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Japanese Developer Behind Tech That Studio Ghibli's Hayao Miyazaki Called an 'Insult to Life Itself' to Release Cosy God Sim Game

6 février 2026 à 11:44

A machine learning animation technology from the same creator whose work was infamously shot down by Studio Ghibli’s Hayao Miyazaki in a viral video almost 10 years ago, will be used in a new evolution/god-sim game coming out next week.

As spotted by Video Games Chronicle, Anlife: Motion-Learning Life Evolution will release on Steam on February 12. Describing itself as a “relaxing evolution simulation,” Anlife features a lush green world inhabited by monocolored creatures made up of blocks. These AI-driven creatures use machine learning to work out how to navigate and move around their environment. As a God-like overseer, the player can choose to merely watch or lend a hand to these struggling creatures as they learn how to move. Alternatively, you can rain down destruction with meteor showers.

The company behind Anlife is Japanese start-up Attructure. The CEO of Attructure, Masayoshi Nakamura, first started developing the technology behind the game back when he was a graduate student in 2009. According to Attructure’s Anlife website, a related simulator that Nakamura was working on was picked up by Japanese telecom company Dwango (operator of Niconico Douga, Japan’s YouTube), and was redeveloped into a different concept. This is what ended up being presented to Hayao Miyazaki by Dwango’s CEO Nobuo Kawakami on Japanese TV in 2016, in what would become a viral video.

"I strongly feel that Artificial Intelligence (AI) is an insult to life itself."

--- Hayao Miyazaki pic.twitter.com/QzxPpfVDst

— DepressedBergman (@DannyDrinksWine) July 17, 2024

The example presented to Miyazaki showed deformed, humanoid models moving awkwardly around. Dwango’s CEO explained how the creatures used machine learning to work out how to navigate the environment instead of having an animator animate them, suggesting such technology could work well for a zombie game. Far from being impressed by the demo, the Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro director considered the animations insulting to his disabled friend. “Thinking of him, I can’t watch this and find it interesting,” he explained, going on to say that, “I would never think to incorporate this technology into my work,” concluding that it was “an insult to life itself.”

“Miyazaki’s words were very impactful.” Anlife creator Masayoshi Nakamura explained in a 2018 video interview. “In truth, I wanted to create life being lived within a simulation. But as a by-product of this, there was a version which used zombies. There are many people who found the zombies’ movements disgusting. Even when I showed it to various people, there were some who found the zombies’ movements disgusting or found their appearance scary. However, the majority of people would not associate that with ‘life’. I was really surprised that (Miyazaki) perceived the zombies in the video as (an insult to) life.”

The upcoming game Anlife has opted for colorful, blocky creatures instead of humanoid characters. “Life on Earth has evolved through mechanisms like genetics and natural selection. Our challenge is to recreate this profound process in digital space and give birth to new forms of life,” Anlife’s homepage explains.

Reactions to Anlife on Japanese social media have been mostly positive, with users curious about the new game and the possibilities of the technology. Others expressed relief that the developer was able to keep going despite the criticism the related simulator got from Hayao Miyazaki. “I think if it had had cute creatures like this from the start, Hayao Miyazaki wouldn’t have got angry,” opined one user.

Over on X, Anlife creator Masayoshi Nakamura mentions that at the moment, the creatures in the game are only capable of learning movements with the goal of reaching food. The creatures that succeed will survive to reproduce and pass on their traits, meaning that their bodies will gradually change shape over generations. Nakamura adds that he was inspired by Peter Molyneux’s games (like Populous, and Black and White).

“The main point of Anlife was having the AI learn on its own, something that at present is technically quite difficult to achieve.” Nakamura explains, but he has high hopes that AI-driven machine learning will be capable of creating even more complex unique experiences in future games. Although Anlife (in its current state) features fairly basic evolution, Nakamura hopes that cutting-edge machine learning technology may eventually enable such in-game creatures to autonomously evolve themselves all the way from learning how to move to eventually “creating something like a civilization.”

Photo by KATSUMI KASAHARA/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images.

Verity Townsend is a Japan-based freelance writer who previously served as editor, contributor and translator for the game news site Automaton West. She has also written about Japanese culture and movies for various publications.

Riftbound’s 2026 Set Release Schedule Is Taking Shape, With Release Dates Now Confirmed For The Whole Year

6 février 2026 à 11:33

Riftbound landed late in 2025, and the general vibe around Riot’s League of Legends card game has been that it’s fun to play - it’s just not always easy to get hold of.

With an Origins restock dropping this week, the Riot storefront once again crashed out, leaving players frustrated in their attempts to get starter sets, decks, packs, and more.

While it remains to be seen if Riot can fix those teething issues from its first set, the good news is that there are four planned for 2026. Here’s everything coming to Riftbound this year, updated in February 2026 thanks to Riot's new roadmap.

February 13, 2026 - Spiritforged

Spiritforged will be the first post-launch set for Riftbound, and will likely give us a good idea of what to expect from sets going forward.

New this time around are mechanics like Equipment which can be attached to Units, Gold that can be spent, and new keywords like Quick-Draw, Repeat, and Weaponmaster.

As for new Legends, you’ll be able to grab cardboard versions of Azir, Draven, Ezreal, Fiora, Jax, Rumble, Rek’Sai, Ornn, Sivir, Lucian, Rneata Glasc, and Irelia.

May 8, 2026 - Unleashed

While other TCGs (ahem, Magic: The Gathering) will overlap previews with releases, Riot is squarely focused on Spiritforged for now - so details about Unleashed are pretty scarce at the time of writing.

Expect it to introduce new mechanics as with its predecessor, but we’re also expecting to see the arrival of fan-favorite Vi as a Legend, alongside Master Yi, Rengar, and LeBlanc.

We’ll update this page as more information becomes available, but for now we know it'll launch on May 8 (or April 10 in China). Expect Pre-Rift events on May 1 - 3.

31 July, 2026 - Vendetta

Again, information for another upcoming set is thin on the ground for Riftbound’s Vendetta. We know it’ll come at the end of July, and that Mel, Akali, and Ambessa are likely to arrive.

Riot has also suggested that Vendetta will see it merge the Chinese and North American release schedules into one. Here’s hoping the supply issues are sorted by then…

Pre-Rift will be 24 - 26 July.

23 October, 2026 - Radiance

While we have the set name for Radiance, we have no further information. What Legends will it include? What mechanics? ANYTHING!?

Until Riot is ready to talk, it remains a mystery, but as always we’ll have this page updated as we hear more. Pre-Rift is pencilled in for 16 to 18 October.

What about Origins?

Origins is still Riftbound’s current set, and while it’s tough to get hold of, that should get easier in the coming months (otherwise, Riot will be in big trouble).

The launch set’s tutorial set, dubbed Proving Grounds, is still going for inflated prices on the secondary market, making it tricky to, you know, learn how to play the game.

The same can be said of the preconstructed decks for Jinx, Lee Sin, and Victor, but anecdotally, I’ve at least seen some stock of those on local game stores, even if they’re not always readily available online.

Boosters are a mixed bag - sometimes you’ll find some, but you’re unlikely to find a box right now.

As we said at launch: “Sadly, as the first set of Riot’s first card game hits shelves, it’s being snapped up by scalpers and put on the secondary market.

