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Robert Duvall Dies: The Godfather and To Kill a Mockingbird Actor Was 95

Legendary film and TV star Robert Duvall has died at 95.

The actor’s wife, Luciana Duvall, confirmed the news with a post on his official Facebook account. She states he passed “peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort” yesterday, February 15.

Duvall has remained one of the most recognizable faces in Hollywood since the ‘60s. One of his earliest, most memorable roles was Boo Radley in the beloved 1962 film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird. The years that followed saw him appear in television shows like The Untouchables, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, The Fugitive, and many more. It wasn’t until the ‘70s that he became a more familiar name amongst the average movie fan, with movies like M*A*S*H and The Godfather.

In addition to showing up for The Godfather Part 2, Duvall has starred in classic films like Tender Mercies, Network, Apocalypse Now, and The Apostle. He also starred opposite Tommy Lee Jones in the acclaimed miniseries Lonesome Dove. More recently, movie fans could have caught him in projects like 2009’s Crazy Heart, 2018’s Widows, or 2022’s Hustle. With a Best Actor Oscar win for his role in Tender Mercies, as well as directing and producing credits on a number of movies through the decades, his impact on entertainment is difficult to overstate.

“To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller,” Luciana Duvall said in her message. “To me, he was simply everything. His passion for his craft was matched only by his deep love for characters, a great meal, and holding court. For each of his many roles, Bob gave everything to his characters and to the truth of the human spirit they represented. In doing so, he leaves something lasting and unforgettable to us all. Thank you for the years of support you showed Bob and for giving us this time and privacy to celebrate the memories he leaves behind.”

No formal service will be held following Duvall’s passing, according to a statement sent by his representative (via ABC). The actor’s family has a request for those who wish to honor his memory.

“Instead, the family encourages those who wish to honor his memory to do so in a way that reflects the life he lived by watching a great film, telling a good story around a table with friends, or taking a drive in the countryside to appreciate the world's beauty,” the statement adds.

Photo by Nomi Ellenson/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).

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The Massive 77" Samsung S90 4K QD-OLED TV Drops Below $1,500 for Presidents Day

Instead of paying for expensive sports tickets and fighting the crowds, why not put that money into a big, gorgeous TV set so you can watch from the comfort of your home. Woot - which is owned by Amazon - just kicked off the best high-end big-screen TV deal I've seen for Presidents Day.

Woot is currently offering the massive 77" Samsung S90D 4K OLED Smart TV for just $1,497.99. Shipping costs just $5, although if you're a Amazon Prime member then the fee is waived. This matches a similar deal I saw during Black Friday. Note that this is a brand new TV with a 1 year Samsung warranty.

77" Samsung S90D 4K OLED TV for $1,497.99

OLED TVs feature best-in-class image quality thanks to their near-infinite black level, near-infinite contrast ratio, and near-instantaneous response time. For most use cases, there isn't a better TV that you can get for the same price.

The S90D is Samsung's 2024 S90 series TV. This is a higher end model that's equipped with a quantum dot (QD) OLED panel, which is brighter and boasts a wider color gamut than traditional W-OLED panels like Samsung's lower end S85 series. It is a slightly older model than the current generation Samsung S90F that was released in 2025, but that TV currently costs $500 more and image quality is practically identical. It's comparable to LG's C-series OLED TVs.

OLED qualities aside, the Samsung S90D also has all the features you'd want in a gaming TV. It has a native 120Hz panel that can be pushed to as high as 144Hz as well as four total HDMI 2.1 ports for running 4K at 120Hz on a PS5 or Xbox Series X gaming console. The S90D also supports variable refresh rate and auto low latency mode

Is this a good TV for the Nintendo Switch 2?

Despite being a current generation console, the Nintendo Switch 2 has lax TV requirements compared to the PS5 or Xbox Series X. When the Switch is connected to its dock and a television, it is only capable of outputting a 4K resolution signal at up to 60 frames per second. It can go up to 120fps if the resolution drops to 1080p, but the data rate required for both these options is pretty much the same. Oddly, it doesn’t even get VRR when docked – that’s reserved for handheld mode only. The Switch 2 console, however, will still benefit greatly from the Samsung's gorgeous OLED panel.

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

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Best Buy’s Presidents Day Sale Is Live With Some Solid Tech and Gaming Deals

The Best Buy has launched its annual store-wide mega sale for Presidents Day Sale. You can check out the whole sale here, or read on to see our picks for the best deals available right now. Pretty much every item category Best Buy sells has gotten the discount treatment, from TVs and video games to PC gaming and Apple products.

