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Invincible Season 4's Dinosaurus Has a Voice Actor, Robert Kirkman Says 7-9 Seasons Needed to Do the Complete Comic Arc, Jokes Season 5 Will Be Out in 2032 | SDCC 2025

During his panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2025, Robert Kirkman announced that Matthew Rhys voices Dinosaurus in Invincible Season 4, and committed to a 2026 release window.

Warning! Potential spoilers for Invincible Season 4 follow:

Rhys, who played Philip Jennings in The Americans, plays Dinosaurus in Invincible. Dinosaurus is expected to be the next major villain to appear after Conquest, and in the comics seeks to heal the world from the toxic effects of human civilization.

BREAKING: Matthew Rhys will voicing Dinosaurus in the next season of Invincible. #SDCC pic.twitter.com/kf2eCYot6C

— IGN (@IGN) July 24, 2025

Meanwhile, Kirkman said all of Thragg’s lines have been recorded, but stopped short of announcing the voice actor. Grand Regent Thragg is the true main villain of the Invincible saga, and the ruler of the Viltrumite Empire.

With Season 4 set for release in 2026, fans are wondering what Kirkman’s master plan is for Prime Video's Invincible adaptation. During the panel, he said 7-9 series will be needed to tell the story from the comics.

“Roughly seven to eight to nine seasons I think would be necessary to do the complete arc from the comics of Invincible,” he said. “So we’ll see. Hopefully we get there. We get a tonne of support from Amazon Prime and couldn’t be more thrilled with how things are going. So, very excited and hopeful for it.”

As fans know, Invincible has at times seen a large gap between season releases, and during the panel he joked that Season 5 will be out in 2032, adding: “You can quote me on that.” Perhaps it’s more likely he’ll get close to completing the Invincible comic arc by then!

And finally, Kirkman addressed a complaint about the animation quality of Invincible, insisting it was improving with each season.

Robert Kirkman responds to criticism about the Invincible show’s animation. #SDCC pic.twitter.com/LAKkExRDO0

— IGN (@IGN) July 24, 2025

Outside of the Prime Video adaptation, Kirkman used his panel to reveal Battle Beast as a playable character in the upcoming Invincible VS video game. That’s a fighting game, but some fans are hoping for an open world Invincible game. Kirkman addressed this request, too, pointing to the massive budgets that would be required to make such a game a reality. Smaller scale Invincible games sound more realistic, based on Kirkman’s comments.

Robert Kirkman acknowledges the internet’s wish for an open world Invincible game. #SDCC pic.twitter.com/RKy3Sw7QxK

— IGN (@IGN) July 24, 2025

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.

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Gaming Laptops Should Be the New Default Student Laptop

For the longest time, the prevailing advice (and sometimes requirement) for students buying laptops was to get something like a MacBook Air or even a Chromebook, two devices that are more than capable of lightweight research and writing workloads and are pretty affordable to boot. However, as more workloads become accelerated by GPUs, workstations and gaming laptops are becoming necessary for some college students – especially if you’re in a field like engineering or design.

It’s more important than ever to take a close look at your syllabus and find out the apps you’re going to be using in order to make a better call on your school laptop. You don’t want to put yourself in a situation where you are holding yourself back because your laptop struggles to handle the work. But you also don’t need to fork over thousands of dollars for some serious workstation when a more affordable gaming laptop can do the same kind of tasks.

What Even Is a Gaming Laptop These Days?

I’m old enough that when I think of gaming laptops, I instinctively think of thick, garish machines made of plastic and bright LEDs. But gaming laptops have come a long way in the last 10 years, and it's probably because manufacturers have realized that people are using them for more than just gaming.

You don’t even have to look far to see the impact of this. The new Razer Blade 16 is a gorgeous laptop that trims down its footprint to be nearly as thin and light as a MacBook Pro. This has come at the expense of some performance on the high-end, as Razer needs to limit the TDP of the GPU to make sure it doesn’t, like, melt, but the result is something that is more attuned to creative professionals than the gamers that made Razer a household name.

Likewise, the entire Asus Zephyrus lineup used to be marketed as high-end gaming devices. And while they’re still certainly capable of playing Cyberpunk, something like the Zephyrus G16 doesn’t really look like a gaming laptop – and that’s because it kind of isn’t. Instead, laptops like this that would have traditionally been known as gaming laptops come with Studio drivers pre-installed and are marketed more towards their AI and creative workload capabilities – plus it looks like it belongs in a board room. This kind of laptop is more akin to a portable workstation than what I’d call a ‘gaming laptop.' So what even is a gaming laptop in 2025?

It used to be that any laptop with a discrete GPU was a gaming laptop – quite simply it was a laptop that could play games. But as creative and AI workloads have ramped up in complexity, that distinction has become more muddled. There are plenty of laptops out there that have high refresh rates and high-end GPUs, but come preinstalled with Nvidia Studio drivers and are marketed and priced as creative workstations.

The fun part, though, is that you can install those Studio drivers on any Nvidia GPU, so you can unlock that creative or AI performance in a more affordable gaming laptop like the MSI Cyborg A15. It won’t be as pretty, or as easy, to carry around campus, but if you have a limited budget, it might be the best way to unlock the extra performance you need for your schoolwork.

The GPU Demands for STEM Work

To be clear, when I was in school studying philosophy, I didn’t really need a powerful laptop – in fact, I did most of my schoolwork in the campus computer lab because I didn’t even have a laptop. But if you’re using, I don’t know, Blender for schoolwork, you really don’t want to depend on a run-down school PC to get your final project out the door.