“It’s a standard practice in TCGs, but Riot is reportedly printing more. If you can hold out, there will be more product.”

That still rings true today - stay strong, and wait it out.

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.

Pokémon TCG Ascended Heroes’ 10 Most Valuable Cards That Collectors Are Already Chasing

6 février 2026 à 11:31

The Mega Evolution set’s Ascended Heroes expansion has quickly become yet another collector-driven Pokémon TCG release, with demand greatly outweighing the supply and maxing out the value of certain cards.

With Mega Evolutions returning in force and Special Illustration Rares pushing presentation to extravagant new heights, the set has created another sharp divide between playable staples and true luxury chase cards.

While not every premium pull is destined for competitive dominance, each of the top ten most expensive cards so far has earned a lofty market price with jaw-dropping artwork, gameplay relevance, pure scarcity, or a combination of the three.

Using the dedicated trading card marketplace TCGplayer, we’ve ranked the 10 most valuable Pokémon cards from Ascended Heroes by their current market price at the time of writing, how their artwork stands out, and why their gameplay impact has kept collectors and competitive players chasing them alike.

10. Mega Froslass ex (275/217)

Mega Froslass ex may sit at the bottom of this list, but its appeal is far from modest. The artwork leans into icy elegance, placing Froslass against a stark, wintry backdrop that feels painterly rather than action-packed. That sort of subdued aesthetic stands apart from the chaos of other Mega Evolutions, making it a sure favourite among collectors who value atmospheric art over spectacle.

In play, Mega Froslass ex has carved out a niche as a disruptive attacker. Its ability to punish large hands and inflict Sleep introduces awkward sequencing for opponents, particularly in slower, resource-heavy matchups. While not a format-defining threat, its control-oriented design has kept it relevant enough to justify its premium status.

9. N’s Zoroark ex (286/217)

Another of the most valuable Pokémon cards in Ascended Heroes, this Special Illustration Rare thrives on narrative as much as mechanics. The artwork places N alongside Zoroark in a richly detailed scene that echoes the duo’s moral ambiguity, rendered in muted tones that feel almost storybook-like.

Gameplay-wise, N’s Zoroark ex remains a utility powerhouse. Its Trade ability seems like one of the most efficient new draw engines in the game, while Night Joker’s attack-copying effect grants immense flexibility. That versatility should keep Zoroark shells relevant across multiple formats, making this version a collector favourite that still earns its keep at the table.

8. Iono’s Bellibolt ex (279/217)

Few Pokémon cards in Ascended Heroes feel as vibrant as Iono’s Bellibolt ex; bursting with neon colours and cartoony expressions, the artwork mirrors Iono’s on-screen energy perfectly — instantly giving the card the kind of big personality we know her for.

That personality translates cleanly into gameplay, too. Electric Streamer allows relentless Energy acceleration, enabling aggressive Lightning strategies to overwhelm opponents before they stabilise. While Bellibolt ex requires careful management to avoid overextending, as Thunderous Bolt stops it from attacking the next turn, its all-around explosiveness has made it a popular addition.

7. Marnie’s Grimmsnarl ex (287/217)

Dark, brooding, and unapologetically stylish, Marnie’s Grimmsnarl ex delivers one of the expansion’s particularly striking character moments — with Marnie’s defiant look pairing with Grimmsnarl’s looming presence, feeling like a thrilling anime snapshot.

Competitively, Grimmsnarl ex rewards evolution-based strategies with efficient Energy acceleration and reliable spread damage. Its consistency has made it a staple in Darkness archetypes, and the Trainer-Pokémon pairing adds enduring collector appeal beyond raw power.

6. Mega Feraligatr ex (274/217)

Another expensive Pokémon TCG entry from Ascended Heroes, this card feels like pure momentum, with Mega Feraligatr’s erupting from crashing water, all sharp angles and violent motion, perfectly communicating its role as a bruiser.

Mortal Crunch excels at punishing damaged Pokémon, allowing Mega Feraligatr ex to close games with alarming speed once pressure is applied. Its straightforward, punishing design should resonate with players who favour decisive turns and collectors who appreciate its unapologetic ferocity.

5. Lillie’s Clefairy ex (280/217)

Few cards in Ascended Heroes are as emotionally resonant as Lillie’s Clefairy ex. The artwork is soft, joyful, and intimate, capturing a tender moment that stands in deliberate contrast to the set’s more bombastic Megas.

Despite its gentle presentation, Clefairy ex carries surprising competitive weight. Fairy Zone’s Weakness manipulation can completely warp matchups, while Full Moon Rondo scales effectively in Bench-heavy formats. Its blend of charm and tactical impact is expected to keep pushing demand well beyond casual collectors.

4. Mega Diancie ex (282/217)

One of Ascended Heroes’ most bedazzling cards, Mega Diancie ex looks like a gemstone brought to life before going under a Sailor Moon transformation. Like Mega Gardevoir ex in the Mega Evolution base set, the pastel-heavy illustration gives off pure elegance and symmetry, creating one of the most visually refined cards in the set.

Diamond Coat grants meaningful damage reduction, while Garland Ray offers flexible scaling that rewards precise Energy management. Mega Diancie ex will likely find a comfortable role in defensive Psychic builds, and its graceful presentation ensures it remains highly desirable even outside tournament play.

3. Mega Dragonite ex (290/217)

The poster child of Ascended Heroes, it’s no surprise that Mega Dragonite ex is one of the most valuable Pokémon TCG newcomers in the expansions, as well as being a pure joy rendered in colour. The artwork is lively and whimsical in an almost magical tone, depicting Dragonite soaring through a dreamlike sky.

On the battlefield, though, Sky Transport introduces constant positional control, while Ryuno Glide delivers devastating damage with surprising efficiency. Dragonite’s popularity as a Pokémon in general, combined with genuine competitive utility, has made this one of the most sought-after pulls in Ascended Heroes.

2. Mega Charizard Y ex (294/217)

Gold cards rarely divide opinion, but Mega Charizard Y ex embraces the style choice’s excess unapologetically. Like those that came before, this Mega Hyper Rare treatment transforms Charizard into a glowing icon, stripped of detail yet radiating prestige.

Explosion Y hits brutally hard, too, with this singular move capable of swinging games in just one attack. That raw power, paired with Charizard’s evergreen popularity, is likely to keep this card a centrepiece of big collections.

1. Mega Gengar ex (284/217)

The most valuable card among the Pokémon TCG’s new Ascended Heroes expansion, Mega Gengar ex stands at the summit of this expensive top ten. Not only is the artwork grippingly chaotic with five menacing, swirling colours, but Gengar’s predatory grin feels alive within the frame, too.

Gameplay-wise, Mega Gengar ex offers both disruption and efficiency. Shadowy Concealment’s Prize manipulation subtly shifts tempo, while Void Gale enables smooth Energy redistribution. Combined with Ascended Heroes’ extreme scarcity at MSRP and iconic design, it’s little wonder this card commands a near four-figure market price.

Where to Buy Ascended Heroes Sealed Boosters

The Ascended Heroes expansion has officially kicked off Pokémon TCG’s 2026 run, but there are only a couple of places where you can reliably buy ETBs, booster packs, and collections right now. Note, outside of keeping up with deal trackers, you’ll likely have to pay above retail price for the time being.

