased fifth, only to become victims of a woodland nightmare. Visions begin by layering psychological horror as the characters confront fears or guilt, then cultism adds communal dread, and lastly, Bruckner delivers on creature-feature goods. One source of terror feeds into the next and provokes future traumas, all interconnected as Bruckner weaves in and out of multiple horror subgenres with ease. There's so much to enjoy as Swedish forestation becomes an isolated outdoor prison, and then all hell breaks loose. Bruckner flaunts his filmmaking chops in a significant way.
Blood Red Sky (2021)
Peter Thorwarth’s Blood Red Sky boils down to vampires on a plane — but not like the SYFY channel throwaway such a title suggests. Nadja (Peri Baumeister) is a bloodsucking mother whose only motivation is to keep her son alive from hijackers who want to crash a commercial flight. It’s far tenser and emotionally comprehensive than expected, staying far away from being another Snakes on a Plane knockoff. Performances are substantial, whether gruff terrorists or ferocious mothers, while intensity drives home an action-horror experience like airliner blockbuster Non-Stop but with more sucked blood. It's a solid vampire movie worth your time.
Apostle (2018)
Director Gareth Evans did not come to play with the gorgeous and gory Apostle. While the Netflix original is several years old at this point, it still feels like this one never got the attention it quite deserved. Before the era where Netflix original films were super prevalent, Apostle follows Thomas Richardson (played by none other than Dan Stephens) as he seeks out to rescue his sister from a strange, secluded cult.
#Alive (2020)
No one does a zombie movie quite like South Korea, and #Alive is one of the absolute best. A video game streamer decides to lock himself in his apartment while a zombie outbreak destroys the surrounding city of Seoul, but just as he’s losing all hope, he discovers that his neighbor in the apartment across from him is also still alive. The two create a zipline to share food, and share walkie-talkies to communicate with one another, while zombies terrorize the world outside of their walls. It’s a film as much about the human need for interaction as it is about survival, and the constant threat of zombies keeps keeps every moment filled with exhilarating tension.
Creep (2014)
Fans of POV/found footage horror films, rejoice, because Creep is one of the best in this style. In Patrick Brice’s directorial debut, Creep follows a filmmaker named Aaron who answers a strange man named Josef’s online ad to film him for the day, the final request of a man claiming to be dying of cancer hoping to make a video for his unborn child. Upon arrival, Aaron realizes that there’s something super weird about Josef and with the camera constantly rolling, we witness the absurdity and danger in store for Aaron. Come for the wild as hell Mark Duplass performance, stay for the Peachfuzz mask. If you love it, Netflix also has the sequel — Creep 2.
The Fear Street Trilogy
Leigh Janiak was the talk of the summer when Netflix dropped the cinematic trilogy based on the popular book series by “Goosebumps” author R.L. Stine, Fear Street. The Fear Street trilogy brought three separate movies to tell one cohesive story about the cursed town of Shadyside and the inhabitants impacted by generational horror. Each film is predominantly set in a different time period, delivering a little treat for fans of slashers, hauntings, teen horror, queer horror, and folk horror. The three films work best when watched all together, but each film can successfully stand on its own, making it a must-see trilogy.
Gerald’s Game (2017)
Stephen King’s Gerald’s Game was considered to be his “unfilmable” work, but if anyone is capable of proving King wrong, it’s Mike Flanagan. The man behind The Haunting of Hill House, The Haunting of Bly Manor, Midnight Mass, Hush, Doctor Sleep, and others successfully tackled Gerald’s Game and provided one of Netflix’s best original horror releases. Gerald’s Game is a terrifying descent into madness and home to a dynamite leading performance by Carla Gugino.
His House (2020)
Remi Weekes truly made something special with His House, arguably one of the scariest films on the Netflix roster. A haunted house story on the surface, His House centers on a refugee couple escaping war-torn Sudan only to find that the English town they’ve fled to may be just as harrowing as the land they left. The source of the film’s horror lies not just with the supernatural elements, but also with themes of grief, guilt, abandonment, xenophobia, and assimilation. It’s a powerful haunt that will linger with you long after the credits roll.
May The Devil Take You (2018)
If there’s one area where Netflix thrives with their horror offerings, it’s with their international selection of scares. Genre fans have been praising the work of Timo Tjahjanto for years with his standout shorts in The ABCs of Death and V/H/S/2, but his feature film work in Indonesia is arguably his best, and Netflix’ acquisition has brought his work to mainstream Western audiences. In May The Devil Take You, a young woman visits her father’s former home trying to find the answer regarding his mysterious illness, only to discover the horrifying truth about his past.
The Perfection (2018)
Go into The Perfection as clueless as possible (but be aware of some triggering rape stuff), because half the fun of this psychological horror film is trying (and failing) to guess just what happens next. Allison Wiliams plays a former cello prodigy who returns to her prestigious music school to find that she’s been replaced by the new star student, Lizzie played by Logan Browning. The Perfection plays with exploitation film conventions and completely subverts them on their head in absolutely unpredictable ways. It’s a wild thrill ride and truly, perfection.
Vampires Vs. The Bronx (2020)
Vampires have been used as metaphors for a variety of othering, but Vampires Vs. The Bronx highlights humanity’s true villain –gentrification. After a trio of young best friends discover a brood of vampires are preparing to destroy The Bronx, they take matters into their own hands and get the community together to fight back against the monsters invading their home. Calling it The Lost Boys for a new generation feels too easy, but the Frog Brothers would be proud do see how Miguel, Bobby, Luis, Gloria, Lil Mayor, and the rest of the gang tackle the aptly named Murnau real estate film. Leave the stake, take the adobo.
A good night's sleep is essential for a healthy and productive day. If you're having trouble sleeping, especially when you're travelling and bedded in unfamiliar accomodations, then you might when to check out this early Amazon Prime Day deal. Amazon is offering the diminutive Dreamegg portable white noise machine for just $9.49 after you apply 50% off coupon code "6TVMPOMB" during checkout. I bought one the last time this went on sale and it has worked as intended in a nursery, keeping the baby soundly asleep.
Dreamegg Portable White Noise Machine for $9.49
The Dreamegg measures less than 2" cubed and weighs in at under 2oz, making it easy to carry along with you on your travels. You don't need to bring along a power brick or spare batteries either; the internal 1,000mAh battery (doubled in capacity compared to its gen 1 model) lasts all night long and the recharges over the universal USB Type-C standard.
In terms of its features, the Dreamegg sound machine offers 16 soothing nature sounds, including ocean waves, rain, birds, fan sounds, and, of course, white noise. Since it's supposed to be placed next to you on a beside table, it doesn't need to have oversized speakers, but the Dreamegg is still loud enough to help drown out other ambient noises that might otherwise keep you awake, like late night conversations, urban fauna their groove on, or music blaring outside.
For travellers with babies, this is a near essential device. In my experience, a white noise machine is one of the best ways to keep a baby sleeping, even in noisier environments, and a surefire way to maintain your sanity.
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
The paperback box set of the core five Witcher books is on sale at Amazon, which has a surprising amount of book deals ahead of its Prime Day sales. You can pick up the full collection for $35.40, which is 61% off the original list price of $89.99.
The collection doesn't include the two prequel short stories, The Last Wish and Sword of Destiny, or the standalone prequel Season of Storms, but you can pick those up individually or in their own box set. These all share the same red spine design as the main box set, so displaying them on a shelf won't drive you insane as it would for me if they didn't match.
Get the Entire Witcher Series on Sale
The Witcher centers around Geralt of Rivia, a monster-killing, bounty-hunting Witcher with magic powers and a penchant for toxic relationships. Throughout the saga you'll meet a colorful cast of characters like Princess Cirilla, who Geralt is tied to in a twist of destiny, Dandelion, Geralt's close friend and wandering bard, and Yennefer of Vengerberg, a sorceress and subject of Geralt's aforementioned complicated love life.
If you're new to the Witcher series, the reading order can be a bit complicated with jumping timelines, the prequel, and the short story collections. Here's a quick TL; DR on how to read the Witcher books in order:
The Last Wish (short stories)
Sword of Destiny (short stories)
Season of Storms (you can also read this last)
Blood of Elves
The Time of Contempt
Baptism of Fire
The Towers of Swallows
The Lady of the Lake
I'd highly recommend these books to anyone who enjoys CD Projekt Red's loose adaptation of them in the form of The Witcher games. As we wait (probably quite a long time) for The Witcher 4, what better opportunity is there to dive into the original lore?
When Will The Witcher Return on Netflix?
Aside from the games, The Witcher books have also been adapted by Netflix... relatively faithfully. Henry Cavill played the titular character for seasons 1-3, with Liam Hemsworth replacing him for season 4 onward. The new season is likely arriving in the second half of 2025.
In our review of season 3, volume 2, we said "[it] closes out its most compromised season yet by once again losing Henry Cavill in the clunky, plot-heavy shuffle", and gave it a five overall.
Let's make this easy. You want to know if there are any post-credits or mid-credits scenes in Jurassic World Rebirth. Well, we'll tell you right here: There are not.
But read on about the new movie all the same!
Life finds a way, and so does the Jurassic franchise, thanks to the seventh film in the series, Jurassic World Rebirth. But with the adventure on Ile Saint-Hubert in the rearview mirror, is this film setting up a new trilogy, or is it a standalone movie? The answer is “maybe” to the first question, and “maybe” to the second one. A lot, you may not be surprised to hear, depends on how well the movie does this week/weekend at the box office.
Directed by Gareth Edwards (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Godzilla) and starring franchise newcomers Scarlett Johansson as Zora Bennett, Mahershala Ali as Duncan Kincaid, and Jonathan Bailey as Dr. Henry Loomis, Rebirth received a 5 out of 10 score from IGN's Clint Gage. "For a movie that promises a 'Rebirth,' the latest Jurassic World plays it frustratingly safe, falling back on the blueprint of the original film, but not shedding any of the problems with the more recent movies," reads the review.
Still, if you’re looking for an explanation of the ending of the movie, and how it could set up a sequel – or even a new trilogy – then be sure to check this space on Friday when we update this page with full spoilers.
Does Jurassic World Rebirth Have A Mid- or End-Credits Scene?
Nope! As stated above, after the final shot, there are just credits for the movie. You should always hang out to pay tribute to the awesome folks who worked on a film, but if you’re wondering whether Blue pops up for a last-second surprise, or Mr. D.N.A. is back for revenge, you’ll have to wait for Jurassic World Rebirth 2: Reborn Again.
Check back on this page on Friday for all the Jurassic spoilers you could ask for!
Sonos is offering a fantastic deal on one of its most popular speakers. I think it's going to beat any Sonos deal we'll see during Amazon Prime Day. The Sonos Era 100 retails for $200. Normally, you could purchase a certified refurbished model for $159, but Sonos has jut discounted it even further to $119, or 40% off compared to the price of buying new. This is the lowest price I've seen for an Era 100 speaker. Sonos refurbished products are like new, include pristine packaging and all original accessories, and come with the same one year warranty as a brand new product.
Sonos Era 100 Smart Speaker for $119
Certified refurbished with 1 year Sonos warranty
The Sonos Era 100 is a direct improvement over the now discontinued Sonos One. This is a small standalone powered speaker that pumps out great sound for its small footprint. Unlike the Sonos Move or Roam, this is not a portable speaker with a built-in battery, so you'll need to leave it plugged in. Sound quality is equivalent to a Sonos Move, which isn't surprising considering they have similar internal components: two tweeters, a mid-woofer, and three class-D digital amps. The Era 100 also supports Dolby Atmos when it is paired with an Arc or Beam soundbar. It has a built-in microphone and can be voice controlled; it can also be used as a smart speaker for both Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant.
Why is Sonos so popular?
Sonos is always on our list of best bookshelf speakers and best soundbars because they offer good sound, pleasing aesthetics, and easy setup in a reasonably priced package.
Sound quality vs size
Despite the fact that Sonos products are compact and don't take up much space in your house, they offer surprisingly loud and distortion-free audio. They're definitely pricier than budget options, but the sound quality is more akin to audio products that cost hundreds more or take up much more space.
Easy setup
Sonos devices are usually simple plug and play. All you have to do is plug in a power cable (if even that's necessary) and one connection to your TV (if even that's necessary), download the Sonos app, and you're done. Generally a receiver isn't required; the soundbars are designed to plug right into your TV and the speakers are designed to work wirelessly. For something like a 5.1ch home theater setup, you don't have to deal with a mess of cables. Individual Sonos speakers can pair with your soundbar and be used as rear satellites, and the subwoofer is also wireless so it can be positioned virtually anywhere in your room.
Communication between devices
Practically all Sonos speakers can communicate with each other. That means you can pair different Sonos speakers in different rooms for multi-room capability. Or you can pair two speakers for stereo output. Or you can pair speakers to your soundbar to be used as a 5.1ch setup. It's all seamlessly done through the app.
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
The new AMC and AMC+ series Nautilus revisits the iconic antihero Captain Nemo from Jules Vernes’ classic sci-fi adventure novels Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island, chronicling the submarine commander’s quest for revenge against the ruthless East India Mercantile Company.
Star Trek: Discovery and Penny Dreadful actor Shazad Latif plays Nemo, and IGN was recently able to chat with him about the series, the first two episodes of which have now debuted. (This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.)
IGN: How much does this version of Captain Nemo stick with what Jules Verne eventually revealed about that character and how much of it is just a necessary reinvention for this show?
Shazad Latif: It's [in] The Mysterious Island where we learn that he might have an Indian background, because of a prince called Dakkar. So the book takes that element and we run with that. And we still run that his wife and child have been killed and his hell-bent revenge on the East India Company, which sort of plays into what Verne was still talking about.
But then we have 10 episodes of exploration, so we have a lot of free rein to follow this guy's story and eventually find out how the Nemo we meet in the books and how we get there, really. There's free rein, but we also stick quite true to it. … Xavier [Marchand], our producer, was obsessed with Jules Verne himself.
IGN: One of the inventions of the show that I liked, I thought it was really smart, is the idea of the development of the Nautilus itself. In the books Nemo just basically makes it on his own. But you would think, if you don't have any money left, that's a lot of work for one guy.
Shazad Latif: Yeah. No, exactly. It's good to see in the first episode, that that's what they're doing, I really like that touch, and how they escape with it. And then it's not his ship then, but it becomes his ship, and he sticks his daughter's shell on it later in the series. It's nice, the emotional connection he has to this ship, which seemingly is just this big piece of metal in the junkyard.
IGN: Nemo’s fellow prisoners become his crew. What do they think of him? Do they trust him?
Shazad Latif: Well, I think at first it's like, "Who the hell is this guy telling us what to do?" And suddenly he's just become captain and taken charge. And you need someone to take the lead. Yeah, it becomes a bit of a poison, because he's just ordering people about and not really explaining his reasons. So I think that we see that come to a head in the series, I think, around episode seven or eight, and it builds throughout.
But there's a moment where he realizes you can't really do that. And if he needs and wants this team to help him on his revenge mission, then he has to be truthful with them, and the truth will set you free. And then being vulnerable around the people you need is a good lesson, I think, in life in general, especially for hot-headed dudes like Nemo. It is a great thing, and it's necessary in his journey.
