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Resident Evil Requiem Director Gives Definitive Response to Open World 'Speculation'

26 janvier 2026 à 18:04

Capcom has responded to ongoing fan speculation about Resident Evil Requiem being an open world game with a definitive-sounding response.

Fan discussion and leaks around the game have long pointed to Requiem featuring more open exploration than in previous Resident Evil titles. This suggestion was fuelled further earlier this month by the release of a fresh gameplay snippet that included a look at a bustling city street, complete with pedestrians and traffic.

Now, however, Resident Evil Requiem director Koshi Nakanishi has stepped in to set the record straight, having seen the discussion online. In short, anyone hoping for an open world Resident Evil should reset their expectations.

"[The development team] did just want to make clear one point," Nakanishi told Game Informer. "They've seen some speculation of whether there's any open world elements in the game, and they just want to set the record straight that this isn't an open world game.

"The main concept behind this game is combining the very different gameplay of Grace and Leon into a cohesive package, and having those two gameplays represent the Resident Evil series, and I think when you play the game, you realize that, or you will find as well that the development team picked the best approach to do this."

In other words, what you should expect from this game is for Grace and Leon's portions to feel like how they've already been pitched, with Grace's focus on horror and Leon's focused on action, as an extension of the Resident Evil franchise's existing games.

In IGN's just-published Resident Evil Requiem final preview, we described Grace's gameplay sections as familiar to anyone who has played Resident Evil 2 or 7. Leon's gameplay sections, meanwhile, stirred up our muscle memory of playing Resident Evil 4. Neither of those games were open world, so it sounds like we shouldn't expect Requiem to be open world either.

"This year is the 30th anniversary of the Resident Evil series, so it feels like no coincidence that 2026’s Resident Evil Requiem is combining the best ideas of the saga into what appears to be a fantastically constructed tribute to everything that makes the series so great," IGN wrote. "Do you like tense survival horror? It’s here. Wanna go all guns blazing with intense action and a quip-obsessed hero? You get that too."

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

Iconic Horror Villains Get a Fresh Look in Funko x WBD Mystery Pops! Series

26 janvier 2026 à 18:00

What toy collector doesn't love a good blind box? Half the fun is not knowing exactly what you're getting. That's the thinking behind Funko's latest series of Funko Pop! figurines, which gives the blind box treatment to iconic horror movie villains like Pennywise the Dancing Clown, Annabelle, and The Exorcist's Regan.

Funko revealed first details about the Mystery Pop! line at the London Toy Fair today. The first Mystery Pop! line is a collaboration with Warner Bros. Discovery and focuses on horror villains from various WB films. While all of these characters have been tackled in Funko Pop! form before, this series features a brand-new, two-tone paint deco.

Check out the Mystery Pop! figurines in the slideshow gallery below:

The six characters included in the Mystery Pop! line are:

  • Pennywise
  • Regan
  • La Llorona
  • Annabelle
  • Pennywise Classic
  • The Nun

Again, fans won't know which figure they're getting until they open the outer packaging. Each figure also comes with an accompanying Pop! card, with a 1:72 chance of receiving a chase foil collector's card.

Funko will reveal more details about pricing and release date for the Mystery Pop! line in the months to come.

For more on the Funko Pop! line, check out the newest Stranger Things line and see where you can preorder the upcoming Tomb Raider figures.

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

Razer Raiju V3 Pro Review: A Top-End PS5 and PC Controller Only Limited by Sony Restrictions

26 janvier 2026 à 18:00

The Raiju V3 Pro is one of those rare PlayStation-layout controllers that also works brilliantly on PC, augmented with modern tech like drift-resistant TMR joysticks, Hall Effect triggers, six extra buttons and polling rates up to 2000Hz. After a month with the Raiju V3 Pro, completing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, the latest MechWarrior 5: Clans DLC and a long-running F1 23 campaign, I'm happy to call it: this is the best symmetric controller I've ever tested.

Design and Features

The Raiju V3 Pro's matte black plastic shell outwardly resembles the DualSense, but conceals a multitude of features – some intended for competitive gamers and plenty of others that benefit everyone. The most obvious example of the latter are the Raiju's advanced thumbsticks: unlike the similarly premium Sony DualSense Edge, the Raiju uses TMR (tunneling magnetoresistance) sensors. This tech has just gone mainstream in the last couple of years, and has both longevity (anti-drift) and precision (no dead zone) benefits over traditional potentiometer-based alternatives, making them a natural choice for a $220 gamepad that you'll want to use for years to get your money's worth.

The stick caps are also swappable, with a taller concave cap and a same-size convex cap awaiting you in the included carry case. That same case also includes a minute screwdriver for installing or removing the four rear buttons, which come attached by default and are labeled M3 to M6. These back paddles, plus two additional clicky M1 and M2 keys hiding out near the shoulder buttons, can all be remapped using the Synapse software on PC or the Razer Controller iOS/Android app. There's also an additional button below the PlayStation button to swap between profiles quickly without software.

The regular face buttons are also interesting, with what Razer calls 'mecha-tactile' switches - essentially clicky, short-threw variants of a traditional membrane button under a PBT cap. These give each button and d-pad direction a pleasing amount of tactile and audible feedback when pressed, while the short travel distance is nicely calibrated to feel immediate without making accidental presses too easy.

The same fine-tuning is evident on the Hall Effect triggers, which are also more durable than their potentiometer-based forebears. A trigger lock on each side allows you to swap the full travel distance for a short and snappy digital input with a mouse click – ideal for timing-dependent games like Elden Ring or Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. The d-pad is also customizable, with four-way and eight-way modes, plus four SOCD settings that let you choose what happens when two opposing directions are held at the same time, whether that's prioritising the first or last input, cancelling the inputs or recognising both simultaneously.

Moving deeper down, into the guts of the controller, there's a high-end microcontroller that allows for a maximum polling rate of 2000Hz when wired to a PC. For a wireless PC connection to the included 2.4GHz USB dongle, the maximum is 500Hz, while on PlayStation 5, it's 250Hz – a platform limitation, Razer tells me. Higher polling rates cut down input latency, though genres like fighting games and shooters will feel the difference most readily.

Gaming and Performance

With its comfortable grips, TMR sticks and familiar layout, adapting to the Raiju V3 Pro was the work of a moment, but I really came to appreciate it while playing through Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. The Raiju V3 Pro carried me through the end game and its increasingly challenging optional content, proving more comfortable for timing parries than the keyboard-and-mouse setup I was using before. Being able to lock the triggers helped for executing Gradient Parries or quickly setting off at a run, and even aiming for moving weak points using the left thumbstick was easier than I expected.

F1 23 was a sterner test of the analogue triggers and thumb sticks, which the Raiju V3 passed with precision, and I appreciated having extra buttons on-hand for changing brake bias or differential settings without taking my eyes off the next corner. MechWarrior 5: Clans is another game that has more functionality than can easily be mapped to a default controller, so having a conveniently-placed rear button to quickly enable a MASC boost or change weapon control groups often came in useful. I found aiming a challenge here versus my usual mouse-and-keyboard, but setting the deadzone to 3% in Synapse and opting for a taller stick cap made things easier.

While most of my testing took place on PC, I also dug out the PlayStation 5 to get some impressions there. The Raiju V3 Pro can't wake the console from sleep, nor can its software be run on the PlayStation directly – that luxury is only afforded to Sony's own DualSense Edge. Similarly, there's no counterpart to the DualSense's adaptive triggers, which means games that heavily rely on haptic feedback, like Astro's Playroom, fall flat. In every other sense though, the Raiju V3 Pro felt as hooked-up and comfortable on PlayStation as it did on PC, whether I was flying through intersections in Grand Theft Auto 5 or gunning down adversaries in Battlefield 6's Redsec battle royale mode.

Battery life for the Raiju V3 Pro is rated at 36 hours, which felt accurate – getting the platinum in Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 only took two charges, and the rest of my testing was done with only a single further top-up. One silver lining of the highest polling rates being locked behind wired play means that you don't need to choose between longevity and performance, as you do on high-end gaming mice that perform at their best at 8000Hz – but tend to run out of juice within a day or two of sustained play.

Will is deputy tech editor for IGN, specialising in PC hardware, sim racing and display tech. He has been publishing about games and technology since 2001 (age 12). Will was formerly Deputy Editor at Digital Foundry. He is currently playing MechWarrior 5: Clans.

Send Help Review

26 janvier 2026 à 18:00

Send Help opens in theaters on January 30.

I’m really shooting myself in the foot here, but I feel compelled to open with a statement which itself constitutes a fulsome review of Send Help, and I’d totally understand if it’s all you needed to hear before buying your ticket and going about your day: if the idea of a Sam Raimi survival thriller centered on Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien going batshit bananas on a beach sounds like a good time at the movies, Send Help is for you.

After turning in one of the better post-Endgame Marvel movies – Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness – Raimi returns to simpler delights: namely, putting his leads through harrowing hell as they struggle to survive the elements and each other. There’s nothing better than seeing a master at work and at play at the same time.

There’s some immensely satisfying symmetry in how Raimi scales down here after Multiverse of Madness in the context of his last movie before that: 2010’s gooptastic Drag Me to Hell, which you’ll remember followed a woman gunning for a promotion and reckoning with how much of herself she’s willing to compromise in order to get it. Send Help goes in completely different directions with that conceit, but takes off from spiritually similar ground: Rachel McAdams plays the terminally chipper Linda Liddle who’s toiled for seven years crunching numbers for Preston Strategic Solutions working towards a vice president role within the company, and those efforts are derailed once Dylan O’Brien’s interminably annoying nepo baby Bradley Preston takes over as CEO.

Linda begins Send Help framed as a bit of a sad sack – desperate for connection with coworkers who want nothing to do with her – who goes home to her bird and works on research for her real dream gig: competing on Survivor. Surprise: those skills become quite relevant quite quickly. From the jump, Linda feels like she would have been right at home at the school lunch table with Tobey Maguire’s Peter Parker and Christine Brown from Drag Me to Hell, passed-over losers full of potential the world can’t or won’t see.

Bradley grudgingly brings Linda along for an important overseas trip, and it’s over those seas that their plane crashes and strands them on a tropical island. Life or death survival situations tend to expose the true self, and seeing how Linda and Bradley adapt and reveal themselves in their perilous circumstances drives much of the movie’s tension. This is the make-or-break moment Linda’s been waiting for her whole life, and Bradley is forced to confront just how much of his privilege has been spoon-fed to him.

Damian Shannon and Mark Swift’s (Freddy vs. Jason) script does great work starting Linda and Bradley at polar opposite points of audience sympathy, and seeing how adversity drives them towards the middle is supremely satisfying. Bradley’s terrible to Linda, but we see him make genuine overtures towards more self-awareness as he’s forced to confront his first impressions of her. Linda, on the other hand, has a past that puts her hunger for survival into a complex and rich frame that makes her decisions in the weeks that follow shocking, but nevertheless rooted in real emotion.