That’s along with not every product even being launched on that 30 January release date. That said, we’ll give you a full breakdown of the best places to get your buy for Pokémon preorders for whichever Mega Evolution: Ascended Heroes products you’re looking out for.

For more Pokémon TCG, consider checking out our full roundup of the most valuable cards from 2025, alongside the pricest pulls from Mega Evolution's other recent expansion, Phantasmal Flames.

Ben Williams – IGN freelance contributor with over 10 years of experience covering gaming, tech, film, TV, and anime. Follow him on Twitter/X @BenLevelTen.

Riftbound's First State of the Game Update Offers Players a Deeper Look Into Their Plans for 2026

6 février 2026 à 11:23

Riot has released its first State of the Game update on Riftbound, a biannual blog-style post designed to keep the community informed. In it, we got a more detailed look at upcoming organized play events, teases for upcoming expansions and cards, solidified dates for sets beyond Spiritforged, and interviews with Game Director Dave Guskin and Executive Producer Changran Chai, which offer insight into what the team has learned since the game launched in October of last year.

Riot previously announced the first half of the organized play roadmap for 2026 during PAX Unplugged, but we now have the full picture. After the Las Vegas Regional Qualifier on February 27, fans can expect more Regional Qualifiers all around the US and Europe, culminating in the final Regional Qualifier in Riot's hometown of Los Angeles in September. See the full, finalized tournament schedule below.

The update also provided a more detailed breakdown of when to expect previews for the rest of the year's expansions starts; Unleashed previews start March 16, Vendetta on June 22, and Radiance kicks off on September 21. We have a full breakdown of Riftbound's 2026 release schedule with full dates and details.

The most important updates come from the interviews with Guskin and Chai. State of the Game updates are intended to be transparent updates on the lessons the Riftbound team has learned throughout its lifecycle, and it's apparent they've learned many hard lessons already. To start, mechanically unique cards from separate products like Proving Grounds will not be present moving forward; "we’ve learned our lesson and do not plan to include mechanically unique cards in future iterations of this product", says Chai. Proving Grounds offered powerful cards not available open in the main Origins set, and with Spiritforged, we'll see reprints of those cards as a way to get those unique cards in the hands of players who may have missed out due to supply issues.

The biggest issue plaguing competitive play in China currently is the dominance of Draven, Glorious Executioner and the purple cards that make up most of the deck. Guskin states that the team's philosophy behind banning and/ or restricting cards is "that we want to intervene at a minimal level needed to correct an emergency state", with no current plans to take action at this time, opting instead to see how the meta will evolve once Spiritforged launches in the US similar to how it did with Origins.

When asked if Riot will be supporting Riftbound digitally, Chai responded that while they are aware of the interest in a digital client, their main focus is "the in-person social interaction, and we do not want that to be lost".

If you're a competitive player looking to attend a Regional Qualifier for a chance at a Best-Of metal Legend card, they've outlined how limited these highly sought-after prizes will be moving forward. Best-of metal cards will be rotated out events after every three set releases. So the Origins/ Proving Grounds Best-of cards will no longer be eligible for prizing following the release of Vendetta on July 31.

Finally, Chai confirmed that we will finally see the printing of new Legends in the three currently unused color combinations with Vendetta.

Riftbound: Spiritforged Releases February 13

Myles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social.

'Will I Be Allowed Back in the Country?' — Avengers: Doomsday Star Ian McKellen Has Now Re-Enacted the Moment Magneto Destroys [Spoiler] in the Movie

6 février 2026 à 10:58

Earlier this week, acting legend Ian McKellen appeared to drop an enormous Avengers: Doomsday spoiler. Now, the actor has repeated the same claim — and even re-enacted the moment on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

McKellen, who reprises his classic X-Men role as Magneto in the film, declared earlier this week that he "destroys New Jersey" in Avengers: Doomsday — a statement that surprised fans and no doubt trained all of Marvel's anti-spoiler snipers upon him.

Well, the actor has now gone further — seemingly performing the moment he does so, and providing some behind-the-scenes context that he joked could get him banned from returning to the U.S.

Ian McKellen reenacts a moment from the set of ‘AVENGERS: DOOMSDAY’ with the Russo Brothers.

(via https://t.co/D1jqq5kKih) pic.twitter.com/W475EWcOyo

— Cosmic Marvel (@cosmic_marvel) February 5, 2026

"I don't think I'm spoiling anything by saying Magneto destroys New Jersey," McKellen said on last night's Late Show with Stephen Colbert. I'm sorry about that, New Jersey. My fault.

"So I'm standing up, pretending to do that [now standing, McKellen stretches his arms out in a classic Magneto pose], and the wind is blowing in my hair, and I'm putting on a fierce look and trying to be magnetic.

"The director over loudspeakers says 'Ian, looking more furious' [McKellen does so, gnashing his teeth]. He then said 'shout something!' I said, 'What do I shout?'

"He says, 'Shout the worst thing you could possibly think of!' so I said 'Mar-lar-go!' Will I be allowed back in the country?"

As part of the same interview, McKellen confirms he'll be shooting The Lord of the Rings prequel movie Hunt for Gollum in New Zealand next summer, likely July. The actor previously strongly suggested he was reprising his role as Gandalf by announcing personally that his character was in it, though there is now no doubt.

The interview is full of fun anecdotes, including McKellen's first meeting with the late, great Christopher Lee, who played Saruman. The two men met at a dinner before shooting began, and during the soup course, Lee told Gandalf that not only did he read Lord of the Rings every year, but that he'd always thought he should play Gandalf. McKellen wasn't sure if Lee was joking.

"He was a very nice man indeed and I think that was a joke," McKellen said. "But maybe not."

Image credit: Richard A. Brooks/AFP via Getty Images.

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

Echo Isle is a Game Boy Color Zelda-like game for PC – Demo Out

6 février 2026 à 11:41

Josh Koenig Games has released a demo for his upcoming Game Boy Color Zelda-like game for PC, Echo Isle. This demo will let you experience the early parts of the game before purchasing it. Echo Isle is made by a single indie dev. In this game, you play as Aster, a star warrior sent to … Continue reading Echo Isle is a Game Boy Color Zelda-like game for PC – Demo Out

The post Echo Isle is a Game Boy Color Zelda-like game for PC – Demo Out appeared first on DSOGaming.

Another Eden Begins is a new time-travelling JRPG from the writer of Chrono Trigger and Xenogears

6 février 2026 à 11:24

Wright Flyer Studios has announced that its new time-travelling JRPG, Another Eden Begins, will be released in Summer 2026. To celebrate this announcement, the team shared the game’s debut trailer, which you can find below. The main story is a deep, well-written adventure with full voice acting. It even features a main theme song by … Continue reading Another Eden Begins is a new time-travelling JRPG from the writer of Chrono Trigger and Xenogears

The post Another Eden Begins is a new time-travelling JRPG from the writer of Chrono Trigger and Xenogears appeared first on DSOGaming.

Level Up Your Gameplay: Grab Lifetime Windows 11 Pro for Just $14 this month

6 février 2026 à 11:07

Full Disclosure: This is a sponsored article Written by KeysOff Attention, gamers! If you’re looking to supercharge your gaming experience, now is the time to upgrade to Windows 11 Pro — and the best part? You can get it for just $14.91 (Reg. $199) on Keysoff Special Sale. That’s right — Windows 11 Pro, the … Continue reading Level Up Your Gameplay: Grab Lifetime Windows 11 Pro for Just $14 this month

The post Level Up Your Gameplay: Grab Lifetime Windows 11 Pro for Just $14 this month appeared first on DSOGaming.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Episode 4 Review

6 février 2026 à 09:01

This review contains full spoilers for this week’s episode of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms.

