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EE Store Has The Cheapest Black Friday Deal on PlayStation 5 in the UK

23 novembre 2025 à 15:00

Looking for a decent deal on a PlayStation 5 in the UK before Black Friday proper hits? Well the online EE Store has the best deal on a PS5 overall right now, and there's plenty more where that came from. There's a ridiculous amount of console, PSVR2, PS Portal, DualSense and accessory deal in their Early Black Friday offers, so you might aswell get yourself sorted right now. If you'd sooner pay monthly, there's plenty of discounted deals live right now too, so let's get straight into it:

The Best PS5 Early Black Friday Deal in the UK

Even if you don't like Football or sports games in general, this PS5 Slim Digital console with a digital code for FC 26 is a banger of a deal for £285. You're usually talking around £400 for just the console on any given day, so £115 off with the option to add a disk drive on later on is ridiculous. Whilst I'd love someone to come along and beat this deal, I very much doubt it's going to happen during Black Friday 2025.

More PS5 Console Deals

Don't fancy going all digital? No problem, there's plenty of other deals knocking around on EE for PS5 right now. The thought of bagging a PS5 Pro with a game boxed in for £585 is mental, which is also cheaper than a bog standard Xbox Series X. It would be rude not to, right? If you're not bothered about FC 26, you can just get the PS5 Pro on its own and save £10, winner.

If you fancy something different and love Ghost of Yōtei, the gold limited edition console is £90 off rocking a tidy £428 price tag, which is £53 more than the standard Slim Disk PS5. So it's down to you is cosmetic are that much important, but it's cheaper than reshelling a DualSense and PS5 if you was thinking of saving money that way.

Pay Monthly PS5 Deals

It's always best practice to buy things outright, but it's not always practical. If you're in that boat EE have some decent early Black Friday deals on 24 month contract console deals, and they've all got some decent stuff bundled in. Unlike buying things outright from EE Store, contract console deals are only available to EE customers as a bill add on.

The cheapest option here is the PS5 Digital Slim, which works out at £466 by the time you've paid it off but comes with a £100 PSN voucher to get a years PlayStation+ Extra subscription. So you'll be paying £366 for the console. That's £86 more than just buying the Black Friday deal above outright, but you're getting the convenience of monthly payments.

PS5 DualSense and Controller Deals

Some cool options and deals here to, with the best being a DualSense Edge controller for under £170, crazy talk. This bad boy has fully adjustable triggers and remappable buttons with a longer battery life to boot. Don't want to shell out so much for a controller? The standard DualSense is down to £42, with an extra £4 scoring you the Chroma edition. If you liked the look of that Ghost of Yōtei PS5 you can just pick up the DualSense controller instead for £55, £20 off it's usual price.

PSVR2, Portal and Accessory Deals

IF you want to go all in with the full PlayStation 5 lineup, it's going to cost you significantly less with these early Black Friday deals. PSVR2 is down to £299.99, that's a massive £100 off. If you also fancy making the most out of PlayStation+ Premium's cloud gaming feature, PS Portal is the best way to do it. It's now down to £175, £25 off its full fat price. The Pulse bluetooth headset and earbuds are down too, now at £105 and £165 respectfully.

PSVR 2 and Portal Pay Monthly Deals

You can also take out a 24 months pay monthly deal on PSVR2 and PlayStation Portal. It's going to cost more than just buying them as expected, but you do get a £50 EE Gamecard. This can be redeemed on games, subscription and other gaming gubbins on the EE Game Store which is a bonus. All need £10 upfront, then the PS Portal is £12 PM and PSVR2 is £22 PM.

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.

Nintendo's 2025 Black Friday Sale is Officially Live

23 novembre 2025 à 15:00

Nintendo's official Black Friday 2025 sale is now live across all major retailers. From Nov. 23-29, fans can score up to 50% off a slew of Switch and Switch 2 games, some top discounts on memory cards, and rock bottom prices on amiibo.

My favorite deal for Nintendo fans right now is on the recently released Samsung P9 512GB MicroSD Express card for just $74.99 after a 25% off instant discount. This is the best option for expanding your Switch 2's internal memory.

When it comes to games, my top pick is Super Mario Odyssey right now, which ranked fourth on IGN's "Top 100 Nintendo Games of All Time", for just 30 bucks.

There's also Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door Remake, Splatoon 3, and more down to $29.99, alongside Luigi Mansion 3, Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, and Donkey Kong Country Returns HD at $39.99.

Several third-party games are also discounted as part of the sale, including Star Wars Outlaws (including all its DLC) for $39.99 on Switch 2, $20 off its original list price.

Final Fantasy's 1-6 Pixel Collection is also down to $39.99. That's $35 off, and the lowest price ever on the game. There are also several other big Black Friday discounts on Switch games like the Dragon Quest HD-2D Remakes, Just Dance 2026, and more.

There's also a whole bunch of great amiibo deals that are absolutely worth your attention.

Amazon has dropped Tears of the Kingdom amiibo, Riju and Sidon to $9.99, while Best Buy has matched that price on Tulin and Yunobo. Street Fighter amiibo are also discounted, sitting at $14.99 at Best Buy.

However, not all deals are yet live, and fans should keep an eye out for more discounts over the coming days as well.

There's also Nintendo's Cyber Monday offerings to consider, from Nov. 30 - Dec. 1, including a $20 discount on more Switch 2 microSD Express cards.

If the Samsung P9 microSD card deal is still a little too steep for you, you're better off waiting until Cyber Monday to secure a discount on the 256GB memory cards instead.

Dropping from $59.99 to $39.99, this will certainly catch the attention of Switch 2 owners, especially since microSD Express cards are the only option for expanding their console's internal storage.

This is a great deal, but I'd personally still opt for the $74.99, 512GB option, as that's definitely the best deal for Switch 2 owners right now.

You can find all of Nintendo's Black Friday deals at the digital Nintendo eShop, as well as at participating retailers such as Amazon, Best Buy, and Walmart.

But, notably absent from the sale are the Switch consoles. For most of the original Switch’s life cycle, Nintendo would offer the Mario Kart 8 Deluxe - Switch bundle during its Black Friday sale.

But this year, it's nowhere to be seen. With the Switch 2 now regularly available, the infamous bundle offering appears to have been retired, at least for now.

That said, while Nintendo isn’t offering any console discounts, you can still easily find the standard-priced Nintendo Switch 2 bundles in stock at all retailers.

They're slightly discounted compared to buying the console and game separately: Mario Kart World's bundle saving you $30, and the Pokémon bundle saving you $20.

Unfortunetly, there also aren't any official discounts on Nintendo's first-party Switch 2 games like Mario Kart World, Donkey Kong Bananza, and Pokémon Legends Z-A. But, we're still on the look out for any surprise discounts in the meantime.

How Do These Deals Compare to Last Year?