Raimi and McAdams do canny work making that clear by how Linda holds herself as Send Help goes, with a Clark Kent-worthy transition out of Linda’s initial shabbiness into an Amazonian warrior. Remember how Rob Schneider turned into Rachel McAdams in The Hot Chick? Raimi basically pulls that trick here in Send Help, with McAdams gleefully leaning into that transition by preening in moments where she’s alone, and getting bolder in her interest towards Bradley as their time on the island passes – a shift that Bradley can hardly reconcile with his disdain for her when they first meet. McAdams and O’Brien are both incredibly strong here in their own rights, but it’s their chemistry that keeps Send Help roaring full-speed ahead. From moment to moment, it’s never clear whether these two are going to kill or kiss each other, and McAdams and O’Brien’s dance between those possibilities never tires.

Excellent though she is in Send Help, Rachel McAdams’ success as a Raimi lead is less a revelation and more of a foregone conclusion: McAdams has been a comedy heavy since the very beginning of her career, and likewise has shown through darker projects like True Detective and Spotlight that she’s just as comfortable in more serious spaces. Both that humor and heaviness are of crucial importance to Linda’s function within this story, and flawlessly executed.

But it’s Dylan O’Brien who really feels like he’s breaking into new territory here, clearly reveling in Bradley’s unsavory, broad buffoonery, and that ironic and total lack of vanity as he snivels his way in and out of Linda’s good graces would make Bruce Campbell proud (something which Send Help seems to nod to with a nice piece of production design during Bradley’s introduction).

Raimi’s at the ready with an airhorn and a taser when it comes time for the big setpieces.

One of the most exciting things about watching a new Sam Raimi movie is seeing genre trappings refracted through his lens. Send Help’s mostly rooted in the survival thriller space, but out of that structure, Raimi animates and escalates those stakes in all the ways you could hope for. The shifting power dynamic between Linda and Bradley serves as the backbone of the action once they’re stranded on the island, but Raimi’s at the ready with an airhorn and a taser when it comes time for the big setpieces.

The plane crash which strands the pair is breathlessly exciting, full of quick little setups and payoffs that act as the first hints of how powerful Linda’s survival instincts are. Linda also puts herself to the test early by hunting a boar, and you’d better believe it doesn’t go exactly according to plan. If you’ve ever wondered how much blood and snot are contained within a boar, Send Help has an answer for you and the answer is “so much less than what we’re actually showing you.” But what of bile? Surely, there must be some bile in a Raimi picture!? And surely, there is. Oh, and some eye shit… some top-shelf eye shit that had me crawling in my skin (these wounds, they will not heal). These gore moments pop off like fireworks and pair wonderfully with the more psychologically-bent slings and arrows the two leads launch at each other.

Despite coming in under two hours, Send Help does occasionally double over itself here and there with respect to how it underlines Linda and Bradley’s suitability for their circumstances, even if that’s already been clearly and effectively established. Frequent Raimi collaborator Danny Elfman’s score also doesn’t leave much of an impression, serviceably punctuating the big moments but otherwise feeling a lot more nondescript than you may expect, especially given the bombastic heights the film reaches by the end. But Send Help represents such a purity of vision and intent that the nits there are to pick feel largely inoffensive.

The First Big Arc Raiders Update of 2026 Adds Solo vs. Squads Matchmaking, 'Bird City,' and More Tomorrow

26 janvier 2026 à 18:00

Developer Embark Studios is launching into new Arc Raiders content when the Headwinds update brings a solo vs. squads matchmaking option, a Bird City map condition, and more to the experience tomorrow.

Following a few social media teases and a month of waiting, Embark confirmed plans to deliver the first real content drop of 2026 with a tense teaser trailer and release date of January 27 just moments ago. The announcement has the Headwinds update set to bring a set of smaller additions to PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X | S tomorrow, as fans wait to really get the ball rolling in February.

Although the next new map, new Arc threats, and major map conditions won’t arrive for a few more weeks, the January update sets Arc Raiders up for all of its future plans. Solo vs. squads matchmaking is probably the biggest addition here, with Embark describing the new queue option as a way to let the more skilled players really test their mettle.

Where players thus far had been pitted against squads of equal count, solo vs. squads is only available to those over level 40, allowing them to match as a solo Raider against teams of as many as three people for extra XP. Players will also benefit from quality-of-life changes with open parties, which allow players to join between matches, and expanded squad invites, which lets squadmates invite additional players directly.

Arc Raiders players can also look forward to a rather bizarre new minor map condition for Buried City called Bird City. It’s more than a cheeky play on words, as it sees the population of topside birds swarming as they leave better loot on top of buildings. Other highlights from the Headwinds update include an Arc Trophy display, a new long-term player project, new quests, the Sandwalker cosmetic set, and what Embark describes as “a range” of gameplay updates and adjustments.

“Headwinds is about opening up new ways for the community to approach ARC Raiders and additional challenges for advanced players,” Embark design director Virgil Watkins said in a statement. “Between the expanded matchmaking options, new map condition and new player project, we’re excited to see how Raiders adapt and experiment — and we can’t wait to see the unexpected, funny moments and short clips the community starts creating as the update rolls out.”

Headwinds is the first of a four-phase roadmap that has content scheduled out through April 2026. Next on the docket is the Shrouded Sky update, which adds a new map condition, Arc threat, player project, map update, Raider Deck, and more sometime in February. Flashpoint will then arrive in March with another map condition and Scrappy update, with Riven Tides rounding things out with a new map and a new large Arc in April.

Arc Raiders launched for PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X | S October 30, 2025. For more while Embark’s 2026 plans roll out, you can read up on how the developer feels about players who spawn into matches late. You can also check out the real-life Stella Montis hotel that Arc Raiders fans have bombarded with positive reviews.

Michael Cripe is a freelance writer with IGN. He's best known for his work at sites like The Pitch, The Escapist, and OnlySP. Be sure to give him a follow on Bluesky (@mikecripe.bsky.social) and Twitter (@MikeCripe).

Ubisoft Follows Last Week's Game Cancelations and Studio Closures With a Proposed Reduction of 200 More Jobs at its Paris Headquarters

26 janvier 2026 à 17:45

Just a week after announcing the cancelation of six games, the closure of two studios and further job losses at another three locations, Ubisoft is now aiming its cost-reduction initiative at staff working inside its Paris headquarters.

Ubisoft has proposed the loss of up to 200 jobs within the French capital, where it currently employs around 1100 people. This process will be organized under the voluntary Rupture Conventionnelle Collective (RCC) process, where staff can agree to form a collective, voluntary mutual termination agreement.

"In line with last week's announcements on its new operating model and the acceleration of cost-reduction initiatives, Ubisoft International has initiated discussions regarding a potential Rupture Conventionnelle Collective, a collective, voluntary mutual termination agreement that could involve up to 200 positions at its headquarters in France," a Ubisoft spokesperson told IGN today.

"At this stage, this remains a proposal, and no decision will be final until a collective agreement is reached with employee representatives and validated by French authorities. The proposal applies exclusively to Ubisoft International employees under French contracts and has no impact on other French entities or Ubisoft teams worldwide."

While the RCC process has to be voluntary and has to be based on terms agreed by employees and trade unions, there's no word today on next steps if the company does not achieve the reduction in headcount it is expecting through this scheme.

Ubisoft's Parisian offices have previously been the sight of protests against the company's previous return-to-office stipulations. Last week, Ubisoft said its company reorganization would also reintroduce five-day office work as standard (albeit with an annual pool of remote working days). Still, IGN understands the decision to propose an RCC to its Parisian workers was made some time ago, before the five-day mandate was decided.

Last week, Ubisoft said it was completely shuttering its Stockholm studio that previously collaborated on Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, alongside mobile studio Ubisoft Halifax. "Restructurings" have also taken place at Ubisoft offices in Abu Dhabi, at Trials studio RedLynx and at Massive, home to The Division.

Of the half dozen games that have now been fully scrapped, Ubisoft only publicly named one — its long-awaited Prince of Persia: Sands of Time remake. Today, an actress believed to have been working on the remake said that she had lost three years' worth of work and discovered her project had been canceled after reading about Ubisoft's shock decision online.

Ubisoft simultaneously confirmed it had delayed a further seven games, including an unannounced title set for launch within the next two months that is widely expected to be the company's under-wraps Assassin's Creed: Black Flag remaster. Ubisoft's stock plunged by 40% following the announcement, and now sits 95% down on its January 2021 peak.

Image credit: IGN.

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

LEGO The Lord of the Rings: Sauron’s Helmet Is Up for Preorder

26 janvier 2026 à 17:01

LEGO has gradually been releasing new Lord of the Rings sets for a few years now, racking up an impressive collection over time. The brick-building company has just announced another one, and it’s actually relatively affordable this time. It’s a display piece depicting Sauron’s Helmet (see it at Amazon), releasing on March 1 for $69.99. Read on for details.

LEGO Icons The Lord of The Rings: Sauron's Helmet

While the evil ruler of Mordor already has a set in the form of the dark castle Barad-dur, he now has a more affordable option. This finely detailed helmet is mounted on a buildable stand, complete with a placard and a minifigure of the Ring-seeking villain.

The helmet itself is mostly all gray, but it’s definitely not boring to look at. It’s all sharp spikes and angles. All of these helmet and bust LEGO sets are aimed at adults, since they’re not toys that are meant to be played with. They’re decorations meant to be displayed. Most of the other similar sets are based on Star Wars or Marvel characters.

More LEGO Lord of the Rings Sets

LEGO initially released a whole series of Lord of the Rings sets starting way back in 2012, but all of those sets are now long retired. This latest batch of sets kicked off in 2023 when LEGO released the massive Rivendell set. This was followed by Barad-dur in 2024, and The Shire in 2025. Also in 2025, LEGO released a Balrog book nook you can expand or fold up to nestle in among your collection of Lord of the Rings books.

Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.

After Prince of Persia: Sands of Time Remake Cancelation, Actress Says She's Lost 3 Years of Work and Found Out via the Internet

26 janvier 2026 à 16:23

Actress Eman Ayaz has said she's lost three years of work in a "life-changing role," just days after Ubisoft canceled its long-awaited Prince of Persia: Sands of Time Remake.

"So hi, my name is Eman, I'm an actor, and last week I experienced the most devastating moment of my career," Ayaz said in a video message posted online today. "I'm still under NDA so I'm going to try my best to speak as vaguely as possible about the details, and I hope you understand."

At no point does Ayaz specifically say the game she worked on was Prince of Persia: Sands of Time Remake, but the actress has also retweeted comments from those who have linked her to the role of Farah in the game, seemingly making the connection clear.

The most devastating moment of my acting career: https://t.co/ZzbWftGL1t

— Eman Ayaz (@emanayazz) January 26, 2026

"Three years ago I booked a life-changing role on a life-changing project," Ayaz began. "It was a rigorous audition process, including a self-tape audition, an in-person callback, and a chemistry read that I had to fly out of the city for. When I got the role I remember crying my eyes out.

