MSI MEG X870E Godlike X Edition review
Now here is something cool. In July 2025, we shared Super Mario Bros Remastered for PC. For those who don’t know, Super Mario Bros. Remastered is a fan remake of the classic NES Mario game for PC. And today, we are happy to share a Minecraft Pack for it. Super Mario Bros. Remastered has been … Continue reading Super Mario Bros. Remastered Got Cool Minecraft & Sonic Packs →
The post Super Mario Bros. Remastered Got Cool Minecraft & Sonic Packs appeared first on DSOGaming.

A Few Good Men, This Is Spinal Tap, and The Princess Bride director Rob Reiner has been found dead in his Brentwood, Los Angeles home, alongside his wife, Michele. Reiner was 78. CNN has reported that the LAPD has explained it is investigating an apparent homicide.
A spokesperson for the Reiner family has confirmed the deaths and has asked for privacy on behalf of the family in the wake of the tragedy.
Rob Reiner’s long career in entertainment began gaining steam when he was cast as Michael Stivic on the 1970s US sitcom All in the Family, the son-in-law of lead character Archie Bunker. However, while Reiner won two Emmy Awards for his work on the show and would continue to find himself in front of the camera in various roles over the years, it was behind the camera that he established his reputation as an extremely versatile and capable director.
Reiner’s directorial debut was the music mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap in 1984. Reiner followed this much-loved cult comedy with the 1986 coming-of-age drama Stand By Me, the 1987 fantasy adventure The Princess Bride, the seminal romantic comedy When Harry Met Sally… in 1989, an adaptation of the Stephen King thriller Misery in 1990, and the Academy Award-nominated military courtroom drama A Few Good Men in 1992. Reiner’s most recent film was this year’s Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, making his final film the long-awaited sequel to his first.
Born in The Bronx, New York in 1947, Reiner was the son of legendary actor, comedian, director, and writer Carl Reiner (whose own seven-decade career began back during the golden age of television alongside fellow comedy icon Mel Brooks).
Luke is a Senior Editor on the IGN reviews team.

Warning: This article contains spoilers for the entire first season of IT: Welcome to Derry!
Fans of Stephen King’s novels will know that these tales of small-town terror and tortured souls aren’t simply standalone stories. They’re all part of a larger storytelling multiverse, and crossovers can and do frequently happen. That’s certainly true for IT: Welcome to Derry – not only is this series a prequel to the It movies, it also includes nods to other King characters and storylines.
With the first season having ended its run on HBO Max, we figured now is a great time to break down the key Stephen King easter eggs in Welcome to Derry and explore how the series takes advantage of the King multiverse. And if the finale is any indication, we’re just getting started.
With Welcome to Derry taking place 27 years before the events of 2017’s It, it should come as no surprise that there aren’t many returning actors for this prequel. Coming into the series, the only confirmed veteran of the series was Bill Skarsgård, who is once again playing the demonic, shapeshifting villain, It (whose favorite form is Pennywise the Dancing Clown). Though we do ultimately get a few unexpected cameos in Episode 8, including Sophia Lillis’ Bev Marsh and Finn Wolfhard’s Richie Tozier on a missing child flyer.
We don’t actually see Skarsgård's Pennywise until Episode 5, but the character’s nefarious influence is certainly felt throughout the season. If there’s any takeaway from the series, it’s that Derry was a cursed place long before the Losers Club clashed with Pennywise for the first time.
With Pennywise being such an important part of the series, it’s worth taking a step back to explore what exactly this character is and how he fits into King’s monster multiverse. The It novel establishes that It is an alien entity created in the void outside the universe. It eventually crashed on Earth via an asteroid millions of years ago, at which point it took up residence in the area that would become Derry, Maine. We see this origin story play out during Episode 4's flashback sequence.
Ever since people began to settle in Derry, It has shown a pattern of emerging for a year or two to seek victims and feast on their fear; it is essentially a psychic vampire. After gorging itself, It then goes into hibernation for 27 years before reawakening and starting the cycle all over again. It tends to target children because their fears are more primal and easier to exploit.
It/Pennywise is easily one of the most terrifying creatures in King’s massive library, but it’s not necessarily unique. King’s Dark Tower novels establish that the multiverse was once bathed in a mystical energy source called the Prim. When the Prim receded like an ocean tide, it left behind a great many supernatural creatures embedded in the worlds of creation; Pennywise is just one of many of those monsters. One of the Dark Tower books even introduces a cousin of sorts – a similar psychic vampire who feeds on laughter rather than fear.
Welcome to Derry may not feature many returning characters, but it does feature one family that should be very familiar to fans of the films. The first episode introduces Jovan Adepo’s Leroy Hanlon; Leroy is the grandfather of Mike Hanlon, who was played in the films as a child by Chosen Jacobs and as an adult by Isaiah Mustafa.