In all honesty, this year’s deals are a mixed bag. $30 for a Switch game like Super Mario Odyssey is a genuinely strong offer, but some other standout Switch or Switch 2 titles aren’t seeing similar discounts. It’s the kind of deal that makes you sit up and take notice, but it’s also the exception rather than the rule.

Take The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom. Last year, the original Switch version fell to just $29.99, which was a huge saving and a no-brainer for anyone who hadn’t picked it up yet. This year, there’s a Switch 2 edition, which changes the dynamic completely.

Nintendo hasn’t discounted it, and at $70, it’s a tough sell unless you’re set on upgrading. The lesson is clear: the game is still desirable, but Nintendo isn’t willing to undercut its new hardware launch.

That’s the broader picture this year. With Switch 2 now on the market, Nintendo is holding firm, offering few bargains unless absolutely necessary. That goes for consoles, the biggest new games, and pretty much everything else. Deals exist, but they’re selective, and if you’re hunting for the same kind of price drops we saw last year, you’re going to be disappointed in some areas.

More Black Friday Deals

Nintendo wasn't the first to kick off its Black Friday sale, as PlayStation started things off a few days ago, discounting plenty of games and dropping the price of its PS5 consoles by at least $100.

Amazon and Best Buy have already long started their official Black Friday sales, both of which will carry on all the way through to Cyber Monday on December 1.

Walmart is already featuring deals from both PlayStation and Nintendo's sales, but its official discounts don't start until November 25, or November 24 for those with a Walmart+ membership.

Are you planning to pick up anything in Nintendo's Black Friday sale?

Let us know in the comments, and stick around with IGN as we continue to update you daily on the best Black Friday deals for 2025.

Robert Anderson is Senior Commerce Editor and IGN's resident deals expert on games, collectibles, trading card games, and more. You can follow him @robertliam21 on Twitter/X or Bluesky.

Dell and Alienware UK Is Now Live and I'm Going To End Up Skint

23 novembre 2025 à 13:00

You heard it right, Alienware and Dell UK just launched their Black Friday deals in the UK and the brand tax is gone. The amount of ridiculous deals on display right now is baffling, and I'm here for it (I've warned my bank account).

TL:DR Dell UK Black Friday Sale

There's something for everyone here, from someone wanting a cheeky workhorse for their work from home job so absolute behemoths that can handle ray tracing and are loaded with the latest and greatest Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000 series graphics cards.

I've sectioned their selection off and picked out the best budget, mid-range and high-end options for each, just to show there's literally something for everyone in here. So let's not waste any time and get straight into it:

Alienware Gaming Desktop, Laptop and Accessory Deals

Let's kick things off with a decent gaming laptop budget deal, the Alienware 16 Aurora. This particular model is £699 and comes loadied with an RTX 3050, which is two generations old but still packs a punch . You can even run a stripped back version of DLSS 4 on it, although you won't get multi frame generation.

It'll still rock Super Resolution (Upscaling) and Ray Reconstruction features. Granted this is quite a big setback, but running games at lower resolutions then turning on Super Resolution will push the hardware on this laptop way beyond it's benchmarks. 16GB DDR5 is plenty and the processor isn't bad, so 1080p gaming native on most games is very possible with decent frame rates. Plus, there's always something good knocking around on Github to squeese more performance out of that overridden DLSS 4.

For mid-range i'd go with either the £1,399 Alienware Aurora Gaming Desktop or the $1549 Alienware 16X Aurora Gaming Laptop, which should get similar performance. What you have to look out for with gaming laptops is the dedicated graphics won't have the same performance as their full-fat desktop counterpart. So whilst getting a 5060Ti over a 5070 sounds like madness, there's not going to be much difference when it comes to headroom playing natively.

Regardless, you're still getting the full DLSS4 experience, which means upscaled resolutions, frame generation and the best ray tracing experience with Blackwell architecture. It's actually insane lowering native resolution on games and seeing what the 5000 series GPUs can do with upscalling and generating extra frames. But in all honesty you'd have no problems getting high frames and max settings out of most games on either setup.

The high-end option here is a bit more nitche, but if you're looking for incrimental improvements that add up, the £2,049 Alienware 18 Area 51 is for you. Compared to the $500 cheaper 16X Aurora, you get an extra 2-inch on your screen with a 60Hz refresh rate upgrade to 300Hz and slightly faster DDR5 RAM, upgrading from 5,600 MT/s to 6,400 MT/s. The GPU is still an 8GB GDDR7 RTX 5070, and the processor has slighly different clock speeds from 2.1/5.4GHz to Area 51's 2.4GHz/5.2GHz. In the grand scheme of things the really isn't going to make much difference.

If you want value for money with your gaming laptop purchase, my money would be on the $1,549 Alienware 16X Aurora. An extra $500 for minimal upgrades isn't really worth it for my personally.

Alienware Gaming Monitor Deals

If you've got a rig capable of 4K 60FPS performance at minimum, the Alienware 32 4K QD-OLED is a ridiculously good deal for £663.56. That's £245.43 below the usual price and a cracking Black Friday deal. It has all the dream specs anyone would want from a gaming monitor, 4K resolution @ 240Hz and a 0.03ms response time backed up by a gorgeous 32-inch HDR-capable OLED display.

It's also G-SYNC and VESA Adaptive Sync compatible with 1 DisplayPort that supports 1.4 and 2.3, 2x HDMI 2.1 and 2 USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports. You can even adjust the height, tilt and swivel with built in cable management and RGB light at the back. It literally is the perfect monitor

Budget-wise, Alienware 27-inch gaming monitor has all the decent 1440p specifications you need for PC gaming for £153.30. Nvidia G-Sync, AMD FreeSync and Vesa AdaptiveSync are all supported, with 2 HDMI Ports and 1 Display Port 1.4. 2ms GTG (Super Fast Setting) response time is well within the limits of what you'd want too, all for £65.70 less than RRP. It's not got the flashy OLED screen, but it's a 27-inch Fast IPS screen for the cost of a couple of AAA games, not a bad deal at all.

Looking for something that packs more punch for a slightly higher price point? the 27-inch AW2723DF is the way to go. You're looking at a 1440p screen still, but this bad bow has a higher 240Hz refresh rate and a much better 1ms Response Time. The screen itself is still 27-inch but it's a nano color fast IPS screen, meaning you're going to get more refined and accurate colour representation. For me this is the best 1440p option that builds on the budget 27-inch gaming monitor in every way.

Dell Laptop Deals

Now I've got all that gaming excitement out of my system, let's concentrate on the workhorses for the grown ups (Oh hi Peter Pan syndrome). If you want something that's going to pack more of a punch than a Chromebook that runs Windows and is ideal for web surfing, day-to-day tasks and streaming, Dell 15 at £268.99 is a solid budget laptop.