“Are there no true knights among you?!,” Dunk bellows at the assembled nobles late in this week’s episode, titled “Seven”. With the last-minute arrival of Prince Baelor Targaryen, who will fight on Dunk’s side against his own kin, Dunk would seem to have his answer. And, boy, does he sure need the help.

“Seven” is the gloomiest, literally and figuratively, episode so far, with the colorful palette of the previous episodes replaced by a muddy, grim aesthetic. And with the exception of one brief exchange between Dunk and Raymun Fossoway, there’s none of the playful banter or humor that’s been a highlight of the previous episodes.

That’s because “Seven” is what would be considered Plot Point 2 in a movie script, the part of the story close to the end where the hero is at his lowest point and with seemingly no way out of the jam he’s in. (This is the second-to-last episode of the season.)

Dunk must confront his fate after coming to Tanselle’s rescue in Episode 3 and beating up Aerion. The reasonable Baelor understands why Dunk did what he did, but he still assaulted a Targaryen prince so he must face some punishment (Baelor has already prevented Dunk from simply being executed).

Baelor reads Dunk his rights, if you will, and the latter faces Aerion, Maekar, and their lords to demand a trial by combat. But, of course, Aerion finds a way to weasel around it by calling for a trial of seven, an ancient custom where each side enlists seven knights to fight each other and the gods will decide who wins. (Even Maekar thinks his son is just trying to wuss out of fighting Dunk one-on-one by employing this tactic.)

"Bertie Carvel instills in Baelor ... a compassion and honor missing from many other Targaryens.

Unfortunately, Dunk doesn’t know enough knights let alone six good ones willing to help him. Eventually, thanks to Egg, he assembles six knights – we should’ve known it was too good to be true that Ser Steffon Fossoway would keep his word! – and it’s not until Baelor’s arrival that a trial of seven can commence. Bertie Carvel instills in Baelor a kind but firm authority and a compassion and honor missing from many other Targaryens.

Another big highlight of “Seven” is seeing Egg in his full Prince Aegon regalia. The opening scene where Egg apologizes to Dunk for deceiving him is moving, especially when Egg tears up as Dunk scolds him. He was just a kid who wanted to go to the tourney so badly that he hatched a half-assed scheme to be anyone’s squire after his drunken brother Daeron decided to sit it out.

Speaking of Daeron, the one gift he does seem to possess beyond his capacity for alcohol consumption is prophetic dreams. He’s dreamt of Ser Duncan the Tall with a slain dragon, which adds an additional layer of morbid curiosity to the fortune teller’s grim prophecy about Egg’s future in Episode 3.

Other observations:

  • Egg’s horrifying story about Aerion threatening to castrate him so then he’d have a sister he could marry. Those freakin’ Targaryens, man.
  • Dunk’s vision of Ser Arlan shrugging was hilarious.
  • Tanselle – who did a fine job repainting the sigil on Dunk’s shield – has fled, so there goes Dunk’s one romantic hope.
  • Animal lover Dunk petting the mouse in his cell window and later talking to his horses.
  • Aerion demeaning a nobleman by making him climb under the table to fetch his walnut.
  • It was nice to see armorer Steely Pate have another good scene with Dunk.
  • Ser Lyonel knighting Raymun Fossoway. Congrats on your promotion, Raymun!
  • That big jerk who humiliated Dunk before the nobles by farting.
  • Daeron knows he’s a coward who will end up in a hell without wine for lying to Maekar that Dunk kidnapped Egg.
  • The Game of Thrones theme kicking in at the very end. Let’s gooooo!

The Grand Tour Returns This Year, With Three New Confirmed Hosts

6 février 2026 à 07:47

Prime Video has announced that The Grand Tour will be returning to screens in 2026, albeit with one very major change: a new trio of hosts.

The new presenters of The Grand Tour will be Thomas Holland and James Engelsman, from YouTube channel Throttle House, as well as trainspotting social media personality Francis Bourgeois.

A six-episode series, set to return to Prime Video “later this year”, will see the new trio in a variety of locations, from the Angolan desert, to Malaysia, and on to California.

“I’ve worked with Thomas for almost a decade making car films,” said Engelsman in a statement published alongside the announcement. “Who knew that all this time, the one ingredient that was missing was a Francis Bourgeois? Let the car adventures commence.”

“When I first heard they were rebooting The Grand Tour and replacing Clarkson, Hammond, and May, I said, ‘Only a moron would take that job,’” added Holland.

Holland is a motoring journalist who launched Throttle House in 2015, and was joined by Engelsman a few years later. Francis Bourgeois (whose real name is Luke Nicolson) is a qualified mechanical engineer who briefly worked at Rolls-Royce before leaving to pursue his growing social media profile.

Prime Video’s most-watched unscripted UK original series globally, The Grand Tour has been on the hoist since September, 2024, following the episode “One for the Road.” The episode was filmed across Zimbabwe and Botswana before taking a special moment to mark the end of hosts Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond, and James May’s TV collaborations after 22 years of working together on The Grand Tour and the BBC’s Top Gear. Clarkson did, however, return to The Grand Tour's social channels this week for a short skit confirming the new hosts.

Luke is a Senior Editor on the IGN reviews team. You can track him down on Bluesky @mrlukereilly to ask him things about stuff.

How to Watch the 2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony Live Online

6 février 2026 à 04:01

The Winter Olympics have returned for 2026. Hosted in Milan Cortina, this year’s event technically already started with some qualifying curling events earlier this week. However, we’ve still got an Opening Ceremony to really kick things off.

Like previous Olympics, this year’s events will be broadcast by NBC and will stream exclusively on Peacock. If you’re already subscribed to Peacock or a cable provider, you’re covered! If not, there happens to be a free trial of the service available through Walmart+ that can get you streaming access.

When Is the 2026 Opening Ceremony?

This year’s opening ceremony will kick off at 2pm ET, which is 8pm local time in Italy, on February 6, 2026. The ceremony will likely run for a total of three hours, and will be broadcast again during primetime at 8pm ET.

The ceremony will include the Parade of Nations as well as performances from artists like Mariah Carey. This will be the first Opening Ceremony to feature the lighting of two separate cauldrons: one in Milan, and one in Cortina d’Ampezzo.

Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony Streaming Options

Let’s get to the heart of the matter. In general, the Winter Olympics, including the Opening Ceremony, are being streamed exclusively on Peacock. If you don't already have a Peacock Premium subcription, maybe this is the motivating factor to pick one up. If so, it's worth noting that the service now has a pretty reasonably priced bundle with Apple TV.

The one thing Peacock doesn’t happen to offer? A free trial. You have to pay the monthly cost upfront to get access. So, if you’d prefer not to pay for any subscription, you have a slightly funkier option.

While Peacock itself no longer offers any freebies, you can include Peacock in a Walmart+ subscription, which does happen to offer a whopping 30-day free trial. If you sign up right before the Opening Ceremony, you’ll essentially get access to the entire Winter Olympics for free. As long as you remember to cancel at the end of the trial, of course.