Welcome to Derry shows us how the Hanlon family first came to settle in Derry in 1962. Leroy is a decorated and well-respected Air Force major who is recruited by General Shaw (James Remar) to work on a top-secret program. Little by little, Leroy becomes exposed to the darkness lurking beneath the idyllic facade of Derry and the racism still rampant in the ranks of the military. In Episode 2, Leroy learns that Shaw is working to harness a weapon that can instill absolute fear in America's enemies. Apparently, Shaw wants to weaponize It, though the full extent of his plan doesn’t become clear until Episode 7.
Episode 2 introduces Taylour Paige as Leroy’s wife, Charlotte, and Blake Cameron James as his son, Will, neither of whom seems particularly enamored with their new home. But, however bad things get this season - and they do get pretty bad - the big takeaway is that nothing is going to drive this family out of Derry.
Matilda Lawler’s Marge Truman has a nasty run-in with It in the Season 1 finale, where we get some surprising insight into this terrible creature. It experiences time Doctor Manhattan-style, where past, present, and future all bleed together. It recognizes Marge as her adult self. She’s destined to become Maggie Tozier, mother to Richie Tozier, one of the central characters in both It movies. In the process, it’s implied that Maggie names her son in honor of Arian S. Cartaya’s Rich, who so heroically sacrificed himself to save her from the fire.
Welcome to Derry is going to draw on more than just the It movies and novel; that much has been apparent ever since a trailer included a shot of a Shawshank Prison bus. But in what is easily the most significant King easter egg so far, the series’ cast includes a major character from The Shining: Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk).
Fans of The Shining and its sequel, Doctor Sleep, will remember that Dick is the head chef at the Overlook Hotel in Colorado. Because he has the psychic aptitude known as “the shine,” Dick is more sensitive than most to the many ghosts haunting the Overlook’s halls. Dick becomes rightfully concerned when he senses that young Danny Torrance, the son of winter caretaker Jack Torrance, shines especially brightly, and is therefore a ripe target for those ghosts. Eventually, Dick is forced to brave the harsh Colorado winter in order to rescue Danny and his mother from the hotel’s wrath.
Welcome to Derry takes place nearly two decades before The Shining; at this stage, Dick is serving on the same Derry Air Force base as Leroy Hanlon. We only catch a brief glimpse of Dick in Episode 1, but he seems intently interested in Leroy, as if he can sense something is supernaturally amiss with the major.
Episode 2 provides more context for Dick's presence in Derry and his interest in Leroy. Dick is using his psychic abilities to help the Air Force dig up and harness the slumbering It. Dick seems to sense that Leroy is special in his own way. A bullet to his brain has robbed Leroy of the ability to feel fear, which makes him uniquely capable of standing up to It. And over the course of the season, Leroy slowly comes to terms with the fact that Dick truly does have supernatural abilities.
Unsurprisingly, Dick plays a central role in battling It in this series. Just as at the Overlook, Dick’s powers will make him more aware than most adults of the danger lurking underneath the town. It even targets Dick specifically, hoping to draw extra sustenance from his psychic abilities, much like the vampires in Doctor Sleep.
That's basically what happens in Episode 5, when It singles out Dick in the sewers and preys on his fear of his late grandfather. As established in Doctor Sleep, Dick had a loving relationship with his grandmother, who shared his shine ability, but he lived in constant terror of his "Black Grandpa," a monstrously cruel and vindictive man. Dick developed a technique of shutting away his fears inside metaphysical lockboxes in his mind. Here, Dick is forced by the spectre of Black Grandpa to open his lockbox, freeing all the ghosts that had been trapped away and causing Dick to once again see dead people.
By the end of the season, Dick overcomes his fears and the burden of his powers to help put It back in a cage. The series ends with Dick walking away from the military and embarking on a career as a chef. As he puts it, “How much trouble can a hotel be?” Yeah, about that…
Click here to learn more about Episode 5 connects to Doctor Sleep.

Episode 2 incldues another fun The Shining Easter egg, as we see a stack of Calumet Baking Powder cans in the grocery store, all displaying that iconic logo of an Indian chief. These cans were also seen in Stanley Kubrick's film adaptation of The Shining, part of the Overlook Hotel's extensive larder.
The exact significance of the cans and the Indian logo has been the source of much debate over the years, with some arguing (like in the documentary Room 237) that Kubrick was trying to include subtle commentary about American imperialism and the genocide of Native Americans. The Indian chief image may also speak to the ancient history of the supernatural terrors in this world. Again, It has been in Derry for a very long time.
Episode 2 also introduces another iconic King landmark in Juniper Hill Asylum. We learn that Lily (Clara Stack) was previously committed there after the death of her father, and she's forced to return at the end of the episode after suffering through another of It's terrifying hallucinations.