You also don’t need to drop thousands of dollars on a top-end workstation to get that work done. If you’re studying in a STEM field, it’s just important that you get something with a discrete GPU. Every time I’ve benchmarked Blender on a CPU, it is exponentially slower than on a discrete GPU, whether it’s on a desktop or a laptop. Likewise, if you’re creating AI models during your coursework, training it is going to take forever on an integrated GPU. Even a low-end discrete chip is going to significantly boost performance.

Gaming laptops aren’t going to be the right fit for every student, though. If your coursework primarily focuses on research, writing, or even diving into Excel, a MacBook or Chromebook is still going to be the way to go. Then again, having a device that lets you play PC games is a nice bonus.

Gaming In Your Downtime

There are plenty of students who can take advantage of the extra power of gaming laptops for their work, but also gaming laptops are just awesome. PC gaming is better and more diverse than ever before, and even a low-end gaming laptop is able to run most games. An English major isn’t going to need a GPU to boost their writing skills, but a gaming laptop is the best way to play games on campus – especially if you’re shacked up in a dorm room.

Because dorms aren’t really known for their spacious layouts, the more any single device can do, the better. A solid gaming laptop can also be an all-in-one schoolwork and entertainment device. No need to get a tiny TV and a PS5 if you can just play games on your laptop, after all.

You can technically play PC games on any laptop with a decent internet connection, too, thanks to services like Game Pass Ultimate or GeForce Now, but I wouldn’t recommend relying on your school’s Wi-Fi. Playing games on dedicated hardware is just going to be a better experience.

Take the Asus TUF A14 we reviewed last year, for instance. With its RTX 4060 – a last-gen part, mind you – this laptop was able to play everything in our test suite above 60fps. And that includes Cyberpunk 2077, one of the hardest PC games to run. RTX 5060 laptops have started trickling out, too, and while we haven’t had the chance to review one yet, you can probably expect similar performance out of them.

Battery life in gaming laptops also doesn’t take as much of a hit as it used to, either. Mostly thanks to the AMD chip in the TUF A14, the laptop lasted nine and a half hours in the PCMark 10 battery test. Now, you won’t get that kind of longevity while you’re actively playing games, but when you’re going around campus doing schoolwork, the laptop should last most of the day.

Plus, who doesn’t want the option of pulling up a game during a boring lecture that you’re not learning anything from anyways?

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

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How to Stream New South Park Episodes After the Massive Paramount Deal

After taking a year off in 2024 (partly to avoid the election cycle, as creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have said), South Park has returned. The series is making its comeback just in time to skewer every ridiculous thing currently happening in the world.

Despite The White House’s claims that the show "hasn't been relevant for over 20 years" (lol), Parker and Stone recently reached a new $1.5 billion streaming deal with Paramount. With the premiere of Season 27’s first episode mere days after the deal was inked, the animated comedy has already been making waves on social media.

If you’re hoping to get in on the fun through full episodes instead of clips on Twitter/X and Bluesky, here’s how you can watch new South Park episodes online.

How to Stream South Park Season 27 Online

The new season of South Park is airing live on Comedy Central at 10pm ET/PT every Wednesday. New episodes will stream exclusively on Paramount+ the day after they air.

Paramount+ recently rebranded its own streaming subscriptions, with the ad-supported Paramount+ Essential plan starting at $7.99 and Paramount+ Premium (which still includes Showtime) starting at $12.99, ad-free. Both plans offer a seven-day free trial, so I won’t blame you if you wait to binge the whole season.

If you want to watch the new season live, Comedy Central is available through live TV subscriptions like Hulu + Live TV. Assuming there won't be any doubled-up episodes, here’s the full schedule for Season 27:

  • Episode 1: “Sermon on the Mount” - July 23
    • Streaming - July 24
  • Episode 2 - July 30
    • Streaming - July 31
  • Episode 3 - August 6
    • Streaming - August 7
  • Episode 4 - August 13
    • Streaming - August 14
  • Episode 5 - August 20
    • Streaming - August 21
  • Episode 6 - August 27
    • Streaming - August 28
  • Episode 7 - September 3
    • Streaming - September 4
  • Episode 8 - September 10
    • Streaming - September 11
  • Episode 9 - September 17
    • Streaming - September 18
  • Episode 10 - September 24
    • Streaming - September 25

The first episode of Season 27 premiered on July 23, after Paramount delayed it by two weeks from its original release date. Matt Stone and Trey Parker certainly had some complaints about the delay, which happened in part because of Paramount’s merger with Skydance.

The new deal with Paramount gives the streaming service the rights to South Park for the next five years, including 50 new episodes, meaning you won't have to wait too long to see more from Cartman and the gang.

How to Catch Up on Previous Seasons

Aside from Paramount+, which will be the home for all future seasons, all 26 previous seasons of South Park are streaming on HBO Max. Individual episodes and seasons are also available to purchase through Prime Video, but if you’re that dedicated, I’d try and get your hands on one of the many DVDs and box sets you know for sure no one can ever take away from you.

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Chuck Mangione, Jazz Legend and King of the Hill Regular, Dies at 84

Legendary Jazz musician, composer, and King of the Hill regular Chuck Mangione has died at 84.

TMZ reported on the famous brass artist’s passing today, saying that he died of natural causes in his Rochester, New York, home. The Bartolomeo & Perreto Funeral Home adds (via RochesterFirst) that Mangione died in his sleep Tuesday.

Mangione’s career in music traces back to the 1960s, where he managed to kick off his life as a professional musician alongside his brother, Gap, with records like Hey Baby! and Spring Fever. Mangione emerged as one of the most notable, recognizable jazz musicians of the century thanks to ‘70s hits like Give It All You Got, Bellavia, and, most famously, Feels So Good.

