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AU Deals: Love is a Battlefield Bargain, Plus Some Nice Prices on the Best AAAs You Must Own

Some sales are good, and some are the kind I instantly DM my dudes about to become The Voice of Unsolicited FOMO. Today’s spread falls firmly into the latter, with discounts on games that blend brilliant design with genuine replay value. There are big-name blockbusters, genre-defining indies, and a few hidden gems that deserve the spotlight.

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I’m using a rusty shiv to cut a 21-candle cake baked for The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay, a mouthful of a stealth shooter that proved movie tie-ins didn’t have to be shovelware. Back in 2004, equipping the goggles and gravel voicebox of Vin Diesel's Furyan felt like nothing else. Unfortunately, the hype surrounding the launch of Halo 2 overshadowed this absolute sleeper hit.

Launch day me was mighty surprised to find that its brand of FPSing was smoother than a drag of KOOL menthols. The eye-shine-assisted stalking was addictive, the melee was raw and responsive, and the world of Butcher Bay oozed menace. This was the kind of slick, confident package that hinted at the brilliance its developers (many of whom would go on to form MachineGames) would later bring to a Wolfenstein reboot. Two decades later, it still stands tall as one of the most atmospheric and inventive licenced games ever made.

This Day in Gaming

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Doom 3 (PC) 2004. Get

- Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay (XB) 2004. eBay

- Hohokum (PS3/4/V) 2014. eBay

Contents

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

On Nintendo Switch, Super Mario RPG remains a comfort-food classic. The original was an unlikely collab between Square and Nintendo that fused turn-based battles with Mario’s charm, and this version keeps that quirky magic alive. Persona 5 Tactica, meanwhile, proves the Phantom Thieves work just as well in grid-based strategy, and the chibi art style is way more endearing in motion than screenshots suggest.

  • Super Mario RPG (-25%) – A$59.90 Square Enix’s charming SNES-era remake with revamped visuals and quality-of-life tweaks. A whimsical turn-based adventure with quirky humour and heartfelt storytelling. Solid deal for both newcomers and nostalgic fans.
  • Catherine: Full Body (-25%) – A$59.80 Atlus’ surreal puzzle-platformer-meets-romance-drama. Navigate tricky block climbs while juggling a love triangle with moral choices. Unique and stylish, it’s a cult classic worth experiencing on Switch.
  • Sonic Frontiers (-40%) – A$59.70 Sega’s open-zone reinvention of the blue blur. Mixes speedy platforming with exploration, combat and surprisingly emotional beats. A generous discount on a bold new era for Sonic.
  • Super Mario Party Jamboree NS2 (-20%) – A$88 The ultimate Switch party game returns with new boards, mini-games and online modes. Perfect for family nights or competitive couch chaos. Rarely discounted this soon after launch.
  • Persona 5 Tactica (-46%) – A$51.70 Atlus’ stylish turn-based tactics spin-off set in the Persona 5 universe. Colourful strategy, sharp writing, and Phantom Thieves flair make this a great grab at under half price.
  • Donkey Kong Bananza (-11%) – A$98 Barrel into jungle platforming fun with DK and friends. Fresh challenges, vibrant worlds, and multiplayer chaos keep the party swinging. A modest saving, but appealing for collectors.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

Over on Xbox Series X, Resident Evil Village takes the Gothic horror of Resident Evil 4 and turns the dial up to eleven with Lady Dimitrescu’s towering presence. Dragon’s Dogma 2 is Capcom’s latest masterclass in emergent open-world chaos, where pawn companions can surprise you with genuinely clever tactics.

  • Battlefield 6 (-19%) – A$89 Massive-scale FPS battles with vehicles, destruction, and team tactics. This recent entry refines the chaos with tighter gunplay and better pacing. Looking great so far.
  • Resident Evil Village (-75%) – A$14.20 A gothic horror rollercoaster blending tense survival, action set pieces, and unforgettable villains. This is an absurdly low price for one of the best modern Resident Evil games.
  • Split Fiction (-16%) – A$59 Narrative-driven mystery with shifting perspectives and puzzle elements. Stylish presentation and clever writing make it a good pick for players who value story above all.
  • Resident Evil 4 (-50%) – A$29.90 Capcom’s masterful remake of its survival-horror classic. Gorgeous visuals, updated controls, and atmospheric design cement its status as one of gaming’s all-time greats.
  • Dragon's Dogma 2 (-55%) – A$48.50 A sprawling, high-fantasy RPG with dynamic combat and emergent encounters. Deep character builds and pawn systems make every playthrough unique. Rarely this cheap so soon after release.

Xbox One

  • Resident Evil Remake Trilog. (-55%) – A$58.40 Three acclaimed survival-horror remakes bundled together. Tight gunplay, haunting atmospheres, and modern visuals make this a must-have.
  • Alien: Isolation (-80%) – A$11.90 A masterclass in tension. Survive against a relentless Xenomorph in this slow-burn horror classic that nails the atmosphere of the original film.
  • Okami HD (-50%) – A$12.40 Gorgeous cel-shaded adventure steeped in Japanese mythology. Creative combat and painting mechanics make this a timeless, Zelda-esque cult hit for me.
  • DuckTales: Rem. (-75%) – A$3.70 Disney’s NES platformer reimagined with hand-drawn art and nostalgic charm. Great for a quick nostalgia hit at pocket-change pricing. Bit of an arse-kicker, though.

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Xbox One

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

On PS5, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered gives Aloy’s debut a visual boost that makes its robot dinosaurs more imposing than ever. Lost Judgment delivers a satisfying blend of Yakuza-style chaos and courtroom drama, with side cases that rival the main story for entertainment.

  • Horizon Zero Dawn Rem. (-20%) – A$59.90 Guerrilla Games’ open-world epic about hunting (non-transforming) dinobots in a lush post-apocalypse. Remastered visuals shine on PS5.
  • Battlefield 6 (-19%) – A$89 Large-scale FPS action with vehicles, dynamic destruction, and squad-based objectives. My brand of chaos and strategy. I'm in already.
  • Hogwarts Legacy (-55%) – A$44.30 Immersive wizarding-world RPG with spell combat, exploration, and school life. I'm not even a Potterverse dude and I loved it.
  • Lost Judgment (-80%) – A$19.90 Sega’s crime-thriller spin-off of the Yakuza series. Blends investigation, brawling, and emotional storytelling.
  • Star Wars Outlaws (-64%) – A$40 Ubisoft’s open-world Star Wars adventure where you play as a charming rogue. Criminally under-played IMO.

PS4

  • Shin Megami Tensei III HD (-55%) – A$31.70 Dark, turn-based JRPG with demon fusion and post-apocalyptic themes.
  • Ace Attorney Investigations Col. (-47%) – A$32 Quirky visual novel puzzler starring prosecutor Miles Edgeworth. He's almost as cool as Phoenix.
  • Red Dead Redemption 2 (-68%) – A$29 Rockstar’s sprawling western masterpiece with unmatched detail. Still mindblowing and the open-world game to beat. For now...
  • Burnout Paradise Rem. (-75%) – A$6.20 High-speed open-world racing with glorious crashes. Fender benders and NOS-assisted jumps all age like a fine wine.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

Lastly, on PC, Sid Meier’s Civilization VI is the ultimate “just one more turn” timesink, with expansions adding absurd levels of replayability. Ni no Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch is still one of the most charming JRPGs ever made, featuring Studio Ghibli’s unmistakable visual touch.

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Legit LEGO Deals

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Adam Mathew is a passionate connoisseur, a lifelong game critic, and an Aussie deals wrangler who genuinely wants to hook you up with stuff that's worth playing (but also cheap). He plays practically everything, sometimes on YouTube.

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Alien: Earth Episodes 1 & 2 Review

Alien: Earth premieres with two episodes on Tuesday, August 12, and drops one episode per week after that.

FX dropped the first two episodes of Noah Hawley’s Alien: Earth, and it’s clear from the beginning what this series is trying to do. It all at once pays homage to the original Alien film while also carving its own niche into the lore of a decades-old franchise which is not an easy trick to pull off. And so, episodes 1 and 2 of the series are all about merging the new and the old. Sometimes it’s in the way a cross dissolve subtly connects two images, but other times it’s literally a spaceship crash-landing into a densely populated futuristic city. The fact that both approaches work so well in Alien: Earth is a testament to everything we have to look forward to in this series.

To begin with, the broad strokes of this review are simple. This is a very good show. It’s well-crafted, well-written, well-acted and just fun to be around. But seemingly determined to skip straight to the part where his new show bursts out of the franchise’s chest, Hawley and his team immediately merge those new and old influences in episode 1’s very first scenes. The crew wakes up, lights a cigarette before they’re out of the cryopod, have a laugh over breakfast in the mess as the camera floats down the familiar hallways of a Weyland-Yutani owned interstellar cruiser. It’s not just Noah Hawley proving he’s a fan who’s seen the movie before, though. It serves two really important functions.

Number 1, okay, yeah, it proves the behind-the-camera team has seen the movie before and that they like it as much as we always have. But Number 2, it’s the setting. Wordlessly and without any other connectivity, we as viewers are put back into the place and time around the original film. It’s a signal, along with the mustache on one of the crewmembers and the logos on their uniforms and the '70s-era “old-monitor” based tech in the production design, that this takes place alongside 1979’s film.

So it starts as a more or less shot for shot re-imagining of Ridley Scott’s original film, until they start to chop it up a little bit. The edit includes several visual asides, bouncing around in time, hinting that there’s more story to this crew and these surroundings than simply “oh that looks just like the Nostromo that Ripley was on!”

That’s the savviest thing about these premiere episodes and the truly exciting thing about Alien: Earth. A lot of ink has been spilled about how this fits in with the franchise and which parts of the canon are being accounted for. But this opening sequence is crafted in such a way that Hawley and his team are saying “yes” to all of it. There is a familiar setting, in a familiar timeline, but they’re doing some new things within that structure.

Hawley and his team are saying 'yes' to all of it.

One of those new things is the Peter Pan allegory at the center of this season’s story. Samuel Blenkin’s Boy Kavalier, Earth’s youngest trillionaire and chief creep of the premiere episodes, is taking the final steps in a quest for a type of immortality. Sydney Chandler’s Marcy, meanwhile, the first terminally ill child to transition into a synthetic body, takes on the name Wendy, Peter Pan’s friend that’s destined to grow up, unlike the lost boys. It’s a fitting metaphor for a franchise built on a creature whose defining trait is that it evolves into something else, and a show within that franchise about children’s consciousnesses evolving into something else as well.

But there’s one scene in particular where the form and function of the story line up in a very cool way. After Marcy becomes Wendy, there’s a lovely little TV on the Radio needle drop, and a peaceful scene where Wendy looks truly happy, looking out over the sea with not a worry in the world. A far cry from the Marcy tethered to an IV stand in the previous scene. But it’s just one achingly slow cross dissolve away from a truly eerie shot of Wendy tromping through the jungle, happy as a clam. It’s unnatural in slow motion, there’s something clearly off about it, and the coolest part about that juxtaposition is that the show doesn’t let you linger in any sort of celebration for long. Every time there’s some light of discovery, Alien: Earth hits you with a bit of darkness as a reminder that none of what’s happening is all good.

The other real win for the premiere episodes is the scope of this show.

Meanwhile, Morrow, the security officer aboard the Maginot played incredibly by Babou Ceesay, is set up to be the most fascinating character in the show. He’s a cyborg, just a regular dude who chose to be augmented. Morrow is, as we’ve seen with synthetic characters like Ash and David from elsewhere in the franchise, a company man through and through. He had the agency to become this way, which paints his decision making in a whole new light. He’s not a complete synthetic created and programmed to carry out company protocol, but he does serve that function we’re all familiar with from the Alien films. He’s cold and calculating and just as terrifying as any artificial person has ever been in the franchise.

