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Everything Coming to Paramount+ in February 2026

31 janvier 2026 à 22:15

February is a stacked month for Paramount+ subscribers, with plenty of action hitting the service on the first day of the month, including a massive slate of movies and live coverage of the 68th Annual Grammy Awards.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, which debuted in January, continues its first season with new episodes dropping throughout the month. While several popular shows return with mid-season premieres, February's standout is the highly anticipated 50th season of Survivor.

Check out the full list below for everything coming to Paramount+ in February, details on upcoming UFC events, and subscription pricing.

Everything Coming to Paramount+ in February

February 1

  • A Night At The Roxbury
  • A Walk on the Moon
  • Almost Famous
  • American Assassin
  • American Beauty
  • American Gigolo
  • Amistad
  • Anything Else
  • Ashby
  • Ask The Dust
  • Bad News Bears (2005)
  • Bang Bang
  • Becoming Jane
  • Blue Eyed Girl
  • Boomerang
  • Bottom of the 9th
  • Boudica: Queen of War
  • Bounce
  • Boys And Girls
  • Bride & Prejudice
  • Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason
  • Bridget Jones's Baby
  • Bridget Jones's Diary
  • Call Me By Your Name
  • Changeland
  • Cinema Paradiso
  • Cloverfield
  • Down to Earth (2001)
  • Down To You
  • Due Justice
  • Eagle vs Shark
  • Ella Enchanted
  • Emma (1996)
  • End of Sentence
  • Face/Off
  • Fear
  • Forces Of Nature
  • Four Letters of Love
  • Frida
  • Get Rich or Die Tryin'
  • Grease
  • Grease 2
  • Hardball
  • Harlem Nights
  • Heatwave
  • Here Comes the Boom
  • Hotel Artemis
  • How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days
  • I Used to Go Here
  • Jane Eyre (1996)
  • Jersey Girl
  • Just Like Heaven
  • Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
  • Katy Perry The Movie: Part of Me
  • Kindred
  • Kiss The Girls
  • Like Water for Chocolate
  • Lilies Not for Me
  • Losing Isaiah
  • Love, Rosie
  • Marshall
  • Marshmallow
  • Match Point
  • Old Guy
  • Our Friend
  • Persona
  • Pretty Red Dress
  • Queen & Slim
  • Regarding Us
  • Roman Holiday
  • Rugrats Go Wild
  • Rugrats in Paris: The Movie
  • Run
  • Runaway Bride
  • Sabrina (1995)
  • Save the Last Dance
  • Seaside
  • Shakespeare in Love
  • She's All That
  • Shrink
  • Sixteen Candles
  • Superstar
  • Team America: World Police
  • The Argument
  • The Beldham
  • The Best of Me
  • The Foreigner
  • The Godfather
  • The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone
  • The Godfather Part II
  • The Golden Child
  • The Heartbreak Kid (2007)
  • The Hurricane
  • The Longshots
  • The Original Kings of Comedy
  • The Outlaws
  • The Prince and Me
  • The Prophecy
  • The Romantics
  • The Rugrats Movie
  • The Saint (1997)
  • The Score
  • The Silent Planet
  • The Sons of Katie Elder
  • The Stepford Wives (2004)
  • The To Do List
  • The Violent Heart
  • The Virgin Suicides
  • The Wood
  • The Words
  • The Yards
  • Til Death Do Us Part
  • To Catch a Thief
  • Us
  • Vampire in Brooklyn
  • What's Eating Gilbert Grape
  • Win A Date With Tad Hamilton!

February kicks off with plenty of great movies to keep you occupied throughout the month, including The Godfather trilogy, some classic rom coms like Bridget Jones's Diary, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, and Runaway Bride, as well as some cult comedies and family movies to round things out.

February 2

  • The Reader

February 4

  • Air Disasters (Season 23)
  • 68 Kill

February 11

  • How Did They Fix That? (Season 4)

February 12

  • Can You Keep a Secret? (US premiere)

February 13

  • Coldwater (Showtime - Series Finale)

February 15

  • Mother's Day

February 18

  • PAW Patrol (Season 11)
  • Wild Boys: Strangers in Town (New Series Premiere)

February 20

  • Dreaming Whilst Black (Season 2 - US Premiere)

February 23

  • CIA (New CBS Series)
  • DMV (Season 1 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • FBI (Season 8 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • The Neighborhood (Season 8 - Mid-Season Premiere)

February 25

The big hook for this season is that fans got to vote on decisions that impact the show (hence the name) including tribe colors, supplies, advantages, reunion location, and much more. Billie Eilish, Jimmy Fallon, Zac Brown, and MrBeast are all confirmed to make celebrity appearances to add a little twist to the games.

Survivor 50 premieres on February 25.

February 26

  • Georgie & Mandy's First Marriage (Season 2 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • Ghosts (Season 5 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • Matlock (Season 2 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • Elsbeth (Season 3 - Mid-Season Premiere)

February 27

  • Boston Blue (Season 1 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • Fire Country (Season 4 - Mid-Season Premiere)
  • Sheriff Country (Season 1 - Mid-Season Premiere)

All UFC Content on Paramount+ in February

UFC fans ate good in January with back-to-back numbered events in UFC 324 and UFC 325. While you'll have to wait until March for UFC 326, there are still some great UFC Fight Night events happening throughout February, including:

  • February 7: Bautista vs. Oliveira
  • February 21: Strickland vs. Hernandez
  • February 28: Moreno vs. Almabayev

With Paramount+ now serving as the new home of UFC, there's a massive back catalog of content that you can watch right now on the streaming service, including classic fights from the 2000s and 2010s. Later this year, Paramount+ will also stream new seasons of popular shows The Ultimate Fighter and Dana White's Contender Series.

Paramount+ Plans and Prices

Paramount+ is currently available as a monthly or annual subscription, with the latter saving you a bit if you lock-in for a year at a time.

The service is currently split into two tiers: Paramount+ Premium and Paramount+ Essential. While they offer virtually the same streaming content, Premium removes ads and grants you access to CBS live, Showtime, 4K UHD streaming on select titles, and the ability to download movies and shows for offline viewing.

Paramount+ Premium is available for $13.99/month or $139.99/year, while Paramount+ Essential is available for $8.99/month or $89.99/year.

Since Paramount+ doesn't have a free trial anymore and there aren't any current deals outside of a generous student discount, your best bet is to shell out for the annual plan as it works out to just under $12 per month. You can also get access to a Paramount+ Essentials subscription via Walmart+, which actually does offer a free trial for new subscribers.

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

Ranking Sam Raimi's Movies From Best to Worst

31 janvier 2026 à 20:44

With Sam Raimi's rambunctious, hellacious deserted island showdown Send Help arriving this weekend, it's time to officially rank the director's films. Needless to say, it's every cinephile's moral imperative to support and see Send Help in theaters, but where will it land on our Raimi list? Where does it rank among the Evil Deads, Spider-Mans, Simple Plans, and Darkmans?

Raimi is definitely an artist formed and molded by the films he loved as a child, from Universal Monster movies to the Three Stooges. His energetic efforts are a blend of dynamic slapstick, camp, and roller-coaster camera work, providing POV shots representing everything from evil forest spirits to bullets to mechanical tentacles to Wild West shot glasses.

Raimi, known also for a physically demanding directing style, has a fondness for personally (gently) abusing his stars, whether he's throwing dirt and mud into Bruce Campbell's face or tossing trash at Tobey Maguire -- the director actively gets involved off screen with the pelting of his movie's protagonists. We doubt he threw a fastball at Kevin Costner though.

We've decided to keep 1985's Crimewave off the list, despite it both being co-written by the Coen brothers and also being a schlocky cult film in the midst of Raimi's schlocky cult era. If this bugs the completionist in you, then just mentally drop it down at Number 16.

Here are Sam Raimi's films... ranked!

15. For Love of the Game (1999)

To be fair, most Raimi fans would much rather revisit Crimewave than 1999's For Love of the Game, which was not only boring and inert as a Raimi film but also dull for a Kevin Costner sports movie. Raimi took the gig, which was his highest-budgeted project at the time, because of his love of baseball, but the end result is a schmaltzy, forgettable story of a pitcher remembering his life and career during his final outing on the field.

It should also just be stated, for austerity's sake, that For Love of the Game features no Oldsmobile Delta 88 -- Sam Raimi's car from The Evil Dead that the director has featured, usually as a cameo, in every other movie. Yes, the Delta 88 scene got cut. Even The Quick and the Dead and Oz the Great and Powerful used dismantled Delta 88 parts for wagons on set. Just saying. Quite foreboding.

14. Oz the Great and Powerful (2013)

Wicked taking Broadway by storm opened up more avenues for exploring L. Frank Baum's world of Oz, namely the backstory of the "Wizard" himself. And on paper there was nothing notably wrong with Sam Raimi helming this Wizard of Oz prequel, with James Franco playing con-artist Oscar and Mila Kunis as Theodora. But the end result just didn't have the Raimi magic. In the end, despite performing decently at the box office, Oz the Great and Powerful just felt like a CG-heavy cash grab with a tone that never gels properly. No one's charisma pops and the project just screamed soulless franchise starter.

Read IGN's review of Oz the Great and Powerful here.

13. The Gift (2000)

Sam Raimi once again found himself in the Billy Bob Thornton business, following the acclaim of A Simple Plan (see below), with a script co-written by Thornton pre-Sling Blade. Unfortunately, The Gift is mostly a by-the-numbers Southern Gothic mystery with an easy-to-spot twist. There's some genuine Raimi flare here and there when it comes to the portrayal of the lead's psychic powers and prophetic dreams, but otherwise this was a dud -- though it did okay at the box office thanks to a great ensemble of Oscar winners/nominees like Cate Blanchett, Greg Kinnear, and Hilary Swank. Plus it had both Keanu Reeves and Katie Holmes playing way against type, for better or worse.

The Gift was also a sort of a bridge between Raimi's A Simple Plan cast (Gary Cole, Chelcie Ross) and his future Spider-Man cast (J.K. Simmons, Rosemary Harris).

12. Spider-Man 3 (2007)

This was a rough one because there were such high hopes for the third Spider-Man film. Raimi had already made two awesome Spidey flicks, with the second one being hailed as the best super-flick of all time -- and then the teasers and trailers got everyone even more hyped! But Spider-Man 3 is a big mess, and the fingerprints of Raimi's behind-the-scene clashes with Sony are all over this one. Featuring villains he didn't want (particularly Venom) and then having the silly Raimi-ness that worked in the previous two films fit like an ill-shaped suit, this third entry was the pits. Now, to be fair, there are some moments, particularly involving Sandman (his effects and fights) that work, but overall fans didn't want to see Peter become a fat-headed jerk (and wanted even less to see him become an emo tool). It's still crazy that the same director and stars could be this far off the mark.

11. Darkman (1990)

Crimewave aside, Darkman was Sam Raimi's first non-Evil Dead flick. It was a modest hit, spawning two direct-to-video sequels (and now maybe a decades-later legacy reboot), and it got Raimi into the Hollywood machine. A mix of big real explosions and campy green screen, Darkman was Raimi's solution, and creation, when he wasn't allowed to make The Shadow, one of his favorite heroes as a kid. It's a superhero story mixed with a Universal Monster tale, starring a fresh-faced Liam Neeson in a role Raimi originally wanted for bestie Bruce Campbell (even some of the lines Neeson's Peyton Westlake yells are reminiscent of Campbell's Evil Dead scenes). You've also got future Oscar winner, and Raimi pal (through the Coen brothers), Frances McDormand trying her hand at a girlfriend/damsel in distress role. Darkman, about a scientist-turned-disfigured vigilante who can 3D print new faces to disguise himself, is a blast, and it marked big things to come for Raimi in the realm of comic book (and comic-book feeling) movies.

10. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022)

Sam Raimi dove headlong into the MCU for one of the better post-Endgame offerings, as Doctor Strange battled a deranged, grief-stricken, post-WandaVision Wanda Maximoff. At times, Multiverse of Madness feels like just a plain neato Marvel movie, but then flashes of Raimi's horror handiwork shine through, particularly through Scarlet Witch's massacring of the Illuminati and her psycho stalking of poor Nexus being America Chavez. Bloodied, limping, almost possessed, Multiverse of Madness Wanda is not to be f***ed with. Earning just shy of a billion, this Doctor Strange sequel was not only Raimi's first movie in nine years (!), but it also wound up as his top-grossing movie, beating out all the Spideys.

Read IGN's review of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness here.

9. The Evil Dead (1981)

The one... the only... the evil... dead! Sam Raimi's shoestring gonzo gorefest cemented him, immediately, as a formidable filmmaker, and a groundbreaker in the realm of independent horror. It's the definitive "cabin in the woods" movie, creating a tumultuous template for all close-quarter scares to come. But just because it's a small cast and a single location doesn't mean it's a slog. Raimi's camera moves, crafting a chaotic carnival ride out a premise that, in less energetic hands, might make you feel like you're standing in line, waiting for said ride. The Evil Dead is one of the most important cult classics ever, and even tops some fans' favorite horror films of all time. It's a best-case scenario of a bunch of talented friends -- Raimi, Bruce Campbell, producer Rob Tapert, et al. -- getting together, scraping together what they could find, and making pure, petrifying art with shocking practical effects.

8. The Quick and the Dead (1995)

Sharon Stone was on top of Tinseltown when The Quick and the Dead was made, and many folks forget just how instrumental she was in putting this pulp Western together. She handpicked Sam Raimi to direct and then went to bat for hot-off-acclaimed-movies Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe. For Raimi, this was his chance to stretch, a little, with a new genre (it's still chock-full of textbook Raimi camera tricks, montages featuring floating objects, etc.) and stretch, a lot, with A-listers Stone and Oscar-winner Gene Hackman. The Quick and the Dead was Raimi blooming into a director who could work with established veterans and/or celebrities and it would, like Darkman, push him even further into being one of Hollywood's Most Wanted. The movie itself is a fun, flamboyant revenge flick, though it never quite settles on whether Stone's "Lady" is supposed to be a badass desperado or a frightened woman who's never killed anyone before.