Feels So Good is no doubt the Grammy-winning flugelhorn player’s biggest song, coming in as his most-listened-to track at more than 21.7 million plays on Spotify. Since its 1978 debut, the track has been featured in Friends, Zombieland, South Park, Doctor Strange, Life After Beth, and so much more.

Jazz isn’t quite the mainstream success it was 50 years ago, but Mangione still managed to find his way to the public eye despite letting his jazz playing do the talking for decades. While he guest-starred in projects like Magnum, P.I., as well as Canadian children’s television series Sharon, Lois & Bram’s Elephant Show in the ‘80s, it’s King of the Hill that might be his crowning achievement in terms of on-screen work.

Mangione appeared in multiple episodes of Mike Judge and Greg Daniels’ classic Texas-set show, showing up as a spokesperson for the fictional superstore, Mega Lo Mart. It was a recurring role that put jazz front and center, sneaking in references to tracks like Feels So Good while giving him a speaking role on more than one occasion.

It’s unclear if Mangione returned to play any kind of role in Hulu’s King of the Hill revival, which is slated to premiere August 4, 2025. In the meantime, fans of his work have taken to social media to celebrate his life and mourn his passing with segments of his music and highlights from his appearances on the show.

Chuck Mangione, the flugelhorn legend behind “Feels So Good,” has passed away at 84. His music made jazz joyful, hearts lighter, and even King of the Hill cooler. Rest easy, Chuck — your melodies will play on forever. pic.twitter.com/wttT6FVEwG

— Eric Alper 🎧 (@ThatEricAlper) July 24, 2025

Everything I know about Chuck Mangione is from King of the Hill pic.twitter.com/2I7El2LV50

— B (@BrendanLLM) July 24, 2025

RIP Chuck Mangione pic.twitter.com/1PZfcu84d2

— Jeff Veillette (@JeffVeillette) July 24, 2025

Photo by David Redfern/Redferns.

Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor 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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Secretlab Otto Review

Let’s be straight with each other: when it comes to what’s under our desks, pretty much anything can become a footrest, right? For most of my adult life, I’ve had a philosophy of “whatever’s around.” Some days it’s a printer. Others it’s the UPS my computer is plugged into or maybe one of my kids’ balls that happened to roll under there. It’s the PC user’s equivalent of the “if it fits, I sits” mantra adopted by cats around the world. But, even though it works, it’s not ideal and isn’t nearly as comfortable over time as something dedicated to that purpose might be.

That’s where the Secretlab Otto comes in. It’s an adjustable leg rest designed to serve as everything from a gentle support while sitting upright to the end of your gaming-chair bed when you recline for a cat nap. I’ve been testing it for a couple of weeks and it’s mightily comfortable – and you don’t have to have a Secretlab gaming chair to use it! You do have to have deep pockets, however, because at $300, this one doesn’t come cheap.

Secretlab Otto Adjustable Legrest – Design and Features

We may as well get this out of the way first: the Secretlab Otto is just about the definition of a luxury item. Nobody needs this. It's functional in the way a Lamborghini is functional: it'll get you where you need to go, but nobody really needs a Lamborghini. It's overkill for getting from point A to point B, and it costs an arm and a leg, but you sure might want one.

At its core, the Otto is just what its name implies: it's an ottoman, themed after Secretlab's Titan Evo line of gaming chairs, and much more thoughtful and comfortable than most footrests aimed at PC gamers. And it’s adjustable to support different sitting styles, but at the end of the day, you put your feet and legs up on it.

When you get past that base functionality, however, it’s clear to see that it’s very much a step above pretty much any other option in this space. Most often, the footrests you see coming out of gaming chair brands are the simple, plastic or metal tilting stands that are mostly copy-pasted between brands. Others are this weird amalgamation of parts, Frankenstein-like creations that look like a gaming chair seat perched atop a wheelbase and definitely not a way for the company to get rid of spare parts. The Otto, on the other hand, actually looks like a footrest; a product designed from the ground up for this one purpose.

There are a few parts to this leg rest, so let's start with the cushion. Secretlab has positioned itself as a premium, even a luxury, brand in the gaming space and the Otto fits this description to a tee. Like the company's armrests and neck pillows, it's made of its PlushCell memory foam and is upholstered with a very stylish and, forgive my eloquent vocabulary, fancy-looking pattern of interlaced triangles. The fabric is soft and velour-like, and the entire thing is contoured to avoid hard edges (like the corner of a printer or a UPS). It’s the kind of design that just makes you want to touch it, which speaks to the appealing nature of its design.

Like Secretlab’s armrests and neck pillows, it's exceptionally soft with a slow rebound when you remove pressure. I review chairs for a living and can say confidently that Secretlab's memory foam material is genuinely some of the best and most comfortable in the business – and I'm comparing it against the cushions on some of the biggest brands and most expensive chairs you can buy this side of being a CEO. It just cradles you, giving way around your weight but not pressing in on you once you’re settled. Secretlab lushly pads the Otto; there’s more than what you need, but it’s a darn good pillow for your legs.

It’s also adjustable in a way most others aren’t. Thus far, the only adjustment I've seen on competing footrests from gaming brands has been the aforementioned tilt on the hard, low stationary footrests and height on the rare Frankenstein models. One or the other, usually, but the Otto gives you both. Using levers on either side, you can raise or lower the chair three inches to match the height of your chair and sitting posture. The opposite lever unlocks its angle adjustment, allowing you to choose from 0°, 7.5°, 15°, 22.5°, or 30° support angles. Secretlab also includes distance as an adjustment point and, sure, you can pick it up using convenient handles on either side to make sure it supports your preferences (pun intended).

But, to be clear, those flat, floor footrests and ottomans like the Otto aren’t trying to be the same thing. They’re made for different purposes and if that’s what you’re after, Secretlab has a whole product line dedicated to that. In this space, the one that’s about supporting your legs and encouraging you to kick back with your feet up, usually all you’re getting is height adjustment, so the Otto is inherently more versatile for combining those two worlds.