Let’s take a look.

Top Deals in Best Buy’s Presidents Day Sale

You can scroll through the catalog above to get a quick look at the items we suggest. If you're intereseted in partuclar product categories, keep on reading.

4K TVs

If your TV could use an upgrade, there are plenty to choose from in the sale. A big variety of sizes and price points have gotten discounts, from manufacturers like Samsung, LG, Insignia, and more.

Gaming Computers

As Sony and Microsoft continue to release their games on PC, PC gaming is looking more and more like the platform of the future. While gaming PC parts are getting more expensive thanks to the demands of AI centers, some terrific pre-built machines and gaming laptops can still be found at discount. If I were in the market, I’d buy sooner than later, because it doesn’t look like prices are going to stop going up anytime soon. For more powerful gaming rigs, check out the Alienware Presidents Day sale.

Video Games

A smattering of new console games are on sale right now, including Ubisoft PS5 games like Star Wars Outlaws and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora - From the Ashes Edition. A bunch of accessories are also on sale, including everything from controllers and headsets to Switch 2 cases and screen protectors.

Apple Products

Famously, Apple almost never offers discounts on its products. Thankfully, those products are also available at other retailers that have no such qualms over dropping prices. Best Buy’s Presidents Day sale has discounts on every major category of Apple’s hardware, including MacBooks, iPads, Apple Watches, and even AirTags. Garb what you want before prices go back up.

For more general discounts, check out Amazon's Presidents Day sale. If you're in the market for a new gaming chair, Secretlab's sale is well worth a look as well.

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

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The iBuypower Presidents Day Sale Is Live, Save Up to $300 Off Ready-to-Ship Gaming PCs

iBuypower - one of the more popular and well known system builders on the market - has officially launched its Presidents Day Sale with a new coupon code "STARS" that offers up to $300 off in tiered savings on ready-to-ship and custom prebuilt gaming PCs. Unless you have a specific need, I highly recommend you go with one of iBuypower's ready-to-ship, or "RDY", gaming PC; they're usually less expensive and ship out more quickly than your standard system.

Apply coupon code "STARS" in cart to save:

  • $50 off over $999
  • $100 off over $1,499
  • $200 off over $2,499
  • $300 off over $3,499

The sale runs through this weekend and Presidents Day, and will expire at end of day on February 16. iBuypower offers free standard shipping on all configs, however can also get a slight discount by choosing a slower shipping service. All systems are covered by a three year labor and two year parts warranty. Below are the best deals sorted by GPU.

iBuypower Radeon RX 9070 XT Gaming PC for $1,899

The Element Pro is iBuypower's best prebuilt for 4K gaming priced under $2,000. It's equipped with an AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D CPU, AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT 16GB GPU, 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, and a 2TB SSD.

The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT is the only 2025 graphics card that we gave a 10/10 score. If you plan to game primarily on a 4K monitor, then this GPU is up to the task. Even though at MSRP it costs $150 less than the RTX 5070 Ti GPU, the 9070 XT can easily go head to head with it on several of the games we tested. By going with an AMD card, you do miss out on Nvidia's admittedly superior ray tracing performance, DLSS upscaling, and multi-frame gen, but you also save $400 compared to iBuypower's least expensive RTX 5070 Ti prebuilt.

iBuypower GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Gaming PC for $2,349

The best deal on an RTX 5070 Ti gaming PC at iBuypower also happens to be the coolest. The system is enclosed in a custom designed and officially licensed HYTE limited-edition Gundam-themed Y70 chassis with a built-in 14" 1100x3840 touchscreen display. The case alone sells for $500 on HYTE's website.

The system is equipped with an AMD Ryzen 9 9800X3D CPU, GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16GB GPU, 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, and a 2TB SSD. The AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D is one of the fastest gaming CPUs on the market, thanks to the 3D-V-Cache technology that's only found in AMD's X3D lineup. On Passmark, the 9800X3D has the second highest gaming score, trailing a mere 300 points behind the considerably pricier 9900X3D.