"I've spent the last three years getting to know the team which has become like a family to me. I've watched it grow through countless stages of development and I've waited and waited for it to finally be released so I could talk about it. And this week, I found out through the internet that the project was canceled."

Ayaz says she was first contacted by her brother who had seen the news of the game's cancelation via an online article. Ubisoft confirmed it had canned its Prince of Persia: The Sans of Time Remake last week, as part of a wider reorganization that featured layoffs at three development studios, the closure of two more, and the shutdown of five other game projects.

"I was in total shock," Ayaz continued. "Just two months ago I filmed marketing for this project, everything had been running smoothly and that was the last I had heard. We were all looking forward to it being released this year, so it felt like an emotional whiplash to suddenly find this out in such a random way."

Indeed, a report late last year suggested Ubisoft's Prince of Persia: Sands of Time Remake was finally just a few months away, after first being announced in 2020. The project was then rebooted, with its most recent incarnation having been in development since early 2023.

"When I initially booked this role, what it said to me was that all the sacrifices I had made, going against my parents' advice, pursuing my dreams, all the heartbreaks I'd had along the way, all the close calls, all the rejections, they finally had added up to something," Ayaz added, discussing the personal toll the cancelation had taken.

Ayaz said she'd turned down other job oppurtunities during the process and worked on the job while recovering from an injury as she had been passionate about not missing out. "It was the best performance of my career, and now no one will ever see it."

A Canadian citizen, Ayaz said she had planned to apply for a U.S. work visa based on having the game on her CV, something she can no longer do as she is unable to officially acknowledge her work on it. And as someone with Pakistani heritage, Ayaz said the cancelation had been yet another setback after working "twice as hard as non-marginalized actors to find space in the industry." She added: "It's an upward battle and it's going to continue to be that way. It's like you think you had your foot on a ledge, and it's crumbled. And you have to start again, and it's just as steep."

For its part, Ubisoft told Prince of Persia fans that despite six years of work, the game was still too far away from being ready to fund any further. "We weren't able to reach the level of quality you deserve," the company said in a statement, "and continuing would have required more time and investment than we could responsibly commit."

"Sadly the entertainment industry isn't just about entertainment," Ayaz concluded, "it's about guaranteeing a cash flow. And that means making decisions that treat people's lives as collateral damage, and art as disposable content... This project existed, even if the world never got to see it. So many talented artists devoted countless hours to make this happen. And that doesn't just disappear, it'll be in our hearts forever, as fricking corny as that sounds... The only way these stories survive is if the audience demands them."

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

Resident Evil Requiem - The Final Preview

26 janvier 2026 à 16:00

With the triumphant return of Leon Kennedy, Resident Evil Requiem is forced to straddle an awkward line between all-out action and methodical survival horror. I’ll be honest, before getting my hands on the game and seeing the transition in action, I was extremely skeptical that Capcom would be able to create a coherent experience involving both Leon and Grace, the series’ latest, highly vulnerable protagonist. The switching between their polar opposite styles sounded jarring, which is almost never a good thing, and although it's been a while, it’s not like we haven’t been burned by Capcom’s desire to push the series towards action before. But I’m pleased to share that, from my all-too-brief three hours of hands-on time with Resident Evil Requiem, not only does this design really, really work, but there’s a lot more going on than just a merging of Resident Evil’s greatest hits.

My playtime started with a short test drive of Leon, and Resident Evil 4 muscle memory kicked in immediately. Make no mistake, this plays just like the recent remake, enhanced with some clever new additions suitable for a veteran badass. Leon is more handy than ever, with a deadly hatchet that he can swing mercilessly added to his regular arsenal. Leon can also heave axes found in the world, can perform new contextual finishing moves such as a handgun shot to the chin, and finally wield the violent chainsaw. There was once a time Leon feared the chainsaw, but now, Leon has become chainsaw, destroyer of ghouls. After a short 15 minutes, the gameplay shifted perspective to Grace Ashcroft, Requiem’s second protagonist, picking up her journey immediately after the events of the previous demo I wrote about in August last year. Grace and Leon are polar opposites. Gone were the tense gunfights and forward momentum of Resident Evil 4, as I was immediately thrust into what felt like a sterile, white, clean version of Resident Evil 7. For the next two hours, I explored the Rhodes Hill Chronic Care Center, a somewhat traditional Resident Evil mansion that contains much of what you might expect among its rooms and corridors, but with plenty of new surprises. Surprises that mostly arise thanks to Grace’s abilities, or rather, lack thereof.

Much like in the previous demo, Grace’s section was focused almost exclusively on survival horror. She is armed with small pistols she finds in the environment, but her firepower and combat skills are negligible compared to our favorite floppy-haired icon. Where Leon can round-house kick zombies in the face, Grace makes do with a clumsy push. Leon is all-out assault, but the best course of action for Grace is slow and deliberate stealth, because if you do try to take some of the new enemies head-on, you’re going to have a bad time.

Last year’s demo revealed a new and much-celebrated stalker enemy, a towering, hunched, bug-eyed warden, but even within the span of my short three-hour session, I was introduced to another two, giving me the impression that Resident Evil Requiem won’t have one Mr. X or Nemesis-like persistent threat, but rather several smaller pursuers that seem to guard certain wings of the Rhodes Hill Chronic Care Center. Most notable was a hulking mass of blubber called Chunk, who burst through the wall and into my heart as he very slowly, but surely, ground his way through halls, stairwells and doorways in pursuit of me. Uniquely, Chunk fills the space entirely, so your only chance of survival is to find and navigate the loops built into the level design in order to outmaneuver the walking lardarse. It’s a clever design that generates a (somewhat) living, breathing wall of terror, and one you can’t simply sidestep or combat roll away from.

Much like the stalker I escaped last year, Chunk is cleverly implemented in the context of traditional safe rooms. Where the room’s bright light caused the previous stalker pain, Chunk simply can’t physically squeeze his sheer mass through the door, making sure there’s a logical in-world justification for a room of respite.

As well as Chunk, I also ran into a 7-foot-tall hulking unit masquerading as a chef, who, until he noticed me, was completely focused on his chopping chores. This soon-to-be stalker wasn’t yet in searching mode; rather, he was fulfilling, I assume, his pre-infection duties. This kind of behavior isn’t unique to the chef: It turns out in Resident Evil Requiem, the traditional zombie fodder is just as much the star of the show. You see, zombies not only talk now, but also have their own personalities.

Resident Evil Requiem, aside from being packed with action and fear, is now also funny, something the series has never (at least intentionally) achieved before.

The undead are no longer unfortunate, generic lost souls, but rather husks that retain a smidge of living personalities, hanging out in the space they once occupied. There’s the lounge singing shrieker in the bar area, who, before being alerted, entertains herself by belting out a ditty. There are the zombies who were formerly patients in recovery that insist on wheeling around their drip stands, which are then, unsurprisingly, wielded as weapons when they’re aggro’d. Some zombies hate loud noises and will repeatedly yell at you if you even so much as smash a vase, and then there’s one that loves nothing more than turning lights on and off until you rudely interrupt him.

If it’s not clear by now, Resident Evil Requiem, aside from being packed with action and fear, is now also funny, something the series has never (at least intentionally) achieved before. As Grace creeps around the hospital, there’s the continual threat that around every corner awaits horror, or laughter, or sometimes even both! When you can hear the undead nattering away in a room you know you have to enter to achieve your next objective, it’s hard to know whether to be scared or have a good chuckle. On paper, this sounds like it could be awful – I’m aware of that, but honestly, it’s so good! I laughed so hard when I caught one particularly dopey zombie red-handed (both literally and figuratively), lifting a large and, importantly, red canister to throw my way. I’m sure you can imagine what happened next.

The zombie fodder isn’t just around to entertain and quickly be disposed of, though. As Grace, the undead are a significant threat, always moving a little faster than you anticipate. Their fallen corpses also pose a significant conundrum, as they have the ability to turn into “Blister Heads,” a reinvention of the Resident Evil remake’s Crimson Heads for a new generation that reanimate with a bulbous cranium and become significantly tougher to take down. Fortunately, Grace has a new tool at her disposal: a Hemolytic Injector that weaponises the buckets of blood lying around the place (seriously, it’s everywhere), creating a lethal injection that can be used as a preventive measure against Blister Heads when injected into fallen enemies, and as a stealth attack against anything moving.

Beyond the new enemy types, playing as Grace does feel very familiar if you’ve played either Resident Evil 7 or Resident Evil 2, although obviously it leans more towards the latter if you choose to play as Grace in third person. You’re exploring a huge mansion with locked doors, there are obtuse puzzles to solve, antique coins to find that can upgrade your equipment, Mr. Raccoons to shoot, safe rooms with a typewriter for saving and a storage box for inventory management, and so forth. Leon, however, can brute-force open certain doors that Grace can’t and is far more aggressive with combat compared to Grace’s methodical stealth. You can also choose to play as Leon in first person, though after a brief dabble, it felt very unnatural to do so. I can’t help but think Capcom built this game with Leon in third person and Grace in first person in mind, but it’s hard to complain about more choice, despite knowing deep down the development team surely has a preference.

To Grace, Chunk and his fellow creeps are stalkers; to Leon, they’re targets.

My demo ended with a second, all-too-short stint as Leon, which allowed me to revisit sections of the Care Center I’d previously experienced with Grace. Interestingly, this section demonstrated perhaps my favorite element of this hybrid experience. Leon is also exposed to some of the tougher combat encounters that I’d suffered through as Grace, although the perspective (much like my viewpoint of choice) is very different. When I met Chunk as Grace, I immediately retreated and was forced into a game of cat-and-mouse. The threat is intimidating and encourages you to tread lightly. As Leon, however, emboldened by my newly acquired shotgun, I felt instantly trigger-happy, unloading shells right up in Chunk’s face and launching hatchet attacks on his head as part of a fight that felt somewhat reminiscent of the El Gigante encounters of Resident Evil 4. To Grace, Chunk and his fellow creeps are stalkers; to Leon, they’re targets. This ethos was reaffirmed when taking on a wave of Blister Heads with Leon at the end of my play time. With Grace, I waited patiently for a stealth attack opportunity; with Leon, I was hurling hand grenades and throwing axes for fun.

This year is the 30th anniversary of the Resident Evil series, so it feels like no coincidence that 2026’s Resident Evil Requiem is combining the best ideas of the saga into what appears to be a fantastically constructed tribute to everything that makes the series so great. Do you like tense survival horror? It’s here. Wanna go all guns blazing with intense action and a quip-obsessed hero? You get that too. Do you prefer playing RE games in first or third person? Doesn’t matter; you can do either. All these choices, along with my fears of a jarring play experience being mostly squashed, make it easy to believe that Capcom’s bold move to have its cake and eat it is going to pay off in a big way.