Free Trial Available

Generally speaking, Walmart+ subscriptions include early access to Walmart deals and free shipping, but for the streaming-inclined, you also get the choice between a Paramount+ Essential or Peacock Premium (with ads) subscription. This subscription is roped into the standard monthly Walmart+ cost of $12.95. Yep, pretty much the same cost as either standalone subscription, making it weirdly enough one of best streaming bundles on the market right now.

The Pitt Season 2, Episode 5: "11:00 A.M." Review

6 février 2026 à 03:00

Warning: This review contains full spoilers for The Pitt Season 2, Episode 5!

We’re now five episodes and a third of the way into The Pitt Season 2. Most other shows these days would have rounded the halfway mark by now, but that’s the joy of watching something that hearkens back to the pre-streaming era of television. There’s still plenty of room left on this runway. Even so, the tone of the series is definitely intensifying as the situation at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center grows more dire, resulting in what is easily the strongest chapter of Season 2 to date.

Episode 5 is great about addressing some of the niggling problems with previous installments, most notably when it comes to the relative lack of focus on Patrick Ball’s Dr. Langdon. As I’ve said before, if this season were to have a main focal character, it should be Langdon, but he’s been purposely relegated to the sidelines by his old mentor. But now Langdon is back in the thick of things, and we start to see the simmering tension between him and Noah Wyle’s Dr. Robby start to boil over.

It’s great watching that mostly silent feud play out in Episode 5, as Robby does everything within his power not to talk to Langdon or be in the same room with him. You can easily sympathize with both men. Robby’s angry dismissal of Langdon was one of the standout scenes of Season 1, and it’s easy to recall the sheer pain and disbelief he felt in that moment. But at the same time, Langdon has paid his dues, and you can understand his frustration at being flatly rejected by a thoroughly unsympathetic Robby.

That all comes to a head in the final moments of Episode 5, as Louie (Ernest Harden Jr.) fittingly becomes the catalyst that forces both men to work together. There’s been the sense all along that the affable Louie’s long string of luck is about to run out, and that finally happens here. Not a bad cliffhanger on which to end the week.

Elsewhere in the ER, Dr. Santos (Isa Briones) is really the star of the show in Episode 5, as the series takes a slightly more humorous approach to her particular plight. The running gag of Santos getting one or two sentences deeper into her dictation, only to be interrupted again by Whitaker (Gerran Howell) or Ogilvie (James Howell), never gets old. But it’s also nice seeing her on the backfoot so much this season, after Season 1 really played up her crusading, righteous doctor side. Paperwork is the bane of us all.

By the same token, it’s fun to watch the insufferable know-it-all Ogilvie continue to get his just desserts. Last week it was almost killing a patient with a reckless extraction; this week, it’s being forced to clean out an elderly woman’s impacted colon.

Ogilvie’s fellow student Joy (Irene Choi) also gets a nice little bit of added attention in this episode. Up until now, Joy has been a fairly one-note character. She’s the scowling, disaffected med student who (understandably) can barely tolerate being paired with Ogilvie. But we get a chance to see a different side of the character when she swoops in to offer a solution to the family shuddering under the burden of crushing medical debt. It’s a happy ending to a depressing subplot, and one that tells us a lot more about who Joy is and why she’s seemingly so detached from it all.

Finally, this episode makes some inroads with Dr. Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi), a character who so far has been played a little more antagonistically than I’d like. She’s the newcomer disrupting the carefully oiled machine that is the ER, and we’ve been left to sympathize with Robby on that front. But the two characters share a strong scene together where Al-Hashimi rightfully berates Robby for treating her like an underling rather than a colleague. It’s subtle, but it helps turn the character in a more favorable direction. Hopefully, that trend continues in the coming episodes.

Get ONNIT Alpha BRAIN To Stay Locked In During Game Time

6 février 2026 à 01:45

Competitive PC and console gamers know that your mental state is just as vital as your skills and equipment when it comes to victory over your opponents. If you’re not focused, a mispress or panic input could lead to your demise, especially in esports, where mere milliseconds matter most. Sure, sleep and breaks can help, but sometimes you just need a boost during those extended gaming sessions and pivotal game moments. Enter ONNIT Alpha BRAIN — a nootropic designed to help you get past cognitive fatigue by supporting focus, memory, and clarity.

Keep Focused with ONNIT Alpha BRAIN

ONNIT Alpha BRAIN is ideal for gamers who want to optimize their performance by improving reaction times, decision-making, and accuracy. Rather than relying on caffeine and other stimulants that aren’t always that great for you, Alpha BRAIN uses better science-driven ingredients to help improve your stamina and focus. Some of those ingredients include L-theanine, vitamin B6, phosphatidylserine, alpha GPC, and huperzia serrata extract, all of which support brain health. Best of all, they come packaged in a capsule form for easy consumption.

While this nootropic can be super beneficial for gaming, it’s also great for when you need to concentrate on a work deadline or want to get creative by boosting productivity. Alpha BRAIN promotes that “flow state” where you just stay locked in and concentrate on the task at hand without distraction.

If you are looking to think clearly and perform your best, ONNIT Alpha BRAIN is for you. It’s available in 30 or 90-count capsules, with free shipping on orders of $100 or more. You can save even more by subscribing. There’s also an Alpha BRAIN Black Label for days when you need that extra caffeine kick and next-level focus. It’s not just capsules available either; you can grab focus shots, neuro gummies, pre-workout, and instant powder, each with different brain-boosting ingredients, all of which should help improve your mental clarity.

What Is ONNIT?

ONNIT, the brand behind Alpha BRAIN nootropics, expertly curates formulas using globally-sourced, scientifically-backed ingredients. It then rigorously lab tests its products, ensuring purity and potency, before sending them to consumers. Beyond supporting cognitive functions, ONNIT offers other nootropics to improve mood, endurance, gut health, and more for optimal performance, no matter what you’re doing.

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

AU Deals: Devastating Price Cuts, Long Plays Ahoy, Zero Regret Purchases Aplenty

6 février 2026 à 01:40

I have played enough of these to be picky, which is exactly why this list exists. Not everything cheap is worth your time, and not everything premium deserves your wallet. This week quietly delivers both value and personality across four platforms, with a few curveballs that reward curiosity. Jump right to the deals with this link.

What's on My Radar Today?

Anyone who reads my stuff on the reg knows I'm an absolute sucker for the gaming axiom that is "friends who slay together, stay together." Horizon Hunters Gathering already looks like my jam as a (PC or PS5) co-op action spin-off set in the Horizon universe. Three like-minded players must team up to cull droves of Dinobots in hunts that lean hard into coordination, roles, and replayability. Think: tactical encounters, rotating mission types like machine incursions and cauldron dives, and a progression system that encourages experimentation rather than rote grinding.

Apparently, there is also a fully canon story campaign and a shared hub where squads prep, customise and plan their next machine (read: monster) hunt. Cross-play and cross-progression are mercifully a thing. If the idea of Terminator taxidermy with mates sounds even remotely appealing, there's an upcoming beta you can sign up for right now. Do it. I'll see you in the mix.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I’m casting magic missiles to light a 22-candle cake for Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance II. I remember this top-down hack 'n slash ARPG to be two-player co-op bliss. Better yet, it eclipsed its predecessor by having deeper customisation, letting us craft our own magical equipment, and the roster expanded from 3 to 7 classes. The cream of that crop if you finished it on Extreme? Legendary drow ranger, Drizzt Do'Urden, and his human assassin nemesis, Artemis Entreri.