7. Drag Me to Hell (2009)

After three Spidey movies in a row, Raimi returned to ooey gooey Deadite form with the darkly comical Drag Me to Hell, which stars Alison Lohman as a loan officer who gets cursed by a psychotic old woman (who first tries to kill her in her car by the way!), and has three days to sort this s*** out or get -- you got it! -- dragged down into hell! In between crime dramas and superhero tales, Raimi loves to let loose, get gross, and do nasty, nefarious things to his lead performers... um, in the movies, to be clear. Drag Me to Hell is a wicked, wild ride with an unforgettable ending that, arguably, makes the movie. Goodnight, Mrs. Ganush, wherever you are!

Read IGN's review of Drag Me to Hell here.

6. Army of Darkness (1992)

The swashbuckling sequel to Evil Dead II (and third Raimi Evil Dead flick overall) transformed Final Boy/Crash Test Dummy Ash Williams into a lovably buffoonish superhero. Saddled with one of the most bizarre R-ratings ever, Army of Darkness is a slaptsick, Harryhausen-inspired delight that only further endeared Raimi to the nerdy horror community. Ash's petulant bravado, only hinted at in Evil Dead II, was on full display here, creating a dope who brings hope to the Medieval masses. And nestled within this hilarious Deadite adventure was also a much-needed subversion of the time travel genre, in which the person whisked back centuries is a stone-cold jackass with no desire to blend in or do right by the era. Army of Darkness is a joy to behold, and also stands tall as one of the few films with a reshot ending that's not only better than the original idea but one of the most crowd-pleasing sign-offs ever.

5. Spider-Man (2002)

Sam Raimi entered the big time, or at least a bigger time, with Spider-Man, a movie that honestly couldn't be made until computer effects reached a certain benchmark. Sure, James Cameron wanted to take a thwip at getting the ol' web-head onto the big screen in the '90s, but, as we found out, Raimi needed to be the one to do it, bringing his whole bag of tricks along with him. His dynamic sense of action and movement mixed perfectly with his goofy, campy whimsey for a spectacular Spidey story reminiscent of the Stan Lee-Steve Ditko Amazing Spider-Man run in the '60s. X-Men had given Marvel fans their first big taste of comic favorites come to life, but there were a few tweaks to the formula (Matrix-style black leather, for one). Spider-Man was Spider-Man. It was everything we wanted, right down to Peter trying his hand at pro-wrestling to earn money. And Willem Dafoe's Norman Osborn was pitch-perfect. Plus, longtime Raimi collaborator Danny Elfman (Darkman, A Simple Plan, many more) provided one of his best scores. With great power came great responsibility.

4. Send Help (2026)

Sam Raimi's latest is definitely one of his greatest, with Send Help providing both edge-of-your-seat thrills and grim laughs thanks to a a story that's part Cast Away, part War of the Roses, and all demented. Rachel McAdams and Dylan O'Brien co-lead this fiendish fable about a frumpy sad-sack number cruncher and her pampered douchebag boss getting marooned on an isalnd together, where she thrives and he connives. Raimi knew McAdams was game after working with her on Multiverse of Madness, though it still feels like a surprise to see her in this particular Raimi-verse. The one filled with glop, slop, and characters getting the bejesus beaten out of them. O'Brien, too, is wonderfilly willing to get down and dirty, even at times channeling some of Bruce Campbell's old meathead machismo.

Read IGN's review of Send Help here.

3. A Simple Plan (1998)

The first big outlier in Sam Raimi's career was -- heck, still is! -- his most acclaimed film to date, winning multiple awards and landing two Oscar nominations (one of which was won by Billy Bob Thornton). A Simple Plan is far more than just "Raimi's Fargo," spinning a morose yarn about two brothers and a local yokel who find $4 million on a crashed private plane in the snowy woods. Their best intentions (about keeping the money, mind you) go miserably awry, almost from the get-go, and Raimi superbly devastates us with his first earnest attempt at genuine emotion, fear, and anxiety. Thornton and Bill Paxton are next level as a the ill-fated bros and Bridget Fonda (on the movie where she'd meet husband Danny Elfman) is searing in a Lady Macbeth-style performance. A Simple Plan is still criminally underseen, not just as a Raimi movie but as one of the best films of the '90s period.

2. Spider-Man 2 (2004)

When Spider-Man 2 hit, the world of superhero movies felt a seismic change. To this day, it's still considered by many to be the best, even when Iron Man and The Dark Knight rolled around six years later and split the vote. Raimi took everything that worked in the first Spider-Man movie and dialed it up, even giving us some Evil Dead-ittude during Doc Ock's hospital tentacle attack. Let's put it this way: Spider-Man 2 is so good that fans immediately accepted the "Spider-Man's powers don't work because Peter is full of anxiety and regret" angle. That would be ripped to shred these days (as everything, sadly, is ripped to shreds). Spider-Man 2 is a cathartic watch, gifting us with Grade-A Spidey while also offering an interesting spin on Otto Octavius being controlled by myopic AI. The Spider-Man/Doc Ock battles feel like they're leaping out of the comic pages, with the subway fight still looming large as one of the best super-brawls ever. Peter dealing with his decision to live a lonely vigilante life helped bring this rollicking romp to life, leaving just enough room to set up a third movie that would for sure be as good, if not better. Little did we know.

1. Evil Dead II (1987)

This is it. The apex. The peak. Evil Dead... perfected!

Only a handful of directors have chosen to/had the opportunity to remake their own movie, but one of them was Raimi favorite Alfred Hitchcock -- an auteur whom Raimi patterned not only his camera work after, but also his suited on-set style. Evil Dead II is a zany, splattery, righteous ride that needs to be seen by everyone. We say this without fear of hyperbole. This is a devilishy camped-up Evil Dead, taking everything that worked in the first movie -- Ash and his girlfriend discover the Necronomicon in a secluded cabin and accidentally release Deadites -- and blowing it up to the Nth degree. Heavy is the slapstick, silliness, and stunt work as Bruce Campbell becomes the consummate demon-battling ragdoll. Evil Dead II is the best horror-comedy ever made and the number of filmmakers it's influenced is too many to count. Even when Raimi makes movies today -- whether it's an MCU entry or something like Send Help -- we get giddy when we see anything that harkens back to Evil Dead II. This iconic cult classic uses every cinematic trick in the book, even inventing a few new ones along the way. It's an over-the-top, brazen, self-aware "sequel" that easily stands the test of time.

What's your favorite Raimi movie? Let's talk in the comments, and of course, vote in our poll too!

Everything Coming to Disney+ in February 2026

31 janvier 2026 à 20:30

For better or worse, 2026 just keeps chugging along. The one benefit of that, to me at least, is getting closer to some pretty exciting streaming releases. Next month, Disney+ will host the return of The Muppets, a new Hannah Montana stream, and the second season of The Artful Dodger. Here's a full breakdown of everything getting added to the service in February.

Everything Coming to Disney+ in February

February 4

  • Ancient Aliens (S17)
  • The Muppet Show
  • We Call It Imagineering

The Muppet Show returns with a special produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg (The Studio, Superbad). It stars Rogen, Sabrina Carpenter, and Maya Rudolph alongside, of course, the iconic Muppets themselves. The special is gauging interest in a potential revival while celebrating the series’ 50th anniversary.

For Disney theme park fans, We Call it Imagineering is a series you can also find on YouTube. Each episode dives into the people and technology behind Disney's most beloved attractions.

February 7

  • Engineering Europe

This National Geographic series digs into some of the wildest feats of engineering across Europe, from massive bridges to tiny engines.

February 10

  • The Artful Dodger (S2)

The Artful Dodger, an Australian TV sequel to the Charles Dickens classic Oliver Twist, is coming straight to Disney+ for its second season. Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Maia Mitchell, and David Thewlys are all reprising their roles in the main cast.

February 13

  • Incas: The Rise and Fall
  • Arranged (S1)
  • Cartoonified! With Phineas and Ferb - Shorts

Cartoonified! With Phineas and Ferb is essentially a revamped version of the Take Two with Phineas the Ferb shorts. The recently rebooted duo interview real-life celebrities, who in turn get the animated treatment.

We’ll also get some more Nat Geo with Incas: Rise and Fall, while Arranged is yet another Lifetime reality series.

February 14

  • Chibi Tiny Tales: Shorts (S7)

The latest season of Chibi Tiny Tales is coming to Disney+ all at once. This iteration of shorts features characters from Phineas & Ferb, Kiff, Tangled, and even a chibi-fied version of A Goofy Movie.

February 17

  • RoboGobo (S2) Premiere
  • New 24/7 Hannah Montana Stream

The second season of RoboGobo, an animated superhero series, is landing on Disney+ after airing Disney Jr. On the same day, Disney+ will be rolling out a new 24/7 Hannah Montana stream in celebration of the series 20th anniversary. The stream will feature a marathon of Hannah Montana episodes as well as movies and concerts.

February 18

  • Armorsaurs (S1)
  • Dead Girl Summer
  • History's Greatest Mysteries (S6)
  • A Roommate to Die For
  • A Sorority Mom's Guide to Rush
  • Storage Wars (S16)
  • Trapped in Her Dorm Room

Armorsaurs takes inspiration from a South Korean series, Armor Saurus, in a blend of live-action and animated art styles. The first season will arrive on Disney+ all at once after airing on Disney XD last fall.

The streamer is also picking up a spread of Lifetime movies and series, a significant chunk of which are college-themed. (I don’t know why.)

February 26

  • Inside the CIA: Secrets and Spies

Another pick-up from Nat Geo, this documentary collection offers an inside look into specific CIA operations over the past several decades.

February 27

  • Ancient Autopsy: Mysteries of the Dead (S1)
  • Miraculous World: Tokyo Stellar Force
  • Sofia the First: Once Upon a Princess

Surprisingly enough, Sofia the First: Once Upon a Princess, a movie rendition of the hit Disney Jr. series from early 2010s, was never added to Disney+. Until now, at least. Along similar lines, the streamer is getting Miraculous World: Tokyo Stellar Force, a movie in the Miraculous: Tales of Lady Bug series.

And, on the less family-friendly side of things, Disney+ will stream the Nat Geo series Ancient Autopsy, investigating the lives of historical figures like Cleopatra and Genghis Khan through, well, their remains.

February 28

  • Danger Decoded (S1)

A new reality docu-series coming straight to Disney+, per its title, breaking down what exactly can make a situation unexpectedly deadly.

Last Chance to Save on Disney+ and Hulu Bundle

Aside from the slate of releases coming to the service, Disney+ also has an ongoing discount on its ad-supported streaming bundle with Hulu, giving you one month of both services for $9.99. For reference, after the most recent price hikes, the bundle typically costs $12.99, while each service now costs $11.99 on its own. The offer ends on February 17.

In the Blink of an Eye Review

31 janvier 2026 à 15:00

This review is based on a screening from the Sundance Film Festival. In the Blink of an Eye will be available to stream on Hulu starting February 27.

For a film about disaster and how we deal with it, there is something tragic about how In the Blink of an Eye becomes such a frequently disastrous disappointment of its own making. Spanning thousands of years though somehow feeling painfully small in scope, it has plenty of big ideas about life, death, and how we endure. Unfortunately, this feeble sci-fi film does little with them, ensuring whatever thematic or philosophical ambition it has fades away into nothing. Just as the title refers to how fast time can pass, leaving us struggling to remember what came before, the film itself feels destined to be utterly forgotten the moment you finish watching.

This latest attempt at live-action sci-fi from Pixar veteran and John Carter director Andrew Stanton is one of sincere intentions, though woefully sporadic execution. At least John Carter, for all its flaws, felt like it was taking some bigger swings; no such luck here, as In the Blink of an Eye is much more modest and mundane, half-heartedly poking at the poetic existential realities of life without genuinely grappling with them. Stanton has been a key part of some of the more moving animated films of the 21st century, especially the sci-fi wonder that is WALL-E, but with In the Blink of an Eye, he can’t inject this robotic, rote, and reductive story with any life.

Written by Colby Day, who previously penned the similarly disappointing Adam Sandler-starring Spaceman, the film follows three storylines. The first, and weakest, follows a Neanderthal family trying to survive in a harsh world they can’t come close to comprehending. Sadly, we as the audience are not invited to comprehend anything they’re saying, as their grunts are not translated. This leaves us having to rely on already one-note performances that are further hampered by prosthetics, which mostly just bring to mind old GEICO cavemen commercials.

The second and strongest part takes place in the present day, where we get to know Claire (Rashida Jones). She’s an anthropologist who, wouldn't you know it, is studying ancient remains from the era in the first part. Without spoiling anything, these first two parts will soon connect in a way that’s less surprising than it is stiff and obligatory. For now, Claire is starting up a halting relationship with a sweet fellow student, Greg (Daveed Diggs). There's a sex joke that initially ties the first part to the second that’s cheeky yet broad, but the more the film goes on, the more the cutting between the different timelines starts to feel not just even broader, but forced and abrupt. The film never remotely trusts us as an audience, insisting on holding our hand through each and every “twist” just as it awkwardly tugs on the heartstrings, earning few of its emotional payoffs.

In the third and more middle-of-the-road part of the film, we observe a lonely space traveler named Coakley (Kate McKinnon), who is on a mission to a faraway planet. She’s meant to colonize it with babies she’ll grow with only the ship’s onboard AI-esque computer system to help her. But when a mysterious disease starts to kill off the ship's oxygen-producing plants, threatening the mission that may be humanity’s last hope, Coakley will begin to contemplate making the ultimate sacrifice to save it. At least, she’ll do so for a moment, but the film soon lets itself off the hook, writing its way out of what could’ve been a more complicated, compelling moral dilemma. After already feeling like it was in the shadow of a film like Duncan Jones’ magnificent Moon, In the Blink of an Eye just shrinks even further into a dull darkness.