Dale Driver is an Associate Director of Video Programming at IGN. Be thoroughly bored by following him on Bluesky at @daledriver.bsky.social

New Super Mario Bros. Wonder Amiibo Are Up for Preorder

26 janvier 2026 à 15:43

I know it’s been sacrilege for nearly three decades now, but I’ve always preferred 2D Mario games to those newfangled 3D ones. (I’m an elder Millennial; leave grandpa to his ramblings). So I couldn’t be happier Super Mario Bros. Wonder is getting the “Switch 2 Edition + expansion” treatment in March. To celebrate the new-gen upgrade and the Meetup in Bellabel Park DLC, Nintendo is releasing three new amiibo based on the game. They cost $24.99 each, and are set to release March 26, the same day as the game’s new content. They’re available to preorder now (see them at Amazon).

Super Mario Bros. Wonder amiibo

The new amiibo are Elephant Mario, Captain Toad & Talking Flower, and Poplin & Prince Florian. Elephant Mario is a delightful amiibo, with the pachyderm plumber squeezing his portly torso into a pipe. As for the Poplin amiibo, the orangesicle-colored character holds a watering can while Prince Florian sits on his head. And in the Captain Toad amiibo, our hero is doing a victory pose in front of the Talking Flower.

Talking Flower Preorders Are Live

Speaking of talking flowers, Nintendo is also releasing another plastic curiosity to add to its lineup of weird hardware. This one is a toy version of the Talking Flower that actually talks to you. It’s available to preorder now as well.

Super Mario Bros. Wonder (Switch) on Sale

As for the Switch 2 version of Super Mario Bros. Wonder, Nintendo is pulling a Nintendo and charging $79.99 for the game. That’s obviously absurd, so here’s a workaround if you don’t already own the original Switch game. You can buy a copy of the original Switch game on sale now at Woot for $46.99 and then upgrade it on the eShop for an additional $19.99 once the expansion comes out. That gets you the full Switch 2 experience of the game for $64.99, which saves you $15. Not too shabby.

Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert for IGN. He also runs IGN's board game and LEGO coverage. You can follow him on Bluesky.

Pokémon TCG: Scarlet & Violet – Destined Rivals Booster Bundles Are Back In Stock and at Market Price on Amazon

26 janvier 2026 à 15:30

Destined Rivals has been one of the trickier 2025 sets in the Pokémon TCG to find at a half-decent price, but Amazon’s just come in with a price cut that puts it well above TCGplayer.

Right now, the six-pack Destined Rivals Booster Bundle is available on Amazon for $52.98, shipped and sold directly by Amazon. The reason that this 9% price drop is especially notable is because That’s notable because TCGplayer currently lists the market price at roughly $52.90, with recent sales consistently landing in the low-to-mid $50 range.

However, all of TCGplayer’s listings come with an added shipping cost of at least $10 on top, making Amazon the best option by a mile. That new $52.98 price is less than half of what a 151 booster bundle will cost you in the Pokémon Trading Card game’s market right now, with its value taking a modest late-2025 drip; so, this definitely makes Destined Rivals the Scarlet & Violet set expansion so catch up on, if you hadn’t had the chance to buy any yet.

After all, Destined Rivals still has some very valuable chase cards that are worth pulling if you can — including Team Rocket's Mewtwo ex, Cynthia’s Garchomp ex, and Team Rocket’s Moltres ex.

Still, this is but one of many decent Pokemon TCG deals Amazon’s been dropping lately. For instance, you can grab the Phantasmal Flames Booster Bundle for only $44.99 at a huge $20 off. Meanwhile, the Mega Charizard X ex Ultra Premium Collection is still only $149.99 at $100 off — offering 18 booster packs from various expansions, promo cards, and plenty of luxury extras.

The pre-order prices for Pokemon’s upcoming Mega Evolution: Ascended Heroes expansion is already seeing retailer-wide sellouts and higher resale prices, so it might be worth stocking up on older collections like these until values start to cool off later in 2026.

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

Nintendo Direct Announced For This Week, Focused on Tomodachi Life: Living The Dream

26 janvier 2026 à 15:25

Another Nintendo Direct is coming this Thursday, January 29, dedicated to the company's upcoming social sim game Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream.

Coming just days after a Nintendo Direct focused on The Super Mario Galaxy Movie which debuted our first look at Yoshi, Birdo and more, the next scheduled broadcast from the company will instead return to its games.

You'll be able to tune in for more details on the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 life sim game this Thursday at 6am Pacific, 9am Eastern or 2pm UK time. The stream is set to run around 20 minutes.

Living the Dream will be the third game in Nintendo's Tomodachi Life franchise, which lets you oversee a community of Mii characters. While a relatively niche series in the West compared to its bigger brands, Tomodachi Life enjoys a strong following among its fans, and particularly so in Japan.

Now, the franchise will be getting its first dedicated Nintendo Direct, similar to how Kirby Air Riders was treated to its own presentation (and then a second!) last year.

The series' first game, Tomodachi Collection, launched in 2009 for Nintendo DS (albeit only in Japan). Its 3DS sequel, Tomodachi Life, was then released worldwide and went on to sell a very respectable 6.72 million units.

Memorably, Tomodachi Life experienced a backlash over its lack of same-sex relationships, something that Nintendo found itself having to comment on after rumors spread online that they were something that had been originally programmed into the game that was later removed. Nintendo denied this, though not before the controversy blew up to the point that it was parodied on late night TV by John Oliver, via a skit which featured crudely animated versions of Mario and Link snogging. Notably, Nintendo then promised that if it did make another Tomodachi Life game, it would make it "more inclusive, and [something that] better represents all players."

While the status of same-sex relationships is yet to be confirmed (though may be this week), Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream is already notable for finally allowing Mii characters to have ears. It only took 20 years.

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

Mario Kart Series Veteran Hideki Konno Retires After Almost 40 Years at Nintendo

26 janvier 2026 à 15:09

It has recently been revealed that Nintendo veteran Hideki Konno retired from the company last summer after almost 40 years.

Joining Nintendo in 1986, Konno shaped many of the Japanese game company’s major series. He worked as assistant director on Super Mario Bros. 2 and 3, as well as designing the games’ levels and characters. Later, as a director, he helmed games including Yoshi's Island, the SNES version of SimCity, and Luigi’s Mansion on the GameCube.

However, Konno is probably best known for his extensive work on the Mario Kart series. He directed the original Super Mario Kart and Mario Kart 64, before going on to produce Mario DS, Mario Kart Wii, Mario Kart 7, Mario Kart 8 (plus the Deluxe version), and Mario Kart Tour. He got a special thanks credit on Switch 2 launch title Mario Kart World.

Konno produced many other games like Nintendogs and was also hardware director for the 3DS. As head of Nintendo mobile, he produced titles such as Animal Crossing Pocket Camp and Fire Emblem Heroes, as well as contributing to the global success of Pokémon Go!

As reported by Japanese news outlet Game*Spark, last year Konno updated his employment status on Facebook to say that he left Nintendo in July 2025. This was recently spotted by fans over on the Famiboard forums and has become a talking point on Twitter / X over the weekend.

Noticing the discussion of Konno’s departure, Takaya Imamura (another former Nintendo employee who was art director on Star Fox 64 and The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask) tweeted: "Konno's resignation is starting to attract attention. The people who defined an era are leaving Nintendo." Imamura himself departed Nintendo in 2021 to pursue his own projects, resulting in the Omega 6 manga and Switch game Omega 6: The Triangle Stars (he even wrote a blog post on why he left).

Last week, it was revealed that another longtime Nintendo creator, Kensuke Tanabe, had recently retired, with Tanabe confirming that Metroid Prime 4 was his last game at Nintendo (as reported by Video Games Chronicle). Many of the legendary game creators who shaped the NES and SNES eras are now in their 60s and 70s, including Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto (72). We will likely be seeing many more of these influential game designers departing Nintendo in the coming years, especially with the Switch 2 out the door.

Photo by Andreas Rentz/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.

Asus ZenBook Duo (2026) Review

26 janvier 2026 à 15:00

Anyone that has to do a lot of work – or even gaming – on a computer knows the virtue of having multiple displays. After all, it makes multitasking easier, without having to rely on alt-tab going to the right window. That’s kind of what the Asus Zenbook Duo is looking to capitalize on, and unlike some of the half-baked designs seen on this laptop line in the past, Asus has actually nailed the formula this time around.

In a nutshell, the Asus Zenbook Duo is just like any other thin-and-light laptop. It’s powered by Intel’s new Panther Lake CPU – specifically the Core Ultra X9 388H – which is powerful, but not the kind of desktop-class performance you’d expect in a heavier workstation or gaming laptop. Still, because of the improvements Intel has made with this generation of mobile processors, this laptop is actually capable of gaming at decent quality settings with a high-ish frame rate.

That said, I wouldn’t recommend this for anyone looking for a strictly gaming laptop. But if you’re a creative person that wants something thin, light, and able to do some gaming on the side – while having a whole second display attached – the Asus Zenbook Duo has a lot to love. That is, if you can get past the $2,299 price tag.

Design and Features

The ZenBook Duo is ostensibly a ‘thin and light’ laptop, but it’s not actually that thin when everything is folded up, measuring about 0.9 inches thick at its thickest point. But when you consider that thickness is two displays, a keyboard and a whole system, it’s actually impressive that Asus was able to fit it into such a thin package.

The extra display also makes the Zenbook Duo a little heavier than it’d otherwise be, coming in at 1.65kg, or 3.63 lb, with everything included. That’s much lighter than something like the Razer Blade, but considering it’s not packing the same kind of hardware, that’s only to be expected.

When the laptop is first opened, it looks like pretty much any other 14-inch laptop. There’s a lovely 16:10 OLED display, and a keyboard. But when I glanced at the side of the laptop I could immediately tell that the keyboard can be removed, just by the difference in tone between the keyboard and the rest of the chassis. The difference is subtle, but it’s just enough that they look like two separate pieces.

However, it’s not immediately clear how the keyboard should be removed. I mean, in theory, it’s not complicated, because it’s just magnetic, but the first time I opened the device I found myself gingerly pulling up on the keyboard in random places making sure I was removing it from the right place. It would have been nice if Asus added a little grip of some kind to the top-right corner of the keyboard, just to make pulling the keyboard off the bottom display a little easier – even if it’s not that complicated.

The keyboard itself attaches magnetically to a set of POGO pins at the bottom of the second display. This serves two purposes: it connects the keyboard to the PC without relying on Bluetooth, and also keeps it charged wirelessly.

When you pull the keyboard off of the bottom display, the PC should automatically enable the second screen, and the keyboard itself will automatically switch to Bluetooth mode. The only time it didn’t do this for me was in the middle of testing, and I was very upset until I figured out that I had disabled Bluetooth for the battery test. Every other time, though, it just worked.

Due to how thin it needs to be, the keyboard doesn’t sport the deepest travel. It’s just a chiclet keyboard at the end of the day, but it’s comfortable enough to type on. However, what’s really annoying is the gestures Asus built into the trackpad. For years now, Asus has had a fascination with making its trackpads as feature-packed as possible, but what actually ends up happening is that my palm is constantly turning up or down the brightness as I’m typing. This is a feature you can thankfully disable in the MyAsus app, but it annoys me every time. What’s wild is that when the feature is disabled, the trackpad actually has excellent palm rejection. Make it make sense.