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Legacy of Kain: Defiance (PS2,XB) 2004. Get

- Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance II (PS2,XB) 2004. Get

- Sega GT Online (XB) 2004. eBay

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

  • Disco Elysium: The Final Cut (-70%) A$18 Still the sharpest writing in RPGs, and the Switch version finally runs clean. Slow, talky, and political, but unforgettable if you like decisions that haunt you.
  • NieR:Automata The End of YoRHa Ed. (-60%) A$21.90 Platinum combat wrapped around philosophical dread. The frame rate wobbles, but the ideas and music still land harder than most modern action RPGs.
  • Untitled Goose Game (-50%) A$15 Still a perfect palate cleanser. Short, silly, and deliberately irritating, but the design discipline underneath the honking joke is genuinely impressive.
  • Neo: The World Ends With You (-60%) A$33.90 Stylish, loud, and mechanically dense. Combat sings once it clicks, though the story takes patience. Worth it if you miss Square Enix being weird.
  • Lego City Undercover (-67%) A$29.90 Open world Lego chaos with a surprisingly solid crime parody. Long load times persist, but the humour carries harder than most licensed efforts.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

  • Aliens: Dark Descent (-65%) A$22 Tactical stress in real time. Smart squad control and genuine tension, though mistakes snowball fast. Feels respectful of Aliens rather than cosplay.
  • Borderlands 3 (-90%) A$9.90 The writing still grates, but the gunplay is peerless. At this price, the loot loop overwhelms its flaws without mercy.
  • Wonder Boy: The Dragon's Trap (-75%) A$6.70 A loving remake that respects its roots. Short, charming, and mechanically honest. Feels like comfort food with a modern coat.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

  • Dragon Quest VII Reimagined (-10%) A$89 Not a massive discount, sure. But enormous, traditional, and unapologetically slow. For series lifers only, but the rework smooths enough edges to justify the revisit.
  • Marvel's Spider-Man 2 (-50%) A$62.40 Slick traversal and confident pacing. The spectacle is real, but the smaller character moments are what stick.
  • It Takes Two (-80%) A$11.90 Still the benchmark for co-op design. Requires a partner and patience, but rewards both generously.
  • Like A Dragon: Pirate Yakuza In Hawaii (-70%) A$29.90 Ridiculous premise, sincere heart. Combat is messy fun, tone swings wildly, and it somehow works if you buy into the bit.
  • The Messenger (-80%) A$4.90 Tight platforming with a knowing wink. The humour occasionally overreaches, but the mechanics never do.

PS4

  • Gran Turismo 7 (-58%) A$46.10 Still unmatched driving feel. Always online quirks remain annoying, but the racing craft is pristine.
  • Persona 5 Strikers (-58%) A$41.70 A musou spin that actually understands Persona. Combat repetition creeps in, but the cast chemistry carries hard.
  • Trials Of Mana (-49%) A$39.30 Bright, breezy action RPG nostalgia. Shallow systems, but earnest charm if you want something undemanding.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

  • Tiny Tina's Wonderlands (-100%) A$0 Chaotic fantasy Borderlands with uneven jokes. Free removes all risk, leaving only the solid gunplay.
  • Hogwarts Legacy Del. Ed. (-85%) A$14.90 A lavish theme park RPG. Story is safe, but the world sells the fantasy better than expected.
  • Dying Light Essentials Ed. (-88%) A$4.50 Parkour horror that still nails tension. Night cycles remain terrifying, even if the storytelling never quite lands.
  • Marvel's Midnight Suns (-85%) A$13.40 Tactical depth disguised as a card game. Social layers are divisive, but the combat loop is quietly brilliant.
  • The Quarry (-85%) A$13.40 Interactive horror with uneven pacing. Strong cast, weaker scares, but worth it if you enjoy choice driven chaos.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

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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.

Baldur’s Gate TV Series Set for HBO, Will Be a Continuation of Baldur’s Gate 3's Story

6 février 2026 à 01:00

Larian Studios’ multi-award-winning fantasy RPG, Baldur’s Gate 3, is set for its own TV series on HBO, and will be helmed by The Last of Us co-creator Craig Mazin.

As reported by Deadline, a television adaptation of the acclaimed game set in the Dungeons & Dragons universe is in development at the network, and interestingly, will be a continuation of the story from the Baldur's Gate 3 game. The television show will reportedly take place after the events of Larian's RPG and follow the characters players grew to love over time as they grapple with the aftermath of its world-changing ending.

The series will be helmed by Craig Mazin, no stranger to adapting video games to live action, following his work co-creating HBO's The Last of Us with Naughty Dog's Neil Druckmann. A huge fan of Baldur's Gate 3, Mazin told Deadline that "After putting nearly 1000 hours into the incredible world of Baldur’s Gate 3, it is a dream come true to be able to continue the story that Larian and Wizards of The Coast created".

"I am a devoted fan of D&D and the brilliant way that Swen Vincke and his gifted team adapted it", he continued. "I can’t wait to help bring Baldur’s Gate and all of its incredible characters to life with as much respect and love as we can, and I’m deeply grateful to Gabe Marano and his team at Hasbro for entrusting me with this incredibly important property."

By taking on this project that has no ties to any other Baldur's Gate game in the pipeline, Mazin will have free rein over what story he wishes to tell, but we do know that it will include both existing and brand new members of the BG3 cast. Shadowheart? Karlach? Astarion? Who are you most looking forward to seeing on your television screen? Mazin reportedly plans to reach out to the cast of the games to sound out how best to approach their roles in the TV show, and if they'd want to be involved, something The Last of Us did with Merle Dandridge reprising her role as Marlene, for example.

Of course, the ending of Larian's multiple game of the year award-winning RPG can vary massively depending on how you chose to play the game, so it will be highly intriguing to see how Mazin and co. go about choosing which ending is canon for them.

It may well be a while yet before we see Baldur's Gate arrive on the small screen, with Mazin still attached to complete production on The Last of Us, which is gearing up for its third, and maybe final, season.

Simon Cardy is a Senior Editor at IGN who can mainly be found skulking around open world games, indulging in Korean cinema, or despairing at the state of Tottenham Hotspur and the New York Jets. Follow him on Bluesky at @cardy.bsky.social.

I Review Graphics Cards for a Living, Let Me Help You Pick an Nvidia GPU

5 février 2026 à 23:56

Whether you’ve been playing PC games for years or you’re building your first gaming PC, picking the right graphics card is probably one of the most consequential choices. It doesn’t help that now there’s three companies making graphics cards, which means there are more options out there than ever before.

But there are a lot of reasons to pick an Nvidia graphics card over one made by AMD or Intel. For one, whether you love it or hate it, Nvidia has plenty of software and features that are exclusive to its graphics cards, whereas things like FSR (FidelityFX Super Resolution) from AMD will work no matter what GPU is in your system. Features like DLSS, or Deep Learning Super Sampling, make an Nvidia graphics card an attractive choice.