IGN: He seems morally dubious at times, at least in the first episode.
Shazad Latif: I think the morally dubious stuff, he's almost willing to do that because he's seen as a prisoner anyway. And also, revenge is clouding his judgment, so he's like, "I'm going to kill these guys, I'm going to kill everyone, and they killed my wife and child." So that's where we start, with the seething anger. And he slowly dissipates that by realizing that's not the only way to do it and you need other people. But yeah, that is the starting point, where he's willing to do anything, and that includes breaking the law, as it were, which he doesn't respect anyway, especially if the law has been made by the East India Company or the British Empire.
IGN: What was the actual production like? Because it looks really good and really expensive. How much of this was actually shot on the water? Or was it all green screen?
Shazad Latif: No, I think it was a great mix of everything. We were on the [water] tank and three sound stages, which had all the interiors and the submarine. But then there was the tank which had the exteriors, and we'd do water scenes there, underwater scenes there, submarine on top, and then the CGI surrounding all of that. I think they had to do layers of CGI on top of the water. It was a whole mix and blend of everything. And we did locations and everything.
IGN: What's the thing about that character that has stayed with you or maybe something surprising that you discovered about him as you were mining that material?
Shazad Latif: The 210-day shoot and playing someone who's so angry, you carry these emotions with you, whether they're small or big. But I think that thing of learning to be vulnerable was a nice lesson which I could take into my own life as well. And then on the outside of that, just getting a chance to play representation of a South Asian character on screen in this way, an action hero. I loved all the action movies and stuff I watched growing up. But it's Harrison Ford, it's Brendan Fraser, it's all those characters. So if there's even one little brown kid or kid who watches this and sees me jumping around a ship, and enjoys it, then that reminds me of when I was young and felt the same thing. So it's a nice thing to be part of.
IGN: Is there an intention to do another season or was this meant to be a one and done?
Shazad Latif: I have no idea. That's a producer question, I guess. I'm just an actor, so I don't get let into those meetings. But we'll see. We'll see.
New episodes of Nautilus premiere Sundays on AMC and AMC+, leading up to the two-episode season finale on Sunday, August 17. Read IGN's Nautilus, Season One review.
As part of its 4th of July Sale, Best Buy is slashing 40% off the price of the GameSir Super Nova Wireless Controller. It's normally $50, but right now the red and white model is down to just $29.99. This is a an excellent price for a controller packed with a plethora of practical features like Hall-Effect joysticks and triggers, tri-mode connectivity, button mapping, included charging dock, and more. This is a PC gaming controller at its core, but it's also compatible with the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 consoles. The red and white color scheme that complements the Switch is a Best Buy exclusive.
40% Off GameSir Super Nova Wireless Gaming Controller
The GameSir Super Nova gaming controller is compatible with your PC, Nintendo Switch, and iOS or Android smartphone or tablet. It connects in one of three ways: wireless Bluetooth, wireless 2.4GHz, and wired via USB Type-C. For the best performance, stick with wired or wireless 2.4GHz, which both boast ultra-low latency with 1000Hz polling rate.
Unlike most standard controllers (including first party ones), the GameSir Super Nova is equipped with Hall Effect joysticks and triggers to eliminate the dreaded stick drift. The thumbsticks also include anti-friction rings and the triggers offer two choices of travel length (short and long) with the flick of a switch. The back buttons are programmable and the ABXY layout can be swapped around to your liking. The controller contains a 1,000mAh battery (although no battery life estimate is given). The included dock has pogo pins so you don't need to fumble around to plug in the controller.
Other features include silent membrane buttons so you can play late at night without waking anyone, rubberized grips, detachable faceplates, RGB lighting, adjustable dual vibration motors, 6-axis gyroscope, and dead zone adjustments.
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
The latest in an incredibly long line of LEGO Star Wars sets is the Battle Droid with STAP. This is a big, impressive build that can be used for play (as suggested by its 12+ age rating) or for display (as suggested by the included stand and placard). As such, it’s one of those LEGO releases that works just as well as a set for kids as it does for adults.
The droid in question is one of the B1-series battle droids that pop up all over the place in the prequel trilogy. They look seriously cool, even if they might fall in battle at the mere suggestion of a blaster bolt or a lightsaber swing. This LEGO battle droid is a bit stockier than the ones in the movies, but that’s probably because a droid this size with thinner limbs might fall apart under its own weight.
This set comes with 10 bags of LEGO blocks, plus a full-color instruction manual and a sticker sheet of decals. First you build the bot’s torso, followed by its legs, feet, arms, and head. Its hands are particularly neat, as they’re comprised of two fingers and a thumb, all of which can move independently (the better for gripping a blaster, or the STAP's handlebars).
Its legs, arms, and feet are all attached using ball joints, so you can pose them in all kinds of ways. This comes in handy when you want to stand it up, because it lets you find the center of gravity for the pose you want to use.
With my son, I’ve built a number of the LEGO action figure sets, like Iron Spider-Man and New Captain America. This battle droid is similar to those, but it looks way better. Its limbs are too thick to look movie-accurate, but unless you’re comparing them side-by-side, you likely won’t notice. The gears on the knees and the thin rods connecting the forearms to the elbows are a nice touch. It’s just a great looking droid overall.
While most of the detail on the droid comes from how the LEGO pieces fit together, you’ll need to affix decals on some of the pieces. As with all stickers, you need to place them carefully, or else your droid may look a little wonky and amateurish.
After building the battle droid in full, you assemble its weapon, the E-5 blaster rifle. Next up is the minifigure version, which is like an artfully shrunken-down clone of the whole set. It looks terrific.
Lastly, you assemblie the STAP speeder and stand (the acronym stands for Single Trooper Aerial Platform). In Star Wars lore, a STAP is a repulsorcraft used by the Trade Federation, most famously in the Invasion of Naboo, as depicted in The Phantom Menace.
The STAP is a pretty standard build that starts with the skeleton of the structure, using various colored bricks that will later be hidden by the brown exterior of the vehicle. I love it when LEGO sets have colorful bricks hidden within them. First, the colors break up the visual tedium of what may otherwise be a bland build. Second, the colorful bricks make it easier to see which brick goes where in the instruction manual.
Once the inside of the vehicle is assembled, you add the exterior bricks, which are all a uniform brown color in this case. The end result is an exterior that’s satisfyingly smooth and curvy. The STAP has handles you can clamp the droid’s hands onto and foot rests you can secure its feet to. It’s a big, sturdy set, with a base that’s just wide enough to hold it up. The end result is really impressive. I’d easily recommend this set to any fans of the Star Wars prequel trilogy.
More New LEGO Releases
Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.
Postapocalyptic open-world survival game Once Human is launching its Annual Version 2.0: Dreamveil, and developer Starry Studio is hosting a special program to mark the occasion. There will be a celebration of all the game has achieved so far, as well as news and updates about what’s coming in the future. IGN will carry a livestream of the full program, so here’s all the details for how you can watch and what to expect as part of the show.
Once Human Special Program Date, Time, and How to Watch
If you’re in the United States, the program will be streaming at night. It’ll begin on Wednesday, July 2 at 9 p.m. Pacific, which means it’ll be at midnight that night in the Eastern time zone. You can watch it live on any of these IGN channels:
If you can’t stay up late to watch it live, don’t worry. We’ll save the show in its entirety on our YouTube page, so it’ll be waiting for you the next morning.
What to Expect from the Once Human Special Program
This being the game’s annual version, there’s sure to be a look back at the past year and what’s happened in the Once Human universe since release. That includes the game’s four scenarios so far: the PVE-focused Manibus and The Way of Winter, and the PVP-focused Evolution’s Call and Prismverse’s Clash. It also includes the game’s mobile version that was released in April. There have been rumblings of a console version also being in the works, but nothing official has been confirmed so far. Could that be part of this show?
There have been trailers and dev logs that have given some sense of new content that’s on the horizon, but the special program will go into more detail. We know a nightmare-themed scenario called Endless Dream is already in Early Access, but if you haven’t played it for yourself, expect a deep dive into the new story and deviants you’ll face and new content and locations being added.
We also know a new class system is being introduced with three classes available: Chef, Gardener, and Beastmaster. Expect a breakdown of each of the classes and what makes them unique. There also will be announcements of new events, in-game rewards, and other updates to celebrate the new annual version. Plus, the developers are likely to reveal a roadmap of future content. If you haven’t played Once Human yet and want to give it a try before seeing the updates, you can play it for free right now on PC and mobile.
The Secretlab 4th of July Sale has officially commenced and runs through July 10. 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. Newer releases like the Titan Evo Nanogen chair and the recliner add-on are exempt from this sale.
It's no secret that we love our Secretlab gaming chairs. Three of the eight chairs in our best gaming chair roundup are Secretlab models. Of all the gaming chairs we covered in our "Budget to Best" roundup video earlier this year, my colleague Akeem Lawanson considered the Secretlab Titan Evo to be the most comfortable. No good chair comes cheap and Secretlab chairs definitely cost a premium, but we think the craftsmanship, materials, and customizability are worth it.
TL;DR - The 7 Best Secretlab Deals
You can quickly browse through all of the listed products on sale above. For more information on each product and why they are worth your consideration, read through below.
Secretlab Titan Evo
The Titan Evo starts at $499 during the sale. This is Secretlab's flagship chair and it's available in small, medium, and large sizes. Upholstery options include Neo Hybrid leatherette, SoftWeave Plus fabric, or premium Napa leather. The chair features cold-cure foam upholstery for the seat, a supportive four-way lumbar system, full length backrest with 165 degrees of recline, full metal 4D armrests with magnetically attached PU cushions, and a memory foam headrest pillow.
Aside from the build quality, the Titan Evo also stands out thanks to the sheer number of officially licensed designs from popular video games, TV shows, and more. Some of the more popular examples include Star Wars, The Witcher, Overwatch, Attack on Titan, League of Legends, World of Warcraft, and Game of Thrones. They generally cost more than the standard colors, but they're worth it if you're looking for that extra personal touch.
In our Secretlab Titan Evo review, Chris Coke wrote that "after two years of daily use, the Secretlab Titan Evo has proven that it can stand the test of time and still be one of the best gaming chairs you can buy. Meaningful ergonomics paired with Secretlab’s wide selection of designs, it remains a fantastic option, especially for fans of bright colors or designs."
Secretlab Titan Evo Lite
Among the Titan chairs, the Evo Lite is definitely the best value with its starting price tag of $419, which is $80 less than the base model Titan Evo. It's built upon the same frame as the Titan Evo and has the same core features like the cold-cure foam cushioning, lumbar, 165 degrees of recline, and 4D armrests. What it compromises on is customization, with "only" two upholstery options, two sizes, and five colors, a non-adjustable lumbar system, simpler arm rests, and no included head rest. If none of these tradeoffs bother you, then you'll be saving quite a bit of money.
Secretlab Titan 2020
The prior model Titan 2020 gaming chair is still available for $474, although there aren't too many options available. The Titan 2020 is still an excellent chair and not much different than the current Evo model. In fact, outside of an upholstery change (the PU leather has been updated with Neo Hybrid Leatherette), the changes are mostly cosmetic. You are limited to fewer design options, so if you want to build out something that's truly unique, you might want to splurge a bit extra for the current generation Titan Evo model.
Secretlab Titan Evo Nanogen Edition
Although the Titan Evo Nanogen Edition isn't on sale, it deserves mention simply because this is our top pick for the best gaming chair. In our Titan Evo Nanogen Edition review, Chris Coke wrote that "the Secretlab Titan Evo Nanogen Edition deserves every bit of the overwhelming praise I’ve given. Granted, at $799 it’s significantly more expensive than the original and not far off from an entry-level Herman-Miller. But the return it offers in comfortable, supportive gaming is well worth the extra cost thanks to dramatically improved materials in both the fabric and multi-layered padding. The Titan Evo Nanogen Edition is class-leading, and is hands-down the most comfortable gaming chair I’ve ever used."
Secretlab Titan Recliner Add-On
Secretlab also announced a new recliner add-on to anyone who already owns the Titan Evo chair. It's so new that not only will this recliner ship out sometime next year, it's not even available for preorder yet. We have received a unit for testing, however, and it has turned out to be a very practical addition.
In our recliner add-on review, Chris Coke wrote that "while both comfort and value are subjective things, the recliner is able to take the Titan Evo and transform it from one of the best racing style gaming chairs to standing head and shoulders above the competition at its price point. It’s novel enough that I wouldn’t be surprised to see other brands following suit in the near future. If you don’t mind paying for it, it’s an absolutely killer upgrade for your gaming chair."
Secretlab Magnus and Magnus Pro
The Magnus and Magnus Pro are also on sale for July 4. The Magnus is a traditional fixed-frame gaming desk while the Magnus Pro ups the ante with a custom designed electric standing desk frame for an additional $250. Both desks feature an all-metal desktop surface, solid steel legs and cleverly thought out areas for cable management, but the Magnus Pro has some really unique features including a power cable that runs internally inside one of the telescoping legs and an in-line control panel that you won't bump into.
In our Secretlab Magnus Pro review. Mark Knapp writes that "the Secretlab Magnus Pro is a fantastic desk, bringing the brilliant cable management solutions of the original Magnus to a fast, quiet, and wide-ranging motorized standing desk. The desk is built well and proves an excellent platform for work and play alike. It’s an expensive desk though, and for the money, it would have been nice to see a smarter safety mechanism for the motors and the desk mat included. Still, the overall quality you get is a big step up from cheaper standing desks, and the optional accessories truly enhance the experience. Anyone who’s not committed to a standing desk should save their money and go for the standard Magnus if everything else about this model sounds good, but for gamers who love a tidy desk and want the flexibility of a standing desk, the Magnus Pro should be the first they consider."
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.
It’s the week of Independence Day, which means tons of retailers are running major sales. You can save money on just about everything in this year's Fourth of July sales, from desks and mattresses to gaming PCs and handhelds. If you’ve had your eye on something, this might be the time to pick it up.
To help you out, we’ve scoured the internet and gathered all the biggest sales in one handy list below. Or, if you want to see a selection of the best deals, you can take a look at our Fourth of July sale page. Let’s take a look.
The Best Fourth of July Sales Live Now
Mega-outlets like Amazon, Target, and Walmart have sales going, as do more specialized retailers like Dell, Home Depot, and Old Navy. Basically, if it's a well-known retailer, it's having a Fourth of July sale.
When Do Fourth of July Sales End?
The sales listed above end at a variety of times. Target's Fourth of July sale ends on July 5, so you don't even get the full weekend to grab your deals. Best Buy's sale ends on Sunday, July 6, when the new weekly sale begins. Home Depot's sale ends on July 9. So it's really a toss-up when it comes to end points, which most of the sites above have listed. And as long as you make your purchases by the end of July 4, you're definitely in the clear.
Should You Wait for Prime Day?
With Amazon’s annual Prime Day sale event coming right up (it runs July 8 - 11 this year), you might be wondering if it’s better to buy the items on your list now or wait for Prime Day. As with most things, it kind of depends.
For starters, you have to be a Prime member to take advantage of the best Prime Day deals. So if you’re not a Prime member and you’re not interested in becoming one, you can certainly buy whatever you want in the Fourth of July sales.