Juniper Hill appears in the original IT novel as well as numerous other King works, from Insomnia to Needful Things to The Dark Half. It's a place every bit as twisted as you'd expect from a psychiatric institution in Stephen King's multiverse.
Along with Juniper Hill, the series also introduced another very recognizable facility in the form of Shawshank State Prison. The wrongfully imprisoned Hank Grogan (Stephen Rider) is doomed to be imprisoned there, even as Charlotte fights to clear his name. Though ultimately, he manages to avoid being imprisoned there.
Shawshank was most famously featured in King's 1982 novella "Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption," which was later adapted into the 1994 movie The Shawshank Redemption. Both versions of the story follow the plight of Andy Dufresne, a man imprisoned for decades at the hellish prison after being convicted of murdering his wife. Shashank was also heavily featured in Castle Rock, another series notable for bringing together pieces of the King multiverse.
Episode 4 features a quick shot of a building called the Arrowhead Motel. This may be a reference to the Arrowhead Project, a top-secret government program referenced in King books like The Mist. There, the Arrowhead Project is aimed at creating an interdimensional window allowing the military to peer into other realities. Obviously, General Shaw and his men have a very different goal in mind in Welcome to Derry, but the general theme of the military tampering with otherworldly forces remains in play.

In Episode 5 we learn a lot more about Madeline Stowe's character, Ingrid Kersh, including that she's the secret lover of Stephen Rider's Hank Grogan. The simple fact that her last name is Kersh is definitely intriguing. That's the name of the old woman who lives in Bev's childhood home in IT: Chapter Two. That woman turns out to be nothing more than another manifestation of It. But it would seem that, at one point, she was a real person, and she did her best to help the children affected by It's evil.
At least, that's what we thought until Episode 6. Now we know that Ingrid has some real demons of her own. We learn that It's Pennywise form was inspired by her own father's clown persona, and now Ingrid is actively feeding It innocent children as a means of achieving some sort of twisted family reunion.
By the end of the season, Ingrid is herself locked away in Juniper Hill, doomed to spend the rest of her life painting and pining for her “papa.” But in the final scene, we discover that Bev had an earlier run-in with the real Mrs. Kersh as a child.
Episode 6 contains a pair of slim but intriguing references to King's iconic vampire novel Salem's Lot. The first is that Mrs. Kersh's and her father Bob apparently vacationed in Cumberland County, the area where the doomed town of Jerusalem's Lot is located. The other comes when the lynch mob references "the Boone brothers," two characters at the center of the 1978 short story "Jerusalem's Lot."
Welcome to Derry’s first episode includes another important, albeit more subtle, easter egg in the form of a charm on Lily’s bracelet – a turtle, a creature with deep significance in King lore. We see another turtle reference in Episode 4, when the Indian tribe buries one of the pieces of the meteorite inside a turtle shell. Episode 8 drops another reference still, as Rose concocts a potion for Dick made from maturin root. Maturin is also the name of the Turtle god in King’s novels. And who can forget the bumbling turtle mascot from Derry High School?
Getting back to It’s cosmic origins, this demon was created at the same time as a benevolent turtle entity; the Turtle is It’s polar opposite and a sign of strength to the members of the Losers Club. The Turtle is also one of the 12 animals featured in the Dark Tower books who guard “The Beams,” invisible energy forces that lead directly to the titular tower at the center of existence.
We’d expect to see multiple turtle references in this series, all meant to serve as reminders that there are other forces at work in Derry beyond It/Pennywise…and not all of them are so sinister.

Episode 4 reveals a lot about the history of It in Derry and how this demonic entity was clashing with the local Native American tribe long before white settlers came to the area. We even learn that the tribe has a legend about the heroic warrior who imprisoned It centuries ago. According to the story, the tribe buried 13 pieces of the meteorite that originally carried It to Earth. 12 of these pieces form a ring around It's woodland territory, while the 13th is located at the center of the ring. As long as that circle remains unbroken, It's evil is contained to the Derry area.
This circular structure is almost definitely meant to be a reference to King's Dark Tower novels. In Mid-World, the place where heroic gunslinger Roland Deschain carries out his long quest to find the titular tower, there are 12 portals forming a great ring around the planet. The beams mentioned above start at these portals and move inward, converging on the Dark Tower in the center. Each of the 12 portals is protected by a Guardian of the Beam, like Maturin the Turtle and Shardik the Bear. It's prison is clearly mimicking the structure of the Dark Tower itself.
We probably won't see any more overt references to the Dark Tower books than this, as Warner Bros. doesn't hold the rights to those stories. Instead, The Haunting of Hill House's Mike Flanagan is currently developing a Dark Tower TV series for Amazon. Still, it's a fun nod for hardcore King fans.