The RTX 5070 Ti offers the best bang for your buck amongst the new Nvidia Blackwell cards in terms of 4K gaming performance. It performs neck-and-neck with the previous generation RTX 4080 Super and pulls ahead in any game that supports multi-frame generation, especially with the recent DLSS 4.5 update. Since the RTX 5070 Ti GPU is non-existent as a standalone card, the only way to get one without paying a ridiculous markup is by getting a prebuilt computer.

iBuypower GeForce RTX 5070 Gaming PC for $1,749

The iBuypower Element is equipped with an AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D CPU, GeForce RTX 5070 12GB GPU, 32GB of DDR5-5600MHz RAM, and a 2TB SSD. The 7800X3D might be a generation older, but it's still considered one of the best gaming CPUs you can get (it's within 1%-5% of the 9800X3D in gaming performance).

This system is a good fit for gamers who run QHD (2560x1440) or WQHD (3440x1440) monitors. The RTX 5070 performs a bit better than the RTX 4070 Super but with the added benefit of newer GDDR7 RAM and multi-frame generation. The 5070 is a superb card for 1080p or 1440p gaming, but it will also play most games just fine in 4K, especially if you're running older or less demanding games. I myself gamed on an RTX 3080 (which is inferior to the 5070) on a 4K monitor for years without any complaints until I finally upgraded last year.

iBuypower GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Gaming PC for $1,579

For comfortable 1080p gaming without overspending, the RTX 5060 Ti is the card you want. This system is equipped with an AMD Ryzen 7 9700X CPU, GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB GPU, 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, and a 1TB SSD.

RTX 5060 Ti GPUs comes in two variants: an excellent 16GB model and a ridiculously lame 8GB model. Fortunately, this system is equipped with the 16GB model. The RTX 5060 Ti (16GB) is a great GPU for 1080p gaming. It outperforms the RTX 4060 Ti by about 20% (greater if the game supports DLSS 4.5). The 16GB of VRAM also allows this GPU to hold its own in 1440p gaming. Check out our RTX 5060 Ti review for more details.

iBuypower GeForce RTX 5080 Gaming PC for $2,499

If you're looking for a system that will run 4K games for at least a few years (and probably more) down the road, then the RTX 5080 is a good option for you. With this card, you can very easily skip the next generation of Nvidia GPUs. This system includes an Intel Core i9-14900KF CPU, RTX 5080 16GB CPU, 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz RAM, and a 2TB SSD.

The RTX 5080 is a powerhouse. It's one of the fastest cards on the market, bested only by the $2,000 RTX 5090 and the discontinued $1,600 RTX 4090. This is a phenomenal card for playing the latest, most demanding games in 4K resolution at high settings and ray tracing enabled. Check out our GeForce RTX 5080 review for our hands-on impressions.

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

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Save $1,400 Off the Alienware Area-51 Ryzen X3D Edition RTX 5090 Gaming PC for Presidents Day

If you're seeking chart-topping gaming performance, then Alienware's biggest and most powerful prebuilt should be high on your list. As part of a greater Dell Presidents Day Sale that started this week, the Alienware Area-51 AMD Ryzen X3D Edition RTX 5090 gaming PC has dropped in price from $5,650 down to $4,249.99 with free delivery. Prior to this sale, the lowest price I had seen for this exact configuration was $5,000.

Update: The price has dropped another $200 for Presidents Day.

Alienware Area-51 Ryzen Edition RTX 5090 Gaming PC

The Alienware Area-51 is Dell's flagship gaming PC. The product photos don't give it due justice; this is a big chassis that towers over the Aurora R16 model with superior build quality and a redesigned cooling system with even greater airflow. This is the only model that can be configured with the hot and power hungry GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card. The first wave of Area-51 systems featured Intel CPUs exclusively, with AMD X3D options only available since late November.

This $4,450 config is equipped with an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU, GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, 32GB of DDR5-6400MHz RAM, and a 1TB SSD. Additional system details include a 360mm all-in-one liquid cooling system for the CPU and a massive 1,500W 80Plus Platinum power supply that allows plenty of headroom for future upgrades.

AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D is the best gaming CPU for most people

...but you can also upgrade to the 9950X3D for a reasonable price

The AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D is considered to be one of the best gaming processors on the market and outperforms any Intel or AMD non-X3D chip in games thanks to AMD's 3D-V-Cache technology. It only has eight cores, but that makes no difference in gaming since most games can't utilize more than eight cores (if that) anyways. That's why its gaming performance is nearly identical to the pricier 9900X3d and 9950X3D.

Now if you regularly use your PC for non-gaming applications that actually do benefit from as many cores as possible, then you can upgrade to an AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D 16-core processor, which doubles the core count while offering similar gaming performance, for an additional $250. That's actually very reasonable as far as CPU upgrades go; the difference in MSRP between a 9950X3D and 9980X3D is $220, so you're only paying an extra $30 for the upgrade.