The other real win for the premiere episodes is the scope of this show. In terms of episode 1s (or in this case episode 1s and 2s), it does an incredible job of communicating the type of scale we can expect from the series. A god damn spaceship crashes into the middle of a city and it looks like a war zone. But wouldn’t you know it, Hawley isn’t just employing that scale for the sake of it. The search and rescue team making their way through the wreckage go back and forth between the old familiar Nostromo-style ship, and the new environment here on Earth. In episode 2, we get some incredible haunted house style sequences that echo the original, with the xenomorph stalking our main characters. The highlight for me though, is the xenomorph interrupting some kind of Elizabethan Bacchanal where a bunch of obliviously entitled rich folks refuse to evacuate the building. It doesn’t end well for any of them.

The xenomorph itself, though, is another example of the classic iconography of this franchise meeting a new menagerie of beasties. The old reliable xeno gets its chance to shine in a typically monstrous way, metal teeth bared and stabby tail at the ready. There’s nothing new about him or the way Hawley is deploying his KY covered carapace. The xenomorph is playing the hits, as it were. But this very purposefully leaves room for the new aliens, however; an inventive bunch of creepy crawlies including an eyeball octopus that, I’m calling it now, is going to be the standout of the show when the dust settles.

Credit Roll Needle Drop Check In

One of my favorite little details about the series is the hard rock tracks Hawley uses over the credits. I wrote in my full season review about the loose connections the tracks make lyrically to the action on screen. I, quite frankly, adore the fact that they’ve pointedly decided to choose heavy metal tracks to communicate a vibe, so I can’t help but write a quick note about these songs in each of my weekly reviews.

Episode 1 ends with “The Mob Rules” by Black Sabbath. From 1981, the track comes from the Ronnie James Dio era of Sabbath, and features just a hint of ‘80s glam along with it’s speedier flavor of metal. As episode 1 ends with the Lost Boys on their way to the crash site and Wendy determined to save her brother's life, the first riffs from “The Mob Rules” highlights our hybrid protagonist’s edge and an attitude that’s lurking under the surface. But the lyrics that open the song are a metal warning of what’s to come.

Close the city and tell the people that something’s coming to call.

Death and darkness are rushing forward to take a bite from the wall.

Depending on how you want to take these lyrics, they could be referring to the xenomorph or the dystopian future of a corporate controlled team of hybrid children, emotionally ported into nearly impervious supercomputer bodies. Which, if my math is correct, is awesome.

Episode 2 meanwhile wraps up with the feedback build up of Tool’s “Stinkfist.” From 1996’s Aenima, the track features the band’s signature Drop-D tuned brand of heavy darkness. However, they edit around the opening verse of the song that is, ostensibly, about anal fisting, and jump straight to the more metaphorical chorus.

It’s not enough, I need more, Nothing seems to satisfy.

I don’t want it, I just need it, to breathe, to feel, to know I’m alive.

In this moment Wendy, who’s participated in more than one conversation about whether or not she’s still human to this point in the show, has found her brother and had him whisked away again. There’s a determination in her not seen in the other Lost Boys, and this mid-90s heavy metal classic features these lyrics that underline this part of her character, while being a compositionally spooky piece of music to play while a half-robot child is left tending a bunch of xenomorph eggs in a crashed spaceship.

Anyway, over-thinking these song choices is going to be a feature of these reviews, so… you know… get used to it.

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Get the Decked Out Asus ROG Strix G16 RTX 5070 Ti Gaming Laptop Is Down to $1,999.99

eBay is offering a great deal on a well equipped RTX 5070 Ti gaming laptop. Antonline (via eBay) has listed the Asus ROG Strix G16 RTX 5070 Ti gaming laptop for $1,999.99 with free shipping. In addition to the powerful graphics card, this laptop features the AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX processor, which is one of the most powerful AMD mobile CPU available right now.

Antonline is an authorized Asus reseller, so you'll be getting the same 1 year warranty as buying from Asus direct. Their official eBay store has over 300,000 reviews with a 98.9% positive feedback rating. This laptop is currently in stock and will be delivered to you within 2-4 days. Antonline also offers free returns within 30 days.

Asus ROG Strix G16 RTX 5070 Ti Gaming Laptop for $1,999.99

The Asus ROG Strix G16 gaming laptop features a 16" 2.5K 240Hz IPS display, AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX processor, GeForce RTX 5070 Ti GPU, 32GB of RAM, and a 1TB NVMe SSD. It measures 0.9" thin and weighs about 5.5 pounds. It's not the lightest laptop on the block, but that's because the Strix models put more emphasis on maximum performance and cooling. This is a pretty high-end model from Asus, sitting just under the Scar lineup and side by side with the Zephyrus lineup. The top lid boasts solid aluminum construction, but the base is made of plastic to keep the weight down and reduce heat transfer to the keyboard and palm area so that your hands don't get toasty while gaming.

The Strix G16 is equipped with a current generation AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX processor, which has a max turbo frequency of 5.4GHz with 16 cores, 32 threads, and 64MB total L3 cache. According to Passmark, this is the third most powerful AMD mobile CPU available right now and beats out Intel's Core Ultra 295HX. In fact, the only AMD processors that have a higher rating are the new X3D models which are very difficult to find in all but the highest end laptops.

The GeForce RTX 5070 Ti mobile GPU is better than the RTX 4080 mobile

The Asus ROG Strix G16 laptop offers a more substantial cooling design than thinner models like Asus' own ROG Zephyrus and is able to accomodate more powerful GPUs like the RTX 5070 Ti without any power throttling. That's important if you want to be able to play games comfortably on the display's enhanced 2560x1600 resolution. The RTX 5070 Ti mobile GPU is a substantial upgrade over the 4070 Ti. In fact, it offers gaming performance on par with the RTX 4080 and takes the lead in any games that support DLSS 4 with multi-frame generation. It's considerably more powerful than the RTX 5070 and the GPU I would recommend at the minimum for gaming at 2.5K resolution.

Looking for more suggestions? Check out the best gaming laptops so far in 2025.

Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.

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This Iniu 10,000mAh Power Bank Doesn't Need a Wall Charger Because It Has a Built-In Plug

Here's a great deal on a 3-in-1 power bank that you don't see every day. Amazon is currently offering an Iniu 10,000mAh 30W Power Bank with foldable plug and USB cable for just $16.79 after you apply 40% off coupon code "8LGHJN3V". It's available in six different colors, although the black one will get you the cheapest price by about $1. This power bank will more than double the total battery life for your Nintendo Switch, Switch 2, Apple iPhone, or Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

Iniu 10,000mAh 45W Power Bank for $12.39

Normally you would need to take along at least three items with you to keep your Switch 2 charged up on the road: a power bank when there's no outlet available, a wall charger when there is one available (and also to charge the power bank), and a cable to link everything together. Instead, why not just bring along one device that carries out all three tasks?

The Iniu is first and foremost a power bank with a 10,000mAh (37Whr) battery capacity. It has three output ports: one built-in USB Type-C cable, one USB Type-C port, and one USB Type-A port. The 30W of Power Delivery is enough to fast charge the Nintendo Switch or Switch 2, which has a maximum charging rate of 18W-20W, and the Apple iPhone 16, which has a maximum charging rate of 30W even for the Pro Max model.

The Iniu power bank doesn't need a wall charger because it basically has one internally. It comes equipped with a built-in 2-prong plug that you can insert directly into any available two or three prong outlet. It also handily folds out of the way when not in use to minimize the chance of breakage while traveling.

Finally, the Iniup power bank includes a built-in USB Type-C cable so that you no longer need to bring along your own. It loops back and clips into itself when not in use so that you can use it as a handy lanyard.

Of course the best "feature" is the price. To get all three items would generally cost you over $20, even if you get everything on sale. At under $17, this 3-in-1 is a versatile bargain.

For more options, check out our favorite portable power banks for traveling.

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.

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Where To Buy Magic: The Gathering Edge of Eternities Collector Boosters Now That They've Sold Out

I must admit, Magic: The Gathering’s new Edge of Eternities surprised me. I felt it was going to be a relatively soft follow-up to the game’s most popular set ever, Universes Beyond: Final Fantasy, and yet it feels like another home run.

A great new setting, unique designs, and some big chase cards have seen stock selling out fast, particularly when it comes to Collector Boosters. As a result, you can still find them, but you’ll need to brave the secondary market - and pay over the odds, sadly.

Where To Find Magic’s Edge of Eternities Collector Boosters

Because they contain a higher chance of opening chase cards worth hundreds (and maybe even thousands), Collector Boosters cost more than Play Boosters and are also unlikely to be reprinted. Once they’re gone, there’s a good chance they’re gone for good.

That’s why a single pack can cost you as much as $40, with Collector Booster boxes going for over $400.

Thankfully, Play Boosters are looking much more likely to be found closer to MSRP for months. The set is standard legal for a long time yet, meaning you can reasonably expect Play Boosters (and the set’s pair of Commander Decks) to be reprinted pretty regularly.

Play Boosters can be found for as little as $6, with boxes up for around $150. In fact, we’ve already seen Play Booster boxes receive discounts at retailers like Amazon.

Lloyd Coombes is an experienced freelancer in tech, gaming and fitness seen at Polygon, Eurogamer, Macworld, TechRadar and many more. He's a big fan of Magic: The Gathering and other collectible card games, much to his wife's dismay.

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GTA Actor Says Disastrous Florida Gaming Convention 'Put the Con in Comic-Con'

Last weekend, a number of gaming fans traveled to Tampa, Florida to attend the National Gaming Expo. The convention, in its first year, promised encounters with actors such as the casts of Grand Theft Auto V, Red Dead Redemption 2, and Mortal Kombat, as well as the former voices behind Nintendo's Peach and Bowser, Donkey Kong composer Grant Kirkhope, and a lot more.

Instead, convention attendees were treated to empty halls, missing talent, a no-show photographer, and...camels?

The National Gaming Expo took place from August 8 through 10 at the Florida State Fairgrounds in Tampa. The official website claims it expected around 30,000 people in attendance, and promised talent signings, photograph opportunities, vendors, and a cosplay contest. On social media, accounts such as Celebrity Talent Booking and voice actors like Ned Luke (GTA V) and Rob Wiethoff (Red Dead Redemption) promoted their appearances at the convention. Wiethoff, who plays John Marston, whipped up a particular fervor with some initial teasing of "exciting news" that got fans excited for some kind of franchise news - but it turned out he was just talking about a reunion of the Red Dead Redemption 1 and 2 casts at the expo.

However, that reunion was...disorganized, to say the least. The entire convention was disorganized. Despite the National Gaming Expo's lofty promises, fans paid $40 for a single-day ticket, $90 for the weekend, and showed up to a pretty barren event, as revealed in various photos and videos on social media:

So this was my first con and didn’t what to expect but this was definitely not it. Don’t support Mike wittenberg, because I was at the national gaming expo and it was so awkward and unorganized 😬 pic.twitter.com/vgi2D7DWvD

— Plapapus 🫧 (@plapapus) August 11, 2025

The National Gaming Expo was a disaster. The con floor was empty, maybe 10 vendors. The only panel that even happened was such a mess, Ned Luke took the MCs job cause he was doing such a bad job. They screwed over the celebs. And now they’re deleting their social media. @ngeshow pic.twitter.com/3KjP8tBzci

— Dan 🎸✝️ (@Husbeep) August 10, 2025

Accounts on social media lament the dismal number and assortment of vendors and booths, as well as a lack of security. One Reddit comment complained there were health insurance and T-Mobile vendors and barely any to do with gaming. "It was the equivalent of walking into a Best Buy searching for a game, seeing the shelves filled with broccoli, dish soap, and various car parts. Then somewhere in the back of the store there’s an open box VCR for $600," said another commenter.

Inexplicably, one attraction that was present at the expo was...a petting zoo, featuring a camel and a few other farm animals:

The National gaming expo has gotta be the worst convention ever produced all they got is a camel and no games pic.twitter.com/WhOExks6Ha

— funkonoki (@funkonoki) August 9, 2025

The convention didn't just look barren. Apparently, a lot of talent that was supposed to be there either didn't show up at all, or showed up late or sporadically in a way that made it challenging for fans to encounter the actors they wanted to see. Several attendees who claim they went to the show on Friday said that the Red Dead Redemption cast wasn't there at all, and were told there was some mistake made with their agency. Others did report that they got to meet the Red Dead Redemption crew later, but complained that paid photo opportunities with them and other talent were canceled due to the one photographer allegedly hired by the convention not showing up.