Episode 2 establishes a key throwback to 2019's IT: Chapter Two with the scene at the Second Hand Rose thrift shop. In the movie, that shop is run by Stephen King's character (that same character cameos as a younger man here), and it's where Bill Denbrough buys his beloved Schwinn bicycle. Back in 1962, it's where Leroy purchases a telescope for his son Will.
Like the turtle, the rose is an image with special significance in King's work, and it also ties back to the Dark Tower books and their central protagonist, Roland Deschain. The rose is a symbol of goodness and purity, though we definitely get a slightly creepy vibe from the shop in this series. If anything, we can't help but be reminded of Needful Things and its infamous shop of horrors.
On the other hand, the shop's current owner, Kimberly Norris Guerrero's Rose, is a major focus of the series, and she seems to be one of the few genuinely good people in Derry. She and her friends have been keeping Derry safe from It’s wrath for centuries. Or, as safe as they can manage, anyway. And now that responsibility is shared by the Hanlons.
Welcome to Derry’s final episode ends with the reveal that this isn’t meant to be a standalone, single-season project, but the start of a larger prequel series. This is Welcome to Derry: Chapter 1, and we get some clues as to what’s coming in the planned second season.
Most notable here is the aforementioned reveal that It is basically unstuck in time and has awareness of the future and his inevitable death at the hands of the Losers Club. We learn that this is why It targeted Marge. It wants to kill the parents before their children can grow to become a threat.
Is It actually capable of changing the past and altering the future, a la Terminator? That remains to be seen. But it’s implied that It will try again in another, even earlier cycle, meaning another group of emotionally fragile youngsters will have to rise up. At the same time, the series may continue to focus on the aftermath of the 1962 cycle, as we see what challenges Rose and the Hanlons face in keeping It dormant under Derry and preventing others from trying to harness the slumbering god’s power.
It’s very likely that Welcome to Derry Chapter Two will showcase some of the other tragedies from Derry’s troubled history. That includes the Kitchener Ironworks explosion in the 1908 cycle and the Bradley Gang massacre in the 1935 cycle, both of which are depicted in the show’s animated opening credits. This town has seen a lot of death and misery over the decades, and It has often been at the center of it all.
For more on IT: Welcome to Derry, check out our review of the series premiere and see director Andy Muschietti break down the shocking ending to Episode 1.
Note: This article was originally published on 10/27/2025 and updated on 12/14/2025 with the latest information about IT: Welcome to Derry.
Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on BlueSky.

It: Welcome to Derry has spent its entire first season attempting to soup up the supplemental material in Stephen King’s novel to a degree where it’s able to stand on its own while retaining the essential King-ness at its heart. With “Winter Fire” bringing the season to a close, Welcome to Derry sees the show achieving that goal, with a finale that keeps big emotions at the center of big spectacle… although that spectacle does become increasingly ridiculous as it spirals. Then again, endings do tend to get a little complicated in the world of Stephen King.
“Winter Fire” opens with the stakes skyrocketing immediately. A dense layer of fog (but not “Mist;” they pointedly do not say “mist” at any point) plunges Derry into chaos, giving much of the episode the feel of a disaster movie. At first blush, this seems to be part of the military “cleanup” hinted at by General Shaw a couple episodes ago. The confused reactions on the part of the soldiers who first detect the phenomenon, however, muddy the waters on that score and suggest it may be the backfiring results of destroying one of the pillars in last week’s episode. Though the rationale for blanketing Derry in moody, atmospheric fog isn’t well justified, the environment does serve as a creepy, engaging setting for the ensuing race against Pennywise. I remain shaken by the god-awful CG in the cemetery scene from Episode 3, so it was a relief that at least the visual effects in the finale seemed a lot more thoughtfully designed and deployed, even if the presence of the fog is not well explained. Guess that’s just the price of admission for cool shots like a procession of catatonic kids floating over the ice, or Pennywise’s monster-bird form making a terrifying beeline for our heroes through that fog.
In any case, the lack of clarity or purpose here serves as a real “masks off” moment for the season’s military conspiracy: It’s a dud. Dick Hallorann aside, it feels as if the outsized military thread’s main purpose was just to squeeze one more episode’s worth of Pennywise (Bill Skarsgård) out of Welcome to Derry by the end, as if the predestined burning of the Black Spot couldn’t work as the season’s true climax because fans would see it coming – the dilemma of a prequel laid bare. General Shaw’s (James Remar) abject ignorance, thinking he could “aim” Pennywise at dissident Americans, comes back to bite him… hard, in the face, until he’s dead. Remar’s measured tones and kindness made Shaw a sympathetic presence for much of the season, which leaves Shaw’s snowballing idiocy over the last two episodes a real disappointment.