The RTX 5090 is the most powerful graphics card ever

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 has emerged as the most powerful consumer GPU on the market. Although with this generation Nvidia has prioritized software updates, AI features, and DLSS 4 technology to improve gameplay performance, the 5090 still boasts an impressive 25%-30% uplift over the RTX 4090 in hardware-based raster performance. If you want the absolute best performance for your gaming PC, there is literally no other option from any other brand.

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

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The Alienware Presidents Day Sale Is Live and I've Picked Out the Best Deals on Gaming PCs and Laptops

The Dell Presidents Day Sale has officially kicked off. Traditionally, this has been Dell's best sale during the early part of the year to score a big discount on both Alienware gaming PCs and laptops. Prices on prebuilts have risen in 2026 because of the increased demand for RAM and GPUs, so if you're looking to upgrade now, you don't want to miss this opportunity to get a new system without an egregious markup. All systems ship free and include a one year warranty.

Alienware Aurora R16 RTX 5080 Gaming PC for $2,130

Dell is currently offering an Alienware Aurora R16 RTX 5080 gaming PC for $2,179.99 with free delivery after a $650 instant discount. This customizable system is equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265F CPU, GeForce RTX 5080 GPU, 16GB of DDR5 RAM, and a 1TB SSD. It's cooled by a 240mm all-in-one liquid cooling system. The 1,000W power supply gives you headroom for upgrades down the road. If you're looking for a future-proof system, this RTX 5080 equipped PC should be powerful enough to set you up for 4K gaming for quite a while.

Alienware Area-51 RTX 5090 Gaming PC From $4,300

If you're seeking chart-topping gaming performance, then Alienware's biggest and most powerful prebuilt should be high on your list. As part of a greater Dell Presidents Day Sale that started this week, the Alienware Area-51 AMD Ryzen X3D Edition RTX 5090 gaming PC has dropped in price from $5,650 down to $4,249.99 with free delivery. Prior to this sale, the lowest price I had seen for this exact configuration was $5,000.

The Alienware Area-51 is Dell's flagship gaming PC. The product photos don't give it due justice; this is a big chassis that towers over the Aurora R16 model with superior build quality and a redesigned cooling system with even greater airflow. This is the only model that can be configured with the hot and power hungry GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card. The first wave of Area-51 systems featured Intel CPUs exclusively, with AMD X3D options only available since late November.

Alienware 16X Aurora Gaming Laptop From $1,499.99

The Alienware 16X Aurora gaming laptop is on sale at a reasonable price for the first time in 2026. Choose either the Intel Core Ultra 9 / RTX 5060 configuration for $1,499.99 ($470 discount) or the Intel Core Ultra 9 / RTX 5070 configuration for $1,899.99 ($470 discount). The Alienware 16X Aurora is the spiritual successor to the m16 laptop, featuring an all-aluminum build (top lid and chassis), high quality display, and powerful unthrottled discrete graphics.

Get a 24" Monitor for Just $63 With Any PC Purchase

The 24" Dell SE2425HM might not be the premier monitor you'd want to be using for gaming, but it's a good secondary or backup monitor to have on hand, especially for the price you can get it at. Purchase any PC and you can get an extra 30% off its current sale price of $89.99, dropping it to $62.99. Just make sure you add it to the same cart as your PC and you should see the discount automatically applied. The SE2425HM features a 1080p 100Hz IPS panel.

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

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The Simpsons May Eventually End, But Will 'Never' Have a Series Finale, Showrunner Says

The Simpsons showrunner Matt Selman has said the series will "never" air a finale episode, even if it did one day end.

Rather than a big farewell sendoff, Selman said The Simpsons would simply air a regular episode — noting that the show had recently parodied the idea of a big finale in its 36th season premiere (an episode named Bart's Birthday that featured numerous returning guest stars and sent up the finale of numerous other famous series).

"If the show ever did end, there's no finale — it would just be a regular episode that has the family in it," Selman told The Wrap, following the airing of its landmark 800th episode. "Probably a little Easter egg here and there, but no 'I'm going to miss this place'."

Selman continued by again voicing his view that The Simpsons exists outside of continuity or canon — even to the point that character deaths such as that of Marge Simpson don't matter (something that the series itself has demonstrated is not always the case, particularly prior to his tenure, and that was contradicted yet again recently by a fellow Simpsons exec who discussed the permanent death of Alice Glick.)