However, some other retailers are also planning their own sales events to compete with Prime Day. Walmart's Deals sale is set to run July 8 - 13 (with Walmart+ members getting one day early access). And Target's Circle Week runs July 8 - 11 - though you do need to be a Target Circle member to take advantage of those deals (you can sign up here for free). Those sales will likely have similar discounts to what we're seeing now in the Fourth of July sales.
All that said, if you're a Prime member and you can wait for Prime Day, it doesn't hurt to hold off and see what kinds of deals are available starting July 8. Prime Day deals are typically quite good, and even if the items you're after aren't on sale for low prices, one of the other retailers will may have it for cheaper than you'll find it now during the Independence Day sales. Or you can just wait for one of the other upcoming sales. Your call.
Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.
The first teaser trailer for Oscar winner Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey is playing in theaters, paired with fellow Universal release Jurassic World Rebirth, but if the director and the studio were hoping to keep the first look video as an exclusively theatrical experience that’s now how it’s playing out. Cell phone recordings of people watching it in cinemas are popping up all over social media and on YouTube (IGN doesn’t link out to pirated material).
We’ve inquired with Universal Pictures about whether they plan on officially releasing the teaser trailer for The Odyssey online.
The trailer opens with what seems to be voiceover from Eumaeus, who was Odysseus’ slave and friend as the character refers to him as “my master.” It’s not clear who is voicing the role.
The teaser shows quick shots of the Mediterranean Sea and the Trojan Horse on a beach before cutting to Telemachus, Odysseus's son played by Tom Holland, meeting with Jon Bernthal’s King Menelaus.
Telemachus seeks information on the fate of his long-missing father Odysseus (Matt Damon), who fought alongside Menelaus in the Trojan War.
Menelaus tells Telemachus of the different rumors about what happened to his father and when imprisonment is mentioned, Menelaus scoffs at that notion, saying, “What prison could hold a man like that?”
Odysseus himself is only glimpsed from a distance or from behind, playing on the mystique of a man who has become a legend.
There’s also a quick glimpse of Lupita N’yongo who appears to be playing Menelaus’ wife, Helen of Troy, whose beauty launched a thousand ships and sparked the Trojan War.
LEGO has a handful of free gifts with qualifying purchases for a limited time. Depending on how much you spend, you can pick up a couple of free sets, and can even grab multiple if you spend enough. Some of these used to be available for purchase, but are now included as fun little gifts and incentives to shop at LEGO directly. Keep in mind, you have to buy sets that are already out; preordering sets don't qualify you for a free gift with purchase, even if it meets the spending requirements. So you can't pick up the recently announced castle setand get the free gifts.
Gifts with purchase are only available to LEGO Insiders members, which is free to join.
LEGO Celebration: Ferris Wheel with Fireworks Free Gift With Purchase
This fun 230-piece Ferris wheel is a gift for any purchase of $85 or more. It stands over 8.5" high and the translucent bricks for fireworks add a fun level of detail. The Ferris wheel itself actually rotates, with the gondola cabins functioning as they would in real life. LEGO Creator sets are typically modular and come with instructions for other bespoke configurations with the included pieces, but that doesn't seem to be the case here. But if you're creative enough, I'm sure you'll be able to find fun ways to utilize these colorful bricks. Available between July 1-7.
LEGO Ideas Friendly Snails Free Gift With Purchase
The Friendly Snails set is available as a free gift with purchases of $160 or more, and makes a great bookshelf or side table display. At 264 pieces, it's another bite-sized build perfect for a session with an episode of your favorite show on in the background. The snails sport a whimsical, cartoony look and the display base has detailed foliage, a mushroom, and even a bee brick to capture the front yard feel of the set. Available July 1-6.
Can You Get Both Gifts With One Purchase?
As far as we can tell, if you spend $160 or more on available LEGO sets, you'll be able to claim both of these free gifts with purchases. So in theory, if you purchase something like the LEGO Mario & Standard Kart, you'd essentially be getting three sets for the price of one. Not a bad deal!
There are also a handful of awesome new LEGO sets available now that it's the first of the month. Sets like the LEGO Icons How to Train Your Dragon: Toothless (#10375) and the Star Wars Battle Droid with STAP (75428) are available for purchase now, the latter of which qualifies you for the free Ferris wheel gift. Additionally, some previously-release sets are now available to purchase on Amazon for the first time, such as the LEGO Icons Lord of the Rings: The Shire (#10354). Remember, the gifts with purchase are only available directly through LEGO and for LEGO Insiders members.
If you're looking for a new gaming monitor but you're on a tight budget, then this early Amazon Prime Day deal is right up your alley. For today only, Amazon is offering a 27" KTC gaming monitor for just $98.59 shipped as part of a limited time Lightning Deal. This item has over 1,000 reviews on Amazon with an average 4.4/5 star rating. It has plenty of premium features you don't expect to see in a monitor at this price point, like a QHD resolution, 100Hz refresh rate, G-Sync compatibility, and a good quality IPS panel.
27" KTC QHD 100Hz G-Sync IPS Gaming Monitor for $98
The KTC H27T13 is a 27" monitor with a 2560x1440 resolution, which averages out to a sharp 109ppi pixel density. It's equipped with a pre-calibrated IPS panel with good color reproduction and wide viewing angles. It's decently fast with a refresh rate up to 100Hz and G-Sync compatibility. KTC includes a 3 year warranty.
If you're considering this monitor, chances are you're pairing it with a budget gaming PC setup. You probably don't need an expensive monitor with a 4K resolution that will overly tax your PC or 240Hz refresh rate that will be hard to achieve. G-Sync technology, however, is especially useful for these budget builds, since your fps is more likely to fluctuate than higher-end builds and adaptive sync helps provide a smoother and tear-free experience. This is a good monitor to pair with something like an RTX 4060, 4070, 5070, or the new Radeon RX 9070 GPU.
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.
We may take it for granted today, but imagine telling a younger version of yourself that one day there will be a magical app that will gather everything Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, Marvel, and National Geographic in one place you can watch whenever and wherever you want for a relatively low monthly price.
That is what Disney+ is thanks to all of the companies Disney owns, and it’s obviously one of the leading streaming platforms as it offers a wide collection of classics and original programming featuring some of the most beloved characters and stories ever told. However, there are so many streaming services out there and it can be tough to keep them all, no matter how much they claim to offer.
That being said, if you are considering signing up for Disney+ for the first time or feel the time is right to jump back into the vault as Scrooge McDuck would dive into his money bin, this guide will provide you with everything you need to know about the current Disney+ subscription plans, bundles, and more.
As of July 2025, Disney+ offers two main plans - Disney+ Basic and Disney+ Premium - and the main differences between the two are whether you get ads, if you are able to download content to watch on the go, and if you get Dolby Atmos. One thing you may not know, however, is that there are various Disney bundles that can get you multiple streaming services for a much lower price than you’d be able to get each individually. The newest streaming bundle includes Disney+, Max, and Hulu, but you can also bundle Disney+ with ESPN. You’ll be able to see all the options below, and we hope it helps make the decision of joining or not an even easier one!
All Disney+ plans increased in price on October 17, 2024. The following information has been updated to reflect these changes. Below is the most up-to-date information we've found from the Disney+ help page.
Disney+ Basic - $9.99/month
Steam Disney+ with ads
No downloads
Supports up to 5.1 audio
Up to 4K UHD video quality
Watch on four screens at once at no extra cost
Over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR
This is the cheapest Disney+ option and is excellent for those who don’t mind watching a few ads and don’t feel the need to have movies and shows ready for those times when no Wi-Fi or cellular service is available. If you travel a ton or have kids and want to load up some episodes of Bluey or Spidey and His Amazing Friends on a tablet for a vacation, you may want to consider an upgrade to the premium plan.
It’s also important to note that, while Disney+ Basic does offer over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR, it does not offer Dolby Atmos like Disney+ Premium does.
Disney+ Premium - $15.99/month or $159.99/year
Stream Disney+ with no ads
Unlimited downloads on up to 10 devices
Watch on four screens at once at no extra cost
Over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR
Dolby Atmos
There are only two tiers of Disney+ and this is the top one. With the increase in price, you get everything Disney+ Basic offers, but you also don’t have to sit through ads and can download as much as you want on up to 10 devices.
Another big benefit you get from upgrading to Disney+ Premium is the addition of Dolby Atmos, which is one of the leading surround sound technologies on the market. In addition to having sound enveloping your room, Dolby Atmos features spatial audio that allows creators to place sounds in specific places and fully immerse you in your favorite stories.
Disney+ Bundle Pricing
Disney+, Hulu Bundle Basic - $10.99/month
Disney+ with ads
Hulu with ads
No downloads
Watch on four screens at once at no extra cost
Over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR
This bundle is for those who want to watch everything Disney+ and Hulu have to offer, but don’t mind watching ads and don’t need to download content to their devices.
Disney+, Hulu Bundle Premium - $19.99/month
Disney+ with no ads
Hulu with no ads
Unlimited downloads on up to 10 devices
Watch on four screens at once at no extra cost
Over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR
Dolby Atmos
This bundle is for those who want all the benefits of Disney+ Premium, including unlimited downloads on up to 10 devices, Dolby Atmos, and no ads, in addition to the full ad-free Hulu library.
Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+ Basic - $16.99/month
Disney+ with ads
Hulu with ads
ESPN+ with ads
No downloads
If ESPN+ is something you’d like to add to Hulu and Disney+, this bundle or the one below it are for you. For those unfamiliar, ESPN+ allows you to stream live sports from across the world, purchase UFC PPV events, and enjoy a ton of on-demand content including the entire 30 for 30 library, select ESPN films, game replays, and more. You also unlock exclusive fantasy sports tools and premium articles on ESPN.
Both of these trio bundles get you the same content on ESPN, you just have to decide if you want ads on Disney+ and Hulu, if you want to download content, and if Dolby Atmos is worth it to you!
Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+ Bundle Premium - $26.99/month
Disney+ with no ads
Hulu with no ads
ESPN+ with ads
Unlimited downloads on up to 10 devices
Watch on four screens at once at no extra cost
Over 300 titles in 4K UHD and HDR
Dolby Atmos
Legacy Disney Bundle - $21.99/month
Disney+ with no ads
Hulu with ads
ESPN+ with ads
No downloads
This plan is no longer available for purchase but existing subscribers can keep it as long as they don’t cancel or change it
This plan is a legacy one that is only available to those who are already subscribed to it, meaning no new account can take advantage of it. If you are a member of this bundle, just know you can keep it as long as you want if you don’t cancel or change it!
Disney +, Hulu, and Max Bundle Pricing
Disney+, Hulu, Max Bundle (With Ads) - $16.99/month
Disney+ with ads, including Disney+ Basic features
Hulu with ads
Max with ads
Disney+, Hulu, Max Bundle (No Ads) - $29.99/month
Disney+ with no ads, including Disney+ Premium features
Hulu with no ads
Max with no ads
What's New on Disney+?
The July 2025 lineup for Disney+ has a little bit of everything. Well, except Star Wars. Several programs from the Disney Channel are making their way to streaming, including StuGo and the latest season of Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir. On the MCU side, the Ironheart series is wrapping up. From Nat Geo, we'll be getting tons of new shark-themed series in celebration of "Sharkfest." For whatever reason, the service is also getting tons of reality shows, including a BBQ-themed competition series and several seasons of Project Runway.
Disney Plus Subscriptions FAQ
What If I Already Have Disney+, Hulu, and/or ESPN+? How Do I Get Bundle Pricing?
While bundling to save money is a wonderful thing, it can be a bit confusing how to get the best pricing if you are already subscribed to Disney+, Hulu, and/or ESPN+. Luckily, it’s not too tricky once you know where to look! To help, here are the instructions right from Disney to ensure you get the best deal!
Existing Disney+ Subscriber
Log in to yourDisney+ account through a mobile or web browser
Select your PROFILE
Select ACCOUNT
Under the SUBSCRIPTION section, select the subscription that you want to change
Select CHANGE next to the name of your subscription
For more, check out our review of Disney+, in which we said, “For what is essentially a streaming service dedicated to the output and archives of a single company – albeit a company that now commands a vast swath of the entertainment landscape – Disney+ is doing a good job at widening its scope with documentaries, programming from its other banners, and, interestingly, concert films.”
Thunderbolts* (The New Avengers, if you will) seems to be one of those movies everyone talked about, but not a lot of people ended up going to see in theaters. Almost two months after its opening weekend, it’s safe to say the movie hasn’t had the best performance at the box office, at least compared to the rest of the MCU.
On the plus side, if you’ve just been waiting to watch the latest Marvel movie at home, you’re in luck. About two months after the movie’s initial release in theaters, Thunderbolts* is available on digital.
Thunderbolts* Arrives on Digital
Thunderbolts* has grossed around $380 million globally on a reported budget of $170 million. While that's certainly a big number, Variety has reported that, when taking into account theater costs, Thunderbolts* needed to gross over $450 million to fully break even. In other words, the movie may or may not have lost money, at least at the box office.
On the other hand, Thunderbolts* was arguably one of the best-received MCU flicks in quite some time. It currently holds a 68/100 Critic's Score on Metacritic, which is actually the highest for any MCU movie since 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home. IGN’s Thunderbolts* review describes the movie as "the most solid the sacred timeline has felt in a little while, providing an adventure befitting its overlooked title characters."
While it might not have been an Avengers-level money maker, the movie struck me as an effort to restore some faith in the MCU. I guess we’ll have to see how that attempt pans out. Next up for Marvel is The Fantastic Four: First Steps, which appears to have broader appeal for families. As Pixar’s Elio struggles at the box office, Disney could certainly use a win, preferably outside of live-action remakes.
When Will It Stream on Disney+
Thunderbolts* will join the rest of the MCU on Disney+ sooner or later, but we don’t have any official word on the streaming release date. Both Captain America: Brave New World and Deadpool & Wolverine arrived on Disney+ a little over three months after arriving in theaters, so Thunderbolts*, which released on May 2, should arrive on Disney+ by the end of August.
Thunderbolts* 4K Steelbook and Blu-ray Releasing July 29
Aside from the digital release, Marvel has also confirmed that several physical editions of Thunderbolts* are coming out on July 29. You can pick up a 4K steelbook, available with two different covers, or stick to a Blu-ray or standard DVD.
David Dastmalchian is set to play M. Bison in the upcoming live-action Street Fighter movie.
Deadline reports that Dastmalchian, who played Thomas Schiff in The Dark Knight, Kurt and Veb in the Ant-Man franchise, Abra Kadabra in the CW's The Flash, and Polka-Dot Man in The Suicide Squad, has secured his biggest role to date, playing Street Fighter’s veteran dictator bad guy.
M. Bison was of course played by the late Raúl Juliá in the infamous 1994 Street Fighter film, which also starred Jean-Claude Van Damme as Colonel Guile and Kylie Minogue as Cammy.
Legendary declined to comment.
In Capcom's Street Fighter video games, M. Bison runs Shadaloo, the criminal organization behind most of the bad things that happen in the ongoing storyline. M. Bison himself is typically an ultra powerful final boss character who wields Psycho Power to destroy any who get in his way. He was rock hard in Street Fighter 2, although has calmed down a bit in the years since.