These adjustments also allow it to fulfill multiple roles, which the company highlights in its included usage guide. If you move it close to the chair at its steepest angle, you get bloodflow-encouraging leg support and a more comfortable sitting experience while working or playing a game with a mouse and keyboard. Move it further away with a shallower angle and it fills the role of a full-on recliner.

But wait – Secretlab already has a product for that: the Secretlab Recliner. It’s an attachment that clamps onto the underside of your gaming chair (Secretlab only) and extends by pulling a lever. That accessory, which I loved when I reviewed it and still love to this day, tucks away under your chair and, by necessity, uses a much narrower pillow that can only support your calves. The Otto is bigger and the better choice if you prefer support for the whole leg instead.

With that, it doesn’t attach to the chair itself and instead stands on an X-shaped glass-reinforced nylon base. Its adjustable arm is made of metal and feels rock solid. I also dig the red accent just below the telescoping arm that raises the cushion.

Assembly, as you might imagine, is dead simple. The arm comes attached to the cushion, so all you have to do is slot on the base and tighten four screws with the included driver. I spent far more time cutting up and disposing of the packaging than I did putting it together, so don’t worry about needing to be handy to put this one together.

Secretlab Otto Adjustable Legrest – Performance

Earlier on, I mentioned how thoughtful the design of the Otto is, and because this is so clearly a luxury product, it's worth examining that when we analyze whether or not it's worth investing in.

Given its $299 price point, I expect the utmost when it comes to build quality, and it checks every box. The fit and finish is excellent. The stitching is impeccable. The small touches – like clean, tight cuts at the end of stitching runs so there’s no dangling strings – to the precision of the embroidery to give an almost royal, chevroned appearance. The top layer, where you touch, is slightly thicker than the sides, so you have a more durable, yet still soft, surface layer. Each lever is custom molded and sleekly labeled, and has a glossy accent badge. The red ring on the extending arm mentioned before adding its dash of color. Or the fact that the legs facing the chair on its base are shorter so you can tuck it right in without interfering with the chair’s movement… These are things that give it an intentionality of design and quality of execution befitting its high asking price.

And though you can use it with any gaming chair and aren't limited to Secretlab's catalog, if you do use it with a Titan Evo, you'll find that the contouring of the footrest is made to complement the contouring of the chair's seat. This makes sense both from a brand uniformity standpoint, but also because the contours of both have been designed to promote proper posture, pressure relief, and blood flow for long sitting sessions.

The versatility of its adjustment points allows the Otto to be more of a daily companion than a traditional footrest. Tucking it in close when typing allowed my legs to have a very slight angle, something so small that you wouldn’t think would make a difference. In practice, it’s obviously more comfortable right away. Moving it further away and using it like a traditional ottoman when reclining with a controller is just as good, and lends it more support than the existing recliner add-on due to its size.

This type of design gives it a larger footprint, however, so you'll need space under your desk. The X-shaped base and tilting mechanism allow it to almost slot-in in front of the chair, so you won’t need to give up nearly as much room as any other kind of ottoman. It’s much closer to the impact of a stationary floor footrest, which is impressive considering how much bigger this is. TL;DR: you’ll be able to tuck your chair in just fine as long as you have a little extra room under your desktop, but you will need a foot or so of free area.

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Robert Kirkman Reveals Battle Beast as a Playable Character in Invincible VS With Debut Trailer | SDCC 2025

Invincible VS will feature Battle Beast as a playable character.

Confirmation comes direct from Invincible creator Robert Kirkman’s panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2025, where a new trailer, below, showing Battle Beast in action was revealed.

Invincible VS is the upcoming 3v3 tag fighting game set in the Invincible universe. It’s developed by Skybound Entertainment’s first in-house game studio, Quarter Up. Already confirmed Invincible VS characters include Mark Grayson (Invincible), Atom Eve, Thula, Bulletproof, and Rex Splode. Check out IGN’s Invincible VS preview from June for more.

Here’s the official blurb on Battle Beast:

Battle Beast enters the arena with all the rage, strength and brutality fans know and love. His insatiable bloodlust has led him across the arena, using massive attack range and Super Armor to overpower opponents. Though slower in speed, his sheer power makes him a dominant “anchor” fighter capable of turning the tide of battle.

Warning! Spoilers for Invincible Season 3 follow:

In the Season 3 of Invincible, Battle Beast survives a brutal battle against a Viltrumite in space after a prison break. In the season finale he is found frozen and adrift by a ship from the Coalition of Planets and revived, setting the stage for his potential involvement in the Viltrumite War. He wants “more!”

To catch up and find out what all this means for Season 4, check out IGN's Invincible Season 3 ending explained.

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.

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South Park Feuds With White House After Season 27 Premiere Features Scathing Donald Trump Parody

The minds behind South Park are feuding with U.S. President Donald Trump's administration after the long-running Comedy Central show aired an extended segment mocking the leader’s behavior and politics, among… other things.

Clips from last night’s South Park Season 27 premiere, titled Sermon on the ‘Mount, flooded social media feeds today as fans of all kinds gathered to see how creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone chose to pick apart the 47th President. While the heavily stylized, satirical series is known for its ruthless takedowns of celebrities, politicians, and everyone in between, its criticisms of Trump feel especially fierce.

Hey, Satan! pic.twitter.com/JQzbcWVUbm

— South Park (@SouthPark) July 24, 2025

The 22-minute episode begins quietly enough as the citizens of South Park seek answers from a president who can “only arrest and sue people” while making everyone’s lives far worse. After the entire town bands together, the show’s new take on Trump is revealed to be a much more accurate depiction of the sitting U.S. president.