It has enough RAM and storage to get things done, and the UHD integrated Intel graphics are going to make everything look nice. It's not going to do much else, but if you're not bothered about running photoshop and getting basic tasks done it doesn't matter.

If you want something mid-range that will fit most use cases bar anything outside of indie gaming, Dell 14 Plus 2-in-1 is a cool choice for £499. Again, it's going to cover day-to-day tasks including streaming, and is a good option for digital artwork and light photo/video editing. It's the angled tablet fold-over design that makes it perfect for drawing, although if you're looking for something that's going to double as a drawing tablet for heavy and professional workloads this might not be powerful enough.

XPS 13 at £1,099 is going to be more suitable for creative work, featuring a Snapdragon X Elite with a dedicated Qualcomm Adreno GPU. These new SoC (System on a Chip) setups are gaining popularity because of how efficient they are at handling local AI tasks (Processing offline on your device instead of an online server). You're getting a much better screen, buckets of RAM. You can also get a non-touchscreen variant that will knock £100 off the final price too.

Dell Desktop Deals

For me these deals come down to two models. If you fancy something capable of handling 4K gaming with ray tracing whilst being a good all-rounder for high-demand tasks without looking like a gaming rig, Dell Tower Plus for £1,498.99 is a beast. It's loaded with an RTX 5070, 32GB of DDR5 Ram and a Ultra 7 265 processor.

After a sleek desktop setup that saves on space? Dell 24 All-In-One is a beautiful bit of kit for under £570. The Ultra i5 processor and 16GB DDR5 RAM is plenty to make that FHD screen shine and is a great family PC option.

Dell Monitor Deals

All of these deals are pretty good budget to midrange offers, most noticably the 4K options for under £560. It just depends if you fancy 4K content or not in all honesty.

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.

Zelda amiibo Drop to Just $10, a Black Friday Deal So Good It Might Literally Be an Pricing Error

23 novembre 2025 à 12:34

Nintendo thankfully isn't dropping amiibo support for Switch 2, and right now that matters because some of the best Zelda figures have quietly crashed to just $9.99 ahead of Black Friday.

Sidon, Riju, Tulin, and Yunobo are all heavily discounted as the Nintendo Black Friday sale kicks off today, and honestly, deals this aggressive usually disappear fast.

Amazon has dropped Riju and Sidon to $9.99, while Best Buy has matched that price on Tulin and Yunobo. Street Fighter amiibo are also discounted for Black Friday, sitting at $14.99 at Best Buy, if that's also of interest.

Each of these was supposedly only meant to get a $10 cut for Black Friday, so either the retailers blinked or someone mispriced them. Either way, grab all of these before the correction hits, because this will not last.

Each figure launched at $29.99, so seeing them down to $9.99 means you're saving 66% and shaving $20 off every amiibo. That's even stronger than the midyear sale, when they bottomed out between $14.99 and $19.99 at Amazon.

And if you're wondering what they actually do in-game, all four of the Zelda figures unlock content in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, while the Street Fighter sets unlock content for Street Fighter 6 on Switch 2.

For the Zelda figures, tap any of them via NFC while playing Tears of the Kingdom and you'll get exclusive paraglider fabric options, extra materials, and a weapon or rare item. Being part of the Zelda line also means they can unlock bonuses elsewhere. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening includes amiibo-exclusive Chamber Dungeons, and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe gives you a new Mii racing suit.

If you're playing The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom on Switch 2 with the upgrade pack, you're getting a much smoother ride. The update bumps up frame rate and resolution, cleaning up the original's only real flaw, its performance.

As Tom Marks put it in his review update, ”This [Switch 2 upgrade] really does feel like the way this game was always meant to be played, and I’m thrilled by the idea of a new generation discovering it for the first time.” Hard to disagree.

More Switch 2 Black Friday Deals

Robert Anderson is Senior Commerce Editor and IGN's resident deals expert on games, collectibles, trading card games, and more. You can follow him @robertliam21 on Twitter/X or Bluesky.

Nintendo Switch 2 MicroSD Express Cards on sale for Black Friday in the UK

23 novembre 2025 à 12:00

It looks like a great time to upgrade that Nintendo Switch 2 256GB internal storage with a MicroSD Express card this Black Friday, and deals have already surfaced.

Express MicroSDs are the new standard for Nintendo Switch 2, with standard MicroSD cards not working, but this also bring faster read/write speeds and meets the demands of games amde specifically for Nintendo Switch 2.

Black Friday MicroSD Express Cards

The best deal here is the 1TB Lexar MIcroSD Express for £169.99, which is down by £30 from £199.99. It's the best bang for your buck when it comes to paying for raw storage, and has the fastest read speeds out of the MicroSD Express cards on offer at the moment. Whilst the Write speeds are the lowest out of the offers, it's hardly going to make a real difference in real world applications.

For less than half that price you can grab a Sandisk 512GB model which has an extra 50MB/s write speed and 20MB/s less read speeds, which is again so minimal you won't notice and is a damn sight easier on your pocket when it comes to its price point. It's usually £86.99, but there's a cheeky Black Friday 8% off bringing it down to £79.99. I wouldn't turn my nose down at saving £16.99 in all honesty.

If you just want to double your Nintendo Switch 2 storage capacity, there's two options available for you in these early Black Friday deals. The Sandisk 256GB card has the same specifications as the 512GB model, then you have the officially licenced Samsung alternative tht's red and has the Mario "M" stamped on the front of it. This has the fastest write speeds of the bunch at 800 MB/s with a respectable 800MB/s read speeds. The Samsung 256GB card is more of a good all-rounder MIcroSD Express card than the SanDisk one, so I'd pay the extra and get that instead.

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.

Dark Souls 2 Will Soon Get RTGI And It Already Looks Glorious

23 novembre 2025 à 09:53

Dark Souls 2 fans, get ready for a treat. The creator of the amazing DS2LightingEngine Mod is currently working on a new version that will add support for real-time RTGI. Although there is no ETA on when the mod will come out, Ganaboy shared some early screenshots from it. And, as you will see, it … Continue reading Dark Souls 2 Will Soon Get RTGI And It Already Looks Glorious

The post Dark Souls 2 Will Soon Get RTGI And It Already Looks Glorious appeared first on DSOGaming.

Get the 2nd Gen Apple AirPods Pro Earbuds for $108, Half the Cost of the AirPods Pro 3 for Black Friday

23 novembre 2025 à 08:50

Why pay over $200 for the new AirPods 3 when you can get the 2nd generation model for literally half the price? Ahead of Black Friday, Woot (which is owned by Amazon), is selling factory reconditioned 2nd gen Apple AirPods Pro earbuds for just $107.99 after you apply a 20% off coupon code "EARBUDS20" in cart. Amazon Prime members get free shipping, otherwise there's a $5 delivery fee. This is the second generation model with USB Type-C charging and MagSafe charging case. Although these are refurb units, they include a 1 year Amazon warranty.