"The show isn't supposed to change," Selman continued on. "The characters reset every week. It's like Groundhog Day, but they don't know it — and they don't die that much."

The Simpsons' 800th episode includes a crossover with The Pitt, featuring various guest stars including Noah Wyle, plus Kevin Bacon and Boyz II Men. It also marks the occasion with a couch gag that finally pays off the fact that Homer gets hit by Marge's car at the beginning of every episode (since the series' opening credits were remade for HD).

pic.twitter.com/ZbtdvUd2In

— Out of Context Simpsons Couch Gags (@OOCCouchGags) February 16, 2026

How long can The Simpsons continue on for? The show has currently been renewed until its 40th season, which means it will remain on-air through until at least 2029. A second Simpsons movie is also on the way, set to debut on September 3, 2027.

Image credit: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images

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

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There's a Whole Bunch of Disney Lorcana Cards on Sale at Amazon Today

Amazon has some excellent deals on Disney Lorcana cards today, and in particular, you can currently pick up a Booster Display set of Azurite Sea for just $90.50. That's a significant 37% drop from the list price of $143.99, and one of the best deals we've ever seen on the booster set.

That includes 24 Packs with 12 cards in each, so that's a total of 288 cards, with each pack guaranteeing at least six common and three uncommon cards, alongside two cards of rare, super rare, or legendary rarity, and finally 1 randomly selected foil card amongst these.

But, it's also worth noting that this is a limited-time lightning deal at Amazon, and once it's gone, it's gone. At this price, I wouldn't be surprised if fans snap these up as soon as possible, as there's still plenty of trading potential in Azurite Sea.

Otherwise, there are loads of other great Lorcana deals to check out at Amazon this week as well. That includes the Gateway Board Game down to just $16.30 - 35% off, and it is basically the perfect way to start playing Lorcana, or even teach you and a friend how to start off on one of the most promising new TCGs in recent years.

My other favorite in the sale is on the Azurite Sea Stitch Collector's Gift Set, which includes six collector cards and four Booster packs of 12 additional game cards in each. That's down to just $33.94 right now, and another tidy drop from the $49.99 list price.

In other Disney Lorcana news, there is a brand new Gift Set and Collection Set up for preorder at Amazon today, featuring Scrooge McDuck and Stitch respectively.

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

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Why Do Gamers Invert Their Controls?

In terms of sheer numbers, inverters vs. non-inverters is the biggest schism in the games community. Whenever the subject comes up, it always leads to some petty argument about how you tilt your head when you look around in real life vs. "No, up means up, you loser, your head is not a tiny aeroplane."

Look, maybe my head is a tiny aeroplane, and my brain is the pilot. And that's before we get to the fact that inverters are at a massive disadvantage in these matters because “invert” rhymes with “pervert”.

For one of these groups, it is merely a fact of life: whether nature or nurture, to those of us afflicted with the scourge of invertism – a stigma I have lived with for most of my life – pushing forward on a stick to look down comes just as naturally as walking or breathing.

There’s a lot of misconceptions about inverters, perpetuated by people on either side of the divide. That people who invert are outliers, that it’s some kind of "skill issue", that it doesn’t make sense to invert Y if you aren’t also going to invert X. That it’s easy to switch with a bit of practice. That it all depends on what your first game system was. But, according to researchers Jennifer Corbett and Jaap Munneke, who surveyed a big sample of gamers and subjected them to cognitive 3D spatial awareness testing, whether or not you played flight simulators as a child has absolutely no bearing whatsoever on your Y-axis praxis.

Though this study has gone some way to disproving these commonly held myths, it stops short of providing any real answers about why some people invert, and why others do not. Largely, I suspect, because that’s rather like trying to explain the briefs or boxers divide. There’s an unknowable number of factors to consider re: why someone would have a preference, and it doesn’t matter anyway because… well, it’s just underwear. It only matters to the individual concerned. It’s not like one day they’re going to stop making boxers.

Except, as the study sort of says if you actually read it, it’s not just a personal preference. Well, it is, but it’s one that’s massively dictated by how your brain happens to be wired and how it handles spatial awareness. Although with practice and perseverance, some people have found that they can unlearn their default and switch over - usually this is from inverting to not inverting - it’s kind of half-way between a personal preference and an accessibility issue. It’s a bit of both. And understanding it may well be crucial for important things beyond the realm of gaming, such as telesurgery or drone operation. All kinds of applications where the operator’s spatial awareness is being distorted by a non-standard field of view, the lack of a third dimension, input lag, frame drops, and more besides.