In the Blink of an Eye is a sci-fi “epic” of little ambition and even less genuine wonder.

As all these timelines start to connect, the film shifts from being merely superficial to downright insulting in one particular parallel it draws. In the present, Claire’s career and budding romance are disrupted by a looming loss that will require her to move back home; in the distant past, the poor Neanderthal family experiences loss after loss due to not having any medicine to treat the illnesses that befall them. These two are not the issue, as Jones makes what are increasingly rushed scenes into something more impactful. The insulting bit comes in the parallel drawn between these two pasts, where real lives are actually at risk. It’s something I not only didn’t feel anything for, but grew quite frustrated with, as it takes up far too much oxygen in an already empty story.

In the Blink of an Eye repeatedly insists that it’s doing something grand or profound; in actuality, it’s a sci-fi “epic” of little ambition and even less genuine wonder. Though it has drawn comparisons to something like the captivating yet divisive Cloud Atlas, those overly flatter what ultimately looks and feels more like a bad episode of a streaming show. More than anything, it ends up playing as one laborious montage of half-baked ideas and forced connections rather than a truly moving sci-fi film. Blink and you’ll miss it? Even if you’re watching, there’s just nothing to see here.

'I Would Prefer That Our Dysfunction Stays Behind Closed Doors' — HBO Boss Comments on George R.R. Martin's 'Abysmal' Relationship With House of the Dragon Showrunner

31 janvier 2026 à 11:34

The boss of HBO has commented on what went down between Game of Thrones author George R.R. Martin and House of the Dragon showrunner Ryan Condal, after Martin described their relationship as "worse than rocky" and "abysmal."

While Martin's displeasure with House of the Dragon's ongoing story development was nothing new, a profile piece published by The Hollywood Reporter revealed eye-opening new detail from Martin on the breakdown of his relationship with Condal — and the extent to which HBO executives had to manage the pair behind the scenes of the show's production.

Martin's unhappiness with Condal appears to have reached its zenith during a contentious Zoom call where the showrunner laid out his vision for House of the Dragon's third season. Martin said he responded to Condal's plan with numerous objections, and ultimately stated: "This is not my story any longer."

"I hired Ryan," Martin said, reflecting on happier times. "I thought Ryan and I were partners. And we were all through the first season. I would read early drafts of the scripts. I would give notes. He would change some things. It was working really well — I thought."

The profile piece noted an initial display of support by Martin for Condal towards the end of Season 1, when the latter had a falling out with his fellow co-showrunner on the series, Miguel Sapochnik. Martin says Condal asked for his support, which he gave, and Sapochnik departed the show shortly afterward.

"Then we got into Season 2, and he basically stopped listening to me," Martin continued, discussing how his relationship with Condal began to deteriorate. "I would give notes, and nothing would happen. Sometimes he would explain why he wasn't doing it. Other times, he would tell me, 'Oh, OK, yeah, I'll think about that.'

"It got worse and worse, and I began to get more and more annoyed. Finally, it got to a point where I was told by HBO that I should submit all my notes to them and they would give Ryan our combined notes."

This then led to the now-infamous and swiftly-deleted blog post penned by Martin in September 2024, which publicly criticized House of the Dragon's direction and said more "toxic" changes from his books were to come. While offering praise for the series' writing, direction and acting, Martin slammed the plot decision to kill off a particular character and went into detail as to why he disagreed with the choice. At the time, Martin also suggested Condal had gone back on a promise to balance the change with another plot point — that had then seemingly been abandoned.

Within hours, the blog post disappeared from Martin's website, and HBO had issued a statement supporting Condal while attempting to lower the temperature. In the profile piece, Martin said the blog post disappeared after HBO contacted Martin's manager, who had Martin's assistant remove the post while Martin himself was asleep.

"I would've put it back up, but then I would've looked like an idiot," Martin said of the incident. "And 80% of it was praise, but that's not what people focused on."

Now, in an interview with Deadline, Casey Bloys, Chairman and CEO of HBO and HBO Max Content, acknowledged the turmoil behind the scenes, waved away its impact, and expressed support for both Martin’s continued involvement in HBO’s Game of Thrones work, and Condal’s work on House of the Dragon.

“Like any good American family, I would prefer that our dysfunction stays behind closed doors,” Bloys began. “But here we are. What I would say is George introduced us to Ryan as the person that he thought would be the best to create House the Dragon. And I will say Ryan has been an excellent showrunner and a really great partner and collaborator, so we embrace his vision and his creative choices, or we wouldn’t have done it.”

Bloys then confirmed that HBO still has an overall deal with Martin, despite his high-profile and very public criticism of House of the Dragon.

“Listen, I consider it great to have George as the architect of this world,” Bloys said. “I mean, think about what he has created, the world, the families, the battles, all of the history, it’s pretty extraordinary. George is a great partner for us to have. The idea that he is going to agree with every creator or showrunner that is either developing or producing, two artists are not always going to agree. So, some of this comes with the territory.”

In November, HBO announced A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Season 2 and House of the Dragon Season 4 as part of a Marvel-style roadmap update for Game of Thrones TV series. House of the Dragon Season 3, meanwhile, debuts in summer 2026, with Season 4 set for 2028. Season 4 will be its last.

Bloys confirmed that Martin “definitely took a step back” in terms of his involvement in Season 3, and has focused on A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms instead. Bloys insisted he was “thrilled” with Season 3 creatively, as he is with Seasons 1 and 2.

“If you remind yourself of the Rotten Tomato stores of the first two seasons, it’s 87%,” he said. “This has been a very successful show for us. So, again, I will say I’m thrilled with what Ryan has done, he’s been a great collaborator with us.”

For his part, Condal has chosen not to comment further on the situation, but has pointed to a previously-reported statement he gave which claimed that Martin had become "unwilling to acknowledge the practical issues at hand in a reasonable way."

With House of the Dragon coming to an end in 2028, thoughts turn to what’s next for HBO and Game of Thrones. A proposed Game of Thrones sequel series starring Arya Stark is reportedly in the early stages of development, seemingly to replace previous plans to develop a spinoff based around Jon Snow. We also have word that animation icon Genndy Tartakovsky (Primal, Samurai Jack, Hotel Transylvania) is attached to the long-gestating Game of Thrones animated spinoff series 9 Voyages, which will follow the adventures of Lord Corlys Velaryon, aka The Sea Snake. The character is played in House of the Dragon by actor Steve Toussaint.

Photo by Tristar Media/WireImage.

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.

'It Certainly Seems That Way' — HBO Boss Gives Clearest Indication Yet That The Last of Us Will End With Season 3

31 janvier 2026 à 11:11

The boss of HBO has indicated The Last of Us will come to an end with Season 3.

Despite the mixed response to Season 2 and subsequent departure of Naughty Dog franchise creator Neil Druckmann, HBO boss Casey Bloys has backed showrunner Craig Mazin's ability to continue on — and to do so successfully despite the series' lead actors changing.

But exactly how long the series would continue had been a topic of debate. In May last year, Mazin indicated a fourth season was pretty much essential for the series. Speaking to Collider, Mazin agreed that in order to wrap up The Last of Us’ story from the two Naughty Dog-developed video games in Season 3 would mean Season 3 itself "would take forever." So, while there was a "decent chance" Season 3 would be longer than Season 2, at the end of the day "there’s no way to complete this narrative in a third season."

He continued: "Hopefully, we’ll earn our keep enough to come back and finish it in a fourth. That’s the most likely outcome."

However, in a new interview with Deadline, Bloys gave a pretty clear indication that Mazin won’t get the chance to make Season 4.

Deadline asked if Bloys could confirm that the upcoming seasons of Hacks and The Last of Us were their final seasons. Bloys responded: “It certainly seems that way, but on decisions like that, we will defer to the showrunners. So you can ask them.” So, not 100% confirmed The Last of Us ends with Season 3, but as close to confirmation as we can get.

Warning! Spoilers for The Last of Us Season 2 follow.

The Season 2 finale teased that, like the game, Season 3 will shift focus to Abby (Kaitlyn Dever) following the death of Joel (Pedro Pascal). It’s unclear exactly how Mazin plans to retell the Seattle section of The Last of Us Part 2 through Abby’s perspective.

Though most of us who played the second game knew what was coming in Season 2, it seems many viewers did not. Mazin has said he still gets bewildered fans asking: "Why did you kill Pedro Pascal?"

"[Game creator and fellow showrunner Neil Druckmann] did a thing. Everyone lost their sh*t, and then I had to do that same thing, because he did the thing. I loved doing the thing, I thought it was great," Mazin said of Joel's death at a Variety panel.

"The big complaint that I've gotten is, 'Why did you kill Pedro Pascal?' And I keep explaining, we didn't kill him! He's a man, he's alive. He's fine. And he's in literally everything else. So I don't know what the problem is!"

“People had very strong reactions to whatever controversial story decision we made,” added Druckmann.

(Check out IGN’s The Last of Us Season 2 finale review to see what we thought of it.)

In August, Ellie actor Bella Ramsey issued a short, sharp message to the louder critics of The Last of Us Season 2, insisting those who hate it can play the video game upon which it is based instead of watching Season 3.

Speaking to The Awardist podcast, Ramsey dismissed the impact of Season 2’s online criticism. "I tried to steer clear as much as I could, to be honest," Ramsey said. “Because there’s nothing I can do about it anyway. The show is out. There’s nothing that can be changed or altered. So I’m like, there’s not really any point in reading or looking at anything.

“People are of course entitled to their opinions. But it doesn’t affect the show, it doesn’t affect how the show continues or anything in any way. They’re very separate things to me. So no, I just don’t really engage.”

Ramsey was then asked what they would tell the “louder critics” of Season 2 going into Season 3. "I would say, you don't have to watch it," Ramsey responded. "If you hate it that much, the game exists. You can just play the game again. You don’t have to watch it, but if you do want to watch it, then I hope you enjoy it."

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.

HBO Makes It Official: House of the Dragon Ends With Season 4

31 janvier 2026 à 10:35

Game of Thrones spinoff House of the Dragon will end with Season 4, HBO has confirmed.

In November, HBO confirmed A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Season 2 and House of the Dragon Season 4 as part of a Marvel-style roadmap update for Game of Thrones TV series.

In that announcement, HBO extended each series run through 2028. Both series will air on HBO and be available to stream on HBO Max. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms was renewed for a second season ahead of the Season 1 debut earlier this month, with Season 2 due out in 2027. House of the Dragon Season 3, meanwhile, debuts in summer 2026, with Season 4 set for 2028.

Now, in an interview with Deadline, Casey Bloys, Chairman and CEO of HBO and HBO Max Content, confirmed that Season 4 of House of the Dragon will be its final season.

“Yes, that is the idea,” Bloys said. “The idea has always been to follow the history of the Targaryens. If you know the books, you know how the Targaryens end up. So there is a natural end to this particular history of that House of the Targaryens.”

While Game of Thrones author George R. R. Martin has expressed his enthusiasm for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, he’s been critical of House of the Dragon. Indeed, Martin recently discussed his broken relationship with House of the Dragon showrunner Ryan Condal, which the author candidly described as "worse than rocky" and "abysmal."

While Martin's displeasure with House of the Dragon's ongoing story development is nothing new, a profile piece published by The Hollywood Reporter revealed eye-opening new detail from Martin on the breakdown of his relationship with Condal — and the extent to which HBO executives had to manage the pair behind the scenes of the show's production.

Martin's unhappiness with Condal appears to have reached its zenith during a contentious Zoom call where the showrunner laid out his vision for House of the Dragon's third season. Martin said he responded to Condal's plan with numerous objections, and ultimately stated: "This is not my story any longer."

In March last year, Condal called Martin’s criticisms of House of the Dragon Season 2 “disappointing.”

Deadline asked Bloys if HBO planned a “supersized” final season of House of the Dragon, but he said a decision had yet been made on its episode count. “Ryan is working, like any show like this; he is finishing post on Season 3 and working with the writers on what Season 4 looks like,” Bloys told Deadline. “I don’t know where he’s landed on the episode count yet.”

With House of the Dragon coming to an end in 2028, thoughts turn to what’s next for HBO and Game of Thrones. To that end, a proposed Game of Thrones sequel series starring Arya Stark is reportedly in the early stages of development, seemingly to replace previous plans to develop a spinoff based around Jon Snow. We also have word that animation icon Genndy Tartakovsky (Primal, Samurai Jack, Hotel Transylvania) is attached to the long-gestating Game of Thrones animated spinoff series 9 Voyages, which will follow the adventures of Lord Corlys Velaryon, aka The Sea Snake. The character is played in House of the Dragon by actor Steve Toussaint.

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.

'What the Duck Is This?' — Arc Raiders Duplication Glitch has Players Running Into Hoarders With Hundreds of Squeaky Bath Toys

31 janvier 2026 à 10:16

A new Arc Raiders duplication glitch has fans worried about exploits, but others just want to know why it’s being used to spawn mountains of rubber duck trinkets.

The Headwinds update brought new content, alongside fresh gameplay tweaks, when it launched for Arc Raiders players across PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X | S earlier this week. While the 40+ level matchmaking option, Solo vs. Squads, was positioned by developer Embark Studios to be its big selling point, some players are more concerned with the return of an item duplication exploit and how it has affected the in-game (duck) economy.

Although players are no doubt using the dupe glitch to amass piles of rare items like blueprints, it seems a few fans are manipulating the system to make some serious coin – and maybe even a quick joke. The duck has slowly become a bit of a running gag for fans on its own, as the squeaky bath toy is one of a few lightweight trinkets that can be found topside and then sold in Speranza for a decent chunk of Raider Coins. It also happens to be the sillier items in Arc Raiders, so when a recently patched dupe glitched returned in a new form, those looking to exploit the system knew just what to do.