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen) for $108

Factory reconditioned with 1 year Amazon warranty

The AirPods Pro is the best-sounding "truly wireless" earbuds for iPhone users thanks to its passively isolating in-ear design combined with excellent active noise cancelation, low-distortion driver and amp, and the Apple H2 chip. It also has useful features like Adaptive Transparency Mode, which lets you better hear your surroundings without removing your earbuds, and Conversation Mode, which automatically enhances the voices of people you're talking to. The second generation AirPods Pro replaces the Lightning port with a more universal USB Type-C port so you don't have to mix and match cables, and also includes a MagSafe charging case as standard.

The AirPods Pro 3 is better, but is worth twice the cost?

Currently there's a Black Friday deal that drops the price of the newer AirPods Pro 3 to $219.99. That's a welcome discount for sure, but it's still double the price of the 2nd gen AirPods Pro 2 deal here. The new AirPods Pro 3 are without a doubt an improvement over the 2nd gen AirPods pro, but it's your call as to whether or not those improvements are worth double the price. Here's a rundown of what's improved this time around:

TL;DR: AirPods Pro 3 improvements

  • Better audio quality
  • Better noise cancelation
  • Built-in heart rate sensing
  • Longer battery life (8hrs vs 6hrs)
  • More weatherproof (IP57 vs IP54)

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.

Black Friday Is the Best Time to Stock up on Cheap USB-C Cables, Get Two for Just $5.60

23 novembre 2025 à 08:30

USB Type-C has become the standard for charging and data cables alike, so it's good to have extra on hand. With this Black Friday deal, here's your chance to get some quality cables at a throwaway price. Amazon is offering a two-pack of Lisen 6.6ft 240W USB Type-C cables for just $5.60 after you apply coupon code "OFU5KCSD". That averages out to $2.80 per cable. USB Type-C cables typically go for about $10 per cable or more at your local big box store. These can charge nearly any device with a USB-C port, including your Nintendo Switch 2, iPhone 16, or even the new M4 MacBook.

2-Pack of Lisen 6.6ft 240W USB Type-C Cables for $5.60

Keep your cable collection simple. These cables measure 6.6 feet in length, which is a great general purpose length: long enough to still be able to use your device while the cable is plugged in, but not so long as to be an unnecessary nuisance. These cables are also rated for up to 240W of power delivery, which means they can be used to charge even high powered electronics like your laptop. They're encased in a braided nylon sheath for extra durability and aeshetics. Lisen claims that they've been lab tested for up to 40,000+ bends and 175lb tensile pulls, "equivalent to a decade of daily extreme use". These cables have 5,000 ratings on Amazon with an average 4.6 star rating.

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.

Amazon's Best Black Friday Meta Quest 3S Deal Is Now Live, Up to $120 Off in Total Savings

23 novembre 2025 à 08:25

Prospective VR gamers alert, Amazon just kicked off its best Black Friday deals on the Meta Quest 3S VR headset. Not only do you save $50-$70 off in instant discounts ($249 for the 128GB model and $329 for the 256GB model), you now get a bonus $50 Amazon credit with either purchase. That's basically getting a Quest 3S headset for as low as $199, plus you get a free game. This is the best deal I've seen from Amazon this year on a Quest 3S headset with warranty.

Note that Best Buy is offering similar Meta Quest 3S deals for Black Friday, but with a $50 Best Buy gift card. Amazon credit is arguably more versatile than a Best Buy gift card, but you should go with the Best Buy deal if you prefer to get The Walking Dead: Saints and Sinners instead of Gorilla Tag as your free game.

Meta Quest 3S Starting at $249 Plus $50 Amazon Credit

Also at Best Buy with $50 eGift Card

The Meta Quest 3S is the best standalone consumer-oriented VR headset under $300. It costs 40% less than the Quest 3 and yet retains most of its hardware and functionality, including the Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 processor, Touch Plus controllers with inside-out tracking, and mixed reality passthrough. However, whereas the Quest 3 has been updated with a new pancake lens design, the Quest 3S retains the Fresnel optics of the Quest 2. Although obviously not as good as the Quest 3, the Quest 3S still very much offers an immersive visual experience that is sure to impress. I myself logged in hundreds of hours on the Quest 2 before I moved on to the Quest 3. For newcomers who want to try out VR gaming without investing tons of money, of for people who want to give this as a gift to someone who's never tried VR, I would recommend the Quest 3S over the Quest, especially at this price.

TL;DR Quest 3S vs Quest 3:

  • Same Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 processor
  • Same Touch Plus controllers
  • Same 120Hz refresh rate
  • Same Mixed reality passthrough functionality
  • Same tetherless and tethered functionality
  • Quest 3 has sharper resolution (2064x2208 vs 1832x1920)
  • Quest 3 has better lens array (pancake vs fresnel)
  • Quest 3 has lower FOV (104°/96° vs 96°/90°)
  • Quest 3 has higher storage capacity (512GB vs 128GB)

Marvel's Deadpool VR game is now available

"Marvel's Deadpool VR adds to a growing roster of great licensed superhero games that help prove VR games can be more than shallow tie-ins. Its kinetic combat system kept me engaged for the entire 10-hour campaign, and the alternate Deadpool variants with genuinely funny unique dialogue made replaying levels feel worthwhile rather than like padding. As the default Deadpool, however, Neil Patrick Harris’s performance delivers exactly what you'd hope for, and the reality show framing enhances the overall story rather than feeling gimmicky. If you’re up for dark, low-brow comedy and fourth-wall-breaking meta-humor, then this is easily the most complete and entertaining superhero VR experience since Batman: Arkham Shadow. Just make sure you're playing on Quest 3 to get the most out of its vibrant visuals."

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.

Upgrade Your Local Storage This Black Friday With a Seagate 22TB External Hard Drive for Just $230

23 novembre 2025 à 07:50

Planning to bulk up on local storage during Black Friday? Then check out of one of the best deals I've seen this year on a high-capacity drive from a reputable brand. Right now you can pick up a massive Seagate Expansion 22TB USB 3.0 Desktop Hard Drive for just $229.99 with free delivery. That averages out to a mere $10.45 per terabyte of storage.

Seagate 22TB External Hard Drive for $229.99

The Seagate Expansion boasts a single 22TB disk drive so it's physically no bigger than any other desktop hard drive. It features a USB 3.0 interface, which won't bottleneck traditional hard drive speeds, and a USB 3.0 cable is included in the packaging. It also includes recovery software and automatic recognition of both Windows and Mac computers.