In a broader sense, the scope of the storytelling expanding around Pennywise through this plot thread feels like a rare instance of Welcome to Derry fumbling its perspective on King’s fiction. So much of the horror of It comes from being alone with it and, even though the secret’s always going to be banding together to face that horror together, all the increased visibility of the monster does occasionally chip away at its mystique through the finale. Welcome to Derry had a glamored clown waiting in the wings that may have helped all this, but Periwinkle/Ingrid Kersh (Madeleine Stowe) is mostly absent from the finale.
Pennywise, reawakened by the pillar’s destruction, uses all this confusion as an opportunity to sneak out and gather an entire school’s worth of children for the most effed-up assembly of all time. Decapitation, musical theater, the entire student body being glamored by It’s deadlights at the same time – that all sounds better than math class to me! “Winter Fire” pushes Pennywise and his surrounding mythology to extremes we’ve never quite seen before, but Skarsgård’s unwavering commitment to the role does wonders for keeping the action on the rails as the clown does things like ice skate across a frozen lake to kill soldiers or, I don’t know, up-end the entire concept of spacetime as it relates to It’s physiology and cycles of feeding. More on that in a minute.
With the fog spreading a deep chill over Derry and Pennywise blowing into a tuba as the Pied Piper for a stream of floating kids, the mission quickly comes into focus: replace the destroyed pillar with the ceremonial dagger in the custody of Lilly (Clara Stack), Ronnie (Amanda Christine), and Marge (Matilda Lawler), which will send Pennywise back to sleep and save Will (Blake Cameron James) and the other glamored kids in the process. Ronnie and Marge finally get through to the increasingly isolated Lilly after the three steal a milk truck to go after Pennywise and Will themselves. The girls get the dagger and its corrupting influence away from Lilly long enough to remind her that she is and always has been a “lifeboat,” not the “anchor” on her loved ones that she’s feared; it’s a moment of support and reconciliation that Stack, Christine, and Lawler navigate well together.
After receiving a phone call from Pennywise, Jovan Adepo puts in his best work of the season as Leroy, Derry’s “man without fear,” finally breaks, tearfully begging Hallorann (Chris Chalk) to help save his baby. Taylour Paige’s Charlotte takes the news of Will’s capture just as hard, exploding in anguish and doing a good job of focusing the other assembled adults – Hank Grogan, Rose and Taniel, and Dick – on the task ahead. The supporting characters are largely left by the wayside throughout the finale, joining in on the action mostly when the plot needs help to move along. Taniel (Joshua Odjick) in particular goes down with a surprising amount of indifference, unceremoniously killed off by gunfire as the adults, kids, and military all converge on the banks of the Penobscot River, on which rests a gnarled tree where the dagger must be placed to reseal It in his prison. With a Shining assist from Dick (a fun diversion that sees Dick trick Pennywise into thinking he’s awoken as Bob Gray), the kids free Will and find the dagger fighting against being put in place. Then a knight in shining armor comes to save the day, as the spirit of Rich Santos (Arian S. Cartaya) arrives just in time to flip off Pennywise and help his friends plunge the dagger into the tree. It’s a moving moment that calls to mind Stan Uris’ spiritual presence while his surviving Losers’ Club friends defeat It in their own time.
The funeral for Rich, Will, and Ronnie confessing their mutual crushes on each other, and the breaking of the “Lifeboats” circle when the Grogans flee town for Canada help to ease Welcome to Derry back into more recognizable emotional territory after the chaotic events on the Penobscot. It’s at Rich’s funeral that Dick gets the chance to use his Shine to give comfort to Rich’s grieving parents, letting them know that Rich is right behind them and he always will be, and I’m not crying, you are! Not everything about Welcome to Derry’s first season worked, but Chris Chalk’s Dick Hallorann was a resounding success, and the cutesy hints at the next steps of Dick’s journey make the idea of potentially getting to spend more time with the character (whether in future seasons of Welcome to Derry or a spinoff) a welcome proposition.
And yes, the finale does put a surprising amount of emphasis on laying groundwork for future stories, which seems ass-backwards considering we know future seasons of the show are supposed to be moving back in time. The narrative grenade Welcome to Derry lobs over its shoulder on the way out the door? Pennywise doesn’t experience time the same way as humans, and killing him may actually just be enabling his birth, suggesting that no defeat of It can be totally counted on as final… not even, it seems, the victory of the Losers Club over It in 2019. Much of this sentiment is conveyed to Marge directly, as Pennywise reveals to her that she becomes Margaret Tozier, going so far as to whip out a missing poster for Finn Wolfhard’s yet-to-be-born Richie Tozier. These are compelling turns to consider, but Welcome to Derry seems happy to punt any further explanation of these timey-wimey intricacies to next season.