Many familiar photographs of Trump, including what appears to be an edit of his infamous 2023 mugshot, are used to portray the character, who has a funny-yet-familiar voice and mouth that separates his chin from the top of his head. This version of Trump then proceeds to take flak for inflicting tariffs on Canada, bombing Iran, and more, calling direct attention to real-world events that have transpired since 2025 began.

Parker and Stone only heat up their criticisms from there, as the show follows a Trump that laughs while threatening to sue White House artists for painting him in a particular way.

“Why is my dick so small?” South Park Trump asks the artists at one point during the Season 27 premiere.

A similar jab can be seen multiple times throughout the episode, as Trump can then be seen taking all of his clothes off before getting into bed with Satan. On more than one occasion, South Park Trump’s behavior, voice, actions, and dialogue also suggest the character is a new version of the South Park movie’s Saddam Hussein, who features many of the exact same traits.

Trump White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers released a statement addressing how the South Park Season 27 premiere depicted the President.

“The Left’s hypocrisy truly has no end — for years they have come after South Park for what they labeled as ‘offense’ [sic] content, but suddenly they are praising the show,” Trump White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told Rolling Stone.

“Just like the creators of South Park, the Left has no authentic or original content, which is why their popularity continues to hit record lows. This show hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention. President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country’s history — and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump’s hot streak.”

It’s unclear if future episodes of South Park will continue to lambast Trump and his actions, but Parker and Stone do include one last stinger toward the end of the new episode. Just before its conclusion, one of 50 of what are called the “South Park Pro-Trump” PSAs is played. In the clip, what appears to be a live-action deepfake of Trump can be seen shuffling through the desert before removing all of his clothes.

“His penis is teeny tiny, but his love for us is large,” the PSA voiceover says.

So can we talk about how Cartman saying "I love you man" to Butters during the end credits was actually Trey saying that to Matt in case it's all over for South Parkpic.twitter.com/oiK2i08EVt

— Ericka ♡ (@NeonTravesty) July 24, 2025

As the episode comes to an end, Eric Cartman (Parker) and Butters (Stone) deliver one last line that seemingly pokes fun at fears of cancelation following its criticisms of Trump. It’s one of a few other moments from the premiere touching on the controversy surrounding its parent company, Paramount, and the lawsuit it recently settled with Trump for $16 million.

The case saw the President sue Paramount based on accusations that CBS News had deceptively edited an interview with 2024 presidential candidate Kamala Harris. The deal had previously faced criticism from Stephen Colbert of The Late Show, which CBS announced was coming to an end after 33 years on the air just last week. Colbert had called the settlement “a big fat bribe” just days earlier.

“I didn’t want to come back and be in the school, but I had to because it was part of a lawsuit and the agreement with Paramount,” South Park’s Jesus Christ says through clenched teeth in the Season 27 premiere. “The guy can do whatever he wants now that someone backed down, OK?”

The character continues: “You guys saw what happened to CBS? Yeah, well, guess who owns CBS? Paramount! Do you really wanna end up like Colbert?”

Parker and Stone signed a five-year streaming deal with Paramount+ reportedly worth $1.5 billion earlier this week after Paramount had moved to delay the show, sparking criticism from the creators. Stone celebrated the news on social media yesterday.

Michael Cripe is a freelance contributor 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 Fantastic Four: First Steps Post-Credits Scene Check-In (No Spoilers)

Let's make this simple: You want to know if there are any post- or mid-credits scenes in The Fantastic Four: First Steps. The answer is yes, there's both.

There’s a lot riding on The Fantastic Four: First Steps. It’s the film that finally introduces the iconic team to the MCU (even if they aren’t on the right Earth just yet). It’s a film that’s striving to do big box office numbers in a very crowded summer movie season and coming off the heels of two underperforming Marvel movies. And, of course, it’s directly laying the foundation for 2026’s Avengers: Doomsday and the rise of Robert Downey, Jr.’s Doctor Doom.

We'll get into the specifics of how First Steps ends and how it does (or doesn't) set up Doomsday when our full Ending Explained breakdown drops tomorrow. But for now, there's one all-important question that needs to be answered.

Does The Fantastic Four: First Steps Have Any Post-Credits Scenes?

Come on, this is a Marvel movie. Of course it does.

Sticking to the traditional MCU formula, First Steps includes both a mid- and a post-credits scene. They're both worth sticking around for, albeit for very different reasons.

So there you have it. Check back here on Friday for our full ending explained update.

IGN's Clint Gage gave The Fantastic Four: First Steps a 7 out of 10 in his review, writing, "With The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Matt Shakman directs a film that’s for sure interesting to look at even if it doesn’t quite rise to the scale of its planet-eating antagonist, a force of cosmic nature that doubles as a metaphor for parenting in a way that makes me feel seen as a father. These First Steps might not be the great strides I was hoping for, but they are sure footing for the Fantastic Four to officially leap into the MCU."

For more on the FF, learn about the Fantastic Four that almost was and see our ranking of the Fantastic Four movies.

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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Ick Review

If there is one moment of real connection in director and co-writer Joseph Khan’s frenzied horror-comedy Ick, it occurs less than three minutes before the ending credits begin to roll. After managing to escape a lengthy tentacle monster attack during what ends up being a rather deadly prom, a surviving teen asks, “Are we done now, or…?” After nearly an hour and a half of being whisked from half-baked scene to half-baked scene, watching absolute bedlam practically materialize out of thin air, and struggling to recall any details from prior scenes that could help me understand how we arrived to certain seemingly major developments, I found myself asking the very same thing.