I dunno. I’m guessing. I’m not trying to get a research grant, so I’m not that invested in whether or not that’s a convincing pitch for how serious this issue is. What’s incredible about the study’s findings is that, and I’m quoting the researchers from an article in The Guardian here, “None of the reasons people gave us [for inverting controls] had anything to do with whether they actually inverted”. So, all of us are barking down the wrong tree, and it actually has more to do with how you process 3D space at a deep cognitive level.

This absolutely tracks with my own, limited, tiny sample size research. I took a poll of IGN Entertainment staff recently and found that, firstly, of the 35 people who responded to my survey, only seven of us are inverters. And of those seven, beyond the inverting, there wasn’t a single unifying factor apart from the fact that we’re all over 30. But most people at the company are over 30, so that hardly feels like a significant marker.

The one thing that seems to make you more likely to invert is whether or not you’re old enough to have been an active gamer in the late '90s or early 2000s.

I asked people to check which control scheme or device they first used, and it was a mix of control pad and joystick. Interestingly, no inverters mentioned mouse and keyboard, which may be significant: very few people seem to invert when using mouse look, which makes sense. I don’t, despite being a hard-wired inverter when it comes to anything with a stick. Essentially your crosshair just becomes a mouse pointer when you’re in the middle of a gunfight.

Some non-inverters did say that they sometimes invert for vehicle controls. But Eurogamer’s Alex Donaldson said anyone who inverts in FPS games is a pervert. It’s just a big mixture of anecdotes and scant few unifying factors in either group. The one thing that seems to make you more likely to invert is age – whether or not you’re old enough to have been an active gamer in the late '90s or early 2000s, and that certainly makes a lot of sense because that would roughly cover the heyday of the PS2 and Nintendo 64 which, as noted by some of my colleagues, had a lot of popular games where the camera was inverted by default. As IGN’s deputy guides editor Casey DeFreitas writes:

"I played way too many hours of both The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Pokemon Snap on the Nintendo 64, and both of those games REQUIRED inverted vertical controls! You couldn't change it. I got used to it and then when I tried games that were default non-inverted, my aim was awful. I refuse to publish gameplay of mine if I can't invert the controls and have to aim, it looks like a baby grabbed the controller."

Lots of really big games from that time – huge, genre-defining games – shipped with inverted look. Goldeneye 007, another N64 classic and a pioneering first person shooter on consoles, had an inverted camera. GTA 3, the original PS2 release, notoriously came configured for inverted look without any way to change it. And people just had to deal with it because otherwise there’d be no GTA for them.

Many would count Timesplitters on the PS2 as their first encounter with modern twin stick controls, and this shipped with inverted Y by default without any way to change it, forcing a lot of people to just get on with it. Now, I think that’s an important part of the story here: the fact that back in the day, configuration options in console games, being able to tailor an experience to your own preferences and brain wiring, simply wasn’t a thing you could rely on. Most of the time you just had to accept whatever the developers shipped it with.

There was also no general consensus as to how 3D controls should work on a gamepad. It was the wild West. Conventions we take for granted now – left stick for movement and strafing, right stick for looking and turning – simply hadn’t been established, and it’s a bit difficult to pin down exactly when they were because these things tend to change slowly, like an abandoned chocolate bar melting on a dashboard.

Timesplitters certainly didn’t invent the modern control scheme – other console FPSes had it as an option years before it. Even Goldeneye 007 had a twin stick mode utilising two of the N64’s ridiculous controllers. Alien Resurrection on the PS1 had it, and interestingly copped a lot of flak from critics at the time who considered it unwieldy and unplayably difficult.

See, like all major technological and cultural innovations, it turns out a lot of people were stumbling around in the ball park of what became the accepted solution. Many people credit Halo: Combat Evolved with popularising the very concept of First Person Shooters on console (not inventing, but perfecting it), with its innovative sticky aiming that made the twin stick controls we still use today feel good and natural in the hands. And also pioneering the ingenious, diegetic method of determining the player’s inversion preference via the use of a tutorial that instructs you to look at specific lights and then simply asking you if the way the camera moved felt right or not, automatically inverting the controls if it didn't. It meant that both types of gamers were catered for in the most natural way possible. The rest is history.