That all brings us to why this episode is called “Winter Fire” in the first place; after all, “winter fire” is a poetic phrase we most closely associate with Losers’ Club member Beverly Marsh, right? Well, Welcome to Derry’s got one crank of the jack-in-the-box left to surprise us with after the “It: Welcome to Derry Chapter One” title card comes up: a jump forward in time to 1986, where Ingrid Kersh (Joan Gregson, returning from It: Chapter Two) hears screams from the next room over from hers in Juniper Hill, where she’s been in custody since the burning of the Black Spot. Ingrid investigates and discovers her neighbor Elfrida Marsh has hung herself, to the horror of the distraught husband and daughter grieving at her feet: Alfred and Beverly Marsh (Sophia Lillis). Ingrid hits Bev with the town motto, “No one who dies in Derry ever really dies,” before giving her a bucktoothed Pennywise grin. The coda certainly reinforces the continuity between Welcome to Derry and the movies, but it’s not all that clear whether Lillis’ presence is just to help put an exclamation point on the season, or to suggest that as Pennywise hinted, there may be unfinished business for the Losers Club to account for sometime in their future.
I have a dangerous habit of replaying favourites instead of starting something new, so a deals list like this is usually what finally pushes me over the line. I have played the overwhelming majority of these, argued about the rest, and regretted paying full price for at least two of them in the past.
Contents
In retro news, I am lighting a 38-candle cake for Punch-Out!!, an absolute knockout of a NES classic. I was there in 1987, controller clenched, staring up at those towering sprites through Little Mac's gloves, trying to read tells and rhythms like it was a real fight tape. Punch-Out did not feel like a sports sim at all. It was a puzzlefest that happened to go upside your thinkin’ machine if you got it wrong.
What made this magic was how readable and human it felt. Every opponent was a personality, not just a stat sheet, from Glass Joe's tragic fragility to Bald Bull's screen-shaking charge. The star punch system rewarded patience and pattern recognition, and it’s still the most satisfying uppercut in gaming this side of Mortal Kombat’s D+HP. Lastly, beating Iron Mike Tyson in the endgame made you a schoolyard legend. Can confirm.
Aussie birthdays for notable games.
- Punch-Out!! (NES) 1987. Get
- Warhawk (PS) 1995. eBay
- WWF No Mercy (N64) 2000. eBay
- Tony Hawk’s 2 (DC) 2000. eBay
- Super Mario Run (iOS) 2016. Get
These Switch deals lean heavily on first party polish and long tail value. If you are filling gaps in a Switch library, this is a strong place to start.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.
This lineup swings between bombastic spectacle and introspective storytelling, and that contrast is exactly why it works.

Xbox One
Or just invest in an Xbox Card.
A strong mix of stylish RPGs and blockbuster action anchors this PlayStation selection.

PS4
Or purchase a PS Store Card.
PC players get the wildest value swings, from free to absurdly cheap bundles.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card
Just like I did last holiday season, I'm getting festive with the LEGO section. In Mathew Manor, my sons and I are again racing this year's batch of LEGO Advent Calendars. Basically, we open the City, Harry Potter, Minecraft, and Star Wars on the daily and compare the mini-prizes for "Awesomeness" and "Actual Xmas-ness". 2024's winner was the Lego Marvel one, but, weirdly, there's no 2025 equivalent. So it's anybody's race this year.
Here are the cheapest prices for the four calendars we're using. Score them yourself or just live vicariously through our unboxings.
Adam Mathew is a passionate connoisseur, a lifelong game critic, and an Aussie deals wrangler who genuinely wants to hook you up with stuff that's worth playing (but also cheap). He plays practically everything, sometimes on YouTube.

Disney’s animated blockbuster Zootopia 2 has overtaken the live-action Lilo & Stitch movie to become the highest-grossing Hollywood release of 2025 and just the third film to make over $1 billion at the global box office.
After three weekends, Zootopia 2 has now made $1.13 billion worldwide, with the majority of that money made internationally (specifically, in China). The domestic haul is now up to $259 million, and the international total is at an incredible $877.7 million. Lilo & Stitch ended its theatrical run earlier this year with $1.03 billion worldwide. But Zootopia 2 still has some way to go before it catches up with the biggest movie of 2025, Ne Zha 2, which made an eye-watering $1.9 billion theatrically. Disney has now had five billion-dollar releases since 2013: Frozen; Frozen 2; Moana 2; Zootopia; and Zootopia 2.
IGN's Zootopia 2 review returned an 8/10. We said: "Zootopia 2 sends ZPD’s first ever bunny-fox detective duo back onto the case of some of the weightiest issues we face as a society, and they brought all the animal puns with them."
Meanwhile, undeterred by a mauling from critics, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 has made $174 million after two weekends in theaters. While the sequel seems unlikely to match its predecessor’s $292 million global box office haul back in 2023, it’s a clear hit for Blumhouse, which, according to Variety, spent just $36 million on the horror film. IGN’s Five Nights at Freddy's 2 review returned a 3/10. We said: “Five Nights at Freddy's 2 gives sequels, video game adaptations, and gateway horror movies a bad name.”