Those who are discovering topside players with hundreds of ducks, however, are just confused.

Did we come across the duck Santa Clause or something?

“Did we come across the duck Santa Clause or something?” one Reddit user said a few days before the launch of Headwinds. “Dupe hacking gone wild? At first we thought it was some joke because the stash was just full of ducks but then we realized they were stacks of 15 ducks each.”

“Okay so I actually came across a guy in blue gate in a random house just spamming ducks on the ground,” another replied. “I assumed he was duping. The floor was littered with them, probably like 100 of them. He wouldn't respond and kinda just stared at me til I walked away.”

Arc Raiders’ mallard problem has only gotten bigger in the aftermath of Headwinds, as the January content update also introduced a handful of more valuable (and more vibrant) ducks to collect as part of the new Bird City map condition. It’s resulted in an abundance of ducks across Buried City…and some very awkward moments.

“A raider caught on fire in Buried City Metro, went down without saying a word, and left behind a mountain of Familiar Ducks,” another user shared. “I extracted with $2.8M. Still confused.”

“Was doing the pharmacist quest for Lance, heard the tell tale duck noise...came upon this silent raider,” one person said, sharing a picture of a solo Raider standing alone in a dark attic.

Referencing a recent cyber-attack against Embark and Arc Raiders, someone replied, “This must be what brought down the servers. DDOS (Duck Duplication on Server).”

In a game that constantly sees players backstabbing each other for a small chance to net worthwhile resources, it’s hard to deny the comedy in PvP players only finding stacks upon stacks of little rubber duckies. Still, it’s definitely the kind of thing Embark promised to clean up earlier this month. Players have complained of cheaters and exploiters in Arc Raiders for weeks, so as goofy as these issues are, they are still causing some players to worry that others have an unfair advantage.

It's especially concerning for those who have kept up with Arc Raiders updates since launch. Embark issued update 1.12.0 January 20 and fixed a handful of exploits, including an item duplication glitch. It took less than a week for players to begin reporting what appears to be a new version of the exploit, and it's unclear how long it will take for the developers to publish a new patch or how many other glitches will be discovered in the meantime.

The Arc Raiders cheater crackdown has seen holes plugged in Stella Montis to try and ward off wall explolits, while some players, like streamer Tfue, have found themselves banned (and then unbanned) without notice. As Embark tries to bring cheats to a halt, players are still finding the fun both in and outside of the game. Some have even looked to the real-world Stella Montis hotel to leave positive reviews. Others are just enjoying Headwinds while they wait for everything else promised in the 2026 roadmap.

For more, you can read about why we think the best Arc Raiders loot needs a serious buff. You can also check out why Embark believes players who spawn into a raid late actually benefit more than most.

Comment
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Image credit: endgame2937 / reddit.

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).

Josephine Review

31 janvier 2026 à 02:54

This review is based on a screening from the Sundance Film Festival.

Beth de Araújo’s Josephine — which won both the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance as well as the festival’s Audience Award — is as visceral as it is delicate. The story of an eight-year-old girl who witnesses a violent sexual assault, and her parents who don’t quite know how to help her cope, the movie’s difficult story, and its rough, raw aesthetic approach, create some of the most challenging parameters for a child actress in recent memory. However, the young performance at its center is as miraculous as the film that slowly coheres around it, resulting in a freight train of emotional impact.

Early one morning in San Francisco, when Josephine (Mason Reeves) and her father Damien (Channing Tatum) go running in Golden Gate Park, they’re briefly separated, and the second grader watches from afar as a mysterious assailant in a green t-shirt (Philip Ettinger) overpowers and assaults an unsuspecting jogger (Syra McCarthy). In a horrifying moment, both victim and perpetrator lock eyes with the young girl, before the attack is broken up and the man is chased and arrested. However, neither Damien nor his wife Claire (Gemma Chan) can decide on the right way to explain to Josephine what she saw, leaving her emotionally adrift as she grows more confused, more resentful of authority, and more violent towards her classmates. As the days go by, she even begins picturing the attacker in the spaces around her — even in the safety of her bedroom.

De Araújo’s frank, unflinching approach to this event stems from having witnessed exactly such an attack at a similar age, imbuing Josephine with an autobiographical quality. Its contours are gradually shaped by the parent characters, and their expertly rendered performances, which lean into Tatum and Chan’s broad types in pursuit of unexpected layers. Damien, although playful at times, is a tough-love kind of parent whose words fail him, but who demands a stiff upper lip from Josephine while trying to navigate the event and its legal aftermath (the victim moves away, leaving Josephine as the only eye witness). Tatum’s comedy has often tapped into a meathead, frat boy persona, and de Araújo’s film is no different, only it captures the difficult domestic eventuality of that masculine mode in the form of a father whose solution to helping his daughter understand the world is stern silence and self-defense classes.

Reeves, who de Araújo discovered at a farmer’s market a few months before filming, brings a shocking naturalism to the part of Josephine.

Chan’s gracefulness, on the other hand, informs Claire’s approach in discomforting ways as well. A dancer and an artist, she searches for ways to talk Josephine through this trauma, but falls back on platitudes, and can’t find ways to answer her daughter when she inevitably asks if she’s ever been a victim of a similar assault. There’s no prescribed perfect age for sex education, and certainly none for explaining, to a pre-adolescent, the grey areas of human sexuality — the attacker’s defense attorneys claim the encounter was consensual non-consent — let alone the definition of “rape.” There’s certainly no handbook for what to do when the ideal time for this discussion slips into the past, for reasons beyond a parent’s control. But unlike Claire and Damien, who each fall back on their own parents’ imperfect, cyclical approaches to supposedly taboo topics, Josephine has the internet at her disposal, though the explanations she finds online only confuse her further.

Reeves, who de Araújo discovered at a farmer’s market a few months before filming, brings a shocking naturalism to the part. Josephine is the masculine “Jo” to her father, and the cutesy “JoJo” to her mother, roles which the character and the actress alike effortlessly oscillate between, as they try to find a sense of stability while the floor is pulled out from under them. Josephine’s growing unease is reflected in daring fashion by the young newcomer, whose growing uncertainty — surrounding both human sexuality and human morality — seeps into her mood in the form of subdued frustrations. Reeves holds these close to the chest, until they eventually boil over. She’s practically a ticking time bomb; it’s as magnificent a debut performance as you’ll ever see.

These emotional pieces are all fitted into place by de Araújo’s deft and careful hand, yielding a film with a psychological complexity (surrounding issues of childhood sexual trauma) on the level of Gregg Araki’s Mysterious Skin. The director’s conception of San Francisco adds to the imposing nature of the story, between its winding streets and the crisscrossing power lines and metal bridge beams that seem to press down on the characters from above. The camera weaves in and out of Josephine’s point of view as though the young girl were being pulled outside herself before being pushed back in, an emotional whiplash further stoked by the use of space. For the most part, de Araújo and cinematographer Greta Zozula place us at eye level and employ telephoto lenses to blur the details of the larger, more imposing adult world in unbroken takes that build in pressure, as though Josephine’s purview were slowly being enveloped by fog. The color green begins to enter her field of view more and more, and eventually, the filmmakers break from their aforementioned blurry approach — with wide lenses that expand space and warp movement — during brief, imaginative moments when Josephine starts to picture the green-shirted attacker in her bedroom, as a specter of the confusion growing in her mind.

Ettinger plays this imagined version of the character with care and caution. He is, at times, an imposing presence, but he can also be ghostly and melancholic, almost sympathetic. He raises questions of what his eyes meeting with Josephine’s in the park may have done to her, and the ways in which her interpretation of the event — and of what led to it — might be forced to change over time as well, when her parents can’t seem to figure out how to connect with her long enough to comfort her. This moment of primal identification with the rapist causes her to turn inward, and to wonder whether she herself has the capacity for evil. That she begins to wear green nail polish goes unremarked upon, but it’s one of the film’s many stark, unmissable details that might cause you to squirm in your seat.

The movie nestles broad philosophical questions within the perspective of a child, which — in tandem with Miles Ross’ brilliantly breathy and propulsive score — inject a terrifying undercurrent into moments of dramatic simplicity. This is centered around the magic of a young performer guiding us through the story’s silent developments by getting lost in thought and self-loathing, and the adult characters who aren’t emotionally equipped to meet her gaze. All this combined makes Josephine one of the most powerful, shattering works of drama to emerge from the modern American independent scene.

How to Watch UFC 325: Stream Volkanovski vs. Lopes 2 Live Online

31 janvier 2026 à 02:30

2026 is shaping up to be a big year for UFC with plenty of welcome changes for fans, including an entirely new way to watch the biggest events. For the uninitiated, live UFC fights have shifted away from pay-per-view (PPV) events on ESPN+ and will now be available as part of a Paramount+ subscription. So, instead of paying $80 per fight, you can enjoy all UFC numbered events, Fight Nights, and a variety of other UFC programming for the entire year for roughly the same cost.

If you're looking to catch the big rematch between Volkanovski and Lopes at UFC 325 on Saturday, you've come to the right place. We've got information on how to stream the fight, plan prices, and a breakdown of the scheduled fight cards down below.

How to Watch UFC 325 Live Online

With the shift away from ESPN+ (now ESPN Unlimited) for all live UFC matches, you'll need to sign up for a Paramount+ subscription in order to watch UFC 325. While, yes, it's annoying that you have to sign up for yet another streaming service, it beats paying for each PPV event individually, and you can stream some great TV shows, movies, and other live sports while you're at it.

While Paramount+ no longer has a free trial, it's still relatively cheap compared to many other streaming services with plans starting at $8.99 per month. Here's the full breakdown of Paramount+ plans as of January 2026:

Since Paramount+ recently increased its price ahead of hosting UFC events, there are unfortunately very few Paramount+ deals currently available. Your best bet is to opt for the annual subscription to save a bit of cash per month or save 50% off any of the above subscriptions if you're an eligible student.

The Walmart+ Free Trial Includes Paramount+

Although Paramount+ no longer offers a free trial, you can still test out the service for 30 days via a Walmart+ subscription. Walmart offers a free trial for new subscribers, which includes access to either a Paramount+ Essentials plan or Peacock Premium.

UFC 325 Start Time and Schedule

Like all numbered UFC fights, UFC 325 is split up into three different fight cards: Early Prelims, Prelims, and the Main Card.

The premier fight of the night is the Featherweight Title bout between Alexander Volkanovski and Diego Lopes, which will round out the evening after the other fights on the main card that begin at 6:00 PM PST. The two previously fought during UFC 314 in April 2024, with Volkanovski taking the champion's belt after a unanimous victory.

But, this time might be different. Lopes is younger, faster, and has a chip on his shoulder. Although Volkanovski is regarded as one of the best featherweight fighers of all-time, he's 37 now, and he may not be able to match Lopes' aggressive fighting style this time around.

Some additional matchups to look out for this weekend include a trio of (what should be) action-packed lightweight bouts between Dan Hooker and Benoit Saint Denis, Rafael Fiziev and Mauricio Ruffy, and Quillan Salkilld and Jamie Mullarkey.

Here's a quick breakdown of the UFC 325 schedule for Saturday, January 31:

Early Prelims - 2:00 PM PST

  • Aaron Tau vs. Namsrai Batbayar - Flyweight bout
  • Sulangrangbo vs. Lawerence Lui - Bantamweight bout
  • Keiichiro Nakamura vs. Sebastian Szalay - Featherweight bout
  • Sangwook Kim vs. Dom Mar Fan - Lightweight bout
  • Kaan Ofli vs. Yizha - Featherweight bout

Prelims - 4:00 PM PST

  • Jonathan Micallef vs. Oban Elliott - Welterweight bout
  • Jacob Malkoun vs. Torrez Finney - Middleweight bout
  • Cam Rowston vs. Cody Brundage - Middleweight bout
  • Junior Tafa vs. Billy Elekana - Light Heavywight bout

Main Card - 6:00 PM PST

  • Quillan Salkilld vs. Jamie Mullarkey - Lightweight bout
  • Tai Tuivasa (#12) vs. Tallison Teixeira (#15) - Heavyweight bout
  • Rafael Fiziev (#9) vs. Mauricio Ruffy (#14) - Lightweight bout
  • Dan Hooker (#6) vs. Benoit Saint Denis (#8) - Lightweight bout
  • Alexander Volkanovski (C) vs. Diego Lopes (#2) - Featherweight Title bout

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

Target Is Offering BOGO 10% Off Prepaid Phone Cards, Including T-Mobile, Verizon, and AT&T

31 janvier 2026 à 02:00

T-Mobile is offering a rare BOGO deal on phone cards for this weekend only. Buy one prepaid phone card and get a second select phone card of equal or lesser value for 10% off. Eligile phone cards include some of the most popular services, including T-Mobile, AT&T Wireless, Verizon, Boost Mobile, Cricket, Tracfone, and Simple Mobile. Phone cards are available in denominations of $10 all the way up to $200. Depending on where you live, local phone fees may apply.

Buy One Get One 10% Off Select Prepaid Phone Cards

Stacks with Target Circle 5% discount

This deal is even better if you are a Target Circle Cardmember because it stacks with the flat 5% discount you get on Target purchases (prepaid phone cards are eligible). If you combine the two discounts, you're saving nearly 10% off the entire order, which is usually as good as you can get when it comes to prepaid card discounts.

The Circle Card is Target's own branded credit card that gives you 5% back on most of your Target purchases. There's also no annual fee. One advantage that the Target card has compared to other cashback equivalents from Amazon, Best Buy, or Walmart is that this is not a "cashback" or "rewards" offer. You literally get a 5% discount applied to each and every Target purchase on the spot. No further purchase or waiting is necessary.