As a result, attendees have been making their feelings known to the National Gaming Expo organizers in whatever way they can. The convention's official Instagram page has been deleted and its Facebook event page has been locked, but the Facebook comments on the Florida State Fairgrounds' post for the event are filled with upset attendees. Many posters are issuing warnings about the event's organizer: CEO of NGE Event Production Michael Wittenberg.

Wittenberg, who formerly ran the National Vape Expo before it was shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic, started the National Gaming Expo this year just months after returning from a year-and-a-half-long stint in a Dominican Republic prison. He was arrested there in 2023 for international narcotics trafficking during a networking event at a resort, after signing to accept a "700-pound pallet filled with promotional items, but Dominican officials sniffed out pills, gummies, and cartridges containing THC, the active ingredient in marijuana," according to CBS News. Wittenberg says the items in it were all federally legal in the United States. "Did I know for sure that stuff was in the pallet? No. But i thought it was a possibility. Was I stupid or ignorant? Yeah. I wasn't guilty. There is a difference," Wittenberg said at the time. "I've done major conventions with these products for 10 years in major convention centers across the country."

The warnings shared by convention-goers, however, are less about the THC and more about Wittenberg's history with conventions. According to commenters, Wittenberg has run threadbare, scammy events before, with some people even popping in to allege he's failed to pay workers in the past. While it's difficult to find a useful record online of his past events, these claims are somewhat supported by at least one review of the National Vape Expo still floating around the internet. "During the weekend I had to come up with ways of passing the time such as counting the number of steps between stands and taking regular coffee breaks," reads the review from a staff reporter at Vapouround from 2017. "Never in my life have I made a large flat white latte last so long. Normally I am an espresso kind of guy but the five seconds they take to drink would not just cut it when I am running down the clock at such a vaping non-event as this."

A handful of involved parties have already publicly commented on the situation at National Gaming Expo. In a statement to IGN, GTA 5's Michael De Santa actor Ned Luke said simply, "It was a scam, the guy who ran it was a con artist. He put the con in comic-con."

Venture Authentics, which had advertised "send-ins" at the expo (letting people send in collectibles to be autographed by talent) has apologized and said it will issue refunds to customers, due to "James Burnes, Michael Antonakos, Grant Kirkhope, and others" not attending. In a Facebook comment, the company clarified: "this one is not the guests fault, it’s 100% on the convention. I’d rather not elaborate publicly, but do not blame the guests. They seem to be just as shocked."

Roger Clark, the voice of Arthur Morgan, similarly acknowledged his absence:

It is with my deepest apologies that I say I wasn’t able to attend the last day of National Gaming Expo today as was announced. My absence was due to circumstances outside of my control. Crazy shit man. Sorry.

— Roger Clark (@rclark98) August 10, 2025

A number of individuals on social media who say they attended the convention are now trying to get refunds. Some are reporting success disputing the card charges for the tickets or getting refunds through Eventbrite, while others say they are unsure how to get a refund at all on photo opportunities that never happened.

IGN has reached out to Celebrity Talent Booking (which seems to have coordinated many of the actors), Michael Wittenberg, the National Gaming Expo, the Florida State Fairgrounds, Kenny James, Michael Antonakos, Grant Kirkhope, James Burnes, Take-Two and Rockstar (for good measure), and the agencies representing Roger Clark, Rob Wiethoff, and Samantha Kelly for comment.

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.

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Adorama Is Clearing Out This Apple MacBook Pro M3 Pro Laptop by Offering a $700 Off Discount

Adorama is clearing out its inventory of older MacBook Pro laptops and offering some huge discounts on brand new, fully warrantied units. Right now you can pick up a Apple MacBook Pro 14.2" M3 Pro laptop for just $1,499 after $700 off in instant savings. This is an excellent deal on a powerful MacBook that can handle heavy duty workstation tasks and it's equipped with a healthy dose of memory and storage to power through all of your back to school needs.

MacBook Pro 14.2" M3 Pro (18GB/1TB) for $1499

This late-2023 MacBook Pro features a 14.2" Liquid Retina XDR display, Apple M3 Pro chip with 11-core CPU and 14-core GPU, 18GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD. The Apple M3 is one generation behind the current M4 model, however the M3 Pro is technically a superior processor to the M4. The M4 has a slightly higher clock speed so it's faster in single-core performance, but the M3 Pro has considerably more CPU and GPU cores, so it is better at multi-tasking performance and in apps that can take advantage of multi-core processing. If you're a creative professional who intends to use this laptop as a primary work rig, then the Pro chip is definitely the way to go.

The MacBook Pro boasts a gorgeous Liquid Retina XDR display.

The 14" MacBook Pro model weighs in at 3.5 pounds and 0.6" thin, which makes it a great portable machine for everyday toting. It's very slightly heavier and thicker than the MacBook Air, but the extra space allows for more powerful components and more aggressive cooling. The MacBook Pro features a gorgeous Liquid Retina XDR display, which is a Mini-LED panel with a 3,024x1965 resolution, Pro Motion (120Hz refresh rate), PS3 Wide Color and True Tone, and up to 1,000nits of peak brightness. It's a big step up from the MacBook Air, which can't achieve the same brightness levels and lacks the Mini-LED panel and Pro Motion refresh rate.

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.

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Blizzard's Story and Franchise Development Team Votes to Unionize

Blizzard's Story and Franchise Development team (SFD) has voted in favor of unionization with the Communications Workers of America, according to a press release shared today.

SFD consists of Blizzard workers producing in-house cinematics, animation, trailers, promotional videos, in-game cutscenes, and other narrative content across Blizzard franchises, in addition to archival workers and historians.

These workers join thousands of others at Microsoft and specifically within Activision Blizzard who have voted to unionize with their departments and teams under Microsoft's labor neutrality agreement in the last few years. Just last year, the entire World of Warcraft team unionized, and the Overwatch developers followed just this past May. Other unions within the company include Raven Software workers who just won their first contract earlier this month, Zenimax QA workers who got a contract in May, the Bethesda union, and several others.

“After more than a decade working at Blizzard, I’ve seen all the highs and lows," said organizing committee member and principal editor Bucky Fisk. "For years, Blizzard has been a place where people could build their careers and stay for decades, but that stability’s been fading. With a union, we’re able to preserve what makes this place special, secure real transparency in how decisions are made, and make sure policies are applied fairly to everyone.”

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.

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The Best Wireless Gaming Mice in 2025

A great wireless gaming mouse allows you to enjoy an untethered experience from your gaming PC. Many of them also feature wired connections, so you can continue to game while the mouse is charging. Wireless mice, however, are far more versatile – gone are the days of wireless lag, so you can continue to experience reliable, accurate clicks and consistent tracking without the wires.

TL;DR – These Are the Best Wireless Gaming Mice

Like many of the best gaming accessories, investing in a wireless gaming mouse doesn’t have to be expensive. Of course, there are premium options out there with high polling rates, high DPIs, RGB lighting, programmable keys, and so on. But, there are also some seriously good contenders if you’re looking for a budget gaming mouse too.

Additional contributions by Kevin Lee, Georgie Peru, and Danielle Abraham

1. Razer Deathadder V4 Pro

Best Wireless Gaming Mouse

The Razer Deathadder V4 Pro is basically the perfect wireless competitive mouse, with long battery life to boot. As I found in my review, it's a blazing-fast gaming juggernaut: Razer's new Gen-2 HyperSpeed Wireless tracks every nudge of your mouse exactly and immediately. It's designed with pro players in mind and you can bump the polling rate all the way up to 8K – although you probably won't notice a difference. For most players, 4K or even 2K is more than enough.

Its weighty hemispheric USB dongle is brilliant: While it does make this a less portable mouse, it has three indicator lights that show you information at a glance, such as your battery status, current polling rate, and connection status. You can customize them to show, for example, your chosen DPI if you prefer. It looks sleek on your desk, and the grippy underside means it won't move from wherever you set it down. Most importantly, it connects instantly whenever you turn the mouse on, and it never dropped connection in all my testing.

It's admittedly pricey at $169.99, but you're paying for the best.

2. SteelSeries Aerox 3 Wireless

Best Budget Wireless Gaming Mouse

You don’t need to spend a lot to get a quality wireless option. There are plenty of budget gaming mice that can keep up with the action, and the flashy SteelSeries Aerox 3 is our top pick. The triangular cutouts at the palm and the bright RGB may seem over the top, but in actual use, its effects are quite nice (which you can customize through SteelSeries’ software). And if you’re worried about damaging the internals, they’re guarded so it's not actually exposed. None of that would matter if the Aerox 3 wasn’t fit for gaming, and thankfully it’s one of my favorite wireless mice you can get on sale for around $50 to $60. That makes it a great value for an all-rounder.

In our Aerox 3 gaming mouse review, it earned a 9 for holding its own in competitive shooters with SteelSeries’ TrueMove Air optical sensor (topping out at 18,000 DPI) while not having to eat up too much battery – although battery life has evolved in brand new wireless mice, the Aerox 3 still isn’t a slouch and charges fast, if anything. It’s a bit tough to find a flashy, high-performance wireless mouse at this price range, making the Aerox 3 my current recommendation for a budget wireless mouse.

3. Logitech G903

Best Ambidextrous Wireless Gaming Mouse

The Logitech G903 is a killer mouse ready to make you the victor, and it continues to be great with each new version’s release. The ambidextrous design is great – more comfortable than most, with the ability to add or remove thumb buttons from either side. You can also choose between having a clicky or free-spinning scroll wheel by hitting the button behind it. The aggressive-looking design is more comfortable than it appears, and it’s pretty light for a wireless mouse. But, if you want a heavier mouse, you can snap in the included 10g weight.

The latest model of the Logitech G903 has made a few upgrades, including a better sensor and longer battery life. You now get a 25K HERO optical sensor with a 25,600 max DPI for wildly precise gameplay, if you want it. The rechargeable battery lasts an impressive 140 hours with the flashy RGB lights on and 180 hours when the lights are off. You also have the option to purchase the PowerPlay mouse pad, an expensive but brilliant accessory. It recharges the wireless mouse as it moves around or rests on the mouse pad. With it, you’ll never have to worry about plugging in your G903 again.

4. Logitech G502 X Lightspeed

Best Ergonomic Wireless Gaming Mouse

The Logitech G502 series is a beloved line of gaming mice, and the latest versions, the X Plus and the X Lightspeed, improve on their predecessors in basically every way. They look more refined and their curvy shape fits your hand no matter what grip you prefer.

This is a mouse built for comfort and utility. It has three programmable thumb buttons, two extra buttons next to the left click, and a scroll wheel that switches between free-spinning and incremental whenever you want. But, as I found in my upcoming review, it's also ideal for competitive gaming: Logitech's wireless tech and sensors have been fantastic for years, and give you low-latency clicks and accurate tracking. And on top of all that, you can pop the small USB dongle into a hatch in the base of the mouse, which makes it a surprisingly portable wireless mouse.

We recommend the Lightspeed over the X Plus because it's slightly cheaper, has a slightly better battery – an impressive 140 hours – and it's slightly lighter at 102g, dropping weight while still feeling solid in your hand. The X Plus has RGB, if that's important to you.

If you need an alternative, the Razer Basilisk V3 Pro that we reviewed is a brilliant wireless mouse that's just as comfortable, but it's edged out of this list by the cheaper Lightspeed.

5. Corsair Ironclaw RGB Wireless

Best Large Wireless Gaming Mouse

There are a lot of great mice out there, but if you have bigger hands, sometimes even the best mouse can start to feel a little cramped. When it comes to an enjoyable gaming session, especially a longer one, comfort is essential, and that applies to your mouse too. If you want a wireless mouse that's going to be a great fit for your bigger hands, the Corsair Ironclaw RGB Wireless is it. It has a large profile, letting you spread your fingers out a bit, and the thumb grip is nice and spacious. Its 130g of heft give it a substantial feel.