On the left side of the laptop, the ZenBook Duo sports an HDMI cable, a Thunderbolt 5 port and a headphone jack (they still make those). The keyboard also has a USB-C port on its left side, but that’s just there for charging the keyboard. On the right, you’ll find the power button, another Thunderbolt port and a singular USB-A port for legacy peripherals.

Around the back, there’s a kickstand. That seems weird at first glance, but it’s actually necessary to use the Zenbook Duo in dual-display mode. It works excellently when the displays are sitting horizontal, but for some reason the kickstand only covers the center of the device, which means if you want to turn the device sideways – which would be great for working on documents or coding – you have to kind of angle the displays in a weird book configuration. And even then, it’s not very stable.

A Second Display?

Having a second display is always going to be useful – that’s why portable monitors exist in the first place – but having one built into the laptop is a compelling idea. This isn’t the first time Asus has made a device like this, with the ZenBook Pro Duo UX581 debuting way back at Computex 2019. However, that laptop looks a lot different than the new 2026 model.

On that previous model, the second display was cut in half and placed above the keyboard deck. This immediately limited its usefulness, as you couldn’t put full-sized apps on it. Plus, this was around the same time that Asus was experimenting with the Screenpad concept, which embedded the numpad into the touchpad – and it’s never really been executed on properly.

In 2024, though, Asus debuted the Zenbook Duo with a full second display, which made it a much more usable device. Now, the company has followed that up with a more refined Zenbook Duo for 2026. For the first time in the 7 years since I saw that first ZenBook Pro Duo at Computex 2019, I’m sold on the concept.

Critically, the Zenbook Duo simply works like a normal laptop in its one-screen-configuration. The second display is only there when I need it, meaning I don’t have to sacrifice a comfortable keyboard like on the original models. And then when I do want to whip out that second display, it’s incredibly useful.

It was really when I sat down to write this review that it started to click for me. I put the laptop in its dual screen mode with Asus’ review guide on the second display, while typing on the top as normal. You see, I do most of my writing on a laptop, and I’ve gotten very good at using touchpad gestures to swap between multiple displays to look at reference material. That’s just how I’m used to working these days, but this laptop makes it so much easier to reference or access a second document or other source of information.

With the Zenbook Duo, I have Google Docs open on the top display with the reference materials right below it. And, because they’re both touch displays, I can just scroll through documents with the touch screen. It feels incredibly natural.

It doesn’t hurt that they’re both gorgeous displays, either. In my colorimeter tests, both displays hit 100% of the RGB and P3 color gamuts, making pretty much any content spring to life. This is also great for photo and video editing, as I can be sure that the edits I’m making are accurate without having to second guess anything.

You can also just remove the keyboard and summon an on-screen keyboard on the second display by using a gesture by pressing four fingers from both of your hands on the screen at the same time. You can even shrink the on-screen keyboard by pressing those same fingers on the screen, and dragging them down. With the latter, it is almost like the Zenbook Duos of old, even! However, actually typing this way is a nightmare, so I wouldn’t recommend it as anything more than a party trick.

Even though I’m not the biggest fan of the physical keyboard and trackpad, the Zenbook Duo is quickly becoming one of my favorite laptops to work on. Even if I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it for gaming.

Performance

The Zenbook Duo that Asus sent for review is powered by an Intel Core Ultra X9 388H, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. And even though it doesn’t have a discrete graphics chip, the integrated Intel Arc B390 is no slouch.

Intel spent the months leading up to CES bragging about how good Panther Lake – the architecture behind the 388H – is at gaming. So I did what any sensible tech reviewer would do and ran it through the same testing regimen as any other gaming laptop. And while it definitely does struggle at its native resolution of 1800p, at 1200p you’ll be able to play pretty much anything, as long as you stay away from the highest quality settings.

Our standard benchmark suite for gaming laptops tests all the games at their max quality settings, and as such, the integrated graphics in the Zenbook Duo do start to struggle. In Cyberpunk 2077, on the Ray Tracing Ultra preset at 1200p, this laptop gets 29 fps – not great. However, turn the settings down to the High preset and it gets 65 fps – and that’s before frame generation.

Oh, yeah, Panther Lake’s integrated GPU supports up to 4x multi-frame generation, just like DLSS or FSR Redstone. With frame generation enabled, Cyberpunk on the High preset goes up to 103 fps at 2x FG and 165 fps at 4x FG. Those numbers look good, but keep in mind that it also comes with a slight increase in latency, going from around 39-42ms without frame gen to 55-72ms with frame gen maxed out.

Compare that to the Lenovo Legion Go 2 – also powered by a mobile-class integrated GPU – which gets 37 fps at 1200p with the same settings. The two processors aren’t directly compatible, as the Legion Go 2’s Z2 Extreme tops out at 35W, compared to about 54W for the ZenBook Duo, but it’s close enough that I’m really looking forward to seeing how this architecture does in a handheld gaming PC.

Gaming performance does really suffer when you play games at the native 1800p resolution, though. For instance, in Cyberpunk, the frame rate drops to 21 fps with the Ray Tracing Ultra preset and XeSS set to the performance setting. And, in Metro Exodus: Enhanced Edition, the framerate goes from 20 fps with the Extreme Preset at 1200p all the way to a measly 13 fps at 1800p.

Even with the new Panther Lake architecture, The Zenbook Duo is clearly still not a gaming laptop, but it does have good enough gaming performance that you should be able to play some games in your downtime.

Battery Life

When a laptop really wants you to work all day on it, it actually has to last most of the day. After all, you don’t want to be in the middle of an important project only to have it die on you halfway through. Luckily, the Zenbook Duo does last quite a while on battery.

In the Procyon Office Productivity Battery benchmark, the ZenBook Duo lasts a whopping 17 hours and 35 minutes on battery, which makes it one of the longest lasting laptops we’ve tested by a lot – though admittedly we almost never review this class of laptop at IGN. The battery puts the Zenbook Duo in the same class as the MacBook Air. Only, Apple’s laptops don’t have a second screen attached to them.

Even outside of the tests, in the week or so I’ve spent with the Zenbook Duo, I never had to rush to plug it in, with it sitting on my desk for a couple of days of intermittent use before needing to charge. This is definitely the type of laptop I’d like to take with me to an event like CES, where its creative chops and long battery life would help me out immensely.

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

Intel Could Take the Handheld Crown From AMD With Panther Lake

26 janvier 2026 à 15:00

Intel technically revealed Panther Lake back in October 2025, leading with the Xe 3 graphics architecture, which Intel claimed was a massively improved integrated graphics chip. Well, shortly after these new laptop processors were "launched" at CES 2026, I’ve finally been able to sit down and test it for myself.

And while the Asus Zenbook Duo I used to try out the Intel Core X9 Ultra 388H isn’t exactly what I’d call a "gaming laptop," what with it not having a discrete graphics chip, it’s more than capable of playing AAA games at high settings. You just have to temper your expectations a bit. If you ask me, though, a thin and light laptop playing games at high settings isn’t the most exciting thing in the world. What’s going to be much more interesting is how Panther Lake is going to perform in handheld gaming PCs.

The Laptop Processor as a Handheld Processor

While Intel has hinted at a handheld-only Panther Lake chip making its way to market some time this year, we don’t necessarily have to wait that long to see these laptop CPUs make their handheld debut. After all, there are plenty of gaming handhelds out there using laptop chips – even if they’re not exactly the most efficient models out there.

Handhelds like the Ayaneo Kun and the GPD Win 4 have been using full-fat laptop CPUs since before the Steam Deck even existed, and that’s not going to stop any time soon. These chips are powerful, especially for the kind of lower-resolution display you find on a handheld, but thus far they’ve been held back by subpar battery life.

That’s one of the reasons, after all, why Valve elected to toss a 15W custom AMD APU in the Steam Deck, otherwise it’d run out of battery after an hour like these other handhelds. That was also the driving force behind AMD’s Z-series chips, starting with the Z1 Extreme that showed up in the ROG Ally and the original Legion Go.

And for the last few years, these Z-series chips have been kind of the default when it comes to gaming handhelds, giving AMD the majority of the handheld market. However, with the MSI Claw 8 AI+ and its Lunar Lake-powered Core Ultra 7 258V, Intel started to sneak into the market.

That was, like the Intel Core Ultra X9 388H I tested in the Zenbook Duo, a laptop chip, albeit one with a slightly lower 37W max power.

I’ve done a lot of the testing on the MSI Claw 8 AI+, and one thing that’s fascinating about that handheld is how long the battery lasts. In PCMark10, which is admittedly not a gaming test, the Claw 8 lasts more than 15 hours, compared to 10 hours from the Legion Go 2. Obviously, those numbers are a lot smaller when you’re actually playing games, but it shows how much better Intel is at handling battery life.

And, in my early tests of Panther Lake, the new Core X9 Ultra 388H is getting northwards of 17 hours in the Procyon Office Productivity battery test. That’s not the same test, but the workloads being tested are similar enough that I’m definitely interested in seeing something like this in a handheld.

Panther Lake Gaming Handheld Chips Are Already Going to Be a Thing

At CES 2026, Intel told us that a Panther Lake handheld chip was on the horizon. We don’t know anything about what this chip will actually look like, just that it’s called the “Intel Core G3” and that it’s coming some time this year. But either way, I’m excited to see what it can do.

I’m not going to pretend that it’s going to be as powerful as the Core Ultra X9 388H found in the Zenbook Duo, but I do think it’s going to be close. Intel claims that this G3 chip will be leveraging the full power of the Arc B390 graphics in the 388H, just likely with less CPU cores and maybe a trimmed down NPU (neural processing unit).

We won’t know how Intel is going to spec this thing out until it’s announced, but if it’s the same B390 that’s in Panther Lake, we might be looking at 60fps gaming in high-end games with high graphics settings. And that’s before Intel’s new multi-frame generation enters the equation.

For instance, in Cyberpunk 2077 at 1200p with the High preset and XeSS set to “Quality,” I was able to get an average of 65fps in a slice of gameplay from the opening mission. When I turned on frame generation, that number went up to 103fps with FG set to 2x and 160fps at 4x multi-frame generation. Now, those higher numbers pushed latency up from 45-55 ms of PC latency up to around 72ms with 4x frame gen, but I don’t know how much that matters in a single player RPG.

AMD’s Old Architectures

If Intel’s nascent handheld chip does come with the same B390 GPU as its high-end Panther Lake laptop chips, Team Blue could actually pull ahead of AMD. As good as the Ryzen Z2 Extreme is, AMD’s handheld chip uses RDNA 3.5 graphics, which isn’t exactly ancient, but it’s also a generation behind the flagship Radeon RX 9070 XT that debuted at the same time. More importantly, it can’t leverage Team Red’s latest upscaling tech. And that’s the best handheld chip AMD has to offer at the moment.