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

Sonos Is Kicking Off a 20% Off Sitewide Sale Ahead of the Big Football Game

31 janvier 2026 à 00:55

A gorgeous new 4K TV upgrade must be paired with great sounding, room filling audio to round out the ultimate home theater experience. You simply shouldn't have one without the other. However, if you're like most people and don't look forward to the task of setting up, positioning, and pairing your speakers, then that's where Sonos comes in. Its products offer excellent sound in a compact package with super easy DIY setup.

To celebrate the big football game on February 8, Sonos is kicking off its own big sitewide sale that takes up to 20% off some its best selling speakers including the Sonos Arc Ultra and Beam soundbars, Era 100 and 300 speakers, and Sub Mini and Sub 4 woofers. Shipping is fast and free and you're getting the full manufacturer's warranty.

Up to 20% Off Select Sonos Speakers

Sonos Era 100

The Era 100 is Sonos' most popular and most versatile speaker. Despite its compact size, the Era 100 houses two tweeters, a mid-woofer, and three class-D digital amplifiers to produce precise, distortion-free audio even at high volumes. It has a microphone for voice control. Because of its flexibility, it's often paired with a sound bar or a second Era speaker.

Sonos Arc Ultra

The Arc Ultra is Sonos' best soundbar speaker, replacing last year's Arc model. It is a massive 46" soundbar that houses 14 total speakers, including five tweeters (plus two upward-firing speakers for Dolby Atmos supported height channels), six midwoofers, and a four-motor, dual-membrane Sound Motion woofer. The Arc Ultra uses AI enhancement technology to isolate and boost the clarity of dialogue and voices. It also has a built-in microphone so that it can be controlled using voice commands from the Sonos app or your favorite smart assistant. Check out our own Sonos Arc Ultra review.

Sonos Beam (Gen 2)

The Sonos Beam is a great option for someone who requires a more compact sound bar or simply doesn't want to spend $900 on the Arc Ultra. The Beam (Gen 2) is a 26-inch long, 5.0-channel soundbar with one tweeter and four mid-woofers for natural, balanced sound and four passive radiators to help with the low end. Although the Beam doesn't have physical height channels, it has two virtual height channels for Dolby Atmos support. It has a microphone for voice control.

Sonos Era 300

The Era 300 is a much bigger, better sounding version of the Era 100. It's nearly double the size and weight. The Era 300 is also shaped differently, but there's a reason for that. The hourglass figure is designed to optimally arrange the six speakers so that they fire sound in all directions, enhancing Dolby Atmos and spatial audio effects. The Era 300 consist of four tweeters and two woofers paired with Class-D digital amplifiers and custom waveguides to help project sound to all corners of your room. Like the Era 100, it also has a built-in microphone for voice control.

Sonos Sub Mini

The audio savvy knows that a single speaker isn't enough to reproduce an entire soundstage. If you could pick only one other speaker to supplement your existing one, then a subwoofer would make the most meaningful impact. If you are space constrained, consider the Sub Mini. Despite its compact size, the Sub Mini can still powerful room-filling bass by way of two inward-facing 6" drivers contained in a sealed (non-ported) enclosure. It features wireless connectivity so you can avoid the hassle of routing a cable back to the rest of your home theater components.

Sonos Sub 4

If you aren't space or budget constrained, the Sub 4 is a step up from the Sub Min. The Sub 4 boasts even more power and a better low-end soundstage thanks to two inward-facing 5"x8" woofers and a traditional ported design.

Why Sonos?

If you're looking for an easy solution to add great sound to your home, then you've probably already heard of Sonos. Sonos speakers are very easy to set up, don't take a large amount of space, and most importantly, offer distortion-free room-filling audio. They're definitely pricier than budget options, but the sound quality is comparable to speakers that cost hundreds more or take up much more space.

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

Today’s Top Deals: Nintendo Switch Games Under $40, Dirt-Cheap Fire Tablet, Atari Handheld at a New Low

31 janvier 2026 à 00:50

If you’ve been waiting to grab any games or accessories, the Amazon-owned Woot has an absolutely Mega Gaming Sale right now. Already marked-down products are an extra 20% off when you use the coupon code GAMER at checkout, and Prime Members get free shipping. Everything from Pokemon Legends: Z-A to an Atari handheld and a Switch controller is discounted. Beyond that, a bunch of LEGO sets that make for a nice Valentine’s gift are on sale, get an Amazon Fire tablet cheap, and more.

TL;DR: Best Deals Today

Nintendo Switch Titles Score Major Price Drop

A bunch of popular Switch games are part of Woot’s gaming sale, where you can score 20% off with the coupon code GAMER. Prime Members even get free shipping. Tears of the Kingdom, Super Smash Bros, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, and Pokémon Legends: Z-A are all ridiculously great deals, with some hitting the lowest prices ever.

My Arcade Atari Gamestation Go Hits Ridiculously Low Price

Bring on the nostalgia with the My Arcade Atari Gamestation Go. Rather than new stuff, this gaming handheld is packed with classics. From PAC-MAN and Asteroids to Centipede and Crystal Castles, there are over 200 retro games on this officially licensed Atari console. With a 7-inch display, integrated paddle, D-pad, trackball, and more, it’s ready to play these games with the controls they were designed for. Plus, you can always plug it into your TV via an HDMI for big-screen fun.

If you’ve been considering grabbing the My Arcade Atari Gamestation Go, now’s the time, as it’s at its lowest price ever on Woot during its gaming sale. Just use the code GAMER at checkout, and it’ll bring it down to just $103.99. The same game console is going for $144 on Amazon right now.

Save on LEGO Sets for Valentine’s Day

Valentine’s Day is fast approaching, which means if you haven’t gotten a gift for the loves in your life, it’s time to hunker down. A bunch of LEGO sets have seen some nice discounts on Amazon. You can skip the fresh flowers and grab a LEGO bundle deal on a bouquet of roses and a botanical bouquet for 83.99. These LEGO sets are going for $55.58 and $48.49 individually, making this an incredible offer. Other lovable LEGO options include a cute Looney Tunes Sweetheart Tweety Bird, a mini bonsai tree set, or the iconic LOVE sculpture. All of these sets are seeing solid discounts today. If you have a Harry Potter fan in your life, the Hogwarts Express Book Nook is also at its lowest price on Amazon.

Refurbished Amazon Fire HD Tablet for Under $30

While Woot’s wild gaming sale is probably the highlight of today’s deals, you can also grab an Amazon refurbished 11th-gen Fire HD 10 Tablet 32GB for $27.99. All you need to do is apply the coupon code FIRE30 at checkout. I use one of these tablets when I’m traveling for streaming shows and doing the basics. Sure, it’s not going to compete with the best iPads, but it gets the job done, and you won’t be heartbroken if something happens to it. There’s even a 90-day limited warranty for some added peace of mind when purchasing a refurbished model.

Switch PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller Is Under $30

If you’re looking for a great controller for Switch 2, Woot has dropped the price of a brand new PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller to just $27.99 when you use the coupon code GAMER. Plus, the Amazon-owned Woot offers free shipping for Prime Members. The controller is available in several different skins, including Zelda Midnight Ride. That same controller is going for $59.99 on Amazon! Now, you won’t get the C button with the PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller, but it does deliver a comfortable grip, reliable connectivity, and two extra mappable buttons.

65% Off a SteelSeries Counter-Strike 2 Dragon Lore Limited Edition Wireless Gaming Mouse

The SteelSeries Counter-Strike 2 Dragon Lore Limited Edition Wireless Gaming Mouse received an epic price drop on Amazon. This great gaming mouse has been priced at $150, but now you can get it for just $52.93. That’s 65% off. On this mouse, you’ll get a lightweight design, an 18K DPI optical sensor, and a 2.4GHz dongle for reliable, low-latency wireless connectivity. In fact, it’s essentially a SteelSeries Aerox 3 mouse, which we reviewed and loved. But of course, it’s rocking the AWP Dragon Lore skin, hence the name, and skips its usual honeycomb pattern.

MTG x Avatar: The Last Airbender Beginner Box Hits New Low Price

Magic: The Gathering’s Avatar: The Last Airbender Beginner Box has dropped to a new low on Amazon. You can grab it for just $23.08. It’s ideal for those just dipping their toes in the MTG world, as it comes with two 20-card tutorial decks, a guide booklet, playboards, and more essentials. After you’ve mastered the basics, you can combine any of the additional eight 20-card half-decks for some real gaming.

Save 21% on MTG: Lorwyn Eclipsed Play Booster Box

Magic: The Gathering Lorwyn Eclipsed just dropped last Friday, and the Play Booster Box has dropped in price by 16% on Amazon. For just $129.98, you’ll get 30 Play Booster packs, making each about $4.33, which is a solid deal. Each pack even guarantees a foil. Now, MTG: Lorwyn Eclipsed is a nice departure from Spider-Man, Avatar, and Final Fantasy. Instead, you just get fantasy creatures throwing spells.

MTG x TMNT Preorder Deals

If you’ve been waiting for the prices to drop on the MTG x TMNT preorder, now is the time to jump. The Booster Box is down to $124.99 on Amazon. In the box are 30 packs, which means each one comes out to about $4.17, which is a great deal. There’s a Bundle Box that includes 9 Play Boosters, 30 Lands, a foil alt-art promo Card, and exclusive accessories that’s on sale for just $60. Or, grab the Turtle Power! Commander Deck and Turtle Team Up Box, as they both have received solid discounts.

While these might be the lowest prices we see for the MTG x TMNT preorder, Amazon even has a nice preorder price guarantee. Whether the price goes up or down, you’re paying the lowest amount. This is the first “Universe Beyond” release of the year, and it’s set to drop on March 6th.

MTG x Marvel Super Heroes Preorder Just Dropped

Jumping further into the future, Amazon just dropped the preorder for the MTG x Marvel Super Heroes set that’s coming out on June 26th. Some things have already sold out, but you can still grab the 30-pack Booster Box for $209.70, the Commander Deck Bundle for $299.96, and more. Be sure to secure your preorder now, as this is already proving to be a popular “Universe Beyond” collab.

After you’ve secured the MTG X Marvel Super Heroes preorder, be sure to check out the MTG: Secrets of Strixhaven preorder, which also just became available on Amazon. It’s set to come out on April 24 and is selling fast.

Enjoy Nearly Half Off The Hobbit & The Lord of the Rings Illustrated by Alan Lee Box Set

Any Tolkien fan will want this four-book box set illustrated by Alan Lee in their collection. With it, you’ll get hardcover editions of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Trilogy that feature the stunning watercolor work of Lee, the conceptual designer on Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. Typically priced at $150, you can grab this beautiful box set for nearly half off on Amazon. It makes a wonderful addition to any collection.

DC Vs. Marvel Omnibus Comic Collection Hardcover Hits New Low Price

It’s a crossover between the greatest superheroes of all time. DC vs. Marvel Omnibus is a fantastic comic collection full of out-of-print stories. Everything from Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man to Batman vs. Captain America can be found in the hardcover book. Best of all, you can grab it for 55% off on Amazon, a new low price.

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

Save 20% Off the Sonos Premium Entertainment Speaker Set (Arc Ultra Sound Bar and Sub 4)

31 janvier 2026 à 00:30

To celebrate the big football game on February 8, Sonos is kicking off its own big sitewide sale that discounts some its best selling speakers including the Arc Ultra soundbar and Sub 4 subwoofer. If you were thinking of getting these two specific speakers for your home theater setup, then you can get actually get an even better price by purchasing them as part of Sonos' Premium Entertainment Set for $1,599. If you were to purchase the two speakers separately during the sale, they would total to $1,659. Without the sale, they'd cost $1,998. Shipping is free.

20% Off Sonos Premium Entertainment Set

Less expensive when purchased together

This set includes:

  • Sonos Arc Ultra soundbar ($879, normally $1099)
  • Sub 4 subwoofer ($719, normally $899)

Sonos Arc Ultra

The Arc Ultra is Sonos' best soundbar speaker, replacing last year's Arc model. It is a massive 46" soundbar that houses 14 total speakers, including five tweeters (plus two upward-firing speakers for Dolby Atmos supported height channels), six midwoofers, and a four-motor, dual-membrane Sound Motion woofer. The Arc Ultra uses AI enhancement technology to isolate and boost the clarity of dialogue and voices. It also has a built-in microphone so that it can be controlled using voice commands from the Sonos app or your favorite smart assistant. Check out our own Sonos Arc Ultra review.

Sonos Sub 4

The audio savvy knows that a single speaker isn't enough to reproduce an entire soundstage. If you could pick only one other speaker, then a subwoofer would make the most meaningful impact. Given how the Arc Ultra excels at the highs and mids, the subwoofer addition would be a no-brainer. The Sub 4 features dual inward-facing 5"x8" woofers and a traditional ported design that allows for a louder and deeper low-end. It also has much more power than the Sub Mini and can reverberate the walls of any sized room in your house. There's no better complement to the Arc Ultra.

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

Genndy Tartakovsky Reportedly Attached to Animated Game of Thrones Sea Snake Spin-Off 9 Voyages

30 janvier 2026 à 23:07

Animation icon Genndy Tartakovsky (Primal, Samurai Jack, Hotel Transylvania) is reportedly attached to the long-gestating Game of Thrones animated spin-off series 9 Voyages, which will follow the adventures of Lord Corlys Velaryon, aka The Sea Snake. The character is played in the live-action series House of the Dragon by actor Steve Toussaint.

News of Tartakovsky’s attachment comes via Deadline's interview with Casey Bloys, Chairman and CEO of HBO and HBO Max Content.

“HBO has developed a slew of other offshoots, with a number being rumored to be currently in the works, including a Jon Snow and Arya Stark sequel written by Quoc Dang Tran; an animated Sea Snake project Nine Voyages, with Genndy Tartakovsky said to be attached, as well as 10,000 Ships written by Eboni Booth and Aegon’s Conquest penned by Mattson Tomlin,” Deadline reports.