You won't miss out on the capable experience of other mice with the Ironclaw RGB Wireless. It has a highly accurate PixArt sensor and connects to your PC over Corsair's latency-free Slipstream wireless or over Bluetooth when you don't need maximum performance. You'll get 10 programmable buttons for tons of control at short notice in games. It features three RGB lighting zones if you want a bit of flair, though you can also opt for longer battery life by turning the lights off.

6. SteelSeries Prime Mini Edition

Best Small Wireless Gaming Mouse

Smaller gaming mice often mean a loss of features and sacrificing build quality, but that's not the case for the SteelSeries Prime Mini Edition. You’re getting a solidly built, lightweight mouse that glides with ease. And, if you’re worried about its “mini” size fitting your grip, you should be fine unless you’ve got extra-large hands. Once you’ve found a comfortable hold, you can get into your game’s action quickly, as it will easily connect to your computer via a USB receiver. There is also a wired version available for a lower cost.

Performance-wise, the SteelSeries Prime Mini Edition can stand up against the best of them. Its optical magnetic switches provide faster and more consistent clicks and should hold up better than their mechanical counterparts. Plus, with the TruMove Air sensor, you’ll have accurate movements, even if you lift the mouse up in the air during a heated moment in your game. And, the software it comes with allows you to make most of the setting customizations you could want. If you decide to go small, this is the mouse for you.

7. Logitech G Pro Wireless

Best Wireless Gaming Mouse for Esports

The Logitech G Pro is a great wireless mouse from Logitech designed for esports, or people who just want a mouse with great battery life and swappable side buttons. Like the G903 you add magnetic side buttons to whichever side you like.

It uses the company's newest sensor, the Hero 25K, so it's got plenty of range to fit anyone's needs, and you can also drop the USB transceiver into the bottom of the mouse too, so you won't lose it when you travel. The best part is it's also compatible with the company's wireless charging system, but it's an optional add-on.

8. Logitech G604 Lightspeed

Best Wireless MMO/MOBA Gaming Mouse

Whether you want all the buttons you could need readily available at your fingertips to conquer in MMOs and MOBAs or you just want one of the best gaming mice you can get your hands on, the Logitech G604 Lightspeed is well worth your time. It offers a dazzlingly long battery life even in its high-performance mode, but can last months at a time if you're using it in Bluetooth mode.

In addition to six thumb buttons that are super easy to use, the mouse has two extra buttons by the edge of the primary mouse button, as well as a clickable scroll wheel that can also click to either side. It may not have any fancy RGB lighting like many other mice on this list, but that brings the price so much lower. Better still, its price didn't prevent the G604 Lightspeed from getting the HERO sensor, which is a performance champ.

Wireless gaming mice vs. Wired gaming mice

Can’t decide between a wired and wireless gaming mouse? Below, we discuss their differences:

Lag and latency are major factors that make people stray from wireless options. Though wired mice aren’t always perfect, they often deliver a speedy, reliable connection without worry of signal interference. With that said, most modern wireless mice come with a 2.4GHz dongle or other technology, which helps greatly limit lag, latency, and signal interference. Most users won’t even notice a difference when comparing it to a wired mouse.

The cord is the most noticeable difference between the two mice types. With wired options, your movements will be slightly more limited, and there’s slight resistance and the potential for the cable to catch on equipment when anchored to your gaming PC. Wireless mice deliver much more freedom in your movements, as there’s no wire to drag you down. That does mean you need to worry about battery life, but with many options offering 70+ hours on a single charge and 100+ hours with AA or AAA batteries, it should not be an issue.

The biggest advantage wired mice have over their wireless counterparts is price. You’ll find wired options are cheaper than wireless even when offering almost all the same features because wireless technology is more expensive than a simple cable.

Wireless Gaming Mouse FAQ

What are the disadvantages of wireless mice?

Though the freedom of movement that a wireless mouse brings is great, there are a few disadvantages. The most obvious is the reliance on a battery. Whether it's rechargeable or runs on a AA or AAA battery, at some point, it will run out of juice. So, staying on top of charging or replacements ensures that doesn’t happen at the worst possible moment. Wireless connectivity also introduces latency and signal interference, especially when connected via Bluetooth. Luckily, the 2.4GHz dongle many gaming mice include is excellent at combating those issues but is still not as reliable as a wired connection. Finally, due to the extra technology baked into wireless mice, they’re pricier than their comparable wired counterparts.

Should you buy a PC controller instead?

It’s a matter of personal preference more than anything else as to whether you stick with the classic gaming keyboard and mouse setup or go for a PC controller.

A controller is perfect when you want to kick back, keeping things casual and comfortable while you game. Controllers are especially great when lounging on a couch and using the big screen of the best TVs for gaming as your display; all the inputs are directly in your hand, with analog sticks offering smoother control over movements.

With a keyboard and mouse pairing, you get an excess of inputs spread throughout the two peripherals. They’re often more precise and reliable, but are better for playing at a gaming desk. A lap desk can bring a keyboard and mouse to your living room, though most won’t find it as relaxing as the controller experience.

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Save 40% Off the Baseus 10-in-1 Charging Station with USB Ports and AC Outlets

If your workstation or gaming desk requires more USB ports and AC outlets for charging, here's an inexpensive solution to your problem. Amazon is offering a Baseus 4-Port 6-Outlet Desktop Charging Station for just $29.99 after a 40% off instant discount. Even better, get a 3.3ft 100W PD USB Type-C cable for free simply by adding it to the same order and checking out (discount should be applied during checkout). This tabletop charger features both USB Type-A and Type-C ports as well as AC outlets for the ultimate versatility.

Baseus 4-Port 6-Outlet Desktop Charger for $29.99

Get a free 6ft 100W USB Type-C cable as well

The Baseus charging station is shaped like a cuboid with ports on all four sides. There are a total of ten ports: three USB Type-C ports, one USB Type-A ports, and six AC outlets. The USB ports combine for a total of 67W of total power output. A single USB Type-C port can also deliver this much output. That's enough output to fast charge the Nintendo Switch or Nintendo Switch 2 (up to 20W), Steam Deck (39W), and Asus ROG Ally (65W). The Asus Rog Ally X and Legion Go support up to 100W, but it's better for the battery to charge at a reduced 65W rate. In fact, they ship with a 65W charger. The Baseus can also fast charge the Apple iPhone 16 (30W) and Samsung Galaxy S25 (up to 45W).

The six AC outlets are ideal for plugging in your printer, desk lamp, monitor, speakers, or anything else that uses a standard two or three prong plug. They're widely spaced apart and positioned on different sides so bulky power bricks won't block every outlet, and the charging station is rated for 1200J of surge protection.

Other practical features include GaN technology (smaller footprint and increased energy efficiency), included sticky adhesive pads so that it won't slide around on your desk, and multiple protection protocols.

Looking for more options? Check out the best USB Type-C chargers so far in 2025.

Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.

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GameSir Announces the G7 Pro Controller With Drift-Resistant Joysticks

GameSir has released the G7 Pro, a new wired and wireless pro-style controller for Xbox, PC, and Android that comes with battery-sipping, drift-resistant "Tunneling Magnetoresistance" (TMR) sticks and four customizable macro buttons – two on the back and two mini bumper buttons. The controller is available in two colors, a white and a black-and-red gradient, for $79.99 from Amazon, Best Buy, and GameSir’s website.

Before you rush out to grab a crispy new D7 Pro, some awkward caveats: It’s wired-only for Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One, wired or 2.4GHz-only for PC, and Bluetooth-only for Android. There’s a switch on the back for toggling between these modes, and it comes with a 3-meter USB-C cable for wired mode, a generous length. Also, its gyro control feature only works on PC games. The controller sports a 1,200mAh battery, rechargeable via USB-C or using an included charging cradle that uses the same design as the one that came with my 8BitDo Ultimate 2C Bluetooth controller.

If you can get past the connectivity limitations, there are things to like about the G7 Pro. Its use of TMR sticks should mean more battery efficiency and better precision, and its hall effect triggers come with micro switch trigger stops, so you can tweak how far they travel before registering a button press. The circular D-pad uses mechanical micro switches and is swappable for a more traditional style four-way cross option that’s included in the package. Its three-piece magnetic faceplate is removable, so you can customize that, too, including by reusing the one-piece options from previous G7s. Or, heck, leave the faceplate off if you like the slick translucent plastic underneath.

At $79.99, the G7 Pro is pricier than GameSir’s G7 controller and its followups, which range from $44.99 to $49.99, but a lot of these features – like customizable trigger stops, TMR sticks, and mini bumper buttons – are new to the G7 Pro. It’s a shame about its lack of Xbox wireless support, though.

Wes is a freelance writer (Freelance Wes, they call him) who has covered technology, gaming, and entertainment steadily since 2020 at Gizmodo, Tom's Hardware, Hardcore Gamer, and most recently, The Verge. Inside of him there are two wolves: one that thinks it wouldn't be so bad to start collecting game consoles again, and the other who also thinks this, but more strongly.

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The Alienware 16X Aurora RTX 5070 Gaming Laptop Drops to the Lowest Price Ever

Alienware's new for 2025 Aurora laptop replaces the m16 models from last year and comes in two models: the 16 and 16X. The 16X is the superior of the two and is on sale right now during the Dell Back to School Sale. You can pick up an Alienware 16X Aurora gaming laptop equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX CPU and GeForce RTX 5070 mobile GPU for $1,599.99 after a $300 instant discount. This is the best price I've seen for an Aurora 16X RTX 5070 laptop by $200.

Alienware 16X Aurora RTX 5070 Gaming Laptop for $1,599.99

Gamers should go with the Alienware 16X Aurora model

The Alienware 16X Aurora is the model that serious gamers should consider over the 16 Aurora, especially right now when the Aurora 16 RTX 4070 laptop is more expensive. There's little argument here; just look at the list of upgrades below:

  • Better display (2560x1600 240Hz G-Sync vs 2560x1600 120Hz)
  • More powerful CPU (Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX vs Intel Core 9 270H)
  • Higher RTX 5070 TGP rating and thus better performance (115W TGP vs 85W TGP)
  • More premium materials (metal alloy lid and chassis vs lid only)
  • RGB keyboard vs white-only backlighting
  • Thunderbolt 4.0 port

Compared to other Alienware laptops, the 16X Aurora is designed to look less like a gamer's laptop. It boasts a sleek, understated design with the absence of extraneous visual-only embellishments or unnecessary RGB lighting outside of the keyboard illumination. This is a solidly built machine with a metal (magnesium alloy) chassis and anodized aluminum lid and bottom shell. Under the hood, the 16X Aurora still packs a punch with powerful gaming components and a robust Cryo Chamber cooling system. It's much more affordably than an equivalent Alienware 16 Area-51 laptop, which costs $600 more. The Alienware 16X Aurora also weighs 1.6 pounds less and has a 30% thinner profile.

The Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX is a top performing CPU

The Alienware 16X Aurora laptop is also equipped with a very powerful CPU as well. The Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX boasts a max turbo frequency of 5.4GHz with a whopping 24 cores and 40MB total L2 cache. According to Passmark, this is the second most powerful Intel mobile CPU available right now and goes head to head with AMD's Ryzen 9 7945HX3D.

The GeForce RTX 5070 is 5%-10% better than the RTX 4070

The mobile RTX 5070 GPU performs about 5%-10% better than the RTX 4070 that it replaces. That's not a very big generational improvement, but the RTX 5070 also supports multi-frame generation, which means the margin will widen in games that support DLSS 4.0. If you want a significantly better performing Nvidia GPU, you'll have to pick up an RTX 5070 Ti or RTX 5080 laptop. Currently the Alienware 16X Aurora doesn't have an option to equip these GPUs, so you would have to pony up $900 more for the Area-51.

Check out more of the best Alienware deals

Check out our Best Alienware Deals article with all of Dell's currently ongoing deals on gaming laptops and desktop PCs. Not everyone is the DIY type. If you're in the market for a prebuilt gaming PC, Dell is one of the best brands we'd recommend. Alienware desktops and laptops feature solid build quality, top-of-the-line gaming performance, excellent cooling (further improved on the newer models), aggressive styling, and pricing that is very competitive with other pre-built options. Best of all, there are plenty of sales that happen throughout the year, so it's not difficult to grab one of these computers at considerably less than their retail price.