Wicked: For Good is now on $468 million globally (it looks like ending its theatrical run a decent way behind 2024’s Wicked, which hit an impressive $758 million globally), Now You See Me, Now You Don't is on $214 million, and The Running Man is up to $68 million (more here on The Running Man’s box office stumble). And finally, James L. Brooks’ Ella McKay made just $2.1 million domestically during its opening weekend.
As the year nears its end, one final blockbuster is set to hit theaters: James Cameron’s Avatar: Fire and Ash. It’s another crucial release for Disney, which is reportedly releasing four different Avengers: Doomsday trailers to push fans into seeing it multiple times at theaters.
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.

We've rounded up the best deals for Sunday, December 14, below, so don't miss out on these limited-time offers.
One of the most anticipated RPGs of 2025, Dragon Quest I & II HD-2D Remake, is down to $39.99 this weekend. This remake transforms the original two Dragon Quest games into gorgeous experiences with numerous updates and tweaks to modernize the experience. The Nintendo Switch physical copy contains the game on the cartridge, so Switch 2 owners can rest assured about any Key-Card concerns.
PS5 Pro is on sale this weekend for $648.99, saving you just over $100 off Sony's most powerful console. Even if you already own a PS5, the PS5 Pro can still be a solid upgrade, providing enhanced performance and frame rates for numerous games. Newcomers to the PlayStation ecosystem can expect the best PS5 has to offer with this one.
Black Ops 7 is the latest Call of Duty, with the game releasing just a few weeks ago. Despite this, it's already on sale at Amazon for half-off, which may be a record for the fastest CoD to hit this price point. If you skipped out on the game at launch, this is a great deal for $35. Black Ops 7 contains a large amount of content, including a new Zombies mode.
Amazon has the Asus ROG Xbox Ally on sale for $489.99, which is even lower than Black Friday! You can save $110 on this portable PC equipped with everything you need to play or stream your Xbox games.
The fan-favorite Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds is on sale for $37.99 right now following its nomination at The Game Awards. CrossWorlds pits together many iconic characters in the Sonic franchise, in addition to characters outside of it like Hatsune Miku, SpongeBob, and even Joker from Persona 5. If you're in the mood for a new racing game, look no further than CrossWorlds this weekend.
The Nintendo Switch 2 version of Star Wars Outlaws is on sale this weekend for $29.99, which is a steal for one of the hybrid system's best third-party games. This version of Star Wars Outlaws is the Gold Edition, packing in all the DLC and updates that released.
2025 had numerous horror games released, and if you missed out on Cronos: The New Dawn, now is the time to buy, as Amazon has the game discounted $20. Cronos puts you in the shoes of The Traveler, who is sent back in time in areas where a virus has ravaged humanity.
Target has the exclusive Ghost of Yotei Limited Edition DualSense on sale for $64.99 this weekend. Normally $84.99, this controller sports a unique design, featuring a gold brushed design all over the front. In my opinion, this is one of the best limited edition DualSense controllers PlayStation has released, only behind the 30th Anniversary and Astro Bot models.
Astro Bot is a must-own game for any PlayStation 5 owner for many reasons. The fun platforming adventure is a trip across PlayStation's iconic history of games, with cameos from many of the beloved characters that shaped each console generation. Today, you can score Astro Bot for $39.99 at Amazon, which is the lowest we've seen it so far.
Super Mario Odyssey is one of the best Nintendo Switch games, and if you missed out on Nintendo's Black Friday sale, you can still score a discounted copy of Odyssey this weekend. Join Mario and his new friend Cappy on an adventure across Kingdoms to stop Bowser's plans to marry Princess Peach.
GTATrilogyGames has released a brand new update for the Grand Theft Auto Vice City Actual NextGen Edition Modpack. This new update aims to fix and tweak a number of things. So, let’s take a closer look at it. For those who don’t know, the Actual NextGen Edition Modpack is made to improve GTA Vice City … Continue reading GTA Vice City Actual NextGen Edition Modpack Update 25 Released →
The post GTA Vice City Actual NextGen Edition Modpack Update 25 Released appeared first on DSOGaming.
Fallout: New Vegas fans, here is something for you today. The Long 15 Team has released a brand new DLC-sized fan expansion mod for Fallout: New Vegas, called Long 15. This mod will add new free content to the game, so it’s a must for everyone who still plays New Vegas. Going into more details, … Continue reading Long 15 is a new DLC-sized Fan Expansion for Fallout: New Vegas →
The post Long 15 is a new DLC-sized Fan Expansion for Fallout: New Vegas appeared first on DSOGaming.