The site added that “Bloys would not comment on any of the alleged GoT development projects but indicated that the success of the smaller-scale, modestly budgeted A Knight of the Seven Kingdom [sic] is informing their development strategy.”

9 Voyages was initially meant to be a live-action show from Rome and Gotham showrunner Bruno Heller, but Game of Thrones creator George R.R. Martin revealed in 2024 that the show had switched to animation due to budget concerns.

"We have moved 9 Voyages, our series about the legendary voyages of the Sea Snake, over from live action to animation, a move I support fully," Martin posted at the time.

"Budgetary constraints would likely have made a live action version prohibitively expensive, what with half the show taking place at sea, and the necessity of creating a different port every week, from Driftmark to Lys to the Basilisk Isles to Volantis to Qarth to… well, on and on and on. There's a whole world out there. And we have a lot better chance of showing it all with animation."

For more coverage of Westeros, read our spoiler-free A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Season 1 review, how they made Ser Arlyn of Pennytree’s formidable prosthetic, and discover why GoT actress Sophie Turner can’t even listen to the theme song now without it triggering anxiety for her.

The Lenovo Legion Pro 5 Gaming Laptop with OLED Display and RTX 5070 GPU Drops to $1,377

30 janvier 2026 à 23:00

Lenovo's weekend sale just dropped a great deal on an affordable yet powerful gaming laptop. Through February 1, you can get a Lenovo Legion Pro 5 Gen 10 gaming laptop, equipped with a 16" OLED display and RTX 5070 GPU, for just $1,376.99 after you apply coupon code "LEGIONPOWER26" (may be automatically applied). That's over $500 in savings and an excellent deal considering the build quality of Legion Pro laptops.

Lenovo Legion Pro 5 RTX 5070 Gaming Laptop for $1,377

The Legion Pro boasts solid build quality, featuring an aluminum top lid and a sturdy plastic bottom chassis. The gorgeous 16" OLED display sports a 2.5K 189ppi resolution, 165Hz refresh rate, HDR 1000 True Black certification, and 100% DCI-P3 color space. This new 2025 model has also been updated with the Wi-Fi 7 standard. Connectivity options include two USB-C 10Gbps ports with DisplayPort 2.1 support (one with 100W of Power Delivery), RJ45 ethernet, and HDMI 2.1.

The rest of the specs include an AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX CPU, RTX 5070 GPU, 32GB of DDR5-5600MHz RAM and a 2TB SSD. The AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX has a max turbo frequency of 5.4GHz with 16 total cores. This is an excellent processor for both gaming and multi-core tasking.

The GeForce RTX 5070 will run most games smoothly

The RTX 5070 is a full powered (unthrottled) mobile model with 115W TGP that performs about 5%-10% better than the RTX 4070 that it replaces. It also supports DLSS 4.5 and multi-frame generation, which widens the performance gap in games that support it. This laptop will able to play most games smoothly even on the enhanced 2.5K resolution, although extremely high demand games like Cyberpunk 2077 will require some graphics settings adjustment to get there.

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

‘Mama. I Thought We Had Time.’ – Macaulay Culkin Joins Hollywood in Remembering Catherine O’Hara

30 janvier 2026 à 22:42

Hollywood stars and fans alike have come together to share fond memories and moments from across Catherine O’Hara’s career following her passing earlier today.

The Home Alone and Beetlejuice star’s manager confirmed with Variety that she died in her Los Angeles home at 71 following “a brief illness.” It’s news that’s shocked the movie and TV world, prompting responses from co-workers, audience members, friends, and more as they remember a comedy icon and acting legend.

Macaulay Culkin, who famously played the son of O’Hara’s Kate McCallister in two Home Alone movies, was one of the first to share a touching tribute. Culkin was just 10 years old when the first film premiered in 1990.

“Mama,” he wrote. “I thought we had time.

“I wanted more. I wanted to sit in a chair next to you. I heard you. But I had so much more to say. I love you.”

He signs off, “I’ll see you later.”

O’Hara may be best known for her part in Home Alone, but her career as an actress stretches far beyond those films. In addition to Beetlejuice and its 2024 sequel, the star provided her voice talents for The Nightmare Before Christmas as Sally, while also working on films throughout the 2000s, such as Best in Show, A Series of Unfortunate Events, Penelope, Monster House, and The Wool Cap. The mid-2010s saw her lean harder into TV appearances, with shows like Modern Family and her role as Moira Rose in Schitt’s Creek under her belt. Recent television projects featuring O’Hara include The Studio and Season 2 of The Last of Us.

“Oh, genius to be near you,” her The Last of Us co-star, Pedro Pascal, wrote today. “Eternally grateful. There is less light in my world, this lucky world that had you, will keep you, always. Always.”

Another star who posted their condolences online was The Studio mastermind Seth Rogen. He shared his first time meeting O'Hara, recalling that he told her "she was the funniest person I'd ever had the pleasure of watching on screen."

"Home Alone was the movie that made me want to make movies," he added. "Getting to work with her was a true honour. She was hysterical, kind, intuitive, generous… she made me want to make our show good enough to be worthy of her presence in it. This is just devastating. We’re all lucky we got to live in a world with her in it."

Beetlejuice lead Michael Keaton, Frozen’s Josh Gad, The Studio’s Ike Barinholtz, Better Call Saul’s Michael McKean, and director Ron Howard are just a few of the other names who have taken to social media to talk about O’Hara and her impact on their lives. You can see just some of these message, as well as posts from fans, below.

“I don’t understand what I’m seeing. I can’t bring myself to believe she is gone,” Gad said. “Why is the world such a heart breaking place right now? I truly cannot process how to say goodbye to someone so full of life who seemed to just be hitting her prime. Goodbye legend."

Gad continued: "Thank you for making us laugh until we hurt… which is why right now we are all hurting so damned much knowing we will never again get those laughs. RIP. My love and deepest condolences go out to her entire family.”

I’m so devastated to hear about the sad passing of Catherine O’Hara 💔 There isn’t a day that goes by where I don’t reference this iconic wine commercial she done as Moira Rose in Schitts Creek.
Rest in peace to a once in a lifetime icon💔

pic.twitter.com/KyyQHnz8Gt

— ⋆⭒˚ᶠᵃⁿ she thinks her piss is wine ⋆⭒˚ (@grxndesenigma) January 30, 2026

Catherine O’Hara — Sally’s song
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) pic.twitter.com/xAJc3Lj1e1

— Horror🪦Collective (@THEH0RRORKID) January 30, 2026

Heartbroken doesn’t even begin to cover it.

Catherine O’Hara was one of a kind. A rare light in this world and her passing hits with a weight I can’t fully put into words.

She wasn’t just a legendary artist,
actor and comedian. She was an ambassador for Canada in the truest… pic.twitter.com/06jGk7OyCP

— Michael Bublé (@MichaelBuble) January 30, 2026

Only one Catherine O'Hara, and now none. Heartbreaking.

— Michael McKean (@MJMcKean) January 30, 2026

This is shattering news. What a wonderful person, artist and collaborator. I was lucky enough to direct, produce and act in projects with her and she was simply growing more brilliant with each year. My heart goes out to Bo & family. #RIPCatherineO’Hara https://t.co/7pWcpYARai

— Ron Howard (@RealRonHoward) January 30, 2026

Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images.

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).

Harry Potter Series Release Window Is Still Early 2027, HBO CEO Affirms

30 janvier 2026 à 22:40

The upcoming HBO TV adaptation of the Harry Potter books still has something shaped like a release window, with HBO CEO Casey Bloys affirming that it will arrive in early 2027.

"Well, we’ve been saying 2027," Bloys said in an interview with Deadline when asked if HBO had narrowed the release window. "I would say, to narrow it down to some extent, early 2027. And now you’re going to ask, does that mean January, February, March, April, that we’re not ready to say. I’ll say early 2027."

We first heard about an early 2027 release window for Harry Potter way back in 2024, but given how uncertain it sounded then, this affirmation from Bloys helps firm things up a bit.

That was the only question and comment on the Harry Potter series from the interview. But we do know quite a bit of other information about the upcoming show, including much of its cast. We know that the main trio of heroes; Harry, Ron, and Hermione, will be played by Dominic McLaughlin, Alastair Stout, and Arabella Stanton, respectively. John Lithgow will portray Albus Dumbledore, Paapa Essidu joins as Severus Snape and Katherine Parkinson will be Molly Weasley. Sherlock actress Louise Brealey will be the series' Quidditch teacher Madam Rolanda Hooch, Game of Thrones' Anton Lesser is Garrick Ollivander, Bertie Carvel will play Cornelius Fudge, and Bel Powley and Daniel Rigby will portray the Dursleys, Petunia and Vernon. Nick Frost is Rubeus Hagrid, who we got a first look at in costume last July, Janet McTeer is Minerva McGonagall, Luke Thallon will be Quirinus Qirrell, and Paul Whitehouse is Argus Filch.

We've also seen some early set photos from the London Zoo and caught a glimpse of Lithgow in costume, and we just recently learned that Hans Zimmer will score the series.

Blogroll image credit: Aidan Monaghan/HBO

The Best Budget Gaming Mouse to Buy in 2026

30 janvier 2026 à 22:30

Not every good gaming mouse costs more than $100. There are plenty of perfectly capable options that you can find for an absolute steal, like our favorite budget gaming mouse, the SteelSeries Rival 3 Gen 2, with its reliable performance and durable build for under $50. Here are five of the best budget gaming mice money can buy right now.

TL;DR – These Are the Best Budget Gaming Mice:

These mice all nail the basics, delivering accurate tracking, a comfortable grip, dependable controls, and a reliable connection. You may miss out on features like saving profiles, RGB lighting, or rechargeable batteries, but those are hardly a sacrifice considering the savings. Instead, you can put that extra dough toward other peripherals like a nice gaming keyboard or headset.

1. SteelSeries Rival 3 Gen 2

Best Budget Gaming Mouse

The wired version of the SteelSeries Rival 3 Gen 2 is our budget King: For less than $50 you get a fast, accurate mouse that stands up to more expensive devices in multiplayer matches. As we explain in our review, it's well-built, its clicks are bouncy, its tasteful RGB lighting is fully customizable, and while we wouldn't recommend it in palm grip it's comfortable for both claw and fingertip grippers. The Gen 2 is a step up on the original, adding slicker feet and a cord that's harder to tangle.

The wireless version performs just as well: its connection is stable in both Bluetooth and 2.4GHz modes and its sensor is slightly more powerful than the wired version, tracking your movements precisely. If you pop two AAA batteries in you can get a whopping 450 hours of battery life on Bluetooth, falling to a still-respectable 100 hours on 2.4G Ghz and a 1,000Hz polling rate. For casual single-player games, you can drop the polling rate to extend its life.

The big drawback of the wireless version is its weight: more than 100g with two AAA batteries, or around 95g with one. For those used to lighter mice, it might feel clunky. It's also more expensive and lacks RGB. For those reasons, the wired version is the one we'd recommend for most people.

2. Logitech G305 Lightspeed

Best Budget Wireless Gaming Mouse

If you’re on the hunt for a cheap yet reliable wireless gaming mouse, our testing of the Logitech G305 Lightspeed has proven it's the best option in that category. It just can’t be beat when it comes to performance versus price. For around $40, it’ll connect to your gaming PC or gaming laptop using a 2.4GHz wireless dongle. Even though it’s wireless, the Lightspeed tech ensures an ultrafast 1ms response time. Battery life shouldn’t be a concern either with it managing 250 hours of continuous play before you need to change the single AA battery.

The Logitech G305 Lightspeed comes packing a HERO optical sensor with an impressive 12,000 DPI sensitivity, 400 IPS precision, and up to 40G of acceleration. That means this mouse can track your speediest movements with incredible accuracy, giving you a leg up in FPS games. The six programmable buttons also mean you can customize the mouse to games or activities you’re performing, and t’s also super durable and compact.

3. Razer DeathAdder V3

Best Budget Ergonomic Gaming Mouse

The Razer DeathAdder V3's ergonomic design and tall dome shape, which provides extra support for resting your palm, is wildly comfortable. However, the bulkier build might not be the best for smaller hands. At least the matte finish and special finger ledge make this mouse suitable for various grip styles. All the buttons are easy to reach, while the low 59g weight and PTFE skates allow it to move at high speeds.

The Razer DeathAdder V3 is comfortable, but it also has the performance chops you want. The Focus Pro 30K Sensor is capable of some accurate, fast tracking and can handle accelerations up to 70G and speeds up to 750 inches per second; it’s probably overkill for most. An 8,000Hz polling rate means a quick response time and the optical switches are super dependable. You can also store up to five profiles on the mouse, so you can adjust the six programmable buttons to the perfect settings for all your favorite games.

4. Roccat Burst Pro

Best Ultra-Cheap Budget Mouse

You don't expect much mouse for $20/£15. But the Roccat Burst Core – the cheaper version of the excellent Roccat Burst Pro – is deceptively capable.

It is lightweight and comfortable, with a crowd-pleasing shape that fits hands of most sizes and grips. Its sensor won't win awards but it feels snappy, and its two thumb buttons are perfectly positioned. You even get customizable RGB in the scroll wheel.

At this price, compromise is inevitable. The left and right clicks feel and sound rattly, the cord never lies perfectly straight and, when I first took it out of the box, one the two feet on the bottom actually fell off.

But the clicks, while mushy, are reliable. They've never failed to register and I can spam them with no problems. And after I hastily stuck the mouse foot back on and whispered a prayer, it didn't fall off again and it glided fine across my mousepad. That feels like a low bar to clear – but then again, this is a low, low price.