Nvidia also has the most powerful graphics cards on the market right now, especially at the high-end. There simply is not another graphics card that can match the RTX 5090 in pure performance. But even when it comes to more affordable graphics cards like the RTX 4060 Ti, the AI upscaling offered by DLSS can really help stretch the performance, and can even push into higher resolutions than you would otherwise be able to.

It's still important to figure out what resolution you want to play games at, because that’s going to change what type of graphics card you want to go for. If you want to play all the newest PC games at 4K with all the settings maxed, you’re going to need a much more powerful card than someone that just wants to play World of Warcraft at 1080p.

TL;DR: These Are Best GPUs

Graphics Cards Basics

While graphics cards are extremely complicated devices, shopping for one doesn’t need to be that much of a hassle. As long as you keep an eye out for some simple specs, you should have a pretty good idea of what you’re getting into.

The most obvious thing to look for is whether or not your graphics card is actually part of the current generation. You don’t want to miss out on performance or features, especially if you’re spending hundreds of dollars on just one part of your computer. With Nvidia graphics cards, this is actually extremely easy, just look at the two numbers following the ‘RTX’ or ‘GTX’ in the graphics card’s name. Nvidia just launched its newest generation of graphics cards, which are labeled with '50.' If it’s ‘40,’ that’s the previous generation from 2022; ‘30’ and ‘20’ are the two generations before that.

Don’t get me wrong, getting a 30-series or 20-series card will still provide an excellent gaming experience, with the RTX 3080 still able to power most games at 4K without breaking a sweat.

But what about the second two numbers? Well, take a look at the RTX 5090, the top-end graphics card on the market. Then, take a look at the RTX 4050, which is only a laptop GPU, but is way weaker. The scale typically goes from 50-90, with the higher number meaning a more powerful graphics card. Nvidia does sometimes add extra letters or words at the end of its graphics cards, with ‘Ti’ and ‘Super’ being common variants. This typically means a slightly more powerful card. For instance, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is going to be slightly more powerful than the RTX 5070. The basic rule of thumb is that, after the number, any extra letters or words typically indicate a faster graphics card.

When it comes to specs, graphics cards have a lot of numbers and lingo to swallow, which can definitely be overwhelming. But if you just want to slot a GPU in your rig and forget about it, you don’t need to pay attention to every little detail.

The amount of VRAM you need is going to largely depend on what resolution you want to play your games at. If you want to play games at 4K, you’re going to want as much video memory as you can afford. There are games that will eat up upwards of 20GB of VRAM at that resolution if you let them, so the sky really is the limit. For lower resolutions like 1080p, however, you can get by with 8GB of RAM, though I would recommend going with a 12GB or 16GB card if it’s in your budget. An 8GB card will get you through most games, but there is a growing number of AAA PC games that need more memory.

There are some other specs you can look at if you really want to, like clock speed, CUDA core count and Streaming Multiprocessors – what Nvidia calls its compute units – but those largely just get better as you get a more high-end graphics card either way. Compute Units are essentially the same as CPU cores on a processor, and each one contains 128 CUDA cores. So, the RTX 5080 with its 84 Compute Units, contains a total of 10,752 CUDA cores. Just keep in mind that directly comparing two graphics cards of different generations by the core counts alone won’t tell you how much of a performance jump it’ll be.

Once you’ve picked the graphics card you want, you need to make sure you have a power supply that can handle it. You can usually check the box your graphics card comes in to get an idea of how much power the card requires, and if not, Nvidia has it listed out on its website. My advice would be to check the required power for your graphics cards and then get a power supply that can provide just a bit more wattage. For instance, if your graphics card recommends a 450W power supply, I’d get a 550 or a 650W unit just to be on the safe side.

1. If You Just Want the Best: RTX 5090

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 is the most powerful graphics card on the market right now, there's no way around that. But I still wouldn't recommend most people buy it. This is a $1,999 graphics card to start and it's not exactly super available on store shelves right now. We've even started seeing scalpers selling this thing for $9000 on eBay, just a day after launch. If you do have the funds to get your hands on it, though, you can expect the best 4K gaming experience money can buy, even if it isn't light-years ahead of the RTX 4090.

When I reviewed the Nvidia RTX 5090, I found that it's around 20-25% faster than the RTX 4090 at 4K, with the performance lead obviously waning at lower resolutions. That's a relatively small gen-on-gen performance uplift, but at the end of the day, faster is faster. The RTX 5090 largely gets its larger performance from an absolutely massive GPU, with 21,760 CUDA cores, which can boost up to 2.41GHz. That's a sizable jump from the RTX 4090, and it's possible primarily through a much larger power budget. This graphics card requires 575W of power to run, which is the most power a consumer graphics card has ever required – including back in the days of dual-GPU graphics cards like the AMD Radeon R9 295X2.

As such, you're going to need a serious power supply to keep this GPU fed with power. Nvidia recommends at least a 1,000W unit to pair with the RTX 5090, but I'd recommend going a little beyond that, with something like a 1,200W PSU, just to make sure it stays efficient when you're really pushing it to its limits. Because this graphics card will hit that power limit, especially when DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation is enabled, and that's largely the reason to get this graphics card.

Essentially, DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation, or MFG, uses the AI Tensor Cores to generate up to 3 AI frames off of each rendered frame. This can hugely improve your framerate, but can introduce serious latency if you're not already getting a solid frame rate. This is a feature you should only really enable if you're already getting 60-70 fps, but it's going to be rare to find a PC game that the 5090 is going to have any trouble hitting that frame rate on.

2. Best for 4K (for Most People): RTX 5080

Every GPU generation is a gamble of whether or not it's going to be a huge improvement on what came before, or just fall flat. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 kind of leans towards the latter option, but that's not to say it's a bad graphics card. While I wouldn't recommend anyone who has an RTX 4000 graphics card to upgrade to the 5080, it's a good upgrade for anyone that's been waiting a couple of generations for a new graphics card.

In my review, the RTX 5080 only ended up being around 11% faster and 8% faster than the RTX 4080 and RTX 4080 Super, respectively, at 4K. That's one of the weakest generational uplifts for a graphics card in years, and it remains slower than the last-generation flagship, the RTX 4090. But given that the RTX 4090 is still way more expensive than the RTX 5080, this is still the best Nvidia graphics card you're going to get around a thousand bucks – assuming you can find one.

The main reason the RTX 5080 isn't much faster than its last-gen counterpart is because Nvidia didn't shrink the manufacturing process, remaining on a similar 4nm node, while also not drastically increasing the amount of CUDA cores on offer. Luckily, that helps avoid the massive power requirements seen on the RTX 5090, with the 5080 'only' requiring 360W of power to run. That means you don't need to fork over the cash for an expensive high-wattage power supply, which means more cash for the games you want to play.

And while this graphics card might be a little disappointing for anyone who keeps a laser focus on graphics cards every generation, playing games on this thing is awesome. Throughout my entire test suite, the only game that didn't get 60 fps at 4K was Metro Exodus: Enhanced Edition, and that was because I was running it without DLSS with Ray Tracing cranked up. Turn on DLSS, and that number is going to hit the triple digits, just like pretty much any AAA game on the market right now. Add in DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation, and you should have no problem fully saturating a high-refresh 4K monitor. Just make sure you can hit 60-70 fps before you turn it on.