Although SSDs are all the rage these days, traditional hard drives are still the superior choice for long term storage. For one, hard drives are significantly less expensive. Compared to this hard drive's $10/TB cost, a solid state drive would run you at least $60/TB. Hard drives also have a much higher maximum capacity. Consumer SSDs generally cap out at 8TB, which pales in comparison to the 22TB capacity of this drive. Perhaps most importantly, although SSDs can equal HDDs in terms of lifespan, it's much easier to recover data from a HDD than SSD if either one fails.

Looking for more alternatives? Check out the best external hard drives of 2025.

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

The Best N64 Games to Play on Analogue 3D

23 novembre 2025 à 02:24

It’s been four years since Nintendo brought the first batch of Nintendo 64 games to its Nintendo Switch Online service, now redubbed Nintendo 64 - Nintendo Classics. For someone who started his games media career covering N64 games, this modern take on Nintendo’s legendary Virtual Console era was a very welcome addition. I ended up playing through a few of the games over the months that followed and was surprised how well some of them aged (special shoutout to Rare’s Banjo games)!

It’s not all sunshine, of course. The games aren’t running natively and may not feel as snappy as you remember them. Some early emulation challenges, like Ocarina of Time’s fog rendering, were addressed pretty quickly, even if some others still linger (F-Zero X is still not as we remember it). And while there are many all-time classics to be found in the emulated library, I would’ve honestly expected a bigger lineup by now with a few more first-party hits as well as some third-party gems that have firmly entered the forgotten gems realm. Which means, Nintendo Classics is a convenient and cost-effective solution to relive the N64 age, but not a perfect one.

Analogue 3D: Nintendo 64's Digital Offspring

Enter the Analogue 3D, a modern – but costly – take on the Nintendo 64 hardware. See Seth’s review for more:

If you’re not familiar with the company, it’s known for making extremely capable high-end solutions to play classic games on modern screens, such as the Analogue Duo (PC Engine/TurboGrafx), the Super NT (SNES), Mega NT ( Genesis/Mega Drive), the Analogue Pocket (all Game Boy systems – with adapters for Game Gear, NGPC, Lynx, and more), and now, the $270 Analogue 3D, capable of bringing both NTSC and PAL games to 4K screens, lag-free, and with additional bells and whistles, like CRT-style display options, overclocking, and VFR. It’s not a replacement for the Switch consoles’ ability to emulate Nintendo 64 on the go, but for purists who have or are willing to build a sizable N64 cartridge collection and want the games to feel and look as good (or better) as they remember, it’s surely the best way to play them on modern screens.

I preordered one day one, mostly because I anticipated some major N64 games that I still own to never come to the Switch service – though I’ll concede that Nintendo has surprised me before. For starters, I did not have the Japan-only Custom Robo and Custom Robo V2 on my Switch Online bingo card. Perhaps there’s more where that came from?

People interested in game preservation usually know their way around a classic gaming library and if you’re part of the Analogue 3D club, you likely have some N64 carts at home already. But as someone who reviewed Nintendo 64 games for a living some three decades ago, I humbly present this non-exhaustive list of personal favorites that are worth going back to and AREN’T yet – and in some cases never will be – on Nintendo’s service.

10 Nintendo 64 Must-Plays

Let’s kick it off with 10 must-plays, in alphabetical order. I've included IGN's Top 25 N64 games at the bottom of this article -- but these picks and other picks in this column are specifically games you can't get yet play on Nintendo Switch and Switch 2.

Beetle Adventure Racing

I wrote a whole column about this one as well, but EA’s Battle Adventure Racing is more than just a – now – obscure entry in the Need for Speed series. It’s a genuinely good racer in which the hunt for its imaginative shortcuts is as entertaining as the actual racing action. Given that the VW Beetle car license comes with strings attached (VW isn’t making Beetles anymore and may not be motivated to rubberstamp an emulated re-release), the Analogue 3D is surely the best way to play it today!

Read my column, Raising the BAR, for more on the history of Beetle Adventure Racing -- and its canceled sequel.

Conker’s Bad Fur Day

Conker’s Bad Fur Day didn’t age as well as Rare’s best platformers, Banjo Kazooie and Banjo-Tooie, partially because of its dated humor and references, but it’s still a great time. I actually played the original saccharine Conker’s game before it was retooled into the M-rated adventure we all know and love today, and historic significance of that “design 180” aside, there still isn’t anything as outrageously funny as the Great Mighty Poo boss battle. Even without the context of Conker’s roots. Perhaps replaying it will finally purge the Ugas’ chant from my brain, too. Note also that the Conker: Live and Reloaded remake is playable on modern Xbox consoles via backwards compatibility.

Diddy Kong Racing

It’s very strange Nintendo added Rare’s much worse Jet Force Gemini to Nintendo Switch Online before adding Diddy Kong Racing, but perhaps the combination of Microsoft-owned game code with Nintendo characters made it a much trickier title to negotiate a re-release contract for. Or maybe it’s still coming. Regardless, Diddy Kong Racing merged the stylings of Mario Kart and Mario 64 into a racing game with multiple vehicle types and an explorable overworld hub – decades before Mario Kart World. The Analogue 3D even smoothes out some of DKR’s framerate issues thanks to its ability to overclock. Given how long it takes Nintendo to make a new Mario Kart, I’m still hoping we’ll eventually get a true remake or a sequel – but lest you want to risk waiting until you approach Cranky Kong’s age you may want to just revisit the original.

Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon

Bonus Pick: Goemon's Great Adventure

Konami’s been issuing classic game collections left and right, which is why we haven’t seen some of its best classics, like the Castlevania GBA games, on Nintendo's service. Goemon games may be more likely additions, since Konami hasn’t revisited them in a long time, but the fact that the only Mystical Ninja game playable on modern hardware today is the obscure arcade original should tell you something. Though they’re not as good as Goemon’s best outings on SNES, Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon is a surprisingly daring Ocarina of Time-style 3D action adventure – and it came out before Nintendo’s mega hit. Plus, with overclocking, it’s actually much more playable than ever. Great Adventure, on the other hand, is a return to the 2D side-scrolling co-op action that may not be as original, but aged much better. Both are still fun to play.

See my column, Life and Death of the Mystical Ninja for more.

Ogre Battle 64: Person of Lordly Caliber

I wrote an entire column about this true gem of strategy RPG and its predecessor, but at the risk of repeating myself: Ogre Battle 64 still rocks. Unfortunately, it’s also exceedingly rare and will cost more than a hundred bucks (without box or manual). If you don’t own it yet, always keep a weather eye out for a copy at the next neighborhood garage sale. See: Forgotten Gems: The Legendary Ogre Battle for more.