You’ve seen Fallout: New Vegas and The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind in Unreal Engine 5.6. So, it’s time now for Skyrim. Greg Coulthard has released a tech demo that ports the world of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim to Unreal Engine 5.6, something that can give us a glimpse at a remaster of it. As … Continue reading The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Unreal Engine 5.6 Tech Demo Released →
The post The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Unreal Engine 5.6 Tech Demo Released appeared first on DSOGaming.

Disney reportedly has a plan to encourage repeat viewings of Avatar: Fire and Ash in theaters — and it involves four different Avengers: Doomsday trailers.
Amid intense speculation that Avengers: Doomsday will finally get its debut trailer this month a full year before its December 18, 2026 release date, The Hollywood Reporter said Disney plans to roll out four different Avengers: Doomsday trailers over the course of four weeks, with each enjoying a run in theaters for seven days before being replaced by the next. And it’s all — allegedly — designed to get bums on seats for Avatar: Fire and Ash.
Avatar: Fire and Ash has a December 19 release date, so if THR is right about this, we’ll have our first Avengers: Doomsday trailer in just a few days. Marvel declined to comment.
Rumors had swirled around online about the Avengers: Doomsday trailer being tied to Avatar: Fire and Ash in some way, but this would certainly be a unique rollout. Now, fans are speculating about how this might work. Some are suggesting each trailer will revolve around a different superhero team (The Avengers, The New Avengers / Thunderbolts, The Fantastic Four, The X-Men). But it could be a lot less interesting than that and the trailer may simply be ever so slightly changed week-on-week, with a few extra shots here and there.
Avatar: Fire and Ash is of course a crucial release for Disney. The special effects-heavy Avatar films cost a huge amount of money to produce, but they have historically made billions of dollars at the box office. Avatar: Fire and Ash is expected to follow suit — and the pressure is on it to deliver for Disney so director James Cameron can realize his vision and release Avatar 4 and 5 over the next six years.
But Cameron has sounded words of caution recently. Speaking on The Town with Matthew Belloni podcast, Cameron admitted he was feeling nervous about Avatar: Fire and Ash’s box office performance, and was mindful of the “forces” working against theatrical releases in 2025.
There’s the potential for “sequelitis,” Cameron noted. "People tend to dismiss sequels unless it’s the third Lord of the Rings film and you want to see what happens to everybody, which in my mind this is — this is the culmination of a story arc, but that may not be how the public sees it.” And there’s the “one-two punch” of streaming and Covid, which means fewer people are going to the movies — 75% of the number in 2019, Cameron suggested.
When pressed on how much Avatar: Fire and Ash cost to make, Cameron wouldn’t be drawn into divulging a figure, only suggesting it was a lot of money, and so the movie will have to make a lot of money to turn a profit. “It is one metric f**k ton of money, which means we have to make two metric f**k tons of money to make a profit,” he said. “I have no doubt in my mind that this movie will make money. The question is, does it make enough money to justify doing it again?”
Well, one way to help with that is to show four different Avengers: Doomsday trailers ahead of screenings of Avatar: Fire and Ash for a month!
On the issue of Avatar's box office, Cameron admitted he was “absolutely” ready to walk away from Avatar if Fire and Ash flops. “I’ve been in Avatar land for 20 years,” he said. “Actually 30 years because I wrote it in ‘95, but I wasn’t working continuously on it for those first 10 years. Yeah, absolutely, sure. If this is where it ends, cool.”
As for Avatar: Doomsday, last week a listing for a trailer popped up on the Korean Ratings Board with a runtime of 1 minute and 25 seconds. It sounds like it won't be long until we finally get a sense of what to expect from the film.
Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Disney.
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.

Actor Peter Greene has died aged 60.
His manager, Gregg Edwards, confirmed to NBC News that Greene was found dead inside his Lower East Side apartment in New York City on Friday, December 12. The cause of death is unknown at this time.
The Daily News reported that Greene was found in his apartment after neighbors reported hearing Christmas music playing inside for several days. According to the Daily News, police indicated his death did not appear to be suspicious, with an autopsy scheduled.
Greene was best known for playing villains, perhaps most famously sadistic security guard Zed in Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 movie Pulp Fiction, and antagonist Dorian Tyrell in Jim Carrey’s 1994 comedy, The Mask.
But he played villains in many other movies, such as Bryan Singer’s 1995 crime thriller The Usual Suspects, Judgment Night, Under Siege 2: Dark Territory, Training Day, and The Bounty Hunter. More recently, Greene played Uncle Charlie in John Wick prequel spinoff TV show The Continental.
Edwards told NBC News: “Nobody played a bad guy better than Peter. But he also had, you know, a gentle side that most people never saw, and a heart as big as gold.”
Edwards told the Daily News that Greene was set to star in a movie with Mickey Rourke that was due to start filming next year called Mascots, and had two other potential projects in the works. He called Greene's death "a shock."
Photo by Paul Bruinooge/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images.
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.