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.

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The Google Pixel 9a Drops to a New Low Price on Amazon Ahead of the Pixel 10 Release

The Pixel 9a is currently at a new low price ahead of the imminent release of the Pixel 10, with many retailers chopping a full 20% off Google's most budget smartphone.

With the Pixel 10 set to be revealed at the Made by Google event on August 20, Google seems eager to get more Pixel 9a units sold by offering an enticing $100 discount. The device normally retails for $499, but you can currently pick it up for only $399 on the Google Store or from retailers like Amazon and Best Buy. This is the lowest price we've seen on this phone so far.

Google Pixel 9a Sale at Amazon

The Pixel 9a was first launched back in April of this year, with most folks appreciating its AI features, solid battery life, and surprisingly good cameras. However, many didn't find it to be as aesthetically successful as the flagship Pixel 9, and some weren't entirely convinced that it would have the longevity to make full use of Google's promised 7 years of software support.

At $399, the Pixel 9a is a much more attractive buy, especially since not everyone needs a high-end Android phone in their pocket. So, if you're looking to upgrade from an older phone but aren't the type to dish out $800 or more for one of Google's flagship devices like the upcoming Pixel 10, there's never been a better time to pick up a Pixel 9a. At the very least, it will do a great job of holding you over until the next iteration of the A-series, which is likely still a year or so away.

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I Tried The Mechanism Gaming Pillow With My ROG Ally X

I’ve been going down a gaming handheld rabbit hole for the last few years, spurred on by the Steam Deck back in 2022. While these PC handhelds definitely existed before that – usually with laptop chips not really designed for this kind of device – they really didn’t capture my attention until this modern crop of streamlined versions. Even after reviewing basically every major handheld that’s launched in the last couple of years, I still find myself bundling up in blankets and playing games on the ROG Ally X or Legion Go S.

There is a downside to these machines. Because of the amount of cooling and power required to run a chip like the Z1 Extreme, most gaming handhelds are inherently bulkier than something like the Nintendo Switch 2. And while that might make the obvious answer “just play the Switch,” I’m just not going to do that. I mean, I already own hundreds of games on Steam, and Nintendo games have largely never appealed to me.

Because I spend so much time reading, writing, and talking about PC gaming handhelds, the algorithms have caught on to my little obsession. I started getting ads for the Mechanism Gaming Pillow – a silly little accessory that’ll hold your handheld up for extended gaming sessions. Then, of course, I reached out and got a sample just to see if it was a) real and b) actually as cozy as it looked. The answer to both was yes.

What Is the Gaming Pillow?

The Mechanism Gaming Pillow is more of a bean bag/monitor arm hybrid than what I would typically call a pillow, but the “pillow” portion is soft and holds its shape. More importantly, it’s flexible and will conform to basically anywhere you put it. That’s tucked into a plastic base, which is then latched down to keep it secure. The top of this plastic base has a nice, soft fake-leather fabric attached to it, so it doesn’t feel hard or uncomfortable – softness is the name of the game here.

A little plastic pillar rises from the base with a connector at the end of it, which doesn’t connect directly to anything but is compatible with Mechanism’s vast array of accessories. The company sells attachments for pretty much every handheld under the sun, which are essentially custom-molded braces that fit snugly on the device. The brace has a slot that you can lock into the stand to keep it secure. And the company even offers files that'll let you 3D print your own attachments.

It took me some trial and error to get it right though. Attaching the brace to the ROG Ally X in a way that it didn’t snap off when I put any pressure on it took a few tries. The brace has two little forks at the top that go into the edge of the vents on the top of the Ally, as well as a piece on the bottom that snaps into place across the bottom of the device. The only problem was that it’s an extremely tight fit, and you have to pretty firmly slide that bottom lock into place on the device.

Once that was done, I didn’t experience many issues with the actual mounting solution, but getting the device at an angle that was comfortable playing with was, well, another adventure. The stand has three points of articulation: one at the bottom, one at the top, and one little knob where the device is mounted. The last of those is easy enough to manipulate – you just adjust a small latch that screws onto it, and you can rotate your device in almost any direction. However, the other two control the tilt of the device and the height of the stand. Both of these require an Allen key to adjust.

That means trying to find the perfect angle and then locking it into place is something that you have to do a minor ritual to complete. However, it does make the stand feel extremely secure, which is probably what Mechanism was going for. I just tend to move around a lot when I’m relaxing, which is the only reason this is an issue.

But once I dialed in my perfect position for the ROG Ally X, I spent several hours over multiple days cuddling up to this silly gaming pillow playing Final Fantasy X. It made a device that’s best in short bursts into one of the most comfortable gaming experiences I’ve had in years. It was so comfy that it made grinding out Wakka’s Celestial Weapon into a pleasant and relaxing experience – if you know, you know.

Modularity Is Key for Gaming Accessories

Perhaps the most interesting thing about this Pillow is how flexible it is. Mechanism has dozens of different attachments for sale, which’ll mount anything from a Steam Deck to an iPad. It means that even if you swap to a different device, you don’t have to buy an all-new gaming pillow – though you’d have to fork over an extra $20 for a new grip.

But those grips are also compatible with Mechanism’s other mounts. I haven’t tested any of those, so I can’t speak to their quality, but the company seems to be building an entire ecosystem of different mounts for your hardware.

I do like the wide compatibility inherent to this kind of system. It reduces waste and stops you from having to waste money buying a different mount whenever you make an upgrade. However, it does kind of lock you into Mechanism’s products, and these grips don’t exactly play nice with third-party cases. I generally don’t put cases on anything – a mistake given how clumsy I am – but I know a lot of folks do, and incorporating this kind of system on top of a case might end up being more of a hassle than it’s worth.

OK, But Why Is This Actually Necessary?

Let’s talk about dimensions. You see, even the relatively small Steam Deck measures nearly a foot long and is 2 inches thick. That’s a lot of plastic to hold, and while its weight of 1.41 lbs doesn’t sound like a lot, it can definitely start to weigh you down over long gaming sessions. For comparison, the new Switch 2 – which is significantly larger than the original – weighs just 1.18 lbs with the Joy-Cons attached.

The Steam Deck is on the lighter side of all the PC handhelds out there. Some are much bulkier than the Steam Deck, like the Lenovo Legion Go at 1.88lbs with its controllers attached. And while I love the larger screen offered by that handheld, I’ve settled into the Ally X, which actually has a smaller footprint than the Steam Deck, but is a bit heavier at 1.48lbs. (I don’t know how Asus did it, but I frequently find that the Ally X lasts far longer than any other handheld, which makes it a mainstay in my little arsenal of gadgets.) But it does start to weigh me down after a little bit.

In the past I solved this by basically propping the Ally up against a pillow when I’m laying in bed playing games. This largely solves the issue, except for when I inevitably doze off and drop the handheld on the ground, or worse, on my forehead. The Mechanism Gaming Pillow largely solves that – even if it has a few issues.

At the end of the day, the Mechanism Gaming Pillow probably isn’t for everyone, especially if you don’t spend a lot of time playing your Steam Deck – or other handheld – at home. But, the combination of gaming handheld and gaming pillow is quickly becoming one of my favorite ways to play games. Now, I just need more companies to come out with their takes on this idea, because while it seemed silly at first, it’s probably one of my favorite Steam Deck accessories now.

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

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The Razer BlackShark V3 Pro Noise Canceling Wireless Gaming Headset Is Now Available at Best Buy

Razer just recently released the newest version of its flagship gaming headset. The BlackShark V3 Pro is now available at Best Buy for $249.99 with free delivery. This headset is compatible with the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, Nintendo Switch, and PC and is available in black or white variants.

New Release: Razer BlackShark V3 Pro Now at Best Buy

You can choose either Razer HyperSpeed Gen-2 WiFi or Bluetooth 5.3... or both

As Razer's highest-end gaming headset, the BlackShark V3 Pro brings just about every feature to the table. For starters, the BlackShark Pro can wirelessly connect in two different ways. The faster method is its Razer HyperSpeed Gen-2 2.4GHz WiFi, which boasts ultra-low latencies as low as 10ms. The second method is Bluetooth 5.3. You can also pair and use both wireless connections simultaneously. There are two wired connections available as well, USB Type-C and 3.5mm audio, although only the USB Type-C port will charge up your battery while you play.

The V3 Pro has better 3D positional audio with new height channels

The BlackShark V3 Pro ups the ante with THX-certified 7.1.4ch surround sound thanks to two simulated height channels for better 3D positional audio. That means you'll be better able to differentiate footsteps and noises above and below you for greater immersion (and potentially a better advantage in competitive shooters like Battlefield 6). Razer offers game-specific EQ profiles, but you're also free to customize and save your own EQ profiles.

The new Gen 2 earcups offer passive noise isolation AND breathability

On the hardware front, Razer has updated the earcups with TriForce Bio-Cellulose Gen 2 50mm drivers that feature a new diaphragm design and increased magnet size, which in turn produces big sound (including a powerful low end) without distortion even at high volumes. The earcups are upholstered in dual-layered FlowKnit memory foam cushions. Razer claims this dual layer design offers the sound isolation qualities of leatherette, the plush comfort of memory foam, and the moisture-wicking breathable comfort of ventilated fabric. Other design perks include a steel reinforced headband and 15-degree swiveling earcups to conform to your ears for a tighter, sound isolating fit.

Hybrid active noise canceling is new to the V3 Pro

New to the BlackShark Pro series is hybrid active noise cancelation. Whereas the V2 Pro only offered passive noise isolation (which literally just means earcups that are designed to seal off your ear canal), the V3 Pro adds on active noise cancelation, which digitally filters out unwanted noise. I currently use a noise canceling gaming headset and it makes a huge difference, especially if your gaming PC is like mine and sounds like a wind turbine whenever a game is running. Active noise cancelation is especially effective at filtering out consistent, predictable noise sources like that. The detachable 12mm microphone also utilizes noise cancelation so that your teammates will hear your voice and nothing else.

You still get up to 70 hours of battery life on a single charge

The V3 Pro continues the Blackshark legacy of offering up to 70 hours of playtime from a single charge. And even if that's just not enough for your gaming ultra marathons, then the fast charge capability will get you 6 hours of playtime from just 15 minutes of charging over USB Type-C. Note that the 70 hour estimate is with 2.4GHz wireless connection and, presumably, with noise cancelation disabled.

The V3 Pro is priced favorably compared to the competition

At $250, the BlackShark V3 Pro isn't the cheapest headphone on the block, but it's actually quite reasonably priced when you look at other top-end gaming headsets on the market. The SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro, one of the few other gaming headsets with noise canceling, retails for $380, or $130 higher. The Logitech G Astro A50 X retails for $400, or $150 higher. If you're looking to pick up one of the best gaming headsets on the market and you're looking not to spend north of $300, you'd be hard pressed to find something better.

We reviewed the Razer BlackShark V3 Pro and loved it

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.

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Everything We Know About the Upcoming Google Pixel 10 Phones

Google is set to reveal new devices next week, with the Pixel 10 family of smartphones confirmed to be among them. Much like last year's Pixel 9, this new release of Google's popular Android phone looks like its going to be iterative rather than substantially different from what fans have come to expect. Still, users can expect some small but meaningful improvements that may make it worth the upgrade.

The Pixel 10 lineup will be shown off at the Made by Google event on August 20 alongside new versions of the Pixel Watch and Pixel Buds. Until then, here's what we know about the Pixel 10.

Pixel 10 Release Date

Google has confirmed the preorder date for Pixel 10 phones is August 20, 2025. The phones will be officially revealed at the Made by Google event that same day, where the company will share all of the details about the full family of devices and their upgrades over previous models. It's worth noting, though, that a report from Winfuture states that supply chain problems could delay the release of the Pixel 10 Pro Fold to October 9.

You can visit the Pixel 10's Google Store page now, which shows an image of the back of the standard Pixel 10 phone. There's also a button there to sign up for emails to receive an "exclusive offer" for new subscribers, offering a single-use discount for an eligible device from August 20 - September 4 when buying the phone via the Google Store.