Rocket: Robot on Wheels

You’ve probably never heard of Rocket, but its developer’s pedigree has improved a thousand fold since its debut back in 1999. I’ve always had a soft sport for developer Sucker Punch’s inaugural game, but those curious what the people behind Ghost of Yotei, Infamous, and Sly Cooper did before they were famous will find a slower-paced, physics-based puzzle platformer featuring a long-forgotten unicycle robot mascot. Given that Sony owns Sucker Punch and publisher Ubisoft likely let the license lapse, here’s probably your one chance to play it again or for the first time. Criminally underplayed when it first came out, Rocket is worth another look.

Space Station Silicon Valley

I’m convinced that DMA’s Space Station Silicon Valley will eventually join the Nintendo Classics lineup – after all, both its publisher, Take Two, and the developer – known now as Rockstar – are still alive and well. But until then, this obscure platform puzzle game is best played on original N64 hardware or the Analogue 3D. Silicon Valley has you switch between a variety of robotic animals to solve increasingly complicated puzzles. It’s odd, funny, and endlessly creative.

Star Wars: Rogue Squadron

Bonus Pick: Star Wars: Battle for Naboo

It’s surprising this graphical showcase hasn’t returned to a Nintendo platform given that you can buy the PC port for a few bucks on Steam. Until it does, you could do worse than play the Expansion Pak-enhanced shooter on an Analogue 3D or original hardware today. A technical achievement for its time, Rogue Squadron is still a very playable and fun experience today. I was actually surprised how good it looks compared to pretty much every other N64 game when I plugged it into my Analogue 3D. The Analogue, of course, also supports the high resolution display mode that requires the 4MB Expansion Pak on original hardware. Bonus: try Star Wars: Episode I Battle for Naboo. It may not have the benefit of the more memorable battles from the original trilogy, but it’s a quality shooter in its own right.

Super Smash Bros.

Yes, I know. It’s insane the original Smash Bros. has not been released on Nintendo 64 Classics. Whatever the reasons, it still feels great and is a wonderful reminder as to how even the biggest hits started small. It’s the weakest game in the series with its limited roster of just 12 characters, but the genius of the series is already on full display here.

WWF No Mercy

Bonus Picks: WWF Wrestlemania 2000, WCW/NWO: Revenge, WCW vs. NWO: World Tour

I’m not a wrestling guy, but even I could tell that developer Aki’s run of Nintendo 64 wrestlers was something special. WWF No Mercy was always our internal top pick at IGN64 (we played it for many late, late hours), but any of the four Aki-made games are still worth playing. And given the complications with character and league licenses, the chances of them ever coming to Nintendo’s service are very slim.

Those 10 picks should be enough to get you started.

Even More N64 Picks for Your Analogue 3D

And here are a few more games worth checking out, based either on gameplay quality or historical significance, as noted:

Bakuretsu Muteki Bangai-O

Inferior to the Dreamcast version, but still a great example of what made Treasure’s games such rare delights, Bangai-O has you steer a tiny flying mech through a maze filled with enemies and relentlessly blast the opposition. Only released in Japan in limited numbers, it’s so ridiculously expensive to buy for N64, it would be really nice to get a digital rerelease.

BattleTanx and BattleTanx: Global Assault

Nintendo 64 was the multiplayer console of the ‘90s – but some of us kept playing four-player split-screen years afterwards, too. Stemming from failed console-maker 3DO, the two BattleTanx games were lesser known, but managed to serve up such addictive tank PVP gameplay, we ended up playing it almost as much as GoldenEye. Sadly, 3DO went under before they managed to pull off a hat trick. Prism Entertainment snapped up the license and maintains the trademarks for BattleTanx, but hasn’t done anything with them. Might as well grab the carts for cheap at a garage sale.

Body Harvest

Body Harvest is not a great game – and its visuals definitely didn’t age well. But it’s an experiment so ahead of its time, it deserves to be played again. From the makers of Grand Theft Auto comes a fully polygonal alien invasion action adventure that lets you command any vehicle you see. If you’re intrigued, please see my column for more: Body Harvest: The Game Nintendo Walked Away From. Killer soundtrack, too.

Bomberman X4

Nintendo 64 is home to four Bomberman games. Let me break them all down so you know which one's which. The first, Bomberman 64, known as Baku Bomberman in Japan, is notable mostly for bringing Bomberman into polygonal 3D. It’s not as snappy as its 2D predecessors, but it’s still fun to revisit. It was followed by the single-player Bomberman Hero. The lack of multiplayer was confounding and the action is decent enough, but it's at the bottom of the Bomberman list for me. It was followed by Bomberman 64: Second Attack. This underrated sequel to the inaugural 64 outing ffeatures more multiplayer options, including two-player co-op and a four-player splitscreen mode. Not all of them hit, but it’s still a quality game to revisit.

Now, things get confusing. There’s also: Bomberman 64.

No, you’re not seeing double. This Racjin-developed game takes everything back to 2D. Which much better results. Only released in Japan, it’s a shame the real Bomberman 64 from the makers of Snowbo Kids is more obscure than the inferior earlier title.

Castlevania: Legacy Of Darkness

Konami tried really hard – and struggled – to bring all its classic 2D series into the third dimension. It gave up on Contra 64 outright and canceled the project, while Goemon fared slightly better and saw two N64 releases, covered above. But you have to laud Konami for not giving up. Legacy of Darkness is basically a redo of Castlevania [64]. Its foggy, blurry visuals won’t dazzle you, but it’s a flawed and forgotten gem worth remembering. I still love that oversized “Home Depot Skeleton” battle.

Cruis’n USA and Cruis’n World

Take a deep breath. I don’t love these games. Actually, I don’t even like these games. I had some fun with Cruis’n USA in the arcades, but only when there weren’t better racers around to play – which was rare, because contemporaries like Daytona USA were always near. The N64 version isn’t a great conversion, but I know many older arcade fans are nostalgic for both Cruis’n games, so it feels right to include them with a special callout.. I do appreciate Williams/Midway's early attempts to recreate arcade game on Nintendo 64 -- a key reason why Nintendo of America included them in their much-publicized Dream Team.

Donkey Kong 64

While I’m making you angry, I have very mixed feelings about DK 64 as well. The two Banjo games are definitely superior in every way, which is no doubt why both were prioritized for release on Switch. But for all the collection bloat, Donkey Kong 64 still has some memorable moments -- and music -- that make it worth revisiting. Plus, that yellow cartridge looks mighty good in either the white or the black Analogue 3D. Overclocking helps with its erratic framerate, but the drop in quality from Banjo-Kazooie is palpable when you play them back to back. I know, I know, many of you love it.

Doubutsu no Mori (Animal Crossing)

Animal Crossing on GameCube was actually a port of Doubutsu no Mori, a Nintendo 64 “communication game” that predates it by a full year. You’ll have to be able to read Japanese kana to fully enjoy it – but also note that you’ll mostly be playing the same game that later came to GameCube as Animal Crossing and Doubutsu no Mori+.