The rest of the Z2 series of handheld chips is in a much worse position. The regular Z2 is using an RDNA 3 GPU, and the Z2 Go, primarily found in the entry-level Legion Go S, has an RDNA 2 graphics core. For reference, RDNA 2 debuted back in 2020.

In AMD’s defense, it makes sense to pair lower-end processors with older architectures to save cash, but if Intel is coming to market with a handheld chip that offers a faster and more efficient architecture, it’s not hard to imagine that Team Red has to be sweating a little bit. It’s going to be a few months before an Intel Panther Lake handheld gaming PC makes its way to market, but when it does, I’m going to be very interested to get it in the lab to see how it holds up against AMD’s established Z-series chips.

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

Rayman 30th Anniversary Edition Leaked by Ratings Board

26 janvier 2026 à 14:21

Surprise! It looks like a 30th Anniversary Edition of Rayman is on the way.

Though not formally confirmed by Ubisoft, the unannounced game has popped up on the Australian Classification website, and it's apparently coming to both Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 5.

While the franchise is owned by Ubisoft, both the developer and publisher are listed as Atari, which has previously distributed physical editions of games and remakes. Sadly, the listing gives us very little detail on what to expect aside from confirmation that it has "very mild" violence (thanks, Gematsu).

We already knew that Ubisoft was set to celebrate all things Rayman as it got ready to mark the series' 30th anniversary, promising last September that it was working on the "future" of the series. Though the official Rayman X/Twitter account had long been dormant, only resurfacing a handful of times in 2020, then once in 2021, in September it was resurrected to bring us up to speed on what's happening in Rayman's world.

"Rayman turns 30! Join us on our official channels to celebrate an incredible legacy," the account exclaimed at the time, attaching a brief video. In the video, brand producer Loic Gounon — who has been working on the Rayman franchise since 2006 — revealed that "a very talented team at Ubisoft Montpellier and Ubisoft Milan are currently working together on the future of Rayman."

We haven't had a mainline Rayman game since 2013's Rayman Legends. "Don't expect news from us too soon," Ubisoft said, "but rest assured, Rayman is in good hands." Despite all the recent changes and cancellations at IP holder Ubisoft, including that Prince of Persia: Sands of Time Remake, Rayman appears to have survived the cull.

Vikki Blake is a reporter for IGN, as well as a critic, columnist, and consultant with 15+ years experience working with some of the world's biggest gaming sites and publications. She's also a Guardian, Spartan, Silent Hillian, Legend, and perpetually High Chaos. Find her at BlueSky.

Sam Raimi Says There's No Chance of a Spider-Man 4 Starring Tobey Maguire Happening, and His Versions of Peter Parker and Mary Jane 'Have Gone Elsewhere'

26 janvier 2026 à 13:44

Director Sam Raimi has ruled out making a belated fourth film for Tobey Maguire's Spider-Man despite once having plans to do so, as his versions of Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson now "have gone elsewhere."

Speaking to Screenrant, Raimi said that he still loved the Spider-Man franchise but could not see a way he would return to direct another entry himself, despite the enduring popularity of Maguire's incarnation and calls from fans for more following the character's reappearance in 2021's Spider-Man: No Way Home.

That film featured Maguire's Spider-Man temporarily crossing over into the MCU and meeting Tom Holland's iteration, before returning to his own universe — and in an earlier version of the script, there were reportedly plans for Kirsten Dunst to reprise her role as Mary Jane as well.

"For a brief time I was handed the torch to carry on after 40 years of Spider-Man comics," Raimi said of his time working on the franchise. "And then after my three movies, I handed the torch off to someone else. And I think they've got to keep running with the storyline and the audience that is now following the torchbearer."

Raimi had once planned a further full trilogy of Spider-Man movies starring Tobey Maguire, and reportedly had lined up John Malkovich to play Vulture, Anne Hathaway as Black Cat, and Bruce Campbell as Mysterio to appear across the new films.

Alas, Sony ultimately decided to cancel work on the new trilogy amid disagreements over the film's script and Raimi's schedule. The company then opted to instead reboot the franchise with Marc Webb directing Spider-Man's new Andrew Garfield incarnation.

Now, Raimi has suggested he'd be unable to tell more stories with his versions of Spider-Man and Mary Jane as their lives have continued off-screen (while Marvel Studios has now come up with its own versions of Vulture and Mysterio to face up against Tom Holland's Spider-Man). Because of that, Raimi has said it wouldn't "be right for me to go back and try and resurrect my version of this story" and that he had been able to "pass the torch happily."

Marvel fans still expect they haven't seen the last of Tobey Maguire as Spider-Man, however, with a further return for the actor expected, though certainly not yet confirmed, in Avengers: Secret Wars, Marvel's upcoming climactic conclusion to the MCU's Multiverse Saga.

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

Kingsman265 Drama Explained: Here's Why Everyone Can't Stop Talking About a $40,000 Marvel Rivals Tournament

26 janvier 2026 à 13:28

Whether you log in to keep up with the NBA or you’re just a casual fan of video games, chances are, you’ve seen a lot of talk about content creators Kingsman265, Cece, zazzastack, and an infamous $40,000 Marvel Rivals tournament recently.

What began as a livestreamed spat between esports teammates has since evolved into an inescapable beast of a trending topic that quickly broke containment in the Marvel Rivals community. But who are these people? Why are thousands rallying behind their favorite online personalities? And why are the Atlanta Hawks posting TikToks about a Marvel Rivals tournament?

The saga many are calling the “Kingsman265 drama” began just earlier this month and is transforming every day, so we did our best to explain the story so far for those who need to know what’s got the internet so worked up.

🏆 DEADPOOL CREATOR CUP 🏆
$40,000 Prizepool - 8 Captains - 48 Creators

🎴 CAPTAINS DRAFT DAY - Jan 13th
🎴 TOURNAMENT DAY - Jan 18th

Marvel Rivals Tournament hosted by @BasimZB @MarvelRivals #MarvelRivals #DeadpoolCreatorCup pic.twitter.com/6GtTcxzJQA

— BasimZB (@BasimZB) January 12, 2026

The Deadpool Creator Cup

NetEase Games’ Marvel hero shooter became the center of attention when a relatively small Marvel Rivals esports content creator named Kingsman265 uploaded a YouTube video titled, “I was kicked from a $40,000 tournament…” on January 17, 2026. That tournament, hosted by streamer BasimZB, was known as the Deadpool Creator Cup, a somewhat small competition advertised to feature 48 creators as Deadpool joined Marvel Rivals. According to a number of competitors invited to the tourney, the competition didn’t include a $40,000 prize pool until after invites had been sent out and many had already signed on.

“In this video I show all perspectives, POV's and exactly why I was removed,” Kingsman says in the video’s description. “With this being one of the biggest tournaments I've played in, and $40,000 on the line with the prize pool being $18,000 for first place, AKA $3,000 per person.”

Most of Kingsman’s videos hover around 25,000 views, with many struggling to break 10,000 views as recently as eight months ago. At the time of this piece’s publication, his upload covering the creator tournament has amassed 2.7 million views. Kingsman says numerous times, both in and outside of the video, that he’s a college student, and that winning the $3,000 would go a long way toward helping pay his bills.

“It is an insanely big deal for someone like me,” his description adds.

The hour-and-17-minute upload is an edited recording of a livestream showcasing a series of pre-tournament scrimmage matches with his team – team captain Cece, zazzastack, kayceeedilla, Fumiata, and collaborator, Luciyasa. It starts simply enough, with each player preparing by speaking about their respective competitive ranks as Kingsman asks Cece if they can “full try hard for these scrims.”

“I need to win this s**t. Can we do that? Please?”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” she replies. “I got you.”

Magik and Black Widow

Judging by what is shown in edited clips, it seems the team gets off to a good start, winning their first match as zazzastack’s preferred character, Black Widow, nabs the MVP title. The laughs between the group quickly fade as Kingsman suggests the team switch from the theoretically balanced build of two tanks, two damage per second (DPS), and two support heroes to the current favored meta composition that includes three supports. Other teammates fire back, telling him they did not plan to utilize the meta comp during their scrimmage matches or for the tournament.

“OK, this is going to be a hard tourney then,” Kingsman says.

Kingsman, who is seen by many to be one of the best Marvel Rivals Magik players in the world, appears to be the first to turn up the heat, arguing that other teams will almost certainly enter matches with the triple support plan because $40,000 in winnings is on the line. Others, including zazzastack, contend they shouldn’t “run a triple support with a character that I don’t know how to play.”

The moment passes and tensions ease. Then, seemingly minutes later, the driving point of contention emerges when Kingsman calmly asks zazzastack if she would be interested in swapping from Black Widow’s sniper to a character with crowd control and displacement abilities like Winter Soldier. She declines, calling Black Widow her “anti-dive” pick, making it clear that she has no intention of switching from her preferred character.

Fans of hero shooters like Marvel Rivals and Overwatch are certainly aware of the weight character flexibility holds in a every match, but team chemistry can sometimes be just as important. Both elements were topics of discussion that day, as Kingsman frequently overperformed as Magik, while zazzastack’s Black Widow proved to be inconsistent.

Meanwhile, players use scoreboards in hero shooters as a measurement of performance, but these tools rarely tell the full story and don’t account for things like time on point or game-changing plays. Still, they can be used to detect symptoms of broader issues. One specific round's scoreboard circulating online saw Magik carrying eliminations with 18 kills, one assist, and two deaths, while Black Widow secured zero kills, zero assists, and five deaths. It’s also worth noting that zazzastack had a notably higher ping than her teammates, often reaching numbers as high as 170ms.

As Kingsman persisted, the tense back and forth about strategy and philosophy eventually took a turn for the worse. The video shows multiple members of the team siding against Kingsman, with players like Cece and Luciyasa becoming two of the more vocal individuals coming to zazzastack’s defense. What many online take issue with is the tone and insults that followed, even as Kingsman offers to switch to other characters to support a new team comp.

“That’s such a good point,” Cece replies with a sarcastic tone. “You’re so right about that – and we’re still going to play Widow.”

“I’m just here to accept that Kingsman is a meta slave,” she jabs again shortly after.

Insults and calls to “shut the f**k up” are lobbed at Kingsman as arguments progress in the video, with clips showing instances of Cece calling him a “loser” in-between matches on her own stream emerging later. One match that takes place later in Kingsman’s video sees the team calmly walk away with a narrow win, with everyone performing relatively well. Just as the “Victory” card slides across the screen, a voice can be heard, saying, “talk s**t to Kingsman now, zazza.”

This whole Kingsman situation on Marvel Rivals has gone insanely viral.

I’ve seen clips of it and posts about it on literally every social media platform, even posts about it from people I KNOW don’t play video games or keep up with them 😅 pic.twitter.com/ZkH84XqJ8X

— ModernWarzone (@ModernWarzone) January 22, 2026

Moments later and more than an hour into tournament prep, Kingsman departs, saying he’s going to go queue ranked games, separate from his team. Cece leaves to take an “urgent” call from BasimZB, the team goes their separate ways, and Kingsman shares a few words with his viewers.