Pixel 10 Models and Prices

The Pixel 10 will come in four models: Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold. This is pretty standard stuff in terms of historical Pixel releases, so it shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone already invested in the Google ecosystem.

For those who want the best of the best, the Pixel 10 Pro and Pro XL will sport better cameras with up to 8K video support and a whopping 16GB of RAM compared to the Pixel 10's 12GB. The Pro will maintain the 6.3" screen of the standard Pixel 10, while the XL is expected to be handful with its 6.8" screen.

Meanwhile, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold will come out swinging with a 6.4" one-handed screen that can be opened into an 8" Super Actua Flex interior screen, which is considered the phone's main display. It also sports 16GB of RAM, which should help to make it a multi-tasking powerhouse.

Expected pricing

While Google won't reveal the official pricing for the Pixel 10 family until August 20, here's the expected pricing for each of these devices:

  • Pixel 10 - $799
  • Pixel 10 Pro - $999
  • Pixel 10 Pro XL - $1,199
  • Pixel 10 Pro Fold - $1,799

Of course, it's worth pointing out that these prices are for the base models of each device. If you need more storage than what comes standard, you'll be looking at increasingly higher prices.

Pixel 10 New Features

The Pixel 10 family isn't looking to diverge too dramatically from what's been working for it, but leaks have revealed a handful of notable upgrades.

Perhaps the most notable change is that the standard Pixel 10 appears set to receive a triple rear camera, which has historically been reserved for the Pro models. This telephoto 5x optical zoom lens joins the usual main and ultrawide lenses—but it comes at a cost.

It appears that the standard Pixel 10's main lens has been reduced from 50MP to 48MP, while the ultrawide sensor has been reduced from 48MP to 13MP. Google is allegedly using the same sensors for these two cameras as the Pixel 9A, so the hope is that improvements to the AI software will offset the downgrades.

Elsewhere, the Pixel 10 will also introduce Google's Tensor G5 processor, which should provide a reasonable improvement to processing power. So, it's a good thing that a larger battery is also expected for each version of Google's new lineup. The standard Pixel 10 should receive a 4,970 mAh battery, while the Pixel 10 Pro and Pro XL will score 4,870mAh and 5,200mAh batteries, respectively. In addition to 27W wired charging, leaks have indicated that the Pixel 10 is likely to support 25W Qi2 wireless charging.

Pixel 10 Colors

As for what colors will be available at launch, known tipster Evan Blass has shared renders of every Pixel 10 device's colors on Monday. These renders included the long-rumored Jade option that adds a nice, natural green to the mix. Additionally, back in July, Android Headlines claimed that the Pixel 10 Pro Fold will be ditching the black and white models and replacing them with Moonstone and Jade versions.

Here are all of the alleged colors for each device:

  • Pixel 10 - Obsidian, Indigo, Frost, Limoncello
  • Pixel 10 Pro - Obsidian, Porcelain, Moonstone
  • Pixel 10 Pro XL - Obsidian, Porcelain, Moonstone, Jade
  • Pixel 10 Pro Fold - Moonstone, Jade

It's worth noting that rumors have stated that the base Pixel 10 Pro is also expected to receive the Jade colorway, but the renders from Blass didn't include that combination. It seems we'll have to stand by for Google's confirmation on August 20.

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Krafton Responds to Ex-Subnautica 2 Leads' Lawsuit, Saying They 'Resorted to Litigation to Demand a Payday They Haven't Earned'

Krafton has issued a response to a recent lawsuit filed by the former leads of Subnautica 2, offering rebuttals to the developers' claims and alleging they "resorted to litigation to demand a multimillion-dollar payout they haven't earned."

This comes in reply to a legal complaint filed by former Unknown Worlds CEO Ted Gill, and fellow co-founders Charlie Cleveland and Max McGuire, last month. In it, the former leads alleged that Krafton went out of its way to hinder Subnautica 2's development, delay the game, and ultimately fire them from their roles all in an effort to stop them and other employees from collecting a $250 million bonus payment that would have kicked in if the game's early access released on time later this year and reached certain sales milestones.

In its response, Krafton says the game was planned for a Q1 2024 release. However, "Cleveland and McGuire abandoned their roles as studio-wide Game Director and Technical Director to focus on their personal passion projects and quit making games for Unknown Worlds entirely. And Gill, who remained, focused on leveraging his operational control to maximize the earnout payment, rather than developing a successful game."

Krafton goes on to allege that by 2023, Unknown Worlds' development director had commented on the founders being "checked out," and that Cleveland in particular had stated publicly he had abandoned video games to pursue filmmaking. The release date of Subnautica slipped to 2024 and then 2025. "An internal assessment of the first playable in March of 2024 made clear that the team had failed to deliver on their promise of developing sufficiently new content. But rather than roll up their sleeves and make the game they had promised, the Key Employees blamed others and overhauled the team." Krafton also says that the leads continued reducing the scope of the game over time.

The response says that by spring 2025, Krafton was trying to stop them from releasing the game, saying it was not ready. However, Krafton alleges the leads tried to release it anyway in order to get their maximum earnout.

"Krafton, fearing how an underbaked EA Subnautica 2 would be received by both existing fans and the broader market, urged Cleveland and McGuire to return to their posts to generate a market-ready product that would not disappoint fans. Cleveland and McGuire declined. In response to Krafton's request for the Key Employees to return to lead the development of Subnautica 2, Gill stated that '[t]here's no coming back to a job they didn't have.'" Krafton further alleges that the leads said they would self-publish the game without Krafton, and that they downloaded "massive amounts of confidential information" from Unknown Worlds.

The Key Employees' insistence on releasing the game immediately was singularly driven by self-interest in obtaining the earnout. At every turn during development, the Key Employees were laser focused on avoiding "a timeline that doesn't tank the earnout opportunity" and scheduling the release to maximize their payments. Conversations throughout the post-acquisition period make clear the Key Employee's [sic] focus was on their payday, and not on the game. As early as 2022, an employee who was due to receive a portion of the earnout stated that despite the significant delays in the game, he was confident "Ted [Gill] will concoct a scheme to get us that earnout." [emphasis Krafton's]

The response goes on to issue answers to every claim in the founders' lawsuit, paragraph by paragraph. Krafton asks the court to rule in its favor, deny the founders' claims for relief, and award Krafton costs, including attorney fees.

This saga began in July, when Krafton seemingly out of the blue announced it would replace Unknown Worlds' leads with former Striking Distance CEO Steve Papoutsis. In the weeks that followed, reports emerged surrounding the $250 million bonus promised to staff amid questions as to whether that payout would be honored. While the Subnautica leads claimed in various statements and in their lawsuit that Krafton had tried to delay Subnautica 2 and ultimately fired them to avoid paying them the bonus, Krafton accused them of neglecting their duties, saying Subnautica 2 was not ready to launch. That final claim remains up in the air, with leaked documents since verified by Krafton confirming that Unknown Worlds was receiving feedback from the publisher that the game was not ready for early access launch. However, a report from Bloomberg suggests this may not have been wholly true.

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.

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Alien: Earth Premieres Tonight – Here's When You Can Watch the First 2 Episodes

Last year’s Alien: Romulus brought one of the best sci-fi franchises of all time to a new generation of audiences. Now, 45 years after the original Alien movie, the franchise is experiencing something new: a TV series. In his 9/10 review of the full season, critic Clint Gage goes so far as to say, “Alien: Earth matches an apex of late ’70s cinema in look and feel, while blowing out the world to create a new context with which to view the franchise.”

If you’re hoping to tune in to Alien: Earth, here’s the rollout for the entire season.

Alien: Earth Premieres Tonight – Here’s When to Expect New Episodes

Alien: Earth kicks off on Tuesday, August 12 with a double episode premiere, with subsequent episodes releasing every Tuesday through mid-September. The show’s first season will include eight episodes.

New episodes will stream on Hulu (in the U.S.) and Disney+ (outside of the U.S.) at 8pm ET, the same time they air on FX.

Alien: Earth is set two years before the original movie on the Alien timeline, though I have some theories it may stray from the especially early lore set out by Ridley Scott’s later Prometheus duology. Franchise execs put to rest any claims that Alien is trying to be the MCU, instead reaffirming that each project will continue to stand on its own. Still, FX has clearly put its hopes in the new series, suggesting that it could be the next Game of Thrones or Shōgun.

Alien: Earth also had a significant presence at San Diego Comic Con, where the entire first episode was screened for a closed audience. We got the chance to interview the cast, getting answers to hard questions like, you know, what does a Xenomorph smell like? We also spoke with the series' creator Noah Hawley about his approach to making a new series in the established franchise.

What’s Next for Alien?

While Ridley Scott at one point suggested his own work on a new Alien movie, Screen Rant recently published an interview where the director confirmed his departure from the franchise. Meanwhile, Fede Alvarez has already discussed plans for a sequel to his recent take on the IP, Alien: Romulus.

We’ve also seen Predator: Killer of Killers release earlier this year, and Predator: Badlands will be hitting theaters in Novembers. The latter has already flashed some of its cards about its Alien references. Whether that’s leading to another full crossover movie? Your guess is as good as mine. (Probably.)

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Ranking the Alien Movies

As the Alien franchise heads into new territory -- both thematically and format..ily -- with the TV series Alien: Earth, we're Weylin' our Yutanis at the seven Xeno-movies that have landed in theaters. Yes, we're gonna rank them all from worst to best, from wasteful to masterful. Did your top Alien film make it to number one? Find out below...

Read IGN's review of Alien: Earth here!

Also, are we going to completely ignore the AvP movies from 20 years ago? You bet your butt-o-morphs we are. Not only did the Alien films that followed disavow everything that was in them, but Fox considers AvP -- the movies, books, and comics -- to be a separate franchise with its own canon.

Check out our very own Alien franchise guide -- movies, games, comics, and books!

What's your top Alien flick? Is it Ridley Scott's 1979 original? James Cameron's stunning 1986 sequel? Fede Álvarez's ferocious new entry into the 45-year-old saga? We've voted amongst ourselves and come up with this official IGN ranking.

With soaring heroines played by Sigourney Weaver, Noomi Rapace, and Cailee Spaeny, menacing Machiavellian androids, and nightmare-inducing monsters whose entire bodies (inside and out) are lethal, the Alien franchise is one of the scariest and most enduring journeys in cinema history.

Warning: Some spoilers for the Alien films follow...

7. ALIEN: RESURRECTION (1997)

They were definitely thinking outside the bun with Alien: Resurrection, hiring Delicatessen co-director Jean-Pierre Jeunet and setting the story 200 years after the events of Aliens and Alien 3. It has some visually gorgeous moments, but it's tonally all over the place. Sigourney Weaver came back, but she's not playing Ellen Ripley...not any version that we knew anyhow. She's a super soldier-style clone made from Ripley blood left behind from Alien 3, a rather callous fusion of humanity and Xenomorphity.

Alien: Resurrection has space pirates, a new model of android, a nefarious scientist, gnarly deaths, and the series first-ever abomination, in the form of the "Newborn," but it all unspools in messy fashion, and just like its place on the timeline, it never rises above being a funky outlier and misfire.

6. ALIEN 3 (1992)

There have been attempts to retro-redeem Alien 3, giving it the old "it's good actually" treatment, but...nah.

After initially teasing a third Alien movie set on Earth, Fox instead delivered a grim misery parade set on a remote decommissioned Weyland-Yutani prison, mostly filled with shaven-headed men donning brown rags who you couldn't tell apart. What's worse, it coldly removed the stakes that allowed 1986's Aliens to reach such emotional highs by killing off Newt and Hicks during the first few minutes and transforming the entire franchise, up until that point, into a morose tragedy.

It was also the first time the series employed CG for its Xenomorph (the "Runner"), and some of those effects haven't aged gracefully. The end result of this very troubled production, which sadly was David Fincher's first feature film (don't worry, he'd rebound with Se7en), was a story that felt like it was punishing Ellen Ripley for surviving and thriving. No, we will have none of that contrarian re-examination. This movie is a "woof."