San Francisco Rush and Rush 2049

The original arcade conversion was surprisingly competent, but the Nintendo 64 version of its sequel, Rush 2049, manages the rare feat of being better than the arcade original. The key to its success was the ability to control the vehicles while airborne, which made all the difference for this version’s battle and stunt modes. “Rush… It’s DANGEROUS.”

Gauntlet Legends

Atari was intent on reinventing each one of its arcade classics in 3D for the new millennium, and Gauntlet Legends turned out to be one of the few that made it and left an impression. Ironically, its blocky polygonal graphics didn’t age as well as the OG’s top-down sprites, but I remember having a plenty of fun playing four-player in both the arcades and at home on N64.

Hybrid Heaven

It’s not as good as you remember it to be, but it remains a really unique attempt at marrying Metal Gear-style action with classic roleplaying gameplay. Ultimately, the world you explore is just not interesting enough to keep most player’s attention, but it’s historically interesting as the only sci-fi action RPG from Konami’s Osaka team and because it featured a widescreen mode way back in 1999. Hybrid Heaven supported the physical Expansion Pak for higher resolution output on N64 hardware, which the Analogue 3D supports virtually as well. For all its faults, Hybrid Heaven remains a cool experimental game that unfortunately ended up a mere footnote in Konami console game history.

Mickey’s Speedway USA

I’m no fan of Mickey’s Speedway USA – to me, it’s the game where Rare’s considerable design chops fell victim to having to color in the lines of a high-profile license. But it’s unlikely we’ll ever see this Disney take on Mario Kart (with way too wide tracks) re-released, so snap it up if you encounter it in the wild. The marriage of Nintendo, Rare, and Disney seemed like the start of a beautiful friendship and Speedway USA is more of a dead end -- but it's still cool to see Rare try something very "American", even if its NASCAR with mice and dogs didn't quite work out.

Micro Machines 64 Turbo

Here’s a surprisingly good racing game, on the other hand. Unfairly overlooked, Micro Machines 64 Turbo is a top-down multiplayer racer that offers up super-fun four player action with 32 different vehicle types – cars, tanks, boats, helicopters – across 48 different tracks. It even features an eight-player mode via what it calls “pad share” (yes, it’s as awkward as it sounds, but you have to appreciate the total commitment to create the ultimate party game).

Mischief Makers

Mischief Makers bucked the trend of making every game 3D on N64 and it’s still good for some fast and fluid action from storied developer Treasure. It’s not as good as Treasure’s own Gunstar Heroes for Genesis, but hey, not many games let you play as a brawling robot maid. We haven't gotten a new Treasure game since 2014, so even its lesser efforts are worth digging up.

Mission: Impossible

The movie-licensed Mission: Impossible may not be a great game, but it's worth adding to your physical cart collection as something that will likely never see a re-release on any platform due to licensing issues and the fact that it's a better museum piece than a video game. Mission: Impossible was a hugely ambitious game development project that didn’t quite make it to the desired finish line. It was pared down and became considerably less ambitious to get it out the door, but some of the great ideas are still to be found in what could’ve been a Hitman game before there were Hitman games.

Rayman 2: The Great Escape

Though not as good as the Dreamcast version, Rayman 2: The Great Escape on Nintendo 64 is an excellent platformer that shows the limbless hero could hang with Mario and Banjo (unlike Ubi’s very similar 3D platformer attempt that year, Tonic Trouble). Rayman’s 2D outings have aged better, but The Great Escape is still surprisingly good.

Snowboard Kids 1 and 2

Nintendo 64’s four controller ports and early success with Mario Kart 64 multiplayer inspired some developers to experiment with “Mario Kart, but with…” games. With Snowboard Kids, Osaka-based Racjin found the winning formula. Never as good as Mario Kart – or 1080, for that matter – both Snowbo Kids games do conjure up plenty of happy memories of playing against friends.

Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire

I know there are plenty of N64 fans who would put this in their top 10 based on the strength of its excellent Hoth level. Visually, it was way ahead of its time. But unfortunately, most of the game is marred by sluggish and unbalanced first-person shooter sections and a repetitive, highly compressed mono soundtrack. It’s an interesting failure that has its fans. Worth playing just for the Snowspeeder bits and the fuzzy memories.

Top Gear and Friends

I wrote about the original Top Gear on SNES in a previous installment of this column, but N64 is a home to a slew of Top Gear titles, all quite different from each other. There’s Top Gear Rally, Top Gear Rally 2, Top Gear Overdrive, and Top Gear Hyperbike. The first one is still arguably the best in the bunch – Boss Game Studios, how you’re missed! Top Gear Rally and the Boss-developed street racing successor World Drive Championship showed what was graphically possible on Nintendo 64, while the Saffire-developed Top Gear Rally 2 added equipment failure to the mix for a more authentic endurance racing experience. Top Gear Overdrive, finally, is an obscure attempt at challenging Beetle Adventure Racing – and it’s quite competent. It’s from Snowblind Studios, the people behind Baldur’s Gate: Dark Alliance. That same team also made Top Gear Hyperbike – a decent racer, but not in the same league as Excitebike 64.

Tetrisphere, The New Tetris, Tetris 64, and Magical Tetris Challenge

Nintendo 64 was home to many quality puzzle games, some of which have already been released on Nintendo Switch. But there’s a quadrilogy of Tetris games that never got there that’s still worth playing. The visually-exciting but also confusing Tetrisphere and the more traditional The New Tetris are mostly notable for their kicking soundtrack (the same composer scored both), while the Japan-only Tetris 64 mixed things up significantly with new block sizes and different modes (and a bio sensor you can clamp to your ear). Capcom’s quality attempt, Magical Tetris Challenge, combines two complicated licenses – Disney and Tetris – and thus will never be seen again outside its limited console run (and the arcade original it’s based on).

There's Even More

How’s that for a list to keep you busy? No, they're not all great -- but they're all interesting games that are surely worth another look. There’s plenty more, of course, from the oddball liquid puzzler Wetrix, to WipEout 64, platformers Chameleon Twist and Glover, rally racer MRC, and some quality sports games like NFL Blitz, ISS ‘98, and NBA Courtside. Bored with GoldenEye? Eurocom’s The World is Not Enough isn’t bad. Plus, there are the excellent (but widely available) Worms Armageddon, Spider-Man, Vigilante 8, and some fun and goofy ports of StarCraft 64, Command & Conquer, Quake, Quake II, Rainbow Six, and Duke Nukem to keep you busy. And yes, I know about Quest 64 and the Army Men games – more power to you if you enjoy them – but they’re not on my Christmas List.

Do you have any favorite Nintendo 64 games that I didn’t mention? Share your recommendations with others – and let me know if you’ve gotten your hands on an Analogue 3D and what your first impressions are.