The Street Fighter movie cast is starting to take shape, with many of the key roles now announced. Rapper Curtis Jackson, aka 50 Cent, is set to play boxer Balrog, Aquaman star Jason Momoa is Blanka, Noah Centineo is Ken, WWE superstar Roman Reigns is Akuma, and Andrew Koji is Ryu. Callina Liang is Chun-Li. Guile is yet to be cast (perhaps the hair is proving to be a sticking point). The movie itself is set for launch on March 20, 2026.
Hollywood’s pursuit of video game adaptations has seen enormous success, with the likes of A Minecraft Movie and The Super Mario Bros. Movie bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars at the box office, so it's no surprise to see Legendary take Street Fighter on. The hope is it outperforms the 1994 effort, which is considered by many to be among the worst video game films of all time.
Photo by Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images.
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
With Amazon Prime Day 2025 officially locked in for July 8–11, most of us are eyeing tech deals and early access offers, but the new Prime for Young Adults membership feels like the ultimate deal. Honestly, I wish I still qualified for it.
Prime for Young Adults is Amazon’s refreshed membership tier for anyone aged 18 to 24, or a student. At just $7.49/month or $69/year, 50% off the standard $14.99 Prime price, it delivers everything you'd expect from a full Prime membership with no concessions. It's also $0 for the first six months.
That includes Prime Video with all its movies, shows, and Amazon Originals (Reacher, Fallout, The Boys, etc), its superfast free delivery (same-day, one-day, two-day), and Prime Gaming featuring monthly games, and even a complimentary Twitch Channel subscription.
There’s also ad-free music through Amazon Music, thousands of eBooks and comics via Prime Reading, unlimited photo storage with Amazon Photos, and access to exclusive sales and early product drops.
One underrated perk is the inclusion of Grubhub+, giving members $0 delivery fees on eligible orders from local restaurants, a $120/year value bundled in at no extra cost. And if you’re travelling or commuting this summer, fuel savings of $0.10 per gallon (or $1 off per gallon during select promo periods) are available at BP and Amoco stations nationwide.
The second big hidden bonus is on cashback. As standard in Prime memberships, subscribers can get 5% cashback on particular categories like tech, beauty, healthcare, and clothing. During Prime Day, however, that cashback amount is doubled to a whopping 10%.
Signing up is straightforward: if you’re in school, a .edu email works. If you’re not, just verify your age with a government-issued ID. Either way, you’ll start with a generous six-month trial, no strings attached. Free stuff? Now that's a proper Prime Day deal.
Ben Williams – IGN freelance contributor with over 10 years of experience covering gaming, tech, film, TV, and anime. Follow him on Twitter/X @BenLevelTen.
Amazon kicked off many of its device deals early this year, but there has been one significant exclusion in the lead-up to Prime Day: Kindles. The good news is that the retailer has released a sneak peek for the upcoming sale and confirmed that both the latest Kindle and Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition will be up to 25% off.
While that doesn't necessarily mean that both the Kindle and Kindle Paperwhite will be 25% off, we can assume that at least one of those devices will be. Amazon doesn't offer Kindle deals very often, so any confirmation that a price cut will be coming is good news for anyone looking to pick up a new reading tablet at a discount.
Kindle Deals to Expect on Prime Day 2025
As mentioned, Amazon confirmed that at least two Kindle models will be discounted during Prime Day by up to 25%. Considering neither of these devices have ever dropped by this big of a margin before, I'd guess that it will be the standard Kindle that getting the full 25% off rather than the Kindle Paperwhite.
The lowest price the Kindle Paperwhite has ever been was $130 during Black Friday 2024. So if the 25% discount is applied to that, it would be a new low price at $120. The standard Kindle has dropped all the way down to $85 before, so a full 25% discount would only drop that price another $3 and seems much more likely.
While Amazon has only called out two Kindle devices, it's possible that there will be additional deals when the sale actually starts. We've seen a few different discounts on these reading tablets in 2025 so far that seem likely. First, there's the Kindle Paperwhite Colorsoft, which received its first major discount during the Amazon book sale in April. There's also the Kindle Paperwhite Kids Edition, which has had a few ongoing promotions throughout the year so far.
Amazon already has early book deals
If you don't want to wait for Prime Day to start browsing book deals, the good news is that there are already quite a few early discounts worth shopping right now. In addition to some popular box sets hitting new all-time lows, Amazon is also running its usual promo on both Audible and Kindle Unlimited. Here's a look at some of the deals available right now.
Amazon just gave a glimpse about what to expect from Prime Day 2025, but with few details of actual products and prices. While we can't really discern how the deals will be this year based on this press release, what Amazon didn't include is very telling: There's absolutely no mention of discounts on video games or gaming accessories on this list.
That doesn't necessarily mean there won't be deals on games and accessories, but it definitely isn't a good sign going into the sale. We've generally come to expect that Prime Day is a good time for gamers to find savings on physical games, hardware, and peripherals, so it's a pretty big letdown to see almost every category except gaming featured in Prime Day's best deals teaser post.
Will Amazon Have Gaming Deals on Prime Day?
Although it's true that Amazon doesn't feature a single category that mentions video games, consoles, or accessories, it did include a product image that features at least some hope that price cuts will appear. Under the Devices and Tech deals section, the photo above is included with a controller and a Switch Lite. This is potentially misleading due to Amazon's ongoing issues with Nintendo products, but it could still be a sign that we will see some discounts during the shopping event.
With higher tariffs set to resume in August, Prime Day is potentially the last big sales event where shoppers will be able to acquire gaming accessories for reasonable prices. If Amazon decides to completely ignore the category, it's possible that the best time to buy things like controllers, headsets, and consoles has already passed us by.
The lack of any mention of any video game discounts whatsoever is also concerning. Video game prices have already been on the rise and sales events like these are usually when people look to buy at a discount. With major companies like Nintendo and Xbox already raising prices, a lack of video game deals on Prime is potentially a precursor of what's to come later in the year for Black Friday.
The Nintendo and Steam Summer Sales Are Live Now
Despite Amazon's omission of gaming discounts, two other big sales are going on right now that are worth mentioning. Both the Steam Summer Sale and the Nintendo Summer Sale are live with some of the biggest discounts of the year so far. These sales run right up against Prime Day this year, so there's still some time to take advantage of the savings before they end.
If you're an anime fan, Crunchyroll is the best streaming platform out there. With just one subscription, you can instantly gain access to over 1,000 different anime series. In a time when anime has never been more popular, Crunchyroll allows you to catch new and popular shows like Solo Leveling while also keeping up with the biggest anime in the world like One Piece. Check out our full rundown of Crunchyroll as of July 2025, in addition to a free trial that allows you to try out the service for one week.
Does Crunchyroll Have a Free Trial?
Yes, Crunchyroll does offer a free streaming service trial. When you are ready to sign up for a plan, you can head over to the Crunchyroll Premium page and score a free seven-day trial on any of the three premium subscription options. This includes the Fan, Mega Fan, and Ultimate Fan tiers. Once your one week free trial ends, your subscription will automatically begin for the monthly price of your plan.
What Is Crunchyroll? The Anime Streaming Service, Explained
The service is available for free with ads on select series and episodes, but Crunchyroll has slowly rolled back the number of anime you can watch without a Premium subscription. Just recently, almost all episodes of One Piece were made exclusive to Premium members only. Still, some months have a decent selection of free options.
How Much Does Crunchyroll Cost?
Each Crunchyroll Premium tier is priced $4 apart. The Fan tier is set at $7.99/month, the Mega Fan tier is $11.99/month, and the Ultimate Fan tier is set at $15.99/month. The last time Crunchyroll increased prices was in May 2024, with only the Mega Fan and Ultimate Fan tiers affected.
What Crunchyroll Premium Tiers Are There?
Once again, Crunchyroll has three different pricing options for Premium members: Fan, Mega Fan, and Ultimate Fan. All anime is available across each of the tiers, so you won't need to worry about missing out on certain series if you do not subscribe to the highest tier.
Fan Subscription - $7.99 per month
To break down the tiers, Fan is the standard Crunchyroll Premium membership, offering the entire Crunchyroll anime library ad-free. You can actively stream on one device at a time, and you'll also recieve a 5% discount off select products at the Crunchyroll Store.
Mega Fan - $11.99 per month
Mega Fan is the most popular tier, with support for up to four different streams concurrently. This tier also unlocks offline viewing, so you can download episodes of any anime and watch them even if you do not have access to the internet. Mega Fan also gives you the Crunchyroll Game Vault, a selection of free games you can download to your mobile device. You'll also recieve a 10% discount at the Crunchyroll Store, up from the Fan tier's 5% discount, with free shipping on orders over $50.
Ultimate Fan - $15.99 per month
Finally, Ultimate Fan is the last tier Crunchyroll offers. All perks from the Mega Fan plan carry over, except you can now stream on up to six different devices at a time. Additionally, your Crunchyroll Store discount is moved to 15%, with early access to deals like Manga Madness and free US shipping on orders. Lastly, active subscribers will receive an exclusive swag bag after 12 consecutive months of subscription.
What's New on Crunchyroll - Spring 2025 Simulcasts
One of the best features of Crunchyroll's Premium Tier is same-day simulcasts. New anime episodes that otherwise air exclusively on local Japanese stations promptly make their way to Crunchyroll for global audiences. While some of these simulcasts are available for free, the vast majority of new releases are behind that Premium paywall.
So, what's airing now? The summer 2025 anime season is kicking off this month, with upcoming higlights like Dan Da Dan Season 2, Kaiju No. 8 Season 2, and Nyaight of the Living Cat. Other anime airing right now include Anne Shirley and, of course, One Piece, which returned after a six-month hiatus. You can check out the full release calendar on the Crunchyroll site.
How to Watch Crunchyroll - Available Platforms
Crunchyroll is available on almost every platform out there. You can watch anime on the official website, or on your mobile device with official apps for iOS, Android, Amazon Fire, and Samsung Galaxy. Additionally, the streaming service is available on gaming consoles like Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X|S. You can also use any media player like Apple TV, Google TV, Roku TV, and more to access the service.
Some deals just hit right, and today’s picks are genuinely worth a look. Assassin’s Creed: Shadows is down to $49.99 in its Limited Edition, M3GAN 2.0’s steelbook bundle is up for pre-order, and the WOWBOX drawer organizers are just $15.99 for a 32-piece set. Add in a reliable Coke Zero 12-pack deal and a surprisingly good rechargeable neck fan for $13.49, and it’s shaping up to be a smart day to grab a few things you’ll actually use.
TL;DR: Deals For Today
There’s more, too. The Silmarillion deluxe illustrated edition is back in stock for under $83, and some early Prime Day offers are already rolling out. Audible Premium Plus is just $0.99 for three months, Kindle Unlimited is free if you’ve got Prime, and young adults can still claim six months of Amazon Prime at no cost. If you’ve been holding off, these are the kinds of practical, high-value deals that make it worth jumping in early.
Coke Zero Sugar 12 Pack
Even if you change your mind and don't want to subscribe and save, you can still get this great deal on Coke Zero when you purchase. It's Coke with zero sugar, and there's 12 cans that you can drink out of and recycle (thumbs up).
Assassin's Creed: Shadows Limited Edition (PS5)
Assassin’s Creed Shadows finally delivers the long-awaited leap into feudal Japan, and it doesn’t waste the opportunity. This Amazon-exclusive Limited Edition includes the full game plus the Sekiryu Character Pack, and it's now down to $49.99—29% off the original $69.99 price. You’ll switch between Naoe, a nimble shinobi, and Yasuke, a powerhouse samurai, across a moody and expansive Sengoku-era Japan. We praised the game’s dynamic environments, more focused pacing, and demanding combat. It doesn’t reinvent the series, but it smartly trims the bloat while offering rich stealth and action-driven storytelling. At this price, it’s a sharp buy for any AC fan.
M3GAN 2.0 - Limited Edition Steelbook (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital)
M3GAN 2.0 dials up the chaos and trades in some of the original’s horror flair for a louder sci-fi action vibe. The Limited Edition Steelbook packs in 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and Digital formats for $37.99, with a pre-order guarantee that locks in the best price. While we noted the sequel stumbles trying to balance satire and spectacle, M3GAN still steals the spotlight with her savage wit and unpredictable presence. It may not reinvent the killer robot genre, but if you’re in for stylish carnage and sharp-edged commentary, this edition delivers plenty of polished personality for the price.
WOWBOX 32 PCS Clear Plastic Drawer Organizer Set
For $15.99, this 32-piece WOWBOX drawer organizer set is an easy win for cutting clutter across any room. You get four sizes of clear black bins, perfect for separating everything from office supplies to cosmetics and kitchen tools. The plastic is sturdy enough to handle daily use without cracking, and the stackable design lets you double your storage without taking up more space.
Tunise Rechargeable Portable Neck Fan
It's a fan that you don't have to hold because it sits comfortably around your neck. This is such a cool and handy product for under $15, especially if you're like me and get warm at the thought of some sunshine.
The Silmarillion Deluxe Illustrated by the Author
I can't describe how much I need this work of art. This edition of the Silmarillion arrives in a deluxe stamped clothbound hardcover edition housed in a custom slipcase and lavishly illustrated with over 50 color pieces by J.R.R. Tolkien himself. This collector's version presents the complete text in two-color print and includes exclusive extras like two fold-out maps of Beleriand, a booklet on the making of The Silmarillion by Christopher Tolkien, and a collectible art card. From the crafting of the Silmarils and Morgoth’s theft, to the fall of Númenor and the forging of the Rings of Power, this volume captures the vast mythological backdrop of The Lord of the Rings. Beautifully quarterbound with foil-stamped black cloth boards, silver-edged pages, and a ribbon marker, it’s a definitive edition for Tolkien devotees.
Amazon Prime Day Is Coming
We're all over Prime Days 2025, and some deals are going live now. For more information about the event and an inside scoop on hot deals and top tips, check out our Prime Day hub.
6 Months Free Amazon Prime For Young Adults
This one is a no-brainer. If your 18-24, snap up this 6-months free deal for Amazon Prime. It includes the free and fast delivery Amazon is known for alongside unlimited streaming, free delivery on GrubHub+, free Prime games every month and loads more.
3 Months for $0.99 Audible Deal
Audible’s doing that 99c a month deal again for Premium Plus, and it’s a steal. Amazon Prime Members get three months free, so make sure to check for an active subscription before looking for this deal. You get three audiobooks to keep, full access to the big library, and it works even if you’ve had a sub before as long as it’s not active now. I just logged in, saw the banner, and grabbed it. Sunrise on the Reaping is already in my library, and I’m eyeing that massive new Sanderson one next. Less than three bucks for all that? Easy win.
3 Months Free Kindle Unlimited
I’ve never really stuck with audiobooks before, but this Kindle Unlimited deal finally got me into them properly. Right now you can get three months free if you’ve got Prime, and it works on your phone or tablet, not just a Kindle. I gave it a go, downloaded a couple of books, and now I’ve actually started finishing them while I’m out walking or doing stuff around the house. It’s made getting through my backlog way easier and I didn’t have to pay a thing to try it. If you’ve been on the fence, this is a solid excuse to dive in.