3. Best for 1440p: RTX 4070 Super

If you ask me, 1440p is the gold standard PC gaming resolution. Not only are the monitors much cheaper than their 4K brethren, but they’re much easier to power with affordable graphics cards. You can absolutely strap an RTX 4080 Super into a gaming PC to play games at 1440p, too, but you’re better off dialing in the performance and saving more money for games. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super is the perfect Nvidia graphics card for 1440p, no matter what games you’re playing.

In my review, I found that the RTX 4070 Super is easily able to play the most demanding games like Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p, delivering 91 fps on the Ray Tracing Ultra preset. And in games like Forza Horizon 5, that number goes up to 158 fps, proving the RTX 4070 Super is capable of high frame rate gaming at 1440p. And at $599, it’s much more affordable than the RTX 4070 Ti or RTX 4070 Ti Super, which will set you back $749 and $799, respectively.

The only downside is that Nvidia didn’t upgrade the VRAM when refreshing the RTX 4070. You’re still getting 12GB of GDDR6X memory, which should be plenty for most games, but you might find it getting stretched in more demanding games like Black Myth Wukong. This is especially unfortunate given you can get the RTX 4060 Ti with 16GB of VRAM at a lower price – even if the RTX 4070 Super will outperform the 4060 Ti in every game regardless.

4. Best for 1080p: RTX 4060 Ti

According to the latest Steam Hardware Survey, 1080p is still far and away the most popular display resolution for PC gamers. While that number has been going down over time, it makes sense why so many people still play at 1080p. It’s simply more affordable to play at this resolution, as you don’t need an extremely powerful graphics card to play even the most impressive AAA games. Plus, because of the low power demands for this resolution, it remains extremely popular among esports players, who can get insane frame rates that are just not possible at 4K.

And that’s what makes the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti such a great 1080p graphics card. The RTX 4060 Ti is affordable at $399, and is easily able to play any game at 1080p at a high frame rate – and I don’t mean just 60 fps. You see, in my review, I found the RTX 4060 Ti to exceed 100 fps in most of the games I tested. In fact, the only game that it didn’t top 100 fps in was Cyberpunk 2077, with 76 fps, but that number went all the way up to 122 fps once I enabled Frame Generation.

In most of the games where a super high frame rate will actually matter, the RTX 4060 Ti can easily reach upwards of 200 fps. Games like Overwatch 2, Valorant and Counter-Strike 2 will love the extra frames this GPU can spit out.

One thing you have to be aware of, though, is there are technically two different versions of the RTX 4060 Ti: An 8GB model for $399 and a 16GB version that costs $499. For most people who just want to play games at 1080p, the 8GB version is going to be fine. And while, yeah, 16GB is better, it’s really not worth adding an extra $100 to the price tag for the two games that need more than 8GB at 1080p.

5. Best on a Budget: GeForce GTX 1660 Super

If $399 is still too expensive, you can still pick up the Nvidia GTX 1660 Super even if it's an ancient graphics card by today’s standards. The GTX 1660 Super is built on the Nvidia Turing architecture that powered the RTX 2080 back in 2018. However, while it’s more than a little outdated at this point, it can still deliver solid 1080p gaming, especially in less demanding games like League of Legends.

If you’re going to compromise and get this older graphics card, keep in mind that you’re missing out on many of Nvidia’s best features. This GPU doesn’t have RT cores, so it doesn’t support ray tracing, and it doesn’t have Tensor cores, which means no DLSS.

When I reviewed the GTX 1660 Super for TechRadar, I was amazed by just how well it performed at 1080p for the price. That was five years ago at this point, but Nvidia still hasn’t released a direct successor to this budget graphics card. That’s a shame, because Nvidia’s graphics architecture has grown a lot since then, and another budget card is long overdue. Luckily, Nvidia still hasn’t discontinued the GTX 1660 Super in the years since it launched and you can find it for as little as $180. Five years later and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super is still the best Nvidia graphics card under $200, however shameful that is.

Upcoming Nvidia Graphics Cards

The first wave of Nvidia Blackwell graphics cards are all here, and it seems like that's all we're going to get for now. Usually, Team Green would follow up its first wave of graphics cards with refreshed "Super" variants. However, nothing in the world of PC gaming hardware is normal right now, and it looks like the Super lineup has been canceled in the face of high RAM prices and AI datacenter demand. Right now, it looks like we'll be waiting for the RTX 6090 whenever that comes out – likely sometime in the second half of 2027.

What Is DLSS?

Deep Learning Super Sampling, or DLSS is an AI upscaling method that uses Nvidia’s Tensor Cores to improve image quality. The Tensor Core will take visual data from the frame being rendered, along with motion vector data, in order to accurately upscale the image to a higher resolution. This process results in an image that looks pretty close to the native resolution, but with a much higher frame rate.

In its early days, DLSS needed to train the AI model on each game it would support, with developers needing to upload data to Nvidia. However, DLSS has gone through several iterations, and now it does not need to be trained on individual games. Instead, if a developer wants to include DLSS in their game, they can just inject Nvidia’s API into the game. This means more games can support the technology, without having to wait for Nvidia’s training on each game.

With DLSS 3.0, Nvidia added Frame Generation to the equation. This technology takes the visual data from two frames, along with motion vector data from the game engine and motion information from its own hardware, and creates an entirely new frame that’s sandwiched between the two original frames. This would introduce a lot of latency, but Nvidia requires its Reflex technology to be enabled before Frame Generation can happen. Reflex essentially syncs the graphics card and the processor, eliminating the need for the CPU to queue up frames for the GPU to render later.

Nvidia updated to DLSS 4.0, then later 4.5, which introduced multi-frame generation and a new upscaling model. The new frame generation lets RTX 5000 graphics cards use AI to generate up to three frames per rendered frame, greatly improving framerates. The new DLSS also moves the upscaling algorithm to a transformer model, which allows for much better image quality, though with a slight hit to performance. But, hey – that's what frame generation is for, I guess.

Together, Frame Generation and Reflex greatly improve your frame rate, but there’s a catch. Because so much of it relies on motion data, you already need to have a decent frame rate for Frame Generation to work smoothly. So, this technology is best used for folks that can already get 60fps or more and just want to push to a higher frame rate.

What Is Ray Tracing?

Ray tracing is just a way to render light realistically. It does this by taking a light source, then simulating each ray of light as it bounces around the scene. It’s a simple concept to be sure, but it ends up requiring a ton of compute power to pull off. Any light being cast potentially has thousands of rays of light, each of which will bounce around hundreds of times, multiply that by needing a new frame 60 times a second, and you can imagine how much power you need to pull it off.

That’s why ray tracing in video games needs specialized hardware to pull this lighting method off without grinding your framerate to a standstill. Luckily, Nvidia has been working this hardware into its graphics cards since the RTX 2080 in 2018.

Fast forward to today, and even with that dedicated ray tracing hardware being built into every mainstream graphics card – not just from Nvidia – we still need to limit ray tracing in order to maximize performance. There are only a few games that support full ray tracing, or ‘path tracing,’ with most other games limiting the ray tracing elements to a certain part of the scene, like shadows or reflections, and also limiting the amount of bounces calculated for each ray of light.

It’s an expensive way to generate lighting, but it looks incredible, especially in games that rely on lighting for atmosphere. In Metro Exodus, for instance, the accurate lighting often leads to darker environments, amplifying the intense atmosphere the game already has.

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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