Early peeks at this nostalgia-fueled alien thriller promised commentary on the dangers of mass apathy shrouded in big laughs and pulpy action, all to the tune of early 2000s radio royalty like All-American Rejects and Wheatus. Instead, Ick skips past any sharp satire with its almost punishing pace and a broken jukebox approach to sentimentality with needledrops so on-the-nose that they’re rendered ineffective. To make matters worse, the actual storytelling isn’t comprehensive enough (nor are the jokes funny enough) to save any of it with memorable characters or any sort of payoff at the end.

Ick follows (or, more accurately, attempts to keep up with) Hank Wallace (Brandon Routh) a former high school football star who endures a rather lengthy rough patch between his teen years and middle-aged adulthood, when he eventually becomes a science teacher at his old high school. This rough patch, I must add, is fully documented in a whirlwind montage that crams far too much backstory in the almost eight minutes before the title card even appears. The wall-to-wall, whooshing quick cuts feel visually reminiscent of Shaun of the Dead or Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World (where Routh also appeared in a funny cameo). But unlike those instances, where speedy cuts were only sparsely and strategically used as scene transitions, this panicky pacing carries on throughout the entirety of Ick.

It’s consistently overwhelming, downright sloppy in places, and there doesn’t appear to be a good enough reason for the breakneck tempo in the first place: it doesn’t effectively enhance the story’s comedic or frightening qualities. It does, however, add to the confusion by trying to pack more into 90 minutes than that timeframe can accommodate, making the whole ordeal feel much longer than it actually is.

There isn’t any explanation as to where the Ick came from or why it suddenly needs to attack at all.

Ick’s bewildering temperament is made more aggravating by the story’s near-refusal to dig below the surface of anything, even when the dormant creature known as the Ick inexplicably reaches a critical mass and begins attacking the town. There isn’t any solid explanation as to where the Ick came from, how this small town has managed to coexist with it for decades (while it was dormant, its slimy tendrils were still visibly everywhere), or why it suddenly needs to attack at all. Perhaps it’s just a visual ode to iconic horror, or commentary on how time and complacency has desensitized the general public amid serious danger, but failing to metaphorically tie this tentacled blob to any societal ill feels like a missed opportunity.

The same lack of exploration also applies to the town’s occupants, who are nothing more than thinly rendered high school archetypes. Routh, for his part, seems to loosen up halfway through and lean into the foolishness when he’s not attempting to play the part earnestly, but those scenes don’t last long enough to allow his or anyone else’s performance (such as the criminally underwritten Mena Suvari as Hank’s high school girlfriend) room to breathe. Ick also doesn’t appear to press all that hard against the well-worn cliches that Hank represents beyond the fallen hometown hero. Early scenes touch on the hypersexual nature of ‘90s-era high school thrillers and the desperation to cling to former glory, but not enough to make any hearty observations or even crank out a few cheeky digs.

Ick’s younger cast, led by Malina Pauli Weissman as the Gen Z voice of reason, Grace, largely exist to lampoon #wokeness. Some of it works, like in the case of Harrison Cone’s Dylan, who weaponizes his feigned social awareness to get away with being a creep and a bully. Beyond that, the angle doesn’t yield any creative jokes or insights that might’ve at least made the pokes at basic empathy worth it. Even Grace’s supposed twist of a storyline feels like an haphazardly inserted afterthought amongst the mayhem that goes nowhere.

To its credit, Ick’s special effects are mostly serviceable.

As the Ick ramps up in presence, the action mainly remains one-note: Inky roots creep up the bodies of victims, seemingly siphons their life force, then fully possess their new host, lather, rinse, repeat. To its credit, Ick’s special effects are mostly serviceable, even if the action they support is largely forgettable. Sprawling and invasive, the monster does look fairly menacing, even in its dormant state. There are definitely scenes when the attacks reach peak aggression and the quality begins to look strained, but as a nod to the classic creature features of yesteryear (which Kahn clearly harbors an appreciation for) it actually fits.

Still, Ick’s big, climactic moments aren't particularly memorable and we aren’t given a reason or chance to care enough about the characters to feel anything about their fate, positive or negative. At most, the mounting danger results in a refreshing cameo from Debra Wilson, who lands the movie’s best wisecracks as an overextended and ultimately unhelpful military leader. She also delivers on one of the more overt themes: the ineffectiveness of government during times of real crisis. The commentary’s a little light, but it is there, for what it’s worth.

Perhaps the most disappointing aspect of Ick is its failure to really nail the nostalgia beyond a somewhat predictable soundtrack, a misstep that really only matters when nostalgia is a central part of the story. Film and TV are rife with examples of well-placed music – Netflix’s Beef, for instance, is a buffet of expertly deployed early 2000s bops that bring heft or energy to its more emotional moments. Ick, on the other hand, opts for the spray n' pray method of musical direction, throwing the era’s most obvious pop-rock tunes into a blender without much thought other than to say, “Hey, remember Hoobastank?” The choices aren’t terribly inspired or all that exciting, which is especially baffling considering Kahn’s extremely diverse videography as an award-winning music video director. It’s a soundtrack you’ve heard time and time again, and putting it in this context doesn’t merit a revisit.

So much of this would be forgivable – the one-note characters, the exaggerated visual cues, even the myopic view of the era’s music – if Ick actually took the time to say anything meaningful. But if Kahn has any real perspective on the state of our society or the era of film this is meant to reflect, it’s almost entirely overshadowed by chaotic editing and a startling lack of cohesion.

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The Legend of Vox Machina Renewed for Fifth and Final Season, Season 4 Gets Debut Trailer and Release Window | SDCC 2025

San Diego Comic-Con 2025 was the home of a number of Critical Role Prime Video announcements. During an SDCC panel, we finally got a release date for The Legend of Vox Machina spinoff The Mighty Nein, but The Legend of Vox Machina itself was the subject of two reveals: a 2026 release window for Season 4, and a renewal for a fifth and final season.