Pokémon TCG Price Comparison
Some of the pricing here by Amazon is insane, but there's some deals to be had when comparing these products to TCG Player. For example, Prismatic Evolutions Super-Premium Collection is a massive 56% below market value, so go with Amazon on that one. On the other end of the scale, TCG Player has Cynthia’s Garchomp ex Premium Collection at a massive 48% below Amazon's current price, which is very close to MSRP. I've compared all the prices in the carousel above, but another pro tip is clicking through to eBay to see if there's any new bargains to be had.
This Weeks Pokémon Card Crashers and Climbers
I’ve been keeping a close eye on the Pokémon TCG market this month, and we’re seeing two very different stories unfold. On one side, Surging Sparks cards are going through a steep correction.
On the other hand, Crown Zenith cards are showing early signs of what could be a long-term value surge. The bottom line? If you're a collector or investor, now is the time to buy into both.
I’m picking up what I can from both sets. The current dip in Sparks is a glimmer of hope for long-suffering 2024-2025 collectors. And Crown Zenith is a train I want to be on before it leaves the station.
Pokémon TCG Classic
The Sam's Club Pokémon TCG Classic deal is back, and it's massively undercutting other big box retailers and the secondary market. Just for comparrison, the top four cards from this set, Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur and Mewtwo, are worth the same price as this discounted offer. This deal is well worth it and should be snapped up as soon as possible.
Mega Evolution Pokémon Cards Are Climbing
I can't believe the X Y era of Pokémon cards came out 12 years ago, but it was an amazing era for the TCG introducing the Mega Evolution mechanic. Mega's will be returning later this year with the start of the Mega Evolutions era and the end of Scarlet and Violet, so snapping up these top Mega cards before prices go even higher is a wise move. We know how it'll play out, no one will be able to grab the new sets at launch, then the nostalgia will kick in and these cards will skyrocket. Just the Charizards and Rayquazzas alone are worth a look.
Magic: The Gathering Price Comparison
MTG doesn't seem to be struggling to keep up with demand despite it being one of the biggest trading card games on earth, but that doesn't stop big box retailers getting cheeky when they notice a peak in demand. Like with Pokémon TCG, i've gone through the majority of MTG stock on Amazon and compared their pricing to market values on TCG Player. The Theros Beyond Death booster made me spit out my tea. Amazon is listing a single booster for $378.08, but these can be picked up any day of the week for $5.59 on TCG Player. Go figure. Another big difference is Marvel's Spider-Man - Play Booster Box. Amazon has their preorder price guarantee on this, but it's still 17% cheaper to preorder on TCG Player.
This Weeks MTG Crashers and Climbers
As we covered in our recent synergies feature, Harmonic Prodigy gives double Wizard triggers – nice! That means it's gone up by 118.70% in the past month (246.76% in three) – not so nice!
That's good for those that own the card, not so good for those who are looking to pick it up standalone. Still, market is still just $12.75 right now, so it could be a lot worse.
Moving away from Vivi, Tifa’s getting some love from Bristly Bill, Spine Sower. This Outlaws of Thunder Junction card can help power up our martial artist heroine, but at a cost of almost $40 now.
Another nifty synergy that's climbing is Perch Protection. This Instant has climbed from a dollar to almost $6, since it handily ties into Chocobo decks.
If you’re sensitive to light while sleeping, this 3D contoured eye mask from WAOAW might be worth trying. It’s designed with deeper eye cavities so there’s no pressure on your lids, and the wide, adjustable strap helps it stay put without pulling at your hair. The material is soft and breathable, and it comes with earplugs and a travel pouch, which makes it a handy option for travel or quick naps.
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.
You probably don't think of Pokémon when asked to name notoriously challenging games. Despite having a complex competitive meta, the campaigns of Pokémon games have been accused of being too easy for years now, especially in more recent games. As a result, fan communities have come up with various voluntary, restrictive challenges to make the game more difficult, such as the many variations of the Nuzlocke challenge.
But there's one fan-created challenge mode that's so difficult it had never been beaten... until now. It's the Super Kaizo Ironmon challenge, and it's just been defeated after over a year and thousands of attempts by hundreds of community members.
The Super Kaizo IronMon challenge was created by streamer iateyourpie, who came up with it in 2024. It builds off of the IronMon challenge and its past variations, which iateyourpie created a few years before that, and which was already a difficult way to play Pokémon.
The standard IronMon challenge includes rules such as required use of a randomizer, all enemy trainer and wild Pokémon levels increased by 50%, a requirement that if a Pokémon faints, it cannot be used anymore, and a rule that you can only catch OR kill one Pokémon per route — no grinding wild encounters for EXP.
Then, there's the Ultimate IronMon rules, which add more restrictions such as only allowing six Pokémon to be obtained during the run total, not letting you leave a Gym once you enter until you've beaten it, and only allowing players to enter a dungeon one time.
And then on top of that there's Kaizo IronMon, which adds rules like only one Pokémon being allowed to be used at a time, only allowing players to catch Pokémon up to four levels higher than the highest Pokémon on their team, prevents killing any wild Pokémon at all, and bans all sorts of helpful items, abilities, moves, and Pokémon.
Super Kaizo IronMon takes literally all of those rules, and for some unhinged reason, adds even more. It require a ROM patch to give trainers smart AI and held items, and gives Gym Leaders full teams of six, making them far more difficult than normal. It forces players to "pivot" to a new Pokémon midway through the game, and has restrictions as to how that Pokémon can be chosen. It bans even more moves and items, and has various requirements for different versions of Pokémon that restrict certain areas such as the Trick House in Pokemon Emerald, the S.S. Anne in FireRed and LeafGreen, and Amity Square in Pokémon Platinum.
So, yeah, maybe no shocker that this took so long to beat, huh? But streamer Reimi has finally managed to do it after an eye-popping 8,502 attempts. The winning run, which concluded this past Friday, took place on Pokémon FireRed. Because it's a randomizer, any Pokémon can appear anywhere, so Reimi's starter Pokémon choice was between a Krabby, a Weedle, and a Blissey. Unshockingly, Reimi went with the Blissey, which became his main fighter for the whole first half of the run.
But because of the pivot rule, Reimi had to swap main Pokémon halfway through the game. He was allowed to catch three different Pokémon from one specific area to choose from, and ultimately settled on a Crobat nicknamed Heskey that evolved from... Ivysaur (it's a randomizer!). Reimi's initial reaction to the evolution on screen was, "That's at least something," but that something turned into a whole heck of a lot as the run continued.
It all culminated in a nervewracking final battle against Blue with Heskey at level 90 and equipped with Earthquake, Sludge, Aerial Ace, and Thunderbolt. In this randomized version, Heskey took out Blue's Camerupt easily with a one-shot Earthquake, and a Parasect with Aerial Ace. Parasect left a nasty partying gift in the form of Flame Body burning Heskey, only for Blue to send out a second Parasect with Acid Armor. Heskey still managed to take it out a single shot with Sludge after healing the burn, and Blue sent out his ace next: a level 95 Quagsire. But Heskey dispatched THAT in one shot too, with a critical hit Earthquake.
Next up was a level 86 Rayquaza, of all things, which proved trickier. Heskey had to slowly chop its health down with Sludge, and while he managed to poison it, Blue kept using Full Restores and Rayquaza kept using Refresh to negate Heskey's efforts. At one point, Reimi had to use the one Full Restore in his bag just to keep Heskey alive, despite wanting to save it for a potential Dynamic Punch later in the fight. Eventually, Rayquaza dropped, leaving Poliwrath. Three attacks later, Heskey finished the job, and Reimi became the first person ever to finish Super Kaizo IronMon.
So what's Reimi doing now that Super Kaizo IronMon has been conquered? He's... still playing it. At the time this piece was written, Reimi was just outside of Viridian City with a level 39 Tentacruel named Squidward.
Reimi's victory will likely pave the way for more wins down the road, but iateyourpie's disclaimer on the Super Kaizo IronMon rules page, "This is not meant for everyone," certainly rings true given how ridiculous it was just to get one person to reach the end of the challenge exactly one time.
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.
Summer has arrived, and what better way to enjoy it than staying in an air conditioned room to check out new anime? Some shows, like One Piece, will continue airing through the next months, but most standard-length shows, like My Hero Academia: Vigilantes, have wrapped up to make way for the summer anime season.
I subscribe to Crunchyroll, which streams most new anime almost immediately after it airs live in Japan. Most other streaming services, aside from occasionally Hulu, can't say the same. As we head into a new season, I’ve broken down every anime the site will simulcast in July.
New Anime Simulcasts in July: Highlights on Crunchyroll
Dan Da Dan Season 2
Premieres July 3
The alien- and demon-hunting duo returns for a new season on July 3. Like the first season, the first three episodes of Dan Da Dan Season 2 were shown in theaters earlier in June as “Dan Da Dan: Evil Eye,” but the full season will run for 12 episodes. Expect an unbelievable amount of innuendos and, hopefully, an opening theme as catchy as Season 1.
My Dress-Up Darling Season 2
Premieres July 5
There’s a lot of action on this list, so here’s something a little more lighthearted to look forward to. My Dress-Up Darling is returning for Season 2 three afters after it originally aired and off the heels of the manga’s final chapter. IGN’s review of the first season highlights the sweetness of the series' “fledgling romance,” but also highlights how the show “runs through the difficulties and joys of constructing a costume from scratch.”
Gachiakuta
Premieres July 6
Bones Studio stays busy. Before the final season of My Hero Academia, we’re getting a new anime from the studio based on Kei Urano’s dark fantasy manga. Directly translated as “legit trash,” Gachiakuta takes place in a world where the wealthy literally float above the masses. The story follows Rudo, a young boy whose wrongful conviction for murder leads him to “The Pit.”
Nyaight of the Living Cat
Premieres July 6
OLM, the studio behind most of the Pokémon anime and the 1997 version of Berserk, is animating one of the more unique manga from the past decade. Nyaight of the Living Cat takes place in an apocalyptic world where people get turned into… you guessed it, cats. The comedy-horror series will also be featured in a Dead By Daylight collab, with some quirky cosmetics releasing on the same day as the anime's premiere.
Dr. Stone Season 4, Part 2
Premieres July 10
Dr. Stone is returning for the second part of its final season. Season 4, also known as Science Future, is planned to wrap up in three parts, making this essentially “Act 2” of a three-act season. Unlike, say, Attack on Titan, Dr. Stone’s final season will air pretty much back-to-back, with each “part” containing a full 12 episodes. You’re basically getting three full seasons.
Kaiju No. 8 Season 2
Premieres July 19
Another breakout anime from 2024, Kaiju No. 8 follows a man who, after giving up his dream of joining humanity's Defense Force, accidentally becomes the type of demon he dreamed of fighting. IGN’s review describes how the first season “delivers a consistent flow of sci-fi monster-fighting splendor while taking ample time to capture the contours of its main cast, raising the stakes for Season 2.” Well, that Season 2 is almost here, premiering on July 20.
Apocalypse Bringer Mynoghra: World Conquest Starts with the Civilization of Ruin
Arknights: RISE FROM EMBER
Betrothed to My Sister's Ex
Clevatess
Cultural Exchange with a Game Centre Girl
DAN DA DAN Season 2
Dealing with Mikadono Sisters Is a Breeze
Dekin no Mogura: The Earthbound Mole
Detectives These Days Are Crazy!
Dr. STONE SCIENCE FUTURE Cour 2
Gachiakuta
Grand Blue Dreaming Season 2
Hotel Inhumans
I Was Reincarnated as the 7th Prince So I Can Take My Time Perfecting My Magical Ability Season 2
Kaiju No. 8 Season 2
KAMITSUBAKI CITY UNDER PRODUCTION
Let's Go Karaoke!
Lord of Mysteries
My Dress-Up Darling Season 2
Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show
New Saga
Nyaight of the Living Cat
Onmyo Kaiten Re:Birth Verse
Private Tutor to the Duke's Daughter
Rascal Does Not Dream of Santa Claus
Reborn as a Vending Machine, I Now Wander the Dungeon Season 2
Rent-a-Girlfriend Season 4
Ruri Rocks
Scooped Up By an S-Ranked Adventurer
See You Tomorrow at the Food Court
Secrets of the Silent Witch
Solo Camping for Two
Takopi's Original Sin
The Rising of the Shield Hero Season 4
The Shy Hero and the Assassin Princesses
The Water Magician
Toilet-bound Hanako-kun Season 2
Turkey! Time to Strike
Watari-kun's ****** Is About to Collapse
Welcome to the Outcast's Restaurant!
With You and the Rain
More Anime Will Go Straight to Streaming Elsewhere
While Crunchyroll may be the go-to site for simulcasts, more and more streaming services are producing and licensing their own anime. As such, plenty of new series will be heading straight to streaming on other services.
In July, Netflix is getting Sakamoto Days Part 2 as well as Leviathan, an anime adaptation of the Scott Westerfeld novel. Meanwhile, Prime Video will be streaming City the Animation, from the studio behind Violet Evergarden and Fullmetal Alchemist.
It’s hard to look at the current-generation gaming hardware and not feel like we’re in the quiet before the storm. Because while the PS5 Pro just came out last year, and Microsoft just had a vague tease of its next consoles, it still feels like we’re sitting at the end of a generation. But there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.
We got a chance to sit down with Mark Cerny, lead architect for the PS5 and PS5 Pro, and Jack Huynh, AMD’s SVP for Computing and Graphics, to talk about graphics tech. While they wouldn’t go so far as confirming the PS6 is on the way, they’re definitely thinking about it. Either way, we can’t talk about graphics technology in consoles without acknowledging where things are for graphics cards – because a lot has changed since the PS5 came out back in 2020, thanks to AI.
A Disappointing Graphics Generation?
It’s an interesting time to think about future graphics technology. We’re fresh off of both Nvidia Blackwell and AMD RDNA 4 cards hitting the market earlier this year, and while both of these graphics architectures are very powerful, raw performance improvements have been lackluster. For instance, even though the Nvidia RTX 5090 now consumes up to 580W, up from 450W from the RTX 4090, my testing only showed an improvement of around 10-25% in most games.
That’s definitely better, but not the substantial GPU performance improvement we’ve come to expect every couple of years. AMD fared a little better, with the RX 9070 XT being about 17% faster than the RX 7900 XT, but at a lower price – though that lower price didn’t last long before retailers jacked it up. I’ve talked to both AMD and Nvidia about this, and both manufacturers tell me the same thing: It’s getting harder to shrink the manufacturing process and add more transistors, so software is the way to improve performance.
Both GPU manufacturers are leaning heavily into their software suites. With the RTX 5090, Nvidia launched its DLSS 4 software suite, which was headlined by the controversial Multi-Frame Generation, or MFG. Likewise, AMD debuted the RX 9070 XT with FSR 4, which implemented AI-powered upscaling for the first time in an AMD GPU, along with improved frame generation. Love it or hate it, frame generation is now a standard feature for graphics hardware.
It’s not hard to see the appeal, after all. With the click of a button, you can get your graphics card to introduce AI-generated frames to provide a higher frame rate, and who doesn’t want more frames? Like most things, though, there’s a catch.