“I’m just here to win the tournament, you know? I need that money,” he says. “I’m f**king broke. I like money, and $40,000, which has a prize pool for first place of three grand, is a lot of money for me. I could really use that to help pay my college.”

BasimZB later sends Kingsman a message, telling him he has been kicked from the tournament without warning. Cece was banned on Twitch – and thus kicked from the tournament – shortly after for a separate incident that she has since said is related to her “saying something toxic to my friend in chat,” violating the streaming site’s terms of service.

Overtime

Kingsman and Cece’s former teammates went on to participate in the tournament and landed in seventh place out of eight teams. All of the major players in the story have since released separate videos and social media statements in an attempt to clear confusion and share their sides of the story, with everyone calling on their fans to not harass anyone else involved.

Cece’s immediate video response alleges BasimZB kicked Kingsman solely because of his tone, which she says was “making the team uncomfortable” and potentially impacting team performance. She says she had little involvement in Kingsman’s removal from the tournament, sharing messages with BasimZB where he says he saw clips of Kingsman “saying disrespectful things while muted” and “saying disrespectful things about the tournament.” She adds, “in hindsight, maybe [Kingsman] should have gotten a warning.”

Cece, who has received a barrage of harassment online following the Deadpool Creator Cup, also took to X/Twitter to respond to questions about her behavior, addressing comments she made both during and after the initial incident. One more recent post issued to her followers sees her explaining the reasoning for her actions and apologizing to Kingsman for some of her words, including calling him a “loser,” both on her stream and her follow-up video.

I’m sorry I failed to realize that I need to take proper accountability on here as well. Many of you saw my replies and they were defensive, deflecting, and argumentative. I was busy fighting to defend myself and I’ve deleted them now because I realized what you guys really…

— Cece (@cecefps) January 20, 2026

“Emotions were high and I failed to notice which resulted in me snapping at Kingsman,” Cece says. “I apologize as no matter what, raising voices and instantly shutting down a teammate is not the right thing to do. I also should have reprimanded the comments directed at Kingsman once the scrims were over. I needed to hold everyone accountable.”

BasimZB initially stood by his decision to kick Kingsman but eventually reversed course after watching the entire series of scrimmages. He has since apologized to Kingsman, saying that he has already spoken to him and that he “def got played by a lot of people.” He has also commented on the “hate” he’s received from users criticizing his handling of the Marvel Rivals tournament, saying, “the people who come in here, when they hate, they are justified in what they’re saying.”

Luciyasa, who has been known to collaborate and “duo” with Kingsman in the past, has also faced criticism for her role during the scrimmage matches and for comments she made later. She has clarified that some of her words were said “at wrong times,” though she stands by telling Kingsman to “shut the f**k up” because of how it was affecting zazzastacks. While it’s unclear if she has spoken with her former Marvel Rivals partner, she has expressed interest in speaking with him offline.

Zazzastack has also been bashed online despite saying relatively little during the confrontation with Kingsman. In her follow-up post, she apologizes for shifting to a “stern” tone after he continued to push her to switch characters, adding that she is “taking accountability for not swapping off Widow when I should have.”

“I was never once rude to Kingsman in the VODs (video on demand) even when asked to talk my s**t,” zazzastacks said. “I will take accountability for getting stern after a while of being asked the same question over and over and do apologise for that as I definitely could’ve had more patience, however I still don’t believe that I insulted him in any way. If Kingsman is at all offended by any of my actions then I am deeply sorry to him.”

Kingsman

Kingsman eventually shared a document containing direct messages between he and Cece called "The Cece Files." It covers a conversation between the two feuding creators that took place after the scrimmage matches and after Kingsman had uploaded his video.

He appears to have hoped to maintain a competitive attitude upon learning of how it could help pay for his education but only wound up removed from the tournament without a dime to show for it. That’s the story the internet has rallied behind, and the result is far, far more than $3,000 for the Magik player.

Kingsman’s latest YouTube video hitting nearly 3 million views may earn him a bit of cash, for example. In addition to what appears to be a growth of hundreds of thousands of subscribers on the Google video platform, he has seen an increase of more than 220,000 followers (up from 1,000 January 16) as his average viewers skyrockets (via TwitchTracker). Kingsman has also seen a drastic increase in subscribers and audience donations, as he also alleges that one anonymous donor outright paid him the $3,000 he had hoped to earn in winnings.

Kingsman265 was gifted in-game units to purchase premium skins.
W dev team @MarvelRivals pic.twitter.com/3eC0znyu6X

— Trending Now ON X (@TrendingNowVidz) January 22, 2026

We can't tell just how much money he has made in the aftermath of his removal from the Deadpool Creator Cup, but as viewers head to comment sections across the internet to offer their support, it’s safe to say he’s got at least a little more cash to help pay for college. Meanwhile, Kingsman says the Marvel Rivals team at NetEase has also stepped in, gifting him in-game credits known as Units to, as he says, “purchase Magik skins.”

NBA team the Atlanta Hawks got in on the drama, too, showing their support for the competitive gamer with a post on TikTok. Even Straight Outta Compton star and son of Ice Cube, O’Shea Jackson Jr., commented on the events of the last few weeks, simply sending out a post mentioning his name.

kingsman went live and just made more than 3K in literally 5 minutes of the stream.

I still have faith in the world pic.twitter.com/1hafMLb3in

— SN | Avataryaya (@avataryaya_) January 21, 2026

The Kingsman265 drama began as the kind of argument hero shooter players find themselves in every day and transformed into what could remain as the biggest gaming drama of the year. For now, it appears every name involved will continue playing, streaming, and competing in Marvel Rivals events, regardless of the sides they took. Kingsman didn’t come close to winning the Deadpool Creator Cup, and it doesn’t like he would have if he hadn’t have been kicked, but at this stage of the drama, it seems the internet is doing its best to put him on top.

“I was looking through my old clips, and I found a video of myself being like, ‘I’ve only ever made $90 from Twitch in four years of streaming, but I’m going to keep streaming anyway,’ and… holy s**t,” Kingsman said during a recent stream as his livestream chat asks him to turn on ads. “You guys really want ads? OK, bro.”

“How do I even turn on ads? I literally don’t know,” he adds.

Michael Cripe is a freelance writer with IGN. He's best known for his work at sites like The Pitch, The Escapist, and OnlySP. Be sure to give him a follow on Bluesky (@mikecripe.bsky.social) and Twitter (@MikeCripe).

Highguard Global Release Times Confirmed Ahead of Launch Showcase

26 janvier 2026 à 13:18

Debuting at The Game Awards 2025 with an end-of-show reveal trailer, Highguard is a new free-to-play PvP raid shooter hailing from some of the creators of Respawn's Apex Legends and Titanfall.

Though we've heard very little since, Highguard reemerged last week with the promise of a launch showcase that confirmed the January 26, 2026 release date. The showcase will offer a "full gameplay deep dive, year one plans, and much more."

In Highguard, players will "ride, fight, and raid as Wardens, arcane gunslingers sent to fight for control of a mythic continent," although it has suffered from a degree of negativity online since that The Game Awards reveal.

Highguard is set to launch across PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X and S. Confirmation of its release time comes from SteamDB, which of course relates only to the global Steam launch, but it is likely Highguard will go live simultaneously across all platforms.

Highguard global release times:

Depending on where you are in the world, Highguard is set to go live on:

Monday, January 26, 2026:

PST (San Francisco):

  • 10am

CST (Austin, Mexico City):

  • 12pm

EST (New York):

  • 1pm

GMT (London):

  • 6pm

CET (Paris):

  • 7pm

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

JST (Tokyo):

  • 3am

CST (Beijing):

  • 3am

AEST (Sydney):

  • 5am

NZST (Wellington):

  • 7am

Vikki Blake is a reporter for IGN, as well as a critic, columnist, and consultant with 15+ years experience working with some of the world's biggest gaming sites and publications. She's also a Guardian, Spartan, Silent Hillian, Legend, and perpetually High Chaos. Find her at BlueSky.

'FTL in a Warhammer 40,000 Skin' Game Pulled From Steam After What May Be a Nuisance DMCA Takedown From a Troll Claiming to Be Games Workshop

26 janvier 2026 à 13:10

A strategy game dubbed ‘FTL in a Warhammer 40,000 skin’ was recently pulled from Steam, with its developer suggesting it may have been on the receiving end of a nuisance DMCA takedown from a troll claiming to be Games Workshop.

Last week, Tundra Interactive posted a message on the Void War Steam forum to say the game was “temporarily unavailable” after it had been pulled from Steam without explanation. The indie developer said it was working with Valve to “resolve” the issue, and pointed to Void War's continued availability on Itch.io.

Void War is often compared to both indie darling FTL and Warhammer 40,000, Games Workshop’s tabletop wargame set in the grim darkness of the far future — and it’s easy to see why.

The gameplay looks incredibly similar to Subset Games’ hugely popular 2012 ‘spaceship simulation roguelike-like,’ and the aesthetic is very Warhammer 40,000. The voidships themselves look — in Void War’s official art — like Imperial Navy Vessels.

Meanwhile, some of the characters look like Space Marines. There’s an actual Psyker that’s called a Psyker. There are “Imperial Shrineworlds.” There’s mention of “Imperial astrogation authorities.” You get the idea.

Following the takedown, IGN asked Tundra Interactive for comment, and it responded with something quite unusual. It said that it had received a takedown notice from Valve stating that Games Workshop itself had claimed copyright infringement. But here’s what makes this one odd: the only claiming information Valve provided the developer it said, is Games Workshop’s public-facing infringements inbox and the name “Mal Reynolds.”

Mal Reynolds is a name that will be instantly familiar to Firefly / Serenity fans, because that’s the name of the main character, played by Nathan Fillion in the beloved but short-lived sci-fi show. It seems unlikely that Games Workshop would have someone on its books named Mal Reynolds, and that it would come after Void War now, half a year after release on Steam. And it’s worth pointing out Void War is still up on Itch.io, where no DMCA takedown appears to have taken place.

Here’s Tundra Interactive's comment to IGN in full:

We received a DMCA takedown notice from Valve stating that Games Workshop is claiming copyright infringement. We have not received any other communication from Games Workshop, and the only claimant information Valve has provided is Games Workshop’s public-facing infringements inbox and the name “Mal Reynolds,” which is unusual since that’s the main character from Firefly. We can’t independently verify who actually submitted the notice, and Games Workshop hasn’t responded yet to our email asking them to confirm or withdraw it. We’re following the standard DMCA process and will share further updates when we have confirmed information.

Of course, this may actually be a genuine DMCA takedown by Games Workshop, and there may well be a Mal Reynolds who's doing the dirty work. Perhaps there's an official FTL-style Warhammer 40,000 game in the works, and it's close to a reveal. Neither Games Workshop nor Valve has clarified the matter, and based on both companies' history when it comes to DMCAs, are unlikely to.