Alongside these announcements, the Critical Role crew revealed a new clip for The Legend of Vox Machina Season 4 in which the main characters plot a heist designed to steal a secret scroll from a heavily guarded vault inside a Cobalt archive. This is all part of the team’s bid to save the world from the apocalypse, of course.

Here’s the setup:

In Season 3, the Chroma Conclave’s path of destruction spread like wildfire while the Cinder King hunted down Vox Machina. Our lovable band of misfits ultimately saved their loved ones, Tal’Dorei, and all of Exandria, but also suffered heavy losses. Season 4 finds our heroes scattered across the globe on separate journeys, but when a cataclysmic threat befalls Exandria, they must reunite to face a foe darker than they could imagine.

Next year will be the Year of Fuck Shit Up! Our heroes return for more debauchery in The Legend of Vox Machina Season 4 in 2026! pic.twitter.com/O20eq6DcmX

— The Legend of Vox Machina and The Mighty Nein (@LVMandM9onPrime) July 24, 2025

Critical Role is the Dungeons & Dragons livestream sensation that now has two of its fantasy role-playing campaigns adapted into animated shows for Prime Video. The Legend of Vox Machina is based on Critical Role’s first tabletop adventure, whereas The Mighty Nein adapts Campaign 2. The Mighty Nein is set in the same world as Vox Machina (Exandria), but takes place around 20 years later, with its main cast playing different characters.

"It's so rare for any television series to get to tell a complete story, beginning to end, exactly as it was envisioned,” said executive producers and Critical Role co-founders Sam Riegel and Travis Willingham. “We're so grateful to our fans, the critters, our partners at Prime Video, and the original Kickstarter backers for bringing this show to life, and turning the numbskulls of Vox Machina into animation legends."

It's a busy time for Critical Role, which just this week confirmed it has a video game on the way.

Image credit: Prime Video.

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.

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Star Wars Reveals First Still From Maul - Shadow Lord and First Look at Ezra Bridger From Ahsoka Season 2 | SDCC 2025

Lucasfilm has released two first-look Star Wars images: one for Maul - Shadow Lord, and another for Ahsoka Season 2.

In a post on StarWars.com, Lucasfilm revealed the first still from Maul - Shadow Lord. Announced at Star Wars Celebration Japan in April, Maul - Shadow Lord is a brand-new Disney+ series featuring fan-favorite villain Darth Maul. It sees Sam Witwer reprise his role as Darth Maul from Star Wars Rebels and Star Wars: The Clone Wars. (Witwer's voice was also featured in the closing scene of Solo: A Star Wars Story.) The new series is set after the final season of The Clone Wars and will see Maul "plotting to rebuild his criminal syndicate on a planet untouched by the Empire." Expect it out at some point in 2026.

Meanwhile, the second image shows Eman Esfandi as Ezra Bridger in a new costume from Season 2 of Ahsoka, which is currently in production.

Also revealed at Star Wars Celebration, Hayden Christensen will return as Anakin Skywalker in Season 2 of Ahsoka. For more, check out why Ahsoka delivers such a powerful testament to Anakin Skywalker's legacy, and the first look at Rory McCann as Baylan Skoll in Ahsoka Season 2.

It's a busy time for the world of Star Wars. Star Wars: Visions Season 3 launches in October, with Jon Favreau's The Mandalorian & Grogu Movie set for May 22, 2026. Star Wars: Starfighter has a May 28, 2027 release date.

Image credit: Lucasfilm.

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.

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How to Play the Pokémon Games in Chronological Order

The mainline Pokemon games make up one of the best-selling video game franchises of all time. From Pokemon Red and Blue to the Pokemon Scarlet and Violet, these games have amassed a huge audience that just keeps coming back for more.

If you haven't played all of the Pokemon video games in the series, however, you may find yourself in a bit of a dilemma trying to figure out where to start in 2025. Most of the major titles in the series are excellent standalone games to dive into, but if you want to start from the beginning, there are two different ways to play in order: Chronologically or by release date.

Jump to:

Which Pokemon Games Should You Actually Play First?

Choosing where to start boils down to what Nintendo console you currently have, though the recent Delta emulator may change that for you. If you only have a Nintendo Switch, you can start with Let's Go Pikachu or Let's Go Eevee, which are kind of like remakes of the original Yellow version from 1998. You can also play Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl for another remake experience. Pokemon Legends: Arceus is also an option, but it is very different from the other mainline games.

If you're wanting to dive right into Pokemon Scarlet and Violet, it's worth noting that you likely won't be missing out on any overly pertinent information from the previous games. The only games in the main series you might not want to jump right into is Black 2 and White 2 as those are sequels.

How to Play the Pokemon Games in Chronological Order

The Pokemon timelne may seem pretty linear at first glance, but without enough obvious details to go off of, it can be pretty confusing to try to follow the chronology from title to title. Luckily, a now deleted tweet from Toshinobu Matsumiya has given us a starting point for some of the games. For the rest, we can only make educated guesses based on a few key details witin the games.

1. Pokemon Legends: Arceus

The first game in the chronology is very clearly Pokemon Legends: Arceus seeing as it's set in a time when the relationship between humans and Pokemon was only just starting to form. You spend a large portion of your time running around a vast open wilderness catching and battling wild Pokemon, and the people you interact with are clearly just beginning to understand the world of Pokemon. This game features crafting and research tasks, which greatly differentiates it from the usual gym battle formula we are used to.

Though we don't know just how long ago Pokemon Legends: Arceus takes place compared to the other games in the series, we do atleast know that it seems to feature the ancestors of Diamond and Pearl characters.