Frame Generation essentially works by holding a frame in the render queue while an interpolated frame is inserted between the “real” frames. This can introduce visual artifacts, but the bigger problem is that it necessarily adds latency. These are both huge issues, but they can both be improved by having a higher starting frame rate. As such, I wouldn’t recommend enabling frame generation unless you’re already getting 45-60fps before frame generation.
It’s easy to take that advice and run with it if you’re installing one of these GPUs into a gaming PC, but the next generation of consoles will likely be running on GPUs that will support frame generation, and gamers will likely have much less control over what features they’re going to use.
AI In Gaming Is Only Just Beginning
The PS5 Pro has already broken the seal on implementing AI in console hardware. That mid-generation console introduced PSSR, or Playstation Spectral Super Resolution, Sony’s version of AI-powered upscaling. That was just the beginning, though. Cerny has already come out and said that PSSR was the beginning of what would become Project Amethyst – a partnership with AMD to make game graphics better for everyone, which would of course include Microsoft.
You see, PSSR could only do so much on the limited hardware of the PS5 Pro. Because it needed to maintain compatibility with current-generation PS5 games, the GPU is still largely using RDNA 2 – though custom RDNA hardware was added to assist with AI performance. Still, most of the work of PSSR is still done locally on the shader core rather than being handed off to a Tensor unit or other sort of AI accelerator. That won’t be the case on the next generation of consoles.
According to Cerny, AMD and Sony have co-developed a new algorithm for AI-based upscaling, which is reportedly what the upcoming FSR Redstone, announced at Computex 2025, is at least partially based on. We haven’t seen this new algorithm in person, but it sure sounds like when DLSS 4 changed Nvidia’s AI upscaling algorithm to a Transformer Model, instead of a CNN (Convolutional Neural Network). This new co-developed algorithm is intended to make upscaled games look sharper than they do now, and Team Green's Transformer model is actually pretty good at what it does.
What’s more, AMD’s Jack Huynh let slip that the “machine learning acceleration hardware [we’re] co-engineering on RDNA 5, our next generation, is a direct outcome of the collaboration we’re doing.” We didn’t even know the next AMD GPU generation would be called RDNA 5 until now, let alone that Sony’s collaboration helped to engineer it. Neither Cerny or Huynh would confirm that RDNA 5 “or whatever it will be called” would be what’s actually powering the next-generation PlayStation, but why wouldn’t it at this point?
Even if the PS6 is built on RDNA 4, it’s going to have access to the same AI accelerator cores that allow the RX 9070 XT to use AI upscaling. But Sony isn’t interested in limiting developers to just upscaling. Cerny himself said that “this will support ChatGPT, if that’s what the developers want,” even if that’s not what Sony is actually focusing on. Instead, Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) is focused on making graphics technology better, but of course that would include frame generation.
Frame Gen Is Probably Coming to Next-Generation Consoles
Right now, AI is inherently controversial, but when it comes to graphics technology it offers a tempting opportunity for platform makers. After all, it allows drastic improvements to image quality without the raw performance that would otherwise be necessary. Instead, you can just render at a lower resolution, and then use AI to speed up rendering. While AI models are computationally intense, it takes much less work to have your GPU upscale an image to a higher resolution than to render all those pixels the old-fashioned way.
Frame generation takes that concept to another level, adding entirely new frames to the render queue. You can argue that these frames are artificial, and you wouldn’t even be wrong, but that doesn’t mean this tech isn’t coming to the PlayStation 6 – if that is indeed what Sony’s next-generation console is called. But at least it sounds like it won’t be all-encompassing, at least not to start with.
When we asked Cerny about whether frame generation was coming to the next-gen hardware, despite needing a high frame rate to begin with, he told us that ultimately it comes down to player choice. “[SIE] can support a high frame rate by having a lower resolution render and more aggressive super resolution,” he said. “We can also support a high frame rate by using frame generation. And once that choice is out there, Sony can learn more about what gamers want.”
It’s not the best answer, but it does sound like Sony is going to ultimately leave the option of using frame generation up to the developers. “We provide tools for developers,” Cerny said.
Neither of the next-generation consoles have been announced yet – unless you count the Switch 2 – so we know very little about what they’re going to look like, let alone what AI features they’ll support. But if all of the controversial AI features are coming to consoles, then the console makers are going to need to implement some kind of guardrails to ensure a good experience.
Because, while Nvidia and AMD are shoving software features into a high-end graphics card and letting everyone else figure out what they want to enable, consoles by their very nature are much less customizable. If frame generation is going to be a major PS6 feature, it needs to be optional on the user-side. I’m worried that if developers can just enable it on the back-end, we’re going to get a lot of “60fps” games that feel a lot like 30fps when you sit down to play them.
Jackie Thomas is the Hardware and Buying Guides Editor at IGN and the PC components queen. You can follow her @Jackiecobra
NetEase Games has finally pulled back the curtain on Marvel Rivals Season 3: The Abyss Awakens with a trailer, below, that features major comic book characters like the symbiote king, Knull, as well as Blade and Jean Grey.
The minute-and-a-half-long cinematic trailer was published today, revealing a first look at the upcoming season’s theme, its new playable characters, and even a few symbiote-themed skins. The Season 3 release date is set for July 11, though it remains unclear how some of the content shown in today’s video will roll out.
Where Season 2: Hellfire Gala introduced new Heroes, Ultron and Emma Frost, Season 3: The Abyss Awakens looks like it will finally allow players to control Blade and Jean Grey/The Phoenix. The former is an especially important addition, as Marvel Rivals fans have speculated about when the Daywalker would be added to the roster since teases began during the vampire-themed Season 1. Jean Grey’s inclusion, meanwhile, comes with the surprise that she’ll be able to harness the power of The Phoenix for her telekinetic abilities.
Knull will serve as the big bad this time around, with the Marvel Rivals Season 2 trailer teasing that he’ll be teaming up with Hela to take power.
“In the wake of the Timestream Entanglement, Knull stirs deep within Klyntar’s core, stretching his shadowed hands across the cosmos," an official description for Marvel Rivals Season 3 says. "Power promised by the dark symbiote god beckons the awakening of a new queen. The Phoenix arrives from across the stars to erase Klyntar before the darkness can rise again! However, she'll require unlikely aid from a warrior of two worlds who lives to fight against the tide of night. As the god of the symbiotes and the Phoenix Force collide, will you burn with the light of creation or embrace the darkness?”
Eagle-eyed Marvel Rivals players will also notice what is most likely a collection of new skins set to arrive at some point during Season 3. There is, of course, Hela’s symbiote skin, which Knull gives her early on in the footage, but it’s toward the end that we get a closer look at a few more. Wolverine can be seen sporting a Phoenix Force skin of his own, with Blade and Magik both sporting fiery outfits as well. It’s Jeff the Landshark symbiote skin that has most fans really freaking out, though.
Marvel Rivals Season 3: The Abyss Awakens will introduce at least two new playable Heroes, but it also marks the beginning of a new chapter for the popular Marvel hero shooter experience. Starting July 11, NetEase will begin rolling out new content at a much quicker pace following pressure it received on social media. While past seasons have been approximately three months long, Season 3 will see that schedule change to two-month-long seasons. That means major updates will drop much faster than before without sacrificing any content, as NetEase hopes to keep fans engaged.
Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor with IGN. He's best known for his work at sites like The Pitch, The Escapist, and OnlySP. Be sure to give him a follow on Bluesky (@mikecripe.bsky.social) and Twitter (@MikeCripe).
Days of Play may be over, but that doesn't mean there aren't still some great PlayStation deals to check out. From games to storage, we've searched the internet to find the best PS5 deals available at the moment. These include some great game deals, including discounts on Assassin's Creed Shadows, Monster Hunter Wilds, and more.
With Amazon Prime Day on the horizon, there are bound to be many more PS5 deals popping up once the sale event kicks off on July 8, too. For now, you can see our top picks for the best PlayStation deals today below.
Best PS5 Video Game Deals
If you're looking to fill up your library with some new PS5 games, there are plenty of great discounts available at the moment. One of our favorites is Assassin's Creed Shadows, which has dropped to its lowest price yet at Amazon as an early Prime Day treat.
Woot's 'Video Game Super Sale!' still has quite a few deals to explore as well, including discounts on Monster Hunter Wilds, Sniper Elite: Resistance, and more. These just scratch the surface of what's out there, though. You can see even more of our favorite video game deals above.
Best PS5 SSD Deals
PS5 games continue to grow in size, and with SSD prices climbing, finding the right storage at a great price is more important than ever. We've listed our favorite deals just here, but you should keep checking back here for more updates as often as possible, as new SSD deals pop up all the time.
Keep in mind that not all SSDs are compatible with the PS5. To ensure optimal performance on the best PS5 SSD, you'll need a PCIe Gen4 x4 M.2 drive with a minimum read speed of 5,500MB/s to match the console's internal storage.
Where to Buy: PSVR 2 Horizon Call of The Mountain Bundle
The PSVR2 Horizon: Call of the Mountain bundle is available to buy for $399.99. This package is great value for everything you're getting (the PSVR2 headset and controllers alongside the Horizon: Call of The Mountain game), and pushes the PSVR2 as a strong contender against budget-friendly VR options like the Meta Quest, delivering a premium virtual reality experience without the eye-watering cost.
Sony also gave the PSVR2 a new lease of life by adding PC VR support, allowing owners of the second-generation headset to play PC VR games like Half-Life: Alyx, provided they have the Sony-made adapter.
Where to Buy: PlayStation Portal
The PlayStation Portal has come a long way since its launch. Initial skepticism surrounded the device, but over time it has proven itself as a handy companion for PS5 owners.
Despite stock challenges and surges in demand, a new feature is making the Portal even more appealing to potential buyers. Sony rolled out an update for the PlayStation Portal, currently in opt-in beta, allowing PlayStation Plus Premium subscribers to stream games from the cloud.
This means you can now enjoy a library of games on the go—even if you don’t own a PS5. The update adds another compelling reason to consider the PlayStation Portal.
How to Trade in Your Old PlayStation Consoles
If you're looking to trade in your old PlayStation consoles, you can do so at select retailers in-store and online. Often, the most widely available retailers are GameStop and Best Buy. However, you can also trade your used devices online at retailers such as Amazon and Microsoft.
Some retailers will offer you cash for your used goods, while others may provide you with a gift card that can be used in-store and online. This is a great way to offload your old gaming gear and get some money that you can put towards a newer console and games.
While trading devices in at retailers will often net you the lowest amount for your used consoles, there are also online marketplaces such as eBay, Craigslist, and OfferUp that may fetch higher prices, but you'll often be responsible for packing and shipping costs, or be required to meet someone in person for the transaction. The latter of which poses its own risks.
Robert Anderson is a deals expert and Commerce Editor for IGN. You can follow him @robertliam21 on Twitter.
It’s a new month, so of course a new batch of LEGO sets is now available. This month has way fewer sets than some other months, but what it lacks in quantity it makes up for in quality. We’ve got an adorable How to Train Your Dragon set, an awesome new prequel trilogy-era Star Wars set, a Nike collab, and more. Let’s dive in.
All New LEGO Sets Available Now
For the blurb averse, the side-scrolling catalog above has all the new sets, plus a batch of sets that are newly available on Amazon.
How to Train Your Dragon: Toothless (10375)
The live-action How to Train Your Dragon movie is burning it up at the box office at the moment, which makes it a great time to pick up this absolutely adorable Toothless set. With an 18+ age recommendation it’s technically a LEGO set for adults, but there’s no way kids wouldn’t appreciate this one. The instructions may contain parts that are tricky for kids to piece together, but that’s a good opportunity for some parent-child bonding time. Grab this one if you’re a fan of the movie.
Star Wars: Battle Droid with STAP (75428)
If you ask me, the coolest set for this month is a LEGO Star Wars set that depicts one of the B1-series battle droids that debuted in the 1999 film The Phantom Menace. It comes with a very large buildable droid on a flying STAP speeder, as well as an adorable minifigure version of the set. The droid is sturdy enough for kids to play with, but it also comes with a stand and placard to use it as a display piece.
Marvel - Miles Morales' Mask (76329)
The masks, helmets, heads, and busts LEGO has been making in recent years pretty much all look great. This is one of the coolest ones yet, because it lets you build the mask of one of the best Marvel characters around. Miles Morales has been in tons of awesome stuff lately, including the Spider-Verse movies and Sony-published video games. For more, check out our picks for the best LEGO Marvel sets.
Nike Dunk x LEGO Set (43008)
Nike Dunk is an iconic basketball sneaker that hit the market over 40 years ago. To celebrate the shoe, LEGO has teamed up with Nike to make this pretty awesome looking set. It features the Dunk logo, along with the sneaker itself, plus a brick-built basketball you can actually spin. It also comes with a B’Ball Head minifigure and secret stash compartments hidden in the set, where LEGO says you can store your “championship rings or other essentials.” It also includes extra laces, in case you want to customize the color of your Dunks.
Finally, this Shelby Cobra is available now for LEGO Insiders (sign up here for free), or July 4 for the general public. This is a gorgeous re-creation of an iconic 1960s sports car. It makes a great gift for any car enthusiast in your life, even if that car enthusiast is you. For more, check out the best LEGO car sets.
LEGO GWPs, Offers, and Insider Rewards for July 2025
The LEGO Insiders program, which again is free to join, gets you free stuff if you shop at the LEGO Store. Signing up makes you eligible for free, exclusive Gift with Purchase sets (GWPs) that you get for buying certain sets, as well as special discounts and rewards you can exchange Insider points to receive. Signing up is a no-brainer if you do any shopping at the LEGO Store.
This month’s new GWP is Friendly Snails (40788). It’s a cute li’l 264-piece set that has you build a couple of snails in a tiny garden area. It’s available with purchases of $160 and up between July 1-7. Also still available is the Celebration: Ferris Wheel with Fireworks (40758) set that is included with purchases of $85 and up. That one is available until July 6, and you can get both GWPs if you time your purchases right.
Also this month, Amazon has added listings for a number of sets that were previously exclusive to the LEGO Store. We're talking LEGO Mario Kart. We're talking LEGO Lord of the Rings: The Shire. These are big, awesome sets and now you can get them from Amazon.
Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.
If you're a Marvel fan with an action figure collection, you might want to make some space for a brand-new figure. Juggernaut is getting a Marvel Legends Retro Series Gamerverseaction figure from Hasbro that's inspired by his appearance in the Marvel vs. Capcom games. The figure is currently available to preorder at GameStop for $64.99, after selling out pretty quick at Amazon, and is set to be released this year on October 1. If you've been hoping to add this figure to your collectible collection, now is your chance to get your preorder in before it's all sold out.
As mentioned before, this Juggernaut figure is inspired by the character's look from the Marvel vs. Capcom games. Standing at 8.9 inches tall, he comes with two alternate hands for posing in various fighting stances and a power effect attachment for showing off his skills in a fight, as seen below where Juggernaut smacks down Captain America with a powerful punch.
Juggernaut isn't the only Marvel Legends Gamerverse action figure worth keeping on your radar right now, either. Hasbro has a full lineup of Marvel Legends Gamerverse action figures inspired by Marvel vs. Capcom games that deserve a place in your collection once they're available, including Wolverine vs. Silver Samurai, Psylocke vs. Thanos, and a few more.