5. Glorious Model O Eternal

Best Budget Ultra-Lightweight Gaming Mouse

It's obvious just from looking at the Glorious Model O Eternal where the weight has been trimmed: Its top and bottom are pocked with honeycomb holes, its bright RGB lighting leaking in to saturate the whole of its hump. It's a bold look, and not for everyone – but even if you don't like the design, you'll love how it feels in your hand.

At 55g, this is one of the lightest budget mice you can buy, and moving around your mousepad is effortless. The shell is surprisingly sturdy: despite the holes it feels solid in the hand and doesn't creak or bend under pressure. Just maybe don't eat cookies above it.

The side buttons are too small, the Glorious app is limited, and the cable feels cheap, but everything else is wonderful. The left and right clicks are crisp and reliable and the scroll wheel is one of the best I've ever used. Its sensor isn't top of the range but it's good enough for most gamers, and it'll serve you well whatever type of game you play. Best of all, you can regularly find it on offer for $30 or less. That's an absolute steal.

6. Keychron M3 Mini

Best Small Budget Gaming Mouse

The top-end version of the Keychron M3 Mini costs $70 flat, which stretches the definition of a budget mouse but it's often on discount bringing it closer to $60. At either price you're getting a lot of wireless mouse for your money, with up to 8K polling rate and 30,000 DPI from its solid Pixart 3950 sensor. Battery life is impressive, too – it'll last well over 100 hours.

What I like most about the M3 Mini is its shape. This is a small, light mouse at 55g, but its hourglass shape will work even if you have larger hands. My hands are slightly bigger than average for a man and I found it comfortable in palm, claw, and fingertip grips, using it for extended sessions without feeling any strain.

The left and right clicks are a sore spot: as I wrote in my upcoming review, they can feel tinny and hollow if you press them in the wrong place. But I easily adapted my grip to make it work, and once I settled in I enjoyed using the M3 Mini in lots of different genres, from competitive FPS games to RPGs.

The cheapest version – which has a maximum 1,000Hz polling rate and a PixArt 3311 sensor – is decent at $40, but if you can spare the extra money I think it's worth getting one of the pricier variants, which have performance to match much higher-end gaming mice.

What to Look for in a Budget Gaming Mouse

When grabbing a budget gaming mouse, you’ll probably have to sacrifice a few features, whether that’s extra programmable buttons, a lower DPI sensitivity, or wireless functionality. One thing you should never settle for is subpar performance, and all of our picks are ready to game. But if you want to explore other options on your own, here's what to look for.

Comfort

To start, you want a comfortable mouse that feels great in hand. Some people grip with their fingertips, while others use a claw or palm grip, so the shape of the mouse is important. For left-handers, you’ll have a far more limited pool and often be stuck with ambidextrous options, but there are a good amount of ergonomic right-handed mice. Read both expert and user reviews (Reddit threads are excellent) to get a sense of how a mouse fits different people's hands, and measure your own hands so you know how it compares to the average.

Wired or wireless?

Next, you need to decide on wired versus wireless. These days, the performance differences between the two are negligible, though the price will increase to drop the wire. You’ll have to consider battery life and weight as well when going wireless.

Weight

Weight is a personal preference but as a general rule, a lighter mouse often feels quicker and more free, while a heavier option can add precision for some people.

DPI

The DPI of a mouse is important, and you want an option that lets you switch between sensitivities. If you want to cover your bases for all games, a setting between 400 to 3,600 should be good, and almost every gaming mouse – cheap or expensive – should cover that range.

Controls

Beyond that, you’ll want the typical basic controls such as side buttons and maybe a few more inputs that you can also assign macros to perform different functions. A dedicated DPI button comes in handy for those who want to switch from speedy movements to more precise ones, while those into MOBA and MMO games could use a few extra programmable buttons on the side of the mouse.

Other features like RGB lighting can be a cool addition but unnecessary when trying to save. Overall, you want a mouse that fits into your budget and works well with the games you play.

Best Budget Gaming Mouse FAQ

How to choose a budget gaming mouse

The first and most important thing about choosing the right mouse for you is its shape. Mice can be symmetrical or "ergonomic," where they curve to fit to the shape of your hand. Every mouse – including symmetrical ones – has a different profile, with curves and humps in different places, and different widths or lengths.

To that end, there are also three primary types of mouse grip: palm, fingertip, and claw. For the palm grip technique, where your whole palm is in contact with the base of the mouse, you'll want a mouse with a wider, taller base that can support your hand, as well as some level of pinky and ring finger support. Claw grippers and fingertip grippers, on the other hand, can look for a mouse that's relatively short and has a small footprint.

The best advice is to know your hand size and preferred grip style, and then read reviews of the mouse to get a sense of how it'll fit you. If you're unsure, pick a simpler shape rather than something with lots of curves and ridges.

Is it worth buying a cheap gaming mouse?

In this day and age, you really don't have to sacrifice a lot when you're trying to save a buck on a gaming mouse. Often what you get is a slightly worse sensor, slightly flimsier build quality, and a lower polling rate – although some mice on this list go up to 8,000Hz, and all of them are solidly built and perform well in-game. It all comes down to your budget.

How much should you spend on a budget gaming mouse?

Although some of the best gaming mice brands have a budget option these days that offer decent quality, that doesn't mean you should buy just any cheap option. Although there are sometimes discounts that drop the price of some good wired mice down near $20, you'll usually want to spend a little bit more to get something you won't be disappointed in. The best budget mice tend to cost anywhere between $30 and $60.

Should you buy a PC controller instead of a mouse?

Honestly, it's completely up to you and your preferences, but some games are more suited to controllers than mice (think platformers and third-person action games). For shooters and strategy games, you'll probably want a mouse.

Most PC games support the use of PC controllers, and it can be cheaper than buying both a mouse and keyboard. It's also worth noting that if you already have an Xbox or PS5 controller, you should be able to connect that to your PC via a Bluetooth adapter.

Additional contributions by Danielle Abraham, a tech freelance writer based in Los Angeles who spends her free time creating videos and geeking out over music history.

Google's Project Genie Seemingly Causes Some Investors to Lose Faith in Roblox, Unity and...GTA 6

30 janvier 2026 à 22:01

Just one day after the announcement of Genie, Google's generative AI-powered virtual world creator, a number of major video game companies are seeing their stock prices tumble, seemingly because some investors think you can just generate an entire video game with AI now.

Of course, that's not what Genie is. Genie essentially lets you create a virtual "world" by offering prompts to describe the environment, a main character, and first or third-person view. Once it's created, you can control the described character and wander around the world you've made.

And that's...kind of it? While you can walk around these virtual spaces with your keyboard, critically, there's nothing else you can really do. There are no game mechanics, there's no one to talk to, no goals, no scores or meaningful interactions. Additionally, each generation is limited to just 60 seconds. And while you could maybe argue that this is just the first step on a road to eventually getting AI to generate playable 3D video games, there's no real evidence yet that such a thing is possible, or that the games would be good or even coherent. The Verge, for instance, tried to basically copy Breath of the Wild using Genie, and while they got something that essentially looks identical, that's just it. It's not playable, the "Link" looks kind of frightening actually, and Genie had to copy something that already existed to make this. It didn't come up with this on its own.

But that hasn't really stopped a lot of investors from suddenly jumping off the video game train, a conclusion first posed by Investing.com and shared by others, including Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier. Perhaps the most notable decline is Take-Two Interactive, which reached a six-month low this morning and, while it rallied somewhat by the closing bell, still ended down 8%. Engine maker Unity is in a similar spot, dropping 24% today also to a six-month low. Roblox stock also cratered today by 13% by close today, though notably Roblox has been on a downward trend since November. Still, it's a six-month low for Roblox, too.

Not every gaming company is seeing a massive nosedive. Ubisoft is technically down 7% today, but with its stock down to just $1/share, any small movement in either direction will seem significant. The company has been in pretty dire straits for months, even years now, and its announcement of more layoffs, closures, and cancelations earlier this month already had stock even further in a downward spiral. EA stock hasn't changed much today at all, but that's understandable, given EA announced last fall that it was preparing to sell to an investor group headed up by the Saudi Arabian government and will soon exit the public trading market. Meanwhile, Nintendo stock, down just under 5% today at the time this piece was written, has been all over the place all month, following a steady downward trend since November.

The pattern I'm seeing here between Take-Two, Roblox, and Unity is a sudden distrust not in games as an idea, but rather concerns about "platforms". Unity is a game engine. People use it to make games. If Genie can also make games, who needs Unity? In Roblox's case, Roblox is a pure user-generated content (UGC) factory - something that would likely become obsolete quickly if Genie took over. And for Take-Two, the publisher is about to release Grand Theft Auto VI later this year (we hope), which would very likely be accompanied at launch or not long after with some new version of GTA Online. While the current GTA Online doesn't rely on UGC, there have been recent suspicions this new version might. Again, the thinking here is seemingly that if people can just make their own little games in Genie, why would they bother doing it in Roblox or GTA or Minecraft or Fortnite or Unreal or anywhere else (Microsoft, for its part is too big to see any stock impact from Genie today and Epic Games is not publicly traded).

Is selling shares of major game publishers going to pay off for these investors? I'm not a stock expert, but if nothing else, it doesn't seem to be like a good idea to bet against GTA 6 right now (though Take-Two's earnings are next week, so we'll see I guess). And while Genie doesn't seem up to the task of making a whole video game out of nothing, plenty of other studios are coming out on one side of the fence or the other on using generative AI of any kind in their work. It seems that one way or another, the folks betting big money on generative AI will reap whatever harvest of that investment there is sooner rather than later.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

The Popular AstroAI P10 5,000A Cordless Car Jump Starter Drops to Just $30

30 janvier 2026 à 22:00

A jump starter is an essential part of car's emergency kit, but you don't need to pay a premium for a cordless model that gets the job done reliably. Amazon is currently offering Amazon Prime members the AstroAI P10 12V 5,000A cordless car jump starter for just $30 after applying coupon code "B9SV8C26". AstroAI is a well known and reputable auto accessory retailer and its jump starters have amassed over 11,000 reviews on Amazon with a 4.6 star rating.

AstroAI P10 12V 5,000A Car Jump Starter for $30

The AstroAI S8 Pro is a 12V cordless car jump starter that can supply 5,000A of peak power. AstroAI states that it's capable of jump starting up to 10L gas or 8L diesel engines. The 10,000mAh battery will give you several jump starts before needing a recharge. Since the battery uses lithium (NMC) cells, it will retain most of its charge even after 24 months of non-use. The AstroAI S8 Pro can also double up as a portable power bank with a USB Type-A port, so you can use it to charge your iPhone or smartphone in a pinch.

The jump starter is relatively compact, weighs just over one pound, and stows away easily in your trunk or dash. It has a built in flashlight with three separate modes (flashlight, SOS, and strobe) for emergencies. It recharges quickly over UBS Type-C and a USB Type-A to USB Type-C cable is supplied in the package.

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

Just 4 Days After Launch, Highguard Gets 5v5 Limited Time Game Mode to Counter Those 3v3 Complaints

30 janvier 2026 à 21:57

Highguard developer Wildlight has announced a 5v5 limited time game mode available to all players starting today. It will run through the weekend.

The free-to-play PvP raid shooter launched this week and immediately met with a “mostly negative” user review rating on Steam, although that has improved in recent days to ‘mixed.’ Meanwhile, Steam concurrents have fallen after a peak of nearly 100,000, sparking questions about Highguard’s future.

Chief among the criticisms from players is that the size of the map feels too big and empty for a 3v3 competitive shooter. You’re able to summon a mount to get about faster (the mounts are one aspect of Highguard that players seem to universally like), but some thought a 4v4, 5v5, or even 3v3v3 mode would have been a better fit.

Now, just four days after launch, Highguard has a 5v5 mode, albiet for just a few days. Today’s update also introduces a brand new base called Soul Well. check out the patch notes below.

“Wardens can now experiment with this dark relic from a lost age, added to rotation in both 3v3 and 5v5,” Wildlight said. “As one of two major patches released during launch week, this update is emblematic of the Highguard team’s dedication to creating a ‘ready for live service’ game, resulting in immediate action. Just this week, the team has squashed hundreds of bugs, improved performance across the board: yesterday’s update, Patch 1.0.4 introduced a variety of bug fixes, new video settings, and highly-requested features.”

While the addition of 5v5 should go some way to countering that feeling of emptiness in Highguard, it doesn’t address complaints about the resource-gathering phase of each map, which involves what some are calling boring mining and loot farming. Through it all is a feeling that Highguard perhaps suffered from being the “one more thing” reveal at The Game Awards, where it might have better managed expectations in a slot earlier in the show. Wildlight staff have indicated they originally planned a true Apex Legends-style shadowdrop for Highguard, but The Game Awards chief Geoff Keighley asked the team about featuring it at the end of the show. Keighley has suffered a backlash of his own, with some feeling Highguard’ position in The Game Awards’ running order overly hyped the game.

You asked, we listened

All-new 5v5 limited time mode, playable now! ⚔️ pic.twitter.com/wBaFZUOCeZ

— Highguard | LIVE NOW! (@PlayHighguard) January 30, 2026

It’s a big weekend for the game, with Steam concurrents hovering around the 9,000 mark at the time of this article’s publication. Wildlight will be hoping 5v5 gives Highguard the jolt in the arm it clearly needs.

Highguard update January 30, 2026 patch notes:

For our first weekend, we’re excited to drop an experimental 5v5 Raid playlist, a new Base and a bunch of performance improvements for 3v3, along with some more options in the Settings menus for people to customize their game.

5v5 Raid Mode - Experimental Playlist

We heard the feedback!

For the weekend, we are experimenting with a 5v5 Raid Mode.

This is a separate playlist and not meant to replace 3’s.

3v3 Raids are still there for people who enjoy it!