Halo eliminating any configuration friction and simply working in whichever way was natural for the individual player probably went a long way toward establishing non-inverted camera controls as society’s default. Instinctively, for the majority of people, many playing these games for the first time in their formative years, up means up. This intuitive piece of Halo’s tutorial wasn’t just a cute way of bypassing menus, it was solving an accessibility problem that was widespread at the time because there were no standards, no hard conventions, about how these things were expected to work... largely because gaming is an industry where a bunch of nerds and computer science poindexters are making entertainment products for normal people who own Sony Bravia TVs and sleep in a big bed with their partner.

In the years since, platform holders have mandated the option of inverting Y alongside other toggles, and it’s basically not an issue any more unless you enjoy arguing about stupid shit with strangers on the internet. I can’t remember being negatively affected by my invertism since Beyond Good and Evil HD came out about 400,000 years ago. In fact, with every new generation, it becomes more of a standard practice to cater for as many preferences, impairments, or even disabilities as possible, with many huge mainstream games now including extensive options for fine-tuning everything from camera controls to high-contrast overlays for the severely colourblind.

I suspect it’s more or less impossible to determine exactly why some people invert and some people don’t. What I do know is that inverting is wildly misunderstood by non inverters, while the reverse isn’t the case at all. I’m not remotely confused as to why Up means Up. On paper, that’s perfectly intuitive. Up means down, patently, is not. And in microcosm, it’s a perfect, low-key example of why diversity matters in game development: you can’t just cater to what is considered “normal”, otherwise you risk alienating huge swathes of your potential audience. And that’s a hard, dispassionate business case for just having some consideration for people who aren’t necessarily the default character in life.

In the business, we call that subtext.

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Is Henry Cavill Joining A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms? Dunk Actor Dunks on Fan Speculation Following Egg Tease

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms actor Peter Claffey, who plays Dunk, has been forced to clarify comments made by his young co-star which fans took as confirmation that The Witcher and Superman star Henry Cavill had secretly joined the series' cast.

Writing on Instagram, Claffey said that the apparent tease by Egg actor Dex Sol Ansell "had nothing to do with Henry Cavill coming into the show or the GOT universe (I wish!)" and that the whole thing had been a "complete misunderstanding."

The alleged slip-up happened during a filmed interview with the pair in which Claffey can be seen asking permission to discuss comparisons between the show and The Witcher, before his co-star then asks if he can mention something specific about Henry Cavill.

Peter Claffey (Dunk) clarifies that Henry Cavill will not be joining the Game of Thrones universe after online speculation:

“Just to clarify, the thing Dex was referring to in the interview had nothing to do with Henry Cavill coming into the show or the GOT universe (I wish!)… pic.twitter.com/RLWzfPlRVW

— westerosies (@westerosies) February 15, 2026

It takes a moment before Claffey seems to understand exactly what Sol Ansell is referring to, before he hurriedly replies: "No, no no no, god, no no no, don't say that," before he turns to the interviewer and says: "Sorry, you didn't hear that." You can watch the moment via the embed just above.

A Song of Ice and Fire fans had spent the weekend discussing the seemingly-confirmed fact that Cavill was joining the show, with many pointing to him playing the role of Daemon Blackfyre. Alas, that is seemingly not the case — unless is this deflection from Claffey. You would think, however, that Cavill was too busy right now to join, with work on Highlander ongoing and his plans to make Warhammer movies still in the offing.

Of course, all of this comes just days after Sol Ansell dropped an even bigger Knight of the Seven Kingdoms spoiler — for real this time. In a separate interview, he discussed story detail told to him by Game of Thrones star George R.R. Martin regarding the ultimate fate of the series' stars — and potentially the finale of the whole show. As he revealed this information, Claffey can be seen making frantic gestures, before he tries to play down what has just been said.

For more on A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, check out IGN’s review of Season 1.

Image credit: Daniele Venturelli/Getty Images

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

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The Weird Tales Graphic Novel Revives a Legendary Horror Magazine

Dating all the way back to 1923, Weird Tales is easily one of the most iconic pulp magazines ever published. That venerable series is returning in a new form in 2026, as Monstrous Books aims to revive Weird Tales as an anthology graphic novel with some major creators attached.