If you're hoping to add more action figures to your collectible collection, it's worth keeping Amazon Prime Day on your radar. The big summer sale event kicks off next week on July 8, and is a good opportunity to look around for discounted figures. It lasts four days this year, until July 11, so you'll have plenty of time to seek out some good collectible deals.
Hannah Hoolihan is a freelancer who writes with the guides and commerce teams here at IGN.
Red Dead Online is showing signs of life after Rockstar added new missions to the game, and as you’d expect fans are once again speculating that a next-gen update for Red Dead Redemption 2 is in the works.
Most fans had come to terms with the idea that Rockstar had moved on from Read Dead Online back in 2022, but the developer has unexpectedly released the new Strange Tales of the West update, which includes four new missions and a tease of more to come.
The new trailer, below, is the first Rockstar has released for Red Dead Online since 2021.
Here's the official blurb:
Author Theodore Levin can’t believe the rumors and missives he’s been receiving from the four corners of the American frontier. He’s working on an anthology of these unexplained and weird phenomena and he needs your help investigating the wildest claims that cross his desk.
Strange Tales of the West will require steely resolve and courage in the face of the odd, twisted, and downright supernatural. Embark upon these four new Telegram Missions by picking up Mr. Levin’s letter at any Post Office or from your Camp’s Lockbox, then opening it via your Satchel or launching Telegram Missions from your Player Menu.
The four new missions are Strange Tales of The Plague, Strange Tales of Modern Science, Strange Tales of The Bayou, and Strange Tales of The Wilderness. As reported by @videotechuk_ on X / Twitter, the update adds a new zombie infected mode, the first mission of which takes place in Armadillo.
Rockstar has launched a new zombie "infected" mode in Red Dead Online as part of the new Strange Tales of The West telegram missions
The first mission takes place in Armadillo and the main objective to kill infected and bring them to a wagon as a team.
But what does this mean for Red Dead Online and parent game Red Dead Redemption 2? Given the zombie nature of the update, some are wondering if Rockstar has prepared an Undead Nightmare-style expansion for Red Dead Redemption 2. That would come as a huge shock given the studio’s all-hands-on-deck focus on next year’s Grand Theft Auto VI, but perhaps more likely is a next-gen port.
In May, GameReactor reported that a Nintendo Switch 2 version of Rockstar's Wild West romp was on the way, along with a "next-gen upgrade patch" that would improve the game for current-gen systems (PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and S). Both could be released later in 2025, according to the site.
Fans have long called for an updated version of Red Dead Redemption 2, which is considered a masterpiece. IGN's Red Dead Redemption 2 review returned a 10/10. We said: "Red Dead Redemption 2 is a game of rare quality; a meticulously polished open-world ode to the outlaw era."
For now, Red Dead Online fans are enjoying digging into Strange Tales of the West, which is officially described as Vol.1. This suggests another content drop is coming. Whatever the future holds, it seems Red Dead Online is back from the dead.
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
Microsoft has announced Wave 1 of the Xbox Game Pass July 2025 lineup, which includes Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4, the return of High On Life, and more.
As revealed in a post on Xbox Wire, out today, July 1, is Little Nightmares 2 (Cloud, Console, and PC) across Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard, and the return of Rise of the Tomb Raider (Cloud, Console, and PC), also across Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard.
Tomorrow, July 2, Legend of Mana (Console) and Trials of Mana (Console) enter Game Pass Standard. On July 3, Ultimate Chicken Horse (Cloud, Console, and PC) hits Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard.
Cool cyberpunk action RPG The Ascent (Cloud, Console, and PC) returns to Game Pass on July 8 via Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard. A day later, on July 9, Minami Lane (Cloud, Console, and PC) enters Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass.
Here’s the big one: on July 11 Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 (Cloud, Console, and PC) launches day one on Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass. Members can get up to three days early access starting July 8, including the Doom Slayer and The Revenant playable skaters, with the Deluxe Edition Upgrade.
Moving on to July 15 and we have the return of High On Life (Cloud, Console, and PC) to Game Pass via Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, and Game Pass Standard. The comedy first-person shooter was a smash hit on Game Pass back in 2022, and a sequel is on the way.
Xbox Game Pass Wave 1 July 2025 lineup:
Legend of Mana (Console) – July 2 Now with Game Pass Standard
Trials of Mana (Console) – July 2 Now with Game Pass Standard
Ultimate Chicken Horse(Cloud, Console, and PC) – July 3 Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Standard
The Ascent(Cloud, Console, and PC) – July 8 Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Standard
Minami Lane(Cloud, Console, and PC) – July 9 Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass
High On Life(Cloud, Console, and PC) – July 15 Game Pass Ultimate, PC Game Pass, Game Pass Standard
And finally, Retro Classics has a new batch of games for subscribers. This is Microsoft's collaboration with Antstream Arcade to bring Activision games from the 80s and 90s to Game Pass members.
Cosmic Commuter
Heart of China
Skiing
Solar Storm
Subterranea
As always, a number of games are set to leave Game Pass this month. Members can get a 20% discount to keep the games in their library.
Games leaving Xbox Game Pass on July 15:
Flock (Cloud, Console, and PC)
Mafia Definitive Edition (Cloud, Console, and PC)
Magical Delicacy (Cloud, Console, and PC)
Tchia (Cloud, Console, and PC)
The Callisto Protocol (Cloud, Console, and PC)
The Case of the Golden Idol (Cloud, Console, and PC)
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
Nintendo has finally confirmed the development team behind Donkey Kong Bananza — and as many fans had suspected, the upcoming Switch 2 blockbuster is being made by the team who previously worked on Super Mario Odyssey.
In a presentation attended by IGN ahead of a new Donkey Kong Bananza hands-on preview, Nintendo said that the same staff who worked on Odyssey also developed this new DK title.
The confirmation comes after Nintendo previously held off from stating which of its teams were behind the game, even after Bananza was playable publicly at the Switch 2's global launch tour.
Still, the news will likely come as no surprise. Fans had suspected Odyssey's talented developers were likely working on DK's impressive-looking turn in the spotlight, and had pointed to various links between the two titles — not least their shared focus on the character Pauline — as clues to their creators.
Odyssey, released for Switch in October 2017, was helmed by Super Mario 3D World director Kenta Motokura, and produced by both Super Mario Galaxy director Yoshiaki Koizumi and Super Mario Galaxy 2 director Koichi Hayashida.
Nintendo did not state specifically whether all or only some of the Odyssey team were back for Donkey Kong Bananza — and fans will likely be keen to know about Koizumi's involvement here in particular.
A key figure involved in the creation and promotion of the original Nintendo Switch, Koizumi was surprisingly absent from the announcement of Switch 2. A Nintendo veteran with more than three decades of experience at the company, Koizumi began his career as an illustrator, before rising through the ranks to serve as director on the GameCube's flagship platformer Super Mario Sunshine. Koizumi has continued to work as a key figure on every subsequent 3D Mario game, including as director of Super Mario Galaxy, and then producer for Galaxy 2, 3D Land, 3D World and Odyssey.
Odyssey remains Nintendo's most recent 3D Mario effort, with no suggestion as yet on when the company plans to launch another. Confirmation that Odyssey team members have been busy building Bananza will inevitably spark questions over whether a new 3D Mario game for Switch 2 is also being developed in parallel, or is still further off than some had expected. A closer look at Bananza's staff list and their roles, once the game launches, may provide further clues.
For now, it's simply interesting to note that Nintendo's blockbuster Mario team have built a Donkey Kong game for Switch 2's launch year — a slot that's often reserved for Mario platformers.
As for Bananza's links to Odyssey, the Switch platformer notably reintroduced Pauline as a major Mario character for the first time in years, and cast her as the music-loving mayor of New Donk City who performs the game's toe-tapping Jump Up Super Star! track.
Donkey Kong Bananza launches on July 17, 2025 as this summer's key Switch 2 title from Nintendo, before the arrival Metroid Prime 4: Beyond and Pokémon Legends Z-A later this year.
Tom Phillips is IGN's News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social
If the thermometer hasn't clued you in yet, it's officially July. And you know what that means: a new batch of PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, and PC games is heading our way. This month sees the release of the next big Switch 2 game in the form of Donkey Kong Bananza, plus a Destiny 2 expansion, College Football 26, a new Tony Hawk remaster collection, and a bunch more games besides. Read on to see release dates for all the biggest games and expansions coming out soon (or soonish). Let's have a look.
If you're someone who likes to preorder your games, you can click the links on the platform of your choice to make sure it arrives on launch day.
July 2025 - Video Game Release Dates
July is a good month for anyone who picked up a Nintendo Switch 2 at launch, because Donkey Kong Bananza hits the hybrid system on July 17. (Nintendo also just confirmed it's made by the Super Mario Odyssey team). If you didn't buy the pricy new system, you may be interested in grabbing Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3+4, Grounded 2, or Ninja Gaiden: Ragebound (which has a fantastic demo on Steam). Or, if you're more into relaxing games to chill out while playing, Tales of the Shire is out on the 29th.
Mecha Break - July 1 - (PS5, Xbox, PC)
Harvest Moon: The Lost Valley & Skytree Village - July 3 - (Switch)
College Football 26 - July 7 - 10 (depending on edition) - (PS5, XSX)
Every Day We Fight - July 10 - (PC)
Everdeep Aurora - July 10 - (PC)
Islanders: New Shores - July 10 - (PS5, Xbox, Switch, PC)
The first trailer for The Running Man is here, and it shows Glen Powell in a more faithful adaptation of the Stephen King novel than Arnold Schwarzenegger’s 1987 sci-fi classic.
The trailer, below, shows Glen Powell’s downtrodden Ben Richards enter The Running Man — the biggest TV show in this dystopian America — out of a desperate need for money to help his sick daughter amid a medical crisis. Powell’s employment status is declared “blacklisted” so he’s unable to work. In the Arnie version, Richards is forced into The Running Man as a framed cop.
The nature of the show itself is different, too. Powell’s Richards is hunted by the entire country as he clings desperately to survival and a chance at the huge cash prize. His every move is watched, and indeed we see this in action in the trailer. All Richards needs to do is survive for 30 days and he’s won. Of course, it’s not quite that easy.
This new The Running Man is directed by Edgar Wright of Shaun of the Dead and Baby Driver fame, and you can feel his signature, fast-paced style in the trailer. Wright has spoken of his desire to more faithfully adapt King’s novel, and as a result we have Josh Brolin as Killian, the show’s executive producer, and a separate character (Colman Domingo’s Bobby Thompson) hosting the show itself. Richards has a few choice words for Killian before setting out to participate in The Running Man, and he vows to take his revenge.
The scope of this new The Running Man is different compared to the 1987 film. Powell’s Richards is on the run across the entire country, whereas Arnie’s Richard’s was confined to a closed off play area (packed with fondly remembered boss fights). The trailer teases a fun sequence where Richards runs out an apartment into a corridor while dodging bullets, then slide into an elevator to escape.
Richards is hunted throughout by a singular masked character whose identity remains a mystery, but Entertainment Weekly reported the character's name is McCone and is played by Foundation star Lee Pace.
What we are sure of is The Running Man will see Glen Powell running. A lot. And yes, he takes his shirt off. We eventually see Michael Cera, who played Scott Pilgrim in Wright’s 2010 movie, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, help Richards out by spraying water on an electrified floor. All very video games.
EW reports Cera plays Elton Parrakis from the book. "I think what he does in the movie is a little surprising, maybe from his previous performances," Wright added. "It was such a thrill to be with him and also just to see him and Glen Powell together. They're a very unlikely duo that it was really fun to witness."
The Running Man launches November 7, 2025.
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.
During a presentation right before my roughly two hours worth of hands-on time with Donkey Kong Bananza, Nintendo confirmed what many people suspected since first laying eyes on the upcoming 3D platformer: That it was in fact being developed by the same team that worked on Super Mario Odyssey. And that tracks, because my main takeaway after playing Bananza was that this is the Odyssey formula to a T. The giant open fields with tons of hidden Moon… I mean Bananas to collect, NPCs offering clues on where to find said bananas, the simple puzzles strewn all around that reward exploration and curiosity, the deep moveset with a ton of different mobility options… Odyssey’s fingerprints are all over Bananza.
But while the formula is largely the same, I never got the sense that Bananza was retreading old ground. It turns out that swapping out a mustachioed plumber for a tumbling hairy gorilla is appropriately transformative. Even in just those two hours, I was absolutely enamored with Donkey Kong’s personality, his sheer sense of strength and power, juxtaposed with his surprisingly speedy movement, and the satisfying destructibility of everything around him. As far as first impressions go, this is everything a 3D Donkey Kong game should be.
My demo had me jumping around to several different save files – the first covering the very beginning of the game with DK working in the mines of Ingot Isle. This served as a very basic tutorial covering the multiple ways DK could punch and smash both objects and the environment. It’s a unique but intuitive control scheme: the A button jumps, but then the rest of the face buttons are all punches in different directions. X punches up, Y punches straight ahead, and B punches straight down. This allows you to carve paths through the walls and create tunnels however you wish, with the only restriction being the material that you’re trying to break through. DK is pretty strong on his own, and can smash through dirt and crystal with ease, but sturdier rocks and stones will require him to grab a harder material out of the ground and use as an impromptu pickaxe.
It’s all as fun to perform with a controller as it is to look at. There’s a greatly satisfying and appropriate sense of power as DK is able to just plow through walls, send weaker enemies absolutely careening backwards with a single punch, and slam the ground with devastating impact, leaving craters in his wake. And he’s fast too! Between his already swift running speed, his roll, and his ability to surf on the objects he rips from the ground, DK’s moveset is the perfect blend of power and agility. It’s a super fun set of tools to play around with that feels like a mix of traditional Donkey Kong, plus The Incredible Hulk.
It's a super fun set of tools to play around with that feels like a mix of traditional Donkey Kong, plus The Incredible Hulk.
After finishing up the tutorial in the mines, the next save that I jumped to was set in the Lagoon Layer, which seemed to be the first real level of Bananza. Like Mario Odyssey, there’s a sort of main throughline in each level that takes you through a series of objectives that essentially tells the story of that layer. In the Lagoon Layer, its denizens were suffering from a water shortage thanks to some nasty invaders plugging up their water supply. So the main objective in this area was to essentially get the water flowing again in a very classic “raise the water level” style of platforming stage.
You could simply mainline it by following the exclamation point markers that are easily visible with a simple press of the L button, but much of the joy in DK Bananza is venturing off the level’s beaten path (and literally beating your own path through it.) There’s just a ridiculous amount of stuff to discover even in just the very first level. Bananas are the main collectible, much like Moons in Odyssey, and are generally tied to some sort of minor puzzle or challenge. Like for example, there was one that was in plain sight, but underwater where DK can’t dive down to reach, so I had to instead jump up and crash down with a ground pound to nab it. Others are more complex and have you completing lengthy obstacle courses, and others still were locked behind special hidden platforming or combat-related challenges.