The lobby has been updated to allow for parties of 5 while the mode is live. Grab 4 friends and jump into some hectic raids!

A few small tweaks for this mode:

  • Raids are now 10 lives instead of 6
  • Respawns are slightly longer during raids to allow generators to be planted/defused

Dev note: As most of you know, we are working on optimizations across the game. Many are in this patch and 3v3 should see good improvements! But… adding 4 more players to the game is not going to improve performance, right? Please keep that in mind as you try 5v5!

Dev note 2: Firing Range does not support 5v5 at this time, so the Play button will be grayed out if your party is over 3.

New Base - Soul Well

Soul Well is a dark relic from a lost age. The Iron Vigil has now prepared this base construct for use in the field where the dead still speak.

This new base will be added to the rotation in all modes.

Optimizations

This patch contains several optimizations that touch on animation performance, projectiles, draw submission times, and other gameplay systems. These optimizations benefit console and PC, but every PC is different, so the exact speedup to overall framerate is dependent on GPU, CPU, and other factors.

Quality of Life

Enabled these visual settings on PC and consoles

  • Motion blur toggle for PC and consoles
  • Anisotropic materials toggle for consoles (PC has this already)

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.

Some Magic: the Gathering Players Attending Lorwyn Eclipsed Pre-release Events Got an Unwanted Surprise: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

30 janvier 2026 à 21:43

Two weeks ago, I happily attended my first-ever pre-release event for a new Magic: the Gathering set. This was for Lorwyn Eclipsed, which veteran players inform me is a long-awaited return to the fantasy stylings of Magic's Lorwyn plane after nearly 20 years. As you can imagine, there were a lot of long-time Magic fans who were very excited about this release, but in the minutes before my pre-release event began, I kept overhearing a tone of anxiety in the conversations around me.

The cause of the anxiety? Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

If you've never been to a pre-release event, what happens is this: you're given a nice little box that contains several booster packs, which you will use to build a deck for the event and play some matches with other attendees. The boxes also tend to contain other goodies, which in the case of Lorwyn Eclipsed involved a deck box, a die, and a single foil card from the set. The foil you get is random, but it's supposed to come from the set you're there to play. And when I opened my box, that's what I encountered. A nice little foil of Shadow Urchin.

But the reason for the anxiety at the event was because word had gotten around that some people were not receiving Lorwyn cards as their foil promo card. Instead, a number of social media posts had been circulating showing players with six Lorwyn Eclipsed booster packs and one foil card from the upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles set.

Now, this is quite the mix-up! Not only is TMNT, uh, very different from Lorwyn, but the TMNT set isn't even supposed to be out yet. It's coming on March 6, just under two months from the date this was happening. So not only was this causing an issue for Lorwyn fans, but TMNT fans excited for the upcoming set were now getting previously unrevealed cards shown off via random social media posts.

This situation also complicated the event itself: normally, a TMNT card would not be legal in a Lorwyn Eclipsed pre-release deck. Fortunately, Wizards of the Coast issued a statement pretty quickly about the situation, saying that stores should replace the TMNT promo cards where possible with Lorwyn cards. Where not possible, players would be allowed to play with the TMNT cards. That... sort of helps, but the fact is that Lorwyn Eclipsed cards are part of a set that's meant to be played together, with cards and mechanics that coordinate with one another to create a balanced game. A single TMNT card is more likely than not going to struggle to fit into decks like that. What's more, shops would have to break into unsold pre-release boxes to take out the replacement foil cards, which essentially just eats through inventory for no reason.

Of course, you could argue, it's just one card! Who cares! And that's fair. But another sentiment I heard both online and at the event I attended was that the turtle invasion felt like a slap in the face to veteran Magic players. Not only has the wait to return to Lorwyn been long, but some long-time players have grown frustrated at how many collaborations with outside IP (dubbed "Universes Beyond") Magic has been doing lately. Wizards has been doing these crossovers since 2020, though at the time Universes Beyond cards weren't planned to be made legal in the Standard format and many of the ones that followed were just reskins, making them fairly easy to put up with if you didn't want to see Transformers or Doctor Who in your Magic game.

But starting last year with Final Fantasy, that changed. The wildly popular Final Fantasy set was dubbed Standard-legal, and this year, Magic is getting more Universes Beyond sets than ever before: TMNT in March, Marvel in June, The Hobbit in August, and Star Trek in November. That's four standard sets - more than Wizards is releasing of non-Universes Beyond sets, of which we are only getting three: Lorwyn Eclipsed, Secrets of Strixhaven, and Reality Fracture. This is a lot to keep up with both mentally and financially, and while you could argue there's no pressure to "keep up," there is if you play the game's Standard format, which always revolves around the most recently-released sets.

It's also worth noting that groups of fans aren't the only ones who are annoyed here. Recently, shareholders of Wizards' parent company, Hasbro, filed a lawsuit against it, alleging that it was overprinting sets of cards, thereby devaluing ones that already existed. In the suit, shareholders also claimed Hasbro had previously done some fairly manipulative things with Magic card sales to cover up shortfalls elsewhere in the company. Regardless of whether or not anything comes of the lawsuit, there are some pretty hefty accusations in the complaint that would understandably sow further distrust among those who already felt Magic was overplaying its hand.

So, back to the pre-release event, you can imagine perhaps being a long-time Magic fan, excited for the return of Lorwyn, ready to play some games involving elves and fairies and merfolk, maybe rubbed the wrong way a bit by the sheer volume of Universes Beyond but trying not to let it bother them, only to open their pre-release pack and find "Michelangelo, Weirdness to 11" in shiny foil. Doesn't feel great. Heck, I've only been playing a year, and I breathed a sigh of relief when my pre-release pack (and, in fact, my entire card shop) was decidedly turtle-free.

To their credit, Wizards has acknowledged fan frustrations and is trying to make good. In a lengthy blog post written by communications director Blake Rasmussen, he apologized for the "shell shock" of seeing a turtle in a Lorwyn box. "We wouldn't blame you if you found it cool, but maybe a bit rude, that Lorwyn Eclipsed had to share the spotlight with an upcoming set," the post reads.

In response, Wizards went ahead and updated its image gallery to include official art of all rares and mythic rares from the main set. "They're already out there if you know where to look, and we'd rather you have them all in one official place," the post reads. "It's ready for you now if you want to take a look."

Rasmussen also announced plans for some sort of make-good event for the stores that had to deal with turtles at the event, though they weren't clear as to what that would look like just yet. Here's what he said:

"Then, to keep the Lorwyn Eclipsed party going, we're going to do—something. We're playing catch up a bit and we wanted to get this article out sooner rather than later, but we're assessing how widespread the issue was and working on some kind of cool, back-end, Lorwyn Eclipsed-related thing we can do for affected stores because we're really proud of this set and we want to make sure it gets its time in the sun. We're going to figure said thing out and get back to you all."

The response to this from the community has been mixed. A lot of people weren't mad about the turtles to begin with. Universes Beyond, some argue, is a great way to get new players into the hobby who might not have otherwise noticed Magic before. Some others who were annoyed with the turtles appear to have been pacified by Wizards' statement and response. Others still aren't happy, believing this is a symptom of a larger problem at Wizards (too much emphasis on Universes Beyond) and an overall lack of care.

We won't really know where the community writ large's heart lies on the broader issues until later this year, when the Magic card deluge has fully arrived and we have a better idea of whether or not people are actually buying all these dang sets. As for Lorwyn Eclipsed, hopefully whatever Wizards is plotting to help assuage the affected stores is appropriately celebratory of Lorwyn, which frankly is a pretty cool setting. I ended up having a grand time at my pre-release event, and will probably attend future ones as a result, provided there are no horror stories of Borg showing up in Strixhaven.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.

Huntdown: Overtime Is a Goofy, Retro, and Delightfully Violent Roguelike | IGN Game Preview

30 janvier 2026 à 15:00

I confess that I had never heard of 2020’s pixelated arcade shooter Huntdown, but after playing (and replaying) through the demo for its upcoming prequel, Huntdown: Overtime, I immediately went back and did so. That’s because I was so completely hooked by the hour or so of roguelike action that I was fiending for more. Playing the original was also a lot of fun, but this followup seeks to improve in just about every way, making it a bit hard to go back. The cheeky retro ‘80’s tone appeals to my thirst for nonsense, the run-and-gun sidescrolling action channels the likes of Contra or Metal Slug, and the roguelike system of upgrades and repeated failure against daunting odds made it extremely hard to put down. I went from this not being on my radar at all, to eagerly anticipating when it comes to Steam Early Access later this year, making this an early contender for my most anticipated indie game of 2026.

You can infer almost everything you need to know about Huntdown: Overtime’s absurd 80s pulp action vibe by its title alone. Taking place in the dystopian, crime-ridden city of Detroit in 2084, you play a cybernetic rogue robocop who battles against flamboyant street gangs like something out of every VHS action movie you’ve ever seen. You’ll go toe-to-toe against the likes of a shirtless bouncer who pummels you with his fists and climbs around on the ceiling like a monkey, to a six-fingered rockstar called Sammy Sixfingers who tries to kill you with an electric guitar while performing a guitar solo in front of a live audience. The whole thing is just incredibly over the top in the right kind of way, making it very easy to replay each section as you try and fail to get through levels in typical roguelike fashion.

It certainly helps that even when you’re replaying through the same series of levels, things are always a little different. For one, the bosses and levels you end up with on each run have a bit of randomness to them in terms of which you’ll get and in what order, which is aided by the fact that you’re given two routes to choose from if you’d like to avoid one you’ve seen more of than you’d like. The levels themselves seem to be procedurally generated as well, and kept me on my toes with slightly different layouts and enemies never appearing in the same order. This procedural component isn’t anything we haven’t seen before, and the level layouts and enemies you’ll find are similar enough playthrough-to-playthrough that you’ll figure out the patterns pretty quick and run out of things to be surprised by (at least in the short section I played).

It actually sort of reminded me of Hotline Miami, reimagined from a sidescrolling perspective.

Combat is also not anything new, modeled after the likes of Contra or Mega Man, where you’re running and jumping through 2D levels blasting everytc hing in sight as you avoid incoming bullets and environmental hazards. That said, though it doesn’t have many new tricks, the formula it apes is extremely polished here, even in this pre-release state. While initially I was dying a lot and felt destined to be outmaneuvered by the numerous gangsters coming after me, it took less than an hour before I was sliding around, flying through the air, and shooting my way through entire sections without taking a single hit. That’s the kind of rewarding mastery I look for in games like this. It actually sort of reminded me of Hotline Miami, reimagined from a sidescrolling perspective, because although you can take more than one hit, there’s something very pleasantly familiar about the crisp gunplay and melee combat, especially when you hit someone with a baseball bat and see their pink, pixelated giblets go soaring across the screen.

The highlight of each run is when you come into contact with the larger-than-life bosses that can be found in each level. Some of these appear in regular sidescrolling levels, whe re maybe someone named Frankie Starsimmon Sr. will attack you with a big ol’ shotgun and leave you with the option to damage her before taking her alive, or just killing her for a lesser bounty. The ability to take bounties alive for an added bonus to your reward is a particularly nice touch that I’m glad to see they added after the original. But things get especially crazy during the boss fights where you go up against someone with a dedicated boss health bar. The main fight in the demo was against a rockstar who used his stage’s pyrotechnics to try and burn you alive, and always had his stagehand nearby to hand him a new electric guitar after he lost the last one trying to hurl it through the back of your head. These fights can be really challenging, as roguelikes are wont to do, and nine times out of ten when I failed a run it was the fault of one of these deadly weirdos. But they were also some of my favorite moments, and made gearing up for the next big fight that much more exciting.

The retreaded ground you’ll encounter as part of the roguelike formula feels especially easy to get through because of the steady stream of unlockables, upgrades, and buildcrafting options that come with each new playthrough. In one playthrough, for example, you might decide to forgo guns for a pure melee weapon build, grabbing perks and upgrades that enhance your close-range combat skills, while in another you might get your hands on a new plasma rifle you just unlocked and blast your way through rows of thugs with ease. Like many of its genre peers, the joy is in having a build come together perfectly so you can bring it to bear against the string of challenging bosses that have been sending you back to the beginning again and again.

The impressive thing about Huntdown: Overtime is that, at least in the full region I played during the demo, I never started a new run without a ton of new stuff to level up and try out. Sometimes that meant I’d unlock a new weapon that could then be found and powered up during runs, while other times it meant buying a certain permanent upgrade that made my healing items more potent, made me move faster, or some other useful boon to give me an edge on my next run. The pace of unlocks and progression felt perfectly balanced so I never felt like I’d hit a wall or had nothing interesting and new to bring into battle next time. It was so easy to immediately go from one run to the next, that even though I originally sat down for a 20-minute session, I ended up playing until I beat every boss in the demo in a single sitting, completely unable to tear myself away when I was sure the next playthrough would bring me victory. And even after I had my first successful run, I then was returned to base to find even more stuff had unlocked that I just had to try, and found myself immediately going straight into my next run just to try out some new stuff. I can’t remember the last time I found myself so instantly hooked!

Even though I originally sat down for a 20-minute session, I ended up playing until I beat every boss in the demo in a single sitting, completely unable to tear myself away.

One thing that piqued my interest after I went back to play the original Huntdown is the fact that this prequel only has one playable character versus the numerous agents you could take on the role of in the first game. While it feels weird to go backwards with the number of playable characters, Overtime’s demo was so polished and finely tuned that I honestly didn’t feel like I was missing much. It seems to be their focusing in on one specific playstyle and trying to make that work extremely well vs. the buffet-style protagonists, each with their own bag of tricks, that was in the first Huntdown.

I wasn’t expecting to end up so completely won over by such a short glimpse into Huntdown: Overtime, especially after seeing its dorky story and retro art style, but you can count me among the believers. For any roguelike fans out there, this is absolutely one to watch.

❌