IGN can exclusively debut a new cover image from The Goon creator Eric Powell. Check it out below:

You can also see this cover alongside all the previously revealed preview art for Weird Tales Vol. 1 in the slideshow gallery below:

Weird Tales Vol. 1 is a hardcover graphic novel that features a mix of adaptations of classic Weird Tales stories and new stories. The adapted stories include:

  • Michael Avallone’s “The Man Who Walked on Air” — adapted by Robert Hack and David Avallone
  • Ray Bradbury’s “The Scythe” — adapted by J.K. Woodward and Jonathan Maberry.
  • Allison V. Harding’s “The Damp Man” — adapted by Marco Finnegan and Nancy A. Collins
  • Robert E. Howard’s “Skulls in the Stars” — adapted by Steve Niles
  • An original Lovecraft Mythos Story by Rodney Barnes with art by Lukas Ketner
  • C.L. Moore’s “Shambleau” — adapted by George Quadros and Blake Northcott
  • Anthony M. Rud’s “Ooze” — reimagined by Weird Tales president, director, and producer John Harlacher and Zac Atkinson

The original stories in this book include:

  • “Doctor Satan vs. Jules de Grandin” by James Aquilone and Dave Swartz
  • “The Cthulhu Project” by Richard Krepit and EV Cantada

“For the first time, the weird, the dark, and the wondrous stories that launched the careers of genre legends leap from the pages of the magazine into a stunning graphic novel experience,” said Aquilone in a statement. “Editor Jonathan Maberry and President John Harlacher have been doing exciting things since they resurrected Weird Tales in 2019. When it came time to assemble the contributors for the historic first graphic novel, we went big and bold. These stories are worthy of the great, pulp legacy of Weird Tales."

“When I was a young teen I got to know and be mentored by Ray Bradbury,” said Weird Tales Editor Jonathan Maberry. “His extraordinary kindness was matched by deep insights into the art and science of storytelling, and that has influenced every part of life and career. He would be delighted that I’m now the editor of Weird Tales Magazine, which he both loved and was published in early in his career. Adapting his powerful and empathetic story, 'Scythe' (Weird Tales, July 1943) is a joyful honor and I can’t help but think Ray would be delighted.”

The Kickstarter campaign for Weird Tales Vol. 1 is live now. The campaign includes various bonus tiers that include exclusive cover art, a Weird Tales challenge coin, T-shirts, and more.

In other comic book news, find out which series was selected as IGN's best comic book of 2025, and see which comics we're most excited for in 2026.

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

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Star Wars: Galactic Racer Includes 'A Good Mix of Familiar Faces and New Characters,' Developer Says, Following Sebulba and Ben Quadinaros Reveals

Star Wars: Galactic Racer developer Fuse Games has said its racing adventure will feature a "good mix" of new faces and classic characters from a galaxy far, far away, following the reveal of Phantom Menace returnee Ben Quadinaros.

Speaking to IGN as part of a wide-ranging interview on Star Wars: Galactic Racer's track-based design, story mode and innovative boost gameplay, creative director Kieran Crimmins teased that fans will be able to look forward to more characters from previous Star Wars movies and games joining the fray.

"There's going to be a good mix of familiar faces and new characters," Crimmins said. "Obviously we want to get that mix right, so no matter what kind of Star Wars media you've engaged with, whether it be a movie or game, there's a bunch of familiarity in there when it comes to the space. Otherwise it wouldn't feel like an authentic Star Wars experience.

"So there's both familiar faces and new characters," Crimmins continued, acknowledging Sebulba and Quadinaros. "We can't talk about who exactly they are just yet though, sorry."

Who else might appear? While less well known, it's possible that other participants seen in Episode 1's podrace might appear, alongside Sebulba and Quadinaros. The Boonta Eve Classic had 18 participants, though poor Ratts Tyerell died during the race, while Anakin Skywalker... well, we all know what happened to him.

"We've seen racing as an activity and as a sport in Star Wars has been around in many forms, right?" Fuse Games founder and CEO Matt Webster said at another point, going on to potentially hint at racers from other parts of Star Wars being included. "Episode 1's podracing we all know and love, Bad Batch's riot racing in Season 2 was just awesome. Star Wars Resistance has got the Aces and low-altitude starfighter racing."

Galactic Racer is set sometime after Return of the Jedi, so anyone could potentially put in an appearance. It seems unlikely we'll see Luke Skywalker, who was quite busy doing other things during this period, but who knows? He sure knows how to race a speeder bike across Endor.

Last week brought our best look yet at Star Wars: Galactic Racer, though we delve much deeper into its clever two-tier boost system, environmental effects, and how the game will let you nuture rivalries and interact with characters on foot in our big Star Wars: Galactic Racer interview that you can go read right now.

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

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