5. ALIEN: COVENANT (2017)

Alien: Covenant is better than you remember, deepening the lore surrounding the towering, buff Engineers and Michael Fassbender's David (who becomes the perfection-seeking mad robot that develops the standard "Xenomorph" -- and the Queen -- using innocent victims in heinous experiments) while also "getting back to basics" following the wild swings of Prometheus.

It's also very much a course correction from Ridley Scott's original "new trilogy" idea, reining in the Xenomorph-free elements of Prometheus and trying to put the toothpaste back in the tube. It's another new planet and another new lambs-to-slaughter situation, but this time the monsters are more familiar in design and the ramifications more or less drop us off at the doorstep of 1979's Alien (though we'll probavbly never find out the fate of David, who is still out there somewhere, living forever as a Synthetic).

Alien: Covenant also pulls a "Newt," killing off Noomi Rapace's Dr. Shaw off-screen despite the crucible she endured in Prometheus and her crusade, at the end of that movie, to take the Engineers to task. That sucks, though the harrowing horror movie-style twist at the end almost makes up for it.

4. PROMETHEUS (2012)

Ridley Scott returning to the Alien franchise after over 30 years? Not a single nerd was skeptical; all were psyched and stoked. But what Ridley Scott delivered was polarizing. Some fans were super into the new lore -- with the Engineers and the Black Goo bioweapon and the early Xeno-variations brought about by its contaminative properties -- and some thought it overly convoluted a simple, terrifying species of predatory alien, a case of a classic movie monster getting explained to death.

Ahead of the film, Scott himself said that Prometheus wasn't directly related to Alien, but that still didn't stop some from feeling deflated by this new direction. Regardless, Prometheus is gorgeous, from its costumes to its sets to its awesome effects, and it opened up a whole new corner of AI sci-fi, which Scott himself helped pioneer in a modern sense with Alien and Blade Runner. Michael Fassbender's David represents Peter Weyland's only recourse for immortality (man, billionaires hate sharing death in common with the poors, don't they), so it stands to reason that the tech CEO would travel light years to try to find out the secret to evading the Reaper.

Oh, and that MedPod C-Section scene, as Dr. Elizabeth Shaw removes the Trilobite from her abdomen? THAT's a freakin' scene, dude.

Even though Alien: Covenant isn't a bad flick, the fact that Scott didn't get to complete his original extensions of Prometheus ultimately hurt the movie, and it made it so that future films have to contend with its mythology.

Alien: Earth also explores the use of Synthetics to make humans immortal, but in a much different way. It's worth noting though that it's not using Prometheus or Alien: Covenant as source material at all, which will clearly make some fans happy.

3. ALIEN: ROMULUS (2024)

Fede Álvarez (Evil Dead, Don't Breathe) might not have added anything new to the mix, per se -- unless you count the "Offspring" creature at the end of the film -- but what he did with Alien: Romulus was take the DNA of 1979's Alien and fuse it with 2012's Prometheus, pitting a ragtag crew of miners and farmers, out to steal cryopods from a research station, against a vicious Xenomorph hive spawned from the exact same Xeno from the first movie. Yes, the one shot out into space by Ellen Ripley.

So you get the Facehuggers, the Chestbursters, and the Xenomorphs, now mixed with the Black Goo and Weyland-Yutani's wicked plans to use the Goo to evolve humans into better deep space slave laborers. Some didn't like how much it called upon past movies (with even Alien: Resurrection getting its flowers thanks to the Offspring), but in the end, Romulus is a savage, inventive heist-gone-wrong tale with amazing visuals and a fan-favorite character in David Jonsson's Andy, a faulty-but-kindly Synthetic companion. Romulus ties most everything together, which is never an easy feat; some feel it crumbles a bit under that burden, while others find it to be the balance we've been searching for.

2. ALIENS (1986)

James Cameron's first big film following The Terminator was sequel-with-no-equal Aliens, which took the slow-burn terror of Ridley Scott's Alien and blew it up. Literally. It's one of the best action movies ever made, overflowing with iconic moments and imagery. And while it's not a horror movie, like the original, it's still scary as hell. It might not be possible to make a Xenomorph movie and not have it be freaky. The moment when the Colonial Marines enter the Hive and get dismantled by the monsters living in the walls is one for the ages.

With Aliens, Cameron expanded both the Alien franchise and movie-making in general. Space marines, the Xenomorph Queen, Weyland-Yutani's scheming, a heroine who transforms from final girl to badass action hero - Aliens created a new landscape while still keeping things terrifying. It's effortlessly quotable, endlessly re-watchable, and Ellen Ripley's quest to save young Newt in the third act (whether you consider Ripley's daughter Amanda to be canon or not) is one hell of a jaw-dropping climax. Aliens is formidable sci-fi, exemplary storytelling, and just damn fun.

1. ALIEN (1979)

Unsurprisingly, Alien gets top marks here. It reshaped sci-fi, which is especially impressive in the wake of Star Wars, when everyone was looking to make space opera carbon copies. It's a space movie, a monster movie, and an exploration of AI evils, and it floored audiences with its creature effects and unforgettable Chestburster scene. While Aliens, seven years later, would be a high-octane shoot 'em up, Ridley Scott's original, written by Dan O'Bannon, is to be studied. It's a masterclass in tension and terror, perfecting the hybrid genre of space-horror. We still see the effects of Alien on cinema nearly 50 years later.

Alien features a cast of unheroic-looking blue collar workers in a very used, lived-in sci-fi environment. There's a nifty protagonist bait-and-switch, the doubling down on the idea of AI scoffing at empathy and valuing efficiency, and the background radiation of a slasher movie (complete with one of the best "Final Girls"). The movie also boasts a ridiculously beautiful production design, a sea of lights and buttons that provide a backdrop of tech malaise. Alien is an amazing experience, one to be savored.

Matt Fowler is a freelance entertainment writer/critic, covering TV news, reviews, interviews and features on IGN for 17 years.

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Beyond the Graphic Novels: Butterfly's Daniel Dae Kim on Riding the K-wave and Pretending to be Superman

When Daniel Dae Kim was a kid, he loved Superman so much that he injured himself jumping out of a window. The actor, whose resume includes cultural touchstones like Lost, 24, Avatar: The Last Airbender, and now KPop Demon Hunters wanted to be the iconic superhero so much that he he decided to “teach himself how to fly” at six years old by leaping from the window sill of his New York apartment. The adventure left him bloodied to the point that his father had to stitch up Kim’s chin without anaesthetic. “I still carry my homage to Superman to this day,” Kim says, pointing to his chin.

That spirit of adventure is part of what led Kim to his new Prime Video series “Butterfly”– a spy thriller in the mold of J.J. Abrams’s Alias based on the Boom! Studios graphic novels. In the show, both Kim’s character David and his fictional daughter Rebecca (Reina Hardesty) are caught up in a world of covert organizations, high-stakes action, international locations, and lots of family drama.

You can check out some of that action and drama in the exclusive clip below, in which David and Rebecca disarm a group of law enforcement officers.

The father-daughter relationship is what drew Kim to the project. “I thought, well, that is actually something that I'm interested in exploring,” Kim says.”You automatically have emotional stakes when you're talking about family, and I know what it's like to be a dad as well as a son. So it was a really nice entry point into the whole story. Regardless of what country we're in or what race we are, we all know what it feels like to be a parent or a child. And every parent makes mistakes, whether they want to or not.”

Kim, who also has a role in Netflix’s KPop Demon Hunters, is proud to be riding the K-wave as Korean culture continues to gain international appeal.

“You have visionary directors like Bong Joon Ho who are making incredible cinema, and it's of such a high quality that the world has to take notice,” Kim says. “And I think that's appropriate because it's not just cinema, it's music and beauty and food now. So I feel very fortunate to contribute something to that conversation because I don't think (Butterfly) could have been made even 10 years ago.”

Kim says it was important for him to bring a sense of Koran authenticity to the series. In addition to learning how to make hotteok (a type of Korean pancake) Kim also endured brutal shoots in extreme weather conditions during the show’s South Korea-based production. “If you know anything about Korean weather, you know that it's brutally cold in the winter and stiflingly hot in the summertime. We shot through three seasons. (We were shooting) sometimes (in) minus 10 (degrees). And I had one layer on because we're playing the whole season as if it happens in the spring. So you're seeing me acting and doing my best to pretend like I'm not freezing cold.”

Beyond locations and authentic food, Kim says he hopes the originality of Butterfly resonates with audiences. “There are a lot of things that you haven't seen before in our show like having actors with faces like ours at the center of it. That kind of originality is a sign of progress. I want to see stories personally from all over the world because I want to learn about different cultures. That’s how we create understanding among cultures. Instead of thinking about the world as ‘us versus them,’ the more we can start thinking about a global community, the better off we'll be.”

Butterfly premieres August 13 on Prime Video.

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The Biggest Pokémon Card Crashers And Climbers This Week - August 12

Special Illustration Rares from Temporal Forces have seen significant movement since their highs earlier in the year. Cards like Raging Bolt ex, Iron Crown ex, and Walking Wake ex were once among the most sought-after pulls from the set, but all three have dropped from their spring peaks.

Raging Bolt ex is down 11% from its May value of $82.36 and now trades around $73.45, while Iron Crown ex has fallen 13% in the same timeframe, moving from $55.74 to $48.30. Walking Wake ex has taken the hardest hit of the trio, losing 20% since May, with its price sliding from $50.37 to $40.45. This downturn mirrors a wider cooling in the set’s high-end singles as both players and collectors reassess their priorities.

Twilight Masquerade has seen a more mixed picture, with some cards losing steam while others continue to gain. Perrin has eased down 11% from March, moving from $106.43 to $94.87, and Carmine has dipped the same percentage since June, going from $78.70 to $69.99. Both are Special Illustration Rare Supporters that enjoyed early interest thanks to their unique effects, but neither has become a fixture in competitive lists, leading to softer demand.

At the same time, the set’s Illustration Rares and certain Pokémon ex cards are climbing in value as interest from both casual and competitive buyers grows.Gastly has risen 13% since June, from $35.74 to $40.99, helped by its role in Gengar evolution lines and appealing artwork.

Greninja ex has climbed 17% since January, from $18.44 to $21.59, thanks to its versatile attacks and solid HP. Sinistcha ex and Tatsugiri have each moved up 10% since April, now priced at $21.59 and $18.48 respectively, while Eevee has gained 10% from early August to reach $21.59. These changes highlight how certain cards can gain value steadily over months due to competitive experimentation, collector interest, or them just being stunning cards. Let's break this all down:

Pokémon Card Crashers

For cards that saw heavy demand early on, the market has cooled. Some have slipped due to a lack of tournament use, others because collectors have shifted their focus.

Raging Bolt ex brings explosive plays with Bursting Roar to refill your hand and Climactic Descent to convert discarded Basic Energy into heavy damage. It looked set to become a staple in certain builds, but the high retreat cost and inconsistent setup have made it less reliable in practice. As competitive players experiment with more stable options, extra copies have been hitting the market. The Special Illustration Rare artwork still turns heads in a binder, but with demand slowing, Its price has slipped.

Iron Crown ex offers useful bench support in Future decks through Cobalt Command, adding damage to your other Future Pokémon’s attacks. Twin Shotels provides a reliable way to apply pressure across the board, bypassing common defenses. Despite this, it has not found a consistent place in top tournament lists, and collector buying has eased off. Without strong competitive results to keep attention high, the price has edged down since May.

Walking Wake ex debuted with plenty of buzz thanks to Azure Wave, which ignores effects on the opponent’s Active Pokémon, and Cathartic Roar, which can hit 240 damage under the right conditions. The trick has been making those conditions happen consistently. Decks built around it have seen mixed success, and without the sustained performance to keep it in the spotlight, its Special Illustration Rare price has fallen noticeably from its early high.

Perrin gives players the option to cycle Pokémon from hand into the deck and fetch an equal number in return. It can be a valuable setup tool in certain builds, but it faces competition from other Supporters that fit more universally into current decks such as PRofessors Research. Collectors still appreciate the detailed Special Illustration Rare art, yet its price has eased back since March as demand from both has softened.