Then there are multiple different types of fossils, which are used as a currency to purchase a variety of cosmetic upgrades, much like the different clothes and hats Mario could buy in Mario Odyssey. There are so many of these hidden all throughout the walls and caves that it honestly was a little bit overwhelming to even think about trying to collect them all, but needless to say, if you’re the type that enjoys collectibles and spending a ton of extra time in a level trying to 100% it, Donkey Kong Bananza will have you covered.
The levels themselves aren't quite as vast as Odyssey's but that's mainly because they're structured very differently.
The levels themselves aren’t quite as vast as Odyssey’s, but that’s mainly because they’re structured very differently. They’re layered on top of each other, with each individual sublayer feeling roughly like the size of a Super Mario Sunshine level. Once you reach the end of that sublayer’s so-called “main quest,” you’ll be able to drop down to the next sublayer, which is still essentially part of the same level. One particular challenge even had me going back up to a previous sublayer so that I could traverse a path that would let me get down to an otherwise inaccessible part of the sublayer I was currently on. As someone who has always preferred the smaller-scale levels of games like Mario 64, Sunshine, and Galaxy, but also still really loved the exploration and sense of discovery in the Kingdoms of Odyssey, this felt like a really great compromise between the two styles of level design. You can also very easily fast-travel between checkpoints of each sublayer, just like you could in Odyssey.
The next two sections were from a fair bit deeper (again, literally) into the game. The first had me exploring a mining town with plenty of minecart rides and lots of opportunities to throw explosive rocks and make things go boom, while the final level was jungle-themed with familiar purple poison lakes all throughout. The big thing that I got to check out in these two final areas, though, were the Bananza transformations. By collecting gold, I could fill a meter in the bottom left of the screen and press R and L together to activate a limited-time Bananza transformation. The Kong Bananza transformation basically just feels like DK on Steroids. He’s bigger, faster, and stronger too, and can pound through walls and enemies that would normally be too tough for normal DK.
The Ostrich Bananza transformation, on the other hand, gives DK the ability to flutter through the air and cross gaps that he normally wouldn't be able to. It’s worth mentioning at this point also that there’s a skill tree, with the player getting a skill point for every five bananas they find. It’s not the most exciting skill tree in the world, with a majority of the skills seeming to just make DK’s already existing skills and stats slightly better, but there are a couple that add new abilities to his repertoire, like double jumping while holding a rock, or being able to drop eggs on enemies from above while in Ostrich form.
I also got to check out Bananza’s two player mode, which amusingly has the second player controlling Pauline in a way very similar to how Mario Galaxy’s Co-Star mode worked. Much like in Galaxy’s coop mode, the second player is able to fire projectiles at enemies, only this time in the form of literal words that she belts out. You can change the power and properties of these words by hovering your cursor over a particular type of material and holding a button to absorb that material. And as you might have guessed, you can make use of the Switch 2 joycon’s unique mouse pointer feature to add some precision to your shots. It’s a mode that seems clearly intended for a parent to play with their young child, or to get someone who’s not into video games to participate, and in that way I think it succeeds, but it’s not a mode that I would ever engage with in any other sort of capacity.
It’s pretty common for me to walk away from a preview event hungry for more, but after my two hours were up with Bananza, I was left with the mightiest of cravings. As someone whose favorite Nintendo mascot is Donkey Kong, this seems to be shaping up to be the 3D Donkey Kong game that I’ve been waiting decades for. For Mario fans still waiting for Nintendo to announce the next major 3D Mario game, Bananza looks set to be a worthy substitute in the meantime.
Mitchell Saltzman is an editorial producer at IGN. You can find him on twitter @JurassicRabbit
The dinosaurs are loose again, because Jurassic World Rebirth is now arriving in theaters. The seventh entry in the long-running dino franchise comes to us from Godzilla and Rogue One director Gareth Edwards, whose trademark sense of scale and spectacle makes him a prime choice for this series. With the first Jurassic World trilogy complete, Rebirth is set to usher in a “new era” of Jurassic.
But today, we want to look back on the series’ history and rank all six previous films from worst to best. This list was based on a vote from IGN’s Jurassic experts, so if you have an issue with it, take it up with the democratic process. Let’s get into it.
6. Jurassic World Dominion
The most recent Jurassic film also has the ignominious honor of being rated the worst. There was a lot of potential for Dominion after the ending of Fallen Kingdom, which teased the human world being invaded by dinosaurs. Instead, Dominion squanders that setup and falls prey to many legacy sequel traps, trying to trade in nostalgia and fan service over storytelling. It also invokes more of the techno-thriller aspects of Michael Crichton’s original novel (good idea) with a subplot about genetically-engineered evil locusts (bad idea). It’s not a complete wash; the chase scene in Malta is fun and there is a surface-level pleasure in seeing the original Jurassic trio of Alan Grant, Ellie Sattler and Ian Malcolm together in the same room again, but overall, it’s just not a great movie. Shoutout to Bryce Dallas Howard for wearing some great plaid shirts, though!
5. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom
Fallen Kingdom is undoubtedly the most divisive entry in the series, with some of our team voting it among the best and others voting it the absolute worst. It evened out to the fifth spot, yet there’s still a lot to recommend here. The dinosaur haunted house gives the back half of the film a delightful Gothic sensibility, the volcano set piece is pretty good, and it at least tries to introduce some new ideas into what had become a stale series premise-wise. That said, the new characters are mostly one-dimensional, the dinosaur auction feels weird given how little money the dinosaurs cost and there not being much elaboration on what the bidders want them for, and many viewers simply couldn’t get behind Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) setting the dinosaurs free at the end, which is perfectly understandable. It’s a weird entry that seems to be a firmly “love it or hate it” affair.
4. Jurassic Park III
The least successful Jurassic film (at the box office, anyway) comes in fourth place, and it’s easy to see why. It’s not a terrible film or anything, but it’s decidedly unambitious, settling for “yet another go around” instead of anything new. Alan Grant and a bunch of new characters are given an excuse to go to the dinosaur island, and they get chased around the dinosaur island until they escape. The end. Still, the movie did include some solid set pieces like the Spinosaurus attack on the river and the pteranodon aviary sequence, both of which were inspired by scenes from the original Crichton novel that never made it into the first film. Plus, Joe Johnston turns in solid journeyman direction and moves things along at a brisk pace. That said, the series definitely needed a fresher take after this one.
3. Jurassic World
That fresher take arrived in Jurassic World, which had perhaps one of the best one-sentence setups of the 2010s: “The park is open.” After all of John Hammond’s failures, someone else took up the mantle and successfully created a Jurassic Park, only for that one to also come crumbling down because of a deep-rooted cynicism that had festered inside of the park’s managers. The Indominus Rex, manufactured to give the park a promotional boost it didn’t need, makes for a great monster that tears out of its cage, setting up a Rube Goldberg plot of toppling dominos that blows up the rest of the park in spectacular fashion. From trained velociraptors hunting alongside motorcycles, to the pteranodons laying siege to the park’s main strip, to the Indominus battling the classic T-Rex in the finale, Jurassic World was full of maximalist blockbuster action and successfully relaunched the franchise.
2. The Lost World: Jurassic Park
The series’ first sequel is also the only one to be helmed by original director Steven Spielberg, who turns in one of the weirdest movies in his filmography. It has some excellent set pieces and plenty of dinosaurs, as well as the welcome return of Jeff Goldblum’s Ian Malcolm, Julianne Moore as new lead Sarah Harding, and the late, great Pete Postlethwaite as big-game hunter Roland Tembo. Despite all this,The Lost World never quite matches the original for sheer inventiveness or emotional resonance. This likely comes down to Spielberg not having the same level of enthusiasm as he did for the previous film, with the studio pressuring both him and Crichton to deliver a sequel to what was at the time the biggest box-office hit in history. Still, it can make for quality viewing, especially when it ends on the T-Rex rampaging through San Diego.
1. Jurassic Park
Did you really think it was going to be anything else? Jurassic Park was unanimously voted as the best film in the series by IGN’s team, and we doubt almost anyone will argue with us. Jurassic Park wasn’t just an excellent summer blockbuster and franchise starter; it was a brilliant science-fiction adventure film that balanced what was at the time cutting-edge visual technology, great character writing and performances, a classic John Williams score and a solid emotional core to deliver one of the most widely beloved movies ever made. It would be the crown jewel of nearly any filmmaker’s career, and yet it stands as one among several of Spielberg’s masterpieces. As much as we enjoy the subsequent entries for all their dino action, Jurassic Park remains a step above its sequels, and we suspect it will stay there for a very long time.
How would you rank the Jurassic Park movies? Vote in our poll and let us know in the comments!
Carlos Morales writes novels, articles and Mass Effect essays. You can follow his fixations on Twitter.
Steam has released a new in-game monitor to help players understand the causes of bad PC game performance.
In a blog post, developer Valve explained that the new performance overlay will show you framerate values, similar to the old FPS counter, "but it can also break out generated frames from DLSS or FSR vs actual game framerate." That's great timing given the new Steam Summer Sale is live.
"It can show you min/max single frame values and a graph of framerate over time," Valve continued. "Additionally, it will show you CPU performance information, GPU performance information, and system memory usage information. These pieces of data can be useful to understand the causes of bad game performance whether that be a slow CPU, GPU, or too high graphics settings that are over-subscribing your video or system RAM."
Here's a screenshot showing all four current options, although note you can only have one of these displaying at any one time — we've compiled them here to make it easier to see what the different settings — FPS Single Value, FPS Details, FPS Details, CPU & GPU Utilization, and FPS, CPU & Ram Full Details — offer:
To enable the new overlay or adjust its size or position, head to Settings->In Game and find the new Performance Overlay section.
Valve said this is "a first step" towards helping Steam users more easily understand their game and system performance, and we can expect additional pieces of data to be added to the overlay going forward.
Steam has since broken that record again logging 41,239,880 simultaneous players, breaking its previous record of 40.2 million players set the weekend before.
And while that number includes idle players — that is, players with Steam open but not necessarily using it — the number of users actively in a game has hit a new record, too, jumping to 13.2 million players.
Valve recently dismissed reports its Steam platform suffered a "major" data hack, confirming there was "NOT a breach" of Steam systems. Given the prolific rise in data breaches and the fact that over 89 million of us have a Steam account, users had good reason to be worried about a possible security compromise.
Vikki Blake is a reporter for IGN, as well as a critic, columnist, and consultant with 15+ years experience working with some of the world's biggest gaming sites and publications. She's also a Guardian, Spartan, Silent Hillian, Legend, and perpetually High Chaos. Find her at BlueSky.
If you're looking for P5X Exchange Codes, IGN's got you covered! In this article, you'll find a list of all the active and working Persona 5: The Phantom X codes in July 2025 that you can redeem for free rewards and bonuses in P5X on PC, iOS, and Android. Note that there are currently no active P5X codes.
Active Persona 5: The Phantom X Codes (July 2025)
There are currently no active Persona 5: The Phantom X codes for the Global server. Seeing as the game has just released in the West, it's likely we'll see at least one new code in the coming days. Stay tuned as we'll update this page as soon as new Exchange Codes are released.
Note that the following codes may work for the Asia versions of P5X (via Eurogamer), but they cannot be redeemed in the Global server:
RACEQUEEN
P5XGRANDOPEN
P5X0418OPEN
P5X2024041810
pancakes
P3R콜라보
P3R聯動開啟
假面役者
天使重生
가면배우
환생천사
All Expired P5X Codes
There are currently no expired Persona 5: The Phantom X codes as of July 2025.
How to Redeem P5X Codes
To redeem P5X codes in Persona 5: The Phantom X, follow the steps below:
Complete Prologue: Discover a Secret World. This takes around 15 minutes after starting the game for the first time.
Open the main menu.
Click on "Exchange Code."
Input your code into the box.
Click on "Confirm."
If your code is valid, you'll obtain your free rewards.
Why Isn't My P5X Code Working?
If the code you're trying to redeem in Persona 5: The Phantom X isn't working, it's likely because of one of three reasons:
The P5X code is expired
There's a typo in the code
The code is region-locked
When inputting a P5X Exchange Code, ensure it's spelled correctly (for example, a zero isn't a capital O, a lowercase L isn't a capital I, etc.) and that there are no spaces before or after the code.
If your P5X code still isn't working after checking for typos, it's more than likely expired and can no longer be redeemed in Persona 5: The Phantom X.
Sometimes, the developer releases codes that can only be redeemed in specific regions, so if you find a code online that you can't redeem in your game, this could also be why.
How to Get More P5X Exchange Codes
To find more Persona 5: The Phantom X codes, the best way is to join the game's official Discord server. Exchange Codes may also be posted on the P5X X account, so we'd recommend turning notifications on for that so you can be notified every time there's a new post in case they're posted there.
Of course, you can bookmark this page too, as we check for new P5X codes regularly and update it each time there's a new code.
What is Persona 5: The Phantom X?
Persona 5: The Phantom X is a gacha spinoff of the popular ATLUS RPG, Persona 5. Like in Persona 5, you attend school and answer classroom questions, forge bonds with characters, and explore various dungeons. You pull for new characters and weapons via gacha banners, which can then be used in combat.
Meg Koepp is a Guides Editor on the IGN Guides team, with a focus on trends. When she's not working, you can find her playing an RPG or cuddling her corgi.
Ever wondered why Clark Kent’s glasses somehow prevent him from being recognized as Superman, despite just being… glasses? It’s a fun question that often comes up whenever a new Superman comes around, and this month’s release of the DC Universe kickstarter is no different. Indeed, official social media posts for the movie have played on this idea, with Rachel Brosnahan (Lois Lane) and Skyler Gisondo (Jimmy Olsen) expressing their confusion when Superman actor David Corenswet takes his glasses off.
But why exactly do the glasses work in this Superman movie? DC Universe steward James Gunn told ComicBook that he has an explanation that is comic book canon: they’re hypno glasses.
“That’s canon in the comics,” Gunn said. “It’s kind of been forgotten but that’s from the comics. I was sitting with Tom King, the comic book writer, and I was like, ‘You know the thing that I just don’t really know how to reconcile in myself is the glasses because the glasses always bothered me as a kid.’ They bothered me because I just don’t have that much suspension of disbelief to believe that.”
Gunn went on to insist that Corenswet did a great job making Clark Kent and Superman look like different people, “even more so” than Christopher Reeve. Reeve’s performance as Superman is often praised for the subtle changes he made to posture and mannerisms as he shifts from playing the tentative reporter and the world’s most powerful superhero.
“You know, they’re two different people even though I think out of all the actors that have played Superman, Corenswet looks the most different as Clark Kent to Superman, even more so than Chris Reeve,” Gunn said. “But he [King] said, ‘You know, there’s an answer for that in the comics, it’s canon that they hypnotize people.’”
The somewhat goofy explanation is in keeping with the tone Gunn’s new Superman is shooting for. Teaser trailers have revealed a number of fun one-liners from Superman, as well as the use of his freeze breath to blow a dog to safety. And, of course, there’s all sorts of co-op punching shenanigans with Krypto the Superdog.
The inevitable next question is, what does Clark Kent look like when he's wearing his hypno glasses? In the same interview, Gunn said the glasses make Kent look like he has a fuller face: "He looks a little bit blockier in my mind when he's got the hypno glasses on."
Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.