Peer Schneider heads up Game Help & Tools across IGN, Maxroll, Map Genie, Eurogamer, RockPaperShotgun, and VG247 and has played every single game named in this article. Likely before you were born (no offense).

The Dark Knight Trilogy Falls Below $30 for Black Friday

23 novembre 2025 à 01:00

Look, you might already own these movies. You might've see them a million times. But, can I interest you in The Dark Knight trilogy once more, now in 4K UHD and featuring HDR for "deeper, more lifelike visuals?" Christopher Nolan's iconic Batman trilogy is on sale for a near-low price of $29 during Amazon's Black Friday sale.

The Dark Knight Trilogy 4K UHD for $29

The Dark Knight Trilogy features three incredible films: 2005's Batman Begins, 2008's masterpiece The Dark Knight, and 2012's The Dark Knight Rises. Christian Bale's performance as Batman is one of the best the franchise has ever seen in live action, and Heath Ledger's legendary depection of The Joker set the benchmark for what a comic book villain can be.

While this isn't as fancy as the Amazon-exclusive steelbook set that was recently released, it's a great package that brings all three movies into the modern era with improved visuals that pop on 4K TVs all for under $30.

Black Friday is also historically the best time to pick up a new TV, so if you're looking to upgrade your current set to something larger or with a better picture (or both), check out our Black Friday TV shopping guide for tips on what to look for and where.

Black Friday sales are just beginning, including early sales from Amazon and Best Buy, so be sure to follow along all week as we round up the best deals this shopping season.

Matthew Adler has written for IGN since 2019 covering all things gaming, tech, tabletop games, and more. You can follow him on the site formerly known as Twitter @MatthewAdler and watch him stream on Twitch.

The Brand-New Icon Blue PS5 DualSense Is Already Discounted for Black Friday

23 novembre 2025 à 00:30

Calling all fans of blue – PS5's latest special edition DualSense, Icon Blue, is already discounted during Playstation's Black Friday sale. Despite releasing only a month ago, the Walmart-exclusive color is on sale for $64, which is actually cheaper than a standard DualSense controller. But, don't wait too long as this controller is likely to sell out quickly at this price.

Save $20 Off Icon Blue DualSense at Walmart

This new controller is very blue, with everything from the joysticks, buttons, triggers, and grips all featuring bold and vibrant shades of blue. The touchpad even features glossy blue icons representing the PlayStation symbols.

In the recent PlayStation blog post, Leo Cardoso from the Color, Material and Finish design team said the new DualSense is "inspired by PlayStation’s iconic shades of blue, this design captures the feeling of anticipation and wonder every time you pick up the controller. As a nod to our origins, we added Katakana characters on the back that spell our name the Japanese way: Pureisutēshon."

Sony is no stranger to releasing unique colors of its DualSense controller, but since this is labeled as a "Special Edition," it's not likely to stick around for long. I rarely purchase special edition controllers, but this one has me very tempted.

Check out PlayStation's 2025 Black Friday sale for even more deals on games, consoles, and more.

Matthew Adler has written for IGN since 2019 covering all things gaming, tech, tabletop games, and more. You can follow him on the site formerly known as Twitter @MatthewAdler and watch him stream on Twitch.

Target's LEGO Christmas Wreath Deal Is Already Sold Out at Amazon

22 novembre 2025 à 23:15

Target is one of the best places to buy LEGO sets in general, but sometimes it's also the only place to buy them at a discount. One such set is the LEGO Wreath-Making Kit, which is currently discounted to $87.99 as part of a three-day sale. This $12 price cut may not seem significant, but seeing as it is completely sold out at Amazon right now, it's definitely worth picking up at this price while you still can ahead of the holidays.

LEGO Wreath-Making Kit Sale at Target

LEGO actually has a ton of really cool Christmas sets available, but not very many of them are getting discounts right now. There was a LEGO Christmas Tree set that went on sale a couple of weeks ago that was incredibly popular, but that price drop didn't last long before jumping back up to full price. This latest deal on the LEGO Wreath-Making Kit deal appears to be even more popular than that seeing as it has already sold out at Amazon at this price.

The wreath itself is made up of a whopping 1,194 pieces, which has earned it an 18+ age rating. As part of LEGO's Botanical line of sets, each of the pieces are made to look like actual fir tree foliage. The wreath is comprised of a ton of little leaves, colorful berries, orange slices, cinnamon sticks, and pine cones. It has all the makings of a great wreath, but without the actual mess and smell of a real wreath. You can choose to hang it on your door or place it on a wall as a nice Christmas decoration ahead of the 2025 holiday season.

According to Target's sale page, this discount will only last through Sunday November 23. Coincidentally, that's also when the official Target Black Friday sale is set to begin. The full Target Black Friday ad has been released and you can already check out what upcoming LEGO discounts will be arriving next week.

More LEGO Christmas Sets

If you're looking for more LEGO Christmas options, there's plenty more to choose from – though not at a discount. The LEGO Poinsettia is a great choice if you like the Wreat-Making kit, but there's also more fun sets like the Star Wars Gingerbread AT-AT that just came out this year.

AirPods 4 Hit New Low Prices for Black Friday

22 novembre 2025 à 23:12

Black Friday is usually the best time of the year to pick up Apple products, as that tends to be when they hit their lowest-ever prices. Apple's official Black Friday sale begins November 28 and includes up to $250 in gift cards with select products, which has been the case for many years now. However, Amazon is actually running better deals than Apple on its products, including a new lowest-ever price for AirPods 4 (both the Active Noise Cancellation and standard models). The best part? You can get the sale price right now. Check out the deals below.

AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation for $99.99

Right now, you can pick up the AirPods 4 (with Active Noise Cancellation) for $99, and the standard AirPods 4 for $79. While many people will likely be happy with the cheaper option, I urge you to consider spending the extra $20 for the better pair, as the difference in sound quality between the two is night and day.

AirPods 4 features a complete redesign of Apple's iconic wireless earbuds, including a new shape that fits better in your ears, improved audio quality, up to 30 hours of total listening time, and better phone calls that isolate your voice for added clarity.

But, the biggest jump is the introduction of a second AirPods 4 model with Active Noise Cancellation (ANC). While this feature has traditionally been reserved for the AirPods Pro models, it's a welcome addition for the base AirPods as it helps eliminate distracting external noise while listening to music, podcasts, or talking on the phone. This model also includes a wireless charging-capable case as an added bonus.

For audio enthusiasts, the new AirPods Pro 3 are also on sale for Black Friday as well, which offer improved ANC, an improved fit, and the ability to track workouts without an iPhone or Apple Watch needed. The 11th generation iPad is also on sale for its lowest price of the year as part of Amazon's Black Friday sale.

Matthew Adler has written for IGN since 2019 covering all things gaming, tech, tabletop games, and more. You can follow him on the site formerly known as Twitter @MatthewAdler and watch him stream on Twitch.

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