Carmine is one of the few cards that can be used on the very first turn when going first, letting you discard your hand and draw five cards. It can enable quick starts, but the narrow conditions for use mean it often sits unused. As the metagame evolves, it's not become a fixture in competitive decks, and its Special Illustration Rare has seen its value slip since June.

Pokémon Card Climbers

Not every card is moving down. Loads of Twilight Masquerade singles have been gradually climbing in value over months, thanks to a mix of playability, collector interest, and unique artwork.

Tatsugiri is a small but effective utility card for certain strategies. Attract Customers can pull a Supporter from the top six cards of your deck if it is in the Active Spot, offering a low-maintenance way to find key cards. Its single retreat cost and light-hearted Illustration Rare artwork make it a popular pick for collectors as well. Since April, that mix of function and style has helped it hold steady gains.

Sinistcha ex benefits from Re-Brew, an attack that spreads damage based on the Grass Energy in your discard before shuffling it back into your deck. Matcha Splash offers reliable damage while healing your team, which can matter in longer matches. As Grass-focused decks see more experimentation, this Special Illustration Rare has moved upward in value since April.

Eevee is always in demand among collectors, and the Twilight Masquerade Illustration Rare shows a group of them cuddled up on a comphy chair. Ascension allows it to evolve quickly, which can be useful in certain setups, though its main draw is its place in the franchise’s history. Since early August, interest has pushed the price up slightly. I expect this card go carry on growing in value indefinately, albiet in small increments.

Greninja ex offers strong offensive options in Shinobi Blade and Mirage Barrage, the latter being able to hit two targets at once. That combination of damage output and flexibility makes it appealing for a variety of decks. The stunning Special Illustration Rare artwork and Greninja fighting for the starter Pokémon top spot with Charizard adds collector appeal, and trainers are willing to pay a premium to get their hands on one of the most valuable Pokémon cards in the Scarlet and Violet era.

Gastly combines a distinctive Illustration Rare design, showing and also evolving into competitive Gengar deck builds. Mysterious Beam offers potential energy disruption, and Suffocating Gas gives cheap damage when needed. Its appeal has been as much about binder displays as tournament tables, and since June it has been steadily rising in value.

Last Week's Crashers and Climbers

Last week’s Pokémon TCG market update saw Paldean Fates and Hidden Fates dominating the spotlight, with several Special Illustration Rares and Shiny Vault classics making notable moves. On the climbing side, Mew ex led the charge with a 76% jump since October to $389.45, driven by its strong Restart ability and flexible Genome Hacking attack. Gardevoir ex followed with a 51% increase to $78.99, benefitting from its energy acceleration in Psychic decks, while Charizard ex rose 36% to $160.00 thanks to its powerful Infernal Reign Ability. Hidden Fates heavyweights also gained ground, with Charizard GX up 12% to $482.89 and Umbreon GX up 19% to $188.88, both continuing to appeal to collectors and players alike.

The crashers list was led by Pikachu from Paldean Fates, which plunged 48% from January to $25.00 as play demand faded despite its nostalgic appeal. Charmander from the same set fell 19% to $20.80, while Glaceon GX from Hidden Fates dropped 33% to $40.30 due to declining GX-era relevance. Moltres & Zapdos & Articuno GX saw a smaller 4% dip to $33.68, and Eevee from Hidden Fates slipped 8% to $33.13. Across both sets, the pattern was clear: high-end, competitive, or visually prestigious cards held or gained value, while smaller, less impactful pulls struggled to maintain early hype.

The Most Expensive Prismatic Evolution Cards You Can Still Pull From Packs

Prismatic Evolutions remains one of the most valuable sets in the Scarlet and Violet era, led by the Umbreon ex SIR at $869, still the top chase card despite dropping from its $1,300 high earlier this year. The Sylveon ex SIR sits in second at $315, bringing powerful control options with its Magical Charm and Angelite attacks. Espeon ex SIR follows closely at $204.99, offering disruption through devolving effects, while Leafeon ex SIR at $209.99 mixes healing and scaling damage. Vaporeon ex SIR holds $200.98 with strong spread damage potential, and Jolteon ex SIR matches the same $179.99 price as Glaceon ex SIR, though Glaceon has dropped 44% since May. Flareon ex SIR at $153.99 remains a hot pick for Fire decks, Roaring Moon ex SIR stays above $140, and Eevee ex SIR closes the top ten at $112.98 with its versatile evolution ability.

Outside the Eeveelutions, the set boasts affordable but striking SIRs like Dragapult ex at $94.99, Ceruledge ex at $93.85, and Bloodmoon Ursaluna ex at $83.99. Mid-range options such as Raging Bolt ex ($75.95), Gholdengo ex ($60.00), Palafin ex ($63.54), Iron Valiant ex ($50.99), Iron Hands ex ($45.95), Terapagos ex ($39.00), and Iron Crown ex ($40.60) offer standout art at a fraction of the top card prices. With many of these having corrected down from earlier highs, collectors now have a chance to secure key pieces at stable values before the next upward shift.

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.

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With Doctor Who's Future Still Uncertain, Showrunner Russell T Davies Says 'I Don't Own It, It's Not Mine'

Doctor Who showrunner Russell T Davies has reflected on his work running the BBC's flagship sci-fi show, and said that ultimately his "heart" was fondest for the series he had personally created.

Speaking while promoting his new TV drama Tip Toe, Davies mentioned his time in charge of Doctor Who — by far his most-watched work, and the longest he has dedicated to any single project — but suggested that his career would instead be remembered for his own creations.

"I love Doctor Who, but I don't own it," Davies told The Big Issue, via Deadline. "It's not mine. So in the end, my heart will always be with the things that I own."

"It is the strongest thing I've written," Davies continued, discussing Tip Toe, which he has described as a mix of his series Queer as Folk, and Years and Years. "I do believe Queer As Folk, Cucumber, It's a Sin and Tip Toe are the ones that will be on my gravestone."

Davies has remained tight-lipped over the future of Doctor Who and his own role as showrunner over the past few months, after previously signing off from his regular column within Doctor Who Magazine on a distinctly gloomy note.

"We don't know what's happening yet," Davies admitted back in June, "and while everyone works that out, I'll take a pause on this page... Hopefully, we'll have news soon."

The production hiatus follows a tumultuous couple of years for Doctor Who with Russell T Davies back at the helm, following his original tenure during the show's David Tennant-led heyday.

Davies' most recent season reportedly delivered the worst viewing figures of the show's modern era, down year-on-year from Doctor Who star Ncuti Gatwa's initial run of episodes in 2024, which itself was lower than the series' previous era featuring Jodie Whittaker.

Criticism of the series' writing and story arcs has persisted, with even Doctor Who actor and writer Mark Gatiss recently suggesting the show was in need of a rest.

And as for the Doctor themselves, the series was seemingly left without a new permanent inhabitant of the TARDIS, after Gatwa departed in a reshot ending to the season, and Billie Piper was drafted in as an unexplained stand-in.

Addressing the future of the show with fellow fans, former Doctor Who Magazine editor Tom Spilsbury recently said viewers should "adjust their expectations" for the series' immediate future, as the wait for official news on the series' Disney co-funding deal renewal drags on. With a potentially lengthy search for a new production partner on the cards should Disney indeed no longer be on board, Doctor Who could remain off-air for the rest of the decade, Spilsbury wrote.

Tom Phillips is IGN's News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social

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New Alien: Earth Trailer Remakes the Original Alien Movie Trailer — and That Poor Cat Will Never Be the Same Again

With Alien: Earth launching today, FX has released a new trailer fans of the original Alien movie are sure to enjoy.

FX has remade the original Alien movie trailer with material from Alien: Earth, complete with similar shots, the same sounds, and re-jigged effects.

In the original trailer for Ridley Scott’s seminal 1979 sci-fi horror movie, we see the word ‘Alien’ appear bit by bit as a xenomorph egg comes into view over an alien landscape. The egg cracks open alongside scary sounds, with footage from the movie showing Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley and the rest of the crew of the Nostromo looking increasingly desperate before we close out on a shot of the Nostromo in space and that iconic tagline: "In space no one can hear you scream."

This Alien: Earth trailer is very similar. It begins with the words 'Alien Earth' appearing bit by bit, as they do in the original trailer, except Earth itself is the egg. Earth then cracks open with the same visual effect, and we get similarly frantic footage from the show. Where Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley was running inside a spaceship corridor, we see new Alien star Sydney Chandler as Wendy, the first hybrid, running in a similar shot.

Some of the shots we see are certainly not for the faint of heart, although they are in keeping with prior Alien: Earth trailers. Where the original Alien trailer showed Ripley’s cat, Jonesy, we see another cat in this Alien: Earth trailer, and, well… let’s just say that poor cat will never be the same again.

The new trailer ends with a new tagline: "We were safer in space."

For a side-by-side comparison, check out the video below:

Alien: Earth is full of homages to the original film - and this latest trailer is one of them! pic.twitter.com/Gnk3xnyhUb

— IGN (@IGN) August 12, 2025

There’s a lot of excitement among fans for Alien: Earth, from Fargo creator Noah Noah Hawley. It reportedly has a bigger scale than fellow FX series Shogun — and the production to go along with it.

Alien: Earth revolves around the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot, which crash-lands on earth. Wendy (Sydney Chandler) and a group of tactical soldiers make a “fateful discovery” that puts them face-to-face with the xenomorph fans know well, but also a number of never-before-seen alien species. Some of these look disgusting, which is of course in-keeping with the Alien franchise’s sci-fi horror roots.

Alien: Earth is set just a few years before the events of Alien, which famously debuted the xenomorph. At this point in the Alien timeline, Earth is governed by five corporations: Weyland-Yutani, Prodigy, which owns the city the Maginot crashes into, Lynch, Dynamic, and Threshold. Cyborgs and synthetics coexist with humans, but then the boss of Prodigy invents hybrids (humanoid robots with human consciousness). Wendy is the first hybrid prototype, and is part of the established push for immortality that is a running theme in the Alien franchise.

Alien: Earth premieres its first two episodes on August 12 on Hulu at 8pm ET, and on FX and Disney+ at 8pm PT / ET (August 13 in the UK and internationally on Disney+). New episodes of the eight-episode season debut each following Tuesday.

In January last year, Hawley explained why he is not using the backstory provided in Prometheus for Alien: Earth, saying he likes the "retro-futurism" of the original films. Hawley said he spoke to Alien chief Ridley Scott about "many, many elements" of the Alien series, including its ties to the prequels, but ultimately decided to cut loose and move away from the bioweapon backstory because he preferred the lore of the original films.

Check out IGN's Alien: Earth review to find out what we think of the show.

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.

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Netflix Announces KPop Demon Hunters Sing-Along Screenings In Theaters For the Stans

KPop Demon Hunters has taken Netflix by storm since its release on the platform back in June — and now, you can take your fandom to the next level with an upcoming weekend of special sing-along screenings in theaters.

Netflix just announced that the animated musical fantasy will head to theaters nationwide and in Canada on August 23 and August 24, with tickets going on sale tomorrow, August 13, at 9am ET.

Tickets can be acquired at SingKPopDemonHunters.com, which is also where the full list of theaters and showtimes can be found.

KPop Demon Hunters is currently the most watched Netflix animated original film of all time and holds several records for the streamer. The movie is currently ranked fourth for Netflix’s most watched English language films, and is also Netflix’s most watched animated film in general.

Plus, the soundtrack has also done well for itself on the Billboard charts. With over 3 billion global streams to date, the album is currently holding the No. 2 spot on the Billboard 200 for the week of August 9.

KPop Demon Hunters was directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans from a script by Kang, Appelhans, Danya Jimenez, and Hannah McMechan. The film stars Arden Cho, May Hong, Ji-young Soo, and boasts an exciting supporting cast featuring Ken Jeong, Liza Koshy, Joel Kim Booster, Daniel Dae Kim, Ahn Hyo-seop, Yunjin Kim, and Byung Hun Lee.

The film — which comes direct from the creative home of the Spider-Verse, Sony Pictures Animation — is streaming now on Netflix.

Lex Briscuso is a film and television critic and a freelance entertainment writer for IGN. You can follow her on Twitter at @nikonamerica.

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