All of which leaves Void War off Steam and Tundra Interactive, like the Imperium Nihilus itself, in the dark. As for Games Workshop, it’s got plenty of official Warhammer 40,000 games in development, including Dawn of War 4, Dark Heresy, and Total War: Warhammer 40,000.

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Star Wars: Starfighter Writer Rules Out Any Secret Cameos, Insists it Really is Standalone With 'No Legacy Characters'

26 janvier 2026 à 12:48

The writer behind upcoming movie Star Wars: Starfighter has ruled out the chance of any familiar face from the franchise's past making a secret cameo, after a recent report confirmed the film would feature a lightsaber duel.

The revelation that Starfighter would feature lightsabers — and lightsaber wielders — set fan tongues' wagging, as they put two and two together with the fact that Starfighter is set post-Rise of Skywalker and the fact that Lucasfilm is keen to feature Rey Skywalker again the future in "several" movies.

Starfighter was originally announced by Lucasfilm as a "standalone" movie with no connection to the main Skywalker Saga or any other spin-off project — and now, the movie's scribe Jonathan Tropper has doubled down on this to rule out any "legacy characters" appearing in any capacity.

"Obviously, lightsabers are a part of that universe and that part of that galaxy," Tropper told Screenrant. "I'm so careful not to reveal anything, but essentially, I think it's known that we have no legacy characters.

"You're not going to see any of the characters you've seen in the other movies," he continued. "So there are certain things that are still hallmarks of Star Wars that it's good to have in there. But more than that, I can't say."

Not only will Starfighter feature a lightsaber battle, but the fight was filmed at least in part by none other than Top Gun star Tom Cruise — who visited the film's set one day and ended up getting involved with its production.

So, who are Starfighter's lightsaber wielders? Lucasfilm has kept details of the movie's plot firmly under wraps, other than confirming that Ryan Gosling's scruffy-looking rogue is an uncle to the movie's younger star. Neither characters look like Jedi (although perhaps that is a deliberate choice, to hide one or both being Force-sensitive?) Production images released so far have seen the pair next to a speeder and on some kind of sci-fi raft, with a vibe that seems far removed from the franchise's usual galaxy-defining space conflicts.

More likely, however, the lightsaber battle will involve one or both of the movie's antagonist characters, played by former Doctor Who Matt Smith and Dracula star Mia Goth. Whispers from the film's production have pinned the two as playing Sith-aligned foes, though this has not been officially confirmed.

"This is a standalone. It’s not a prequel, not a sequel," director Shawn Levy previously said at Star Wars Celebration 2025 in April. "It’s a new adventure. It’s set in a period of time that we haven’t seen explored yet." Star Wars: Starfighter is currently due to launch on May 28, 2027.

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

Pokémon TCG: Perfect Order Preorders Are Up at TCGplayer, Revealing the Latest Market Price Data for Sealed Products

26 janvier 2026 à 12:39

While Ascended Heroes is the next big release in the calendar for Pokémon TCG, we can't help but look ahead to further down the line to the most recently announced set, Mega Evolution - Perfect Order. It will feature Mega Zygarde ex, Mega Starmie ex, Mega Clefable ex, and Meowth ex, and now confirmed to be releasing on March 27 this year.

Unsurprisingly, preorders for Perfect Order have been pretty hard to come by so far, with everything currently unavailable at most major retailers. Unfortunately, if you missed The Pokémon Center's latest drop, then it's a waiting game for now. That's at least if you don't want to dabble with the resale market.

Just as it did with Ascended Heroes, TCGplayer has recently launched its selection of presale listings for Perfect Order, giving plenty of fans an alternative to secure the upcoming set (as long as they can stomach the increased cost over MSRP).

I've left a link to everything that's now available in TCGplayer's presale, ready for the March 27, 2026, release. But, if that's not of interest to you, then we can swiftly move on to discussing the latest market price data on display for Perfect Order's sealed products, see how it compares to Ascended Heroes in its run-up to release, alongside the rest of the Mega Evolution series as well.

Perfect Order is actually one of the smallest English sets we've seen in years, with only around "120 cards", including secret rates, and only 88 cards in its main set. Unlike Ascended Heroes, Perfect Order will release its selection of sealed products in one fell swoop on March 27.

With that said, let's kick off our discussion on its current market prices with the Elite Trainer Box, prominently featuring a rather cool-looking Mega Zygarde ex. ETBs are currently sitting at around $139.98 market on TCGplayer, which is a 180% markup presently.

That's a bit higher compared to the current market for Ascended Heroes, which is sitting around $117.75 right now. But, with Perfect Order listings not being live for long, I'd also expect these to come down a bit before release in late March.

Phantasmal Flames last year averaged around $150-$200, even closer to its release, but has since dropped significantly, falling almost 50% in a fairly short space of time, and now sits around $80 instead. So, let's hope for a repeat of that for AH and PO as well later in the year.

Finishing up, if you're after the exclusive Pokémon Center Elite Trainer Box for Perfect Order, that's sitting at around $390.55 market price right now, but is also limited to just a few listings on TCGplayer, so keep that in mind before making any purchases, as prices could still come down.

Next up is boosters, which are also looking a little pricey right now for Perfect Order. Booster Bundles are sat at around $86.38 market - for six packs, this works out at around $14.39 each, and that's before delivery costs. Individually, boosters are fairing a tiny bit better, at $10.92 each, while the massive Booster Boxes are currently $243.17 market price, containing 36 packs. That's the best value of the bunch, working out at about $6.75 per pack, if you can stomach the upfront cost.

Out of all of these, I'd only recommend considering the Booster Boxes (36 packs), as that's the best value for money, and these rarely drop further in price closer to release. Booster bundles, on the other hand, can significantly drop further.

For example, Amazon has got Phantasmal Flames Booster Bundles for $44.99 right now, which is still above the MSRP, but it's also the best price going right now, and significantly better than paying around $80 before release day! At $7.50 per pack, it's not quite equalling the value you'd get from a Booster Box, but it's quite a lot closer. So, my advice, spend big now on a 36 pack of boosters, or spend a lot less in a few months time when prices have settled a bit more.

Still, that's the price of cards on the resale market these days! I'm sure most of us are already quite used to it, even if it's still a mega pricey. So what else is up for grabs, and how are the prices looking right now? For starters, there's the three pack blisters, featuring Chikorita, which are sitting at about $50 right now, alongside the Build and Battle bundles, for $69.94, or the single pack blister, featuring Makuhita, for $18.99.

For now, stock is unavailable for the other single or three pack blisters, so there's no market price data available. Check back in closer to release, and we'll be sure to update you when anything else changes, and new data and sealed products for Perfect Order appear.

This article also contains contributions from Robert Anderson, Senior Commerce Editor, and IGN's resident deals expert on games, collectibles, trading card games, and more. You can follow him @robertliam21 on Bluesky.

Terraria's Bigger and Boulder 1.4.5 Update Is Almost Here, and This Teaser Has Fans More Excited Than Ever

26 janvier 2026 à 12:33

Re-Logic has dropped a new teaser trailer for Terraria 1.4.5 — now dubbed the Bigger and Boulder Update — which is set to launch tomorrow, January 27.

The teaser for Bigger and Boulder — I see what you did there, Re-Logic — shows off "over 100 combinations and eight brand new boss tracks," as well as reveals character portraits (including the Goblin Tinkerer), new icons for auto-sorting things like coins, new furniture, and new Palworld and Dead Cells minions.

There also seems to be a pre-hard mode Acorn Tosser, Slime Spear, Slime Whip, and Starcrash Whip, lightning strikes in thunderstorms, Boulder tiles, blocks, and chests, and more. Lots, lots more.

And no, Re-Logic doesn't even say that this is the last update anywhere — despite insisting Terraria had received its last update for years — but of course, with the team promising that crossplay will be "made available some time after 1.4.5," there's at least one more patch on the way.

"When Rockstar learned about the release of Terraria 1.4.5, they postponed GTA 6 in fear," teased one player in the YouTube comments. "I kid you not, I am gonna start on journey mode just to disable corruption spread, Hypeeeeee!" said another on Reddit.

Terraria 1.4.5 releases on January 27 and includes "things that got left out of 1.4.4" plus crossover events with Dead Cells and a second collab with Pocketpair's Palworld, this time for Terraria players. The upcoming features were published on the Terraria wiki, and outline what to expect from 1.4.5 when it comes out. Expect official and final patch notes soon.

Terraria is pretty old at this point; IGN reviewed it 15 years ago(!) in 2011. Even then, though, we thought it was amazing, scoring it 9/10 and writing: "Though on the surface it looks like just another "me too" indie game seeking to ride the coattails of Minecraft's success, Terraria expands on the familiar sandbox gameplay with a greater emphasis on combat and adventure that proves very satisfying. That's rare indeed."

Vikki Blake is a reporter for IGN, as well as a critic, columnist, and consultant with 15+ years experience working with some of the world's biggest gaming sites and publications. She's also a Guardian, Spartan, Silent Hillian, Legend, and perpetually High Chaos. Find her at BlueSky.

Thor: Love and Thunder Director Taika Waititi Says His Star Wars Script Tries to 'Harness a Little Bit More of the Fun' of the Series' Original Films

26 janvier 2026 à 12:25

Marvel's Thor: Love and Thunder director Taika Waititi has said his under-wraps Star Wars script is designed to recapture the sense of fun found in the sci-fi saga's original trilogy.

Waititi's on-again, off-again work on a Star Wars movie has been ongoing since at least 2020 and at times has felt unlikely to ever release due to the director's busy schedule and after a divisive reception to his most recent Marvel project.

Still, Waititi's take on a galaxy far, far away was recently mentioned again by outgoing Lucasfilm boss Kathleen Kennedy, who described it as "somewhat alive" — which was a more promising update than several other Star Wars movie projects that Kennedy had worked on which she simply didn't mention at all.

Now, Waititi has been asked to give a hint at what his script will entail. And, perhaps unsurprisingly, the filmmaker behind comedy-infused films such as What We Do in the Shadows and Thor: Ragnarok said he wanted to bring out the "fun" of Star Wars, too.

"I think you've seen it before but I'm just trying to sort of go back and harness a little bit more of the fun from the original films," Waititi told Variety, "which is what I remember.

"The stakes were very high," he continued, reminiscing of his take on George Lucas' original trilogy, "there were serious things going on but also there was a lot fun to be had in those films. That's what I was trying to bring back."

Back in 2023, Waititi blamed the long wait for his Star Wars movie to materialize on his current workload, and that he didn't expect to make the project until he'd completed "four other scripts" he was involved with. The director used the same reasoning to explain why he wouldn't direct another Thor project for Marvel, as he was already planning to be busy for another six or seven years.

Amid a pile of in-progress and now-scrapped Star Wars pitches within Lucasfilm this decade, only two Star Wars films have been definitively confirmed to release. The Mandalorian and Grogu launches in theaters on May 22. After that, the Ryan Gosling-starring Star Wars: Starfighter arrives on May 28, 2027.

Image credit: Anna Pocaro/Variety 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

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