2. Pokemon Red, Blue, and Yellow

As the original games in the series, Pokemon Red, Blue, and Yellow are up next in the timeline. Bringing the first-generation Pokedex and introducing us to the classic Pokemon game formula, these best-selling games are what started it all.

Although we can't know for sure that these Game Boy games are up next in the timeline, the deleted Tweet from Game Scenario writer Toshinobu Matsumiya confirmed that the series starts with these. The technology featured in the game is also fairly limited compared to some of the newer games -- though still advanced enough to bring fossils back to life!

Bonus: Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen

Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen are remakes of the original Red and Blue games and thus are at the same exact point in the timeline. Much of the plot is the same as the originals with some key differences -- including visiting the Sevii Islands after becoming champion of the Elite Four.

3. Pokemon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald

Pokemon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald brought all new Pokemon and throws you into the Hoenn region -- which is some distance from both the Kanto and Johto regions. Considering this game features the third generation of Pokemon and some new technology, it seems most likely that it would take place after both Red and Blue and Gold and Silver. However, according to that same deleted tweet from Matsumiya, Pokemon Ruby and Sapphire take place at the same point in time as FireRed and LeafGreen.

This also means that Pokemon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire are at the same point in the timeline here seeing as they are remakes.

4. Pokemon Gold, Silver, and Crystal

As the second game in the series (in terms of release date) Pokemon Gold and Silver take place three years after the events of Red and Blue. With some exciting new Gen 2 Pokemon and some of the best post-game content in the series, Gold, Silver, and Crystal were an excellent follow up to the original games. By traveling to the Kanto region after becoming the champion of Johto, you get a firsthand look at the passage of time. You even get to battle the protagonist from the first games, Red, who is quite strong.

This placement in the chronology also applies to the remakes: HeartGold and SoulSilver. Although the remakes offer some additional content, they are essentially just updated versions of the originals.

5. Pokemon Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum

In terms of series release order, Pokemon Diamond and Pearl came a few years after Ruby and Sapphire. However, we now know from that deleted tweet from Matsumiya that Diamond and Pearl actually takes place at the same time as HeartGold and SoulSilver. This may seem a little bit confusing considering the advancements in technology we see in Diamond and Pearl, but we can likely just chalk it up to the actual date the games were created rather than the chronology within the Pokemon universe.

This would also mean that the remakes, Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl are set in the same point of the timeline. Though the timeline gets a bit wonky with the inclusion of Fairy-type Pokemon considering those weren't introduced until X and Y.

6. Pokemon Black and White

Featuring the fifth-generation of new Pokemon, Black and White was the second mainline game to come out on the Nintendo DS. Although we don't know exactly when the story takes place in the Pokemon universe, we do that it takes place after Diamond and Pearl thanks to Matsumiya's tweet. Since there aren't any obvious links to the previous games, we can only assume that Black and White takes place more than 3 years after Red and Blue.

7. Pokemon Black 2 and White 2

As a true sequel to Black and White, Pokemon Black 2 and White 2 offer a fairly obvious transition through the chronological timeline. We see changes where gym leaders pass on their duties to the next generation, Team Plasma has advanced their plot, and there is a new Champion. Between all of these things, we know that roughly two years have passed since Black and White, progressing the timeline forward in an uncharacteristically linear fashion.

8. Pokemon X and Y

As the first game in the series to allow payers to explore and battle in 3D, Pokemon X and Y was a fresh take on the classic Pokemon formula. While this is largely due to it being the first title in the series to be a Nintendo 3DS game, it definitely helped set up future games. While we don't know exactly when the game fits in the chronology, thanks to Matsumiya we atleast know that X and Y take place at the same time as Black 2 and White 2. However, it's possible that it is set in a different universe due to Mega Evolution being a thing.

9. Pokemon Sun and Moon

Happening a few years after X and Y, Pokemon Sun and Moon takes us to the Alola region. While we don't have any information from Matsumiya about where this game fits in the timeline, it features a few characters from X and Y that indicate that time has passed between games. An adult Red and Blue also make an appearance, though their exact age isn't revealed, so we still don't know exactly how much time has progressed since Red, Blue, and Yellow.

This also means that Pokemon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon take place at the same point in time as they are essentially remakes of Sun and Moon with some additional content.

10. Pokemon Sword and Shield

With the arrival of the Nintendo Switch came the first Switch-exclusive mainline Pokemon game: Sword and Shield. Featuring a brand-new region, new Pokemon, and the introduction of Gigantamax, Sword and Shield is essentially a soft reboot of the series. So that being said, we have no idea where it fits on the chronological timeline. There aren't really any hard references to the previous games, so there is no way of accurately fitting it into the known Pokemon universe.

One of the only clues we have about the timeline comes in the form of new technology. The addition of the Rotom Phone seemingly places us further in the chronology than Red and Blue at the very least, but that's all we can really gather. It's possible that Pokemon Sword and Shield simply takes place in an entirely different universe than any of the other games.

11. Pokemon Scarlet and Violet

As the latest entry in the series, Pokemon Scarlet and Violet brings all-new Gen 9 Pokemon and the open-world Paldea region to the Nintendo Switch. There haven't been any obvious clues revealed about where it lands on the timeline, so we unfortunately don't have enough information to try to accurately place it. That being said, if it follows the chronological structure of previous mainline games, it's possible that it takes place at the same time as the events of Pokemon Sword and Shield.

How to Play the Pokemon Games by Release Date

I you want to play the games in the order they were released rather than try to attempting to go through the convoluted chronological timeline, here are all of the mainline Pokemon games by release date:

  1. Pokemon Red and Blue - February 27, 1996 - Game Boy
  2. Pokemon Yellow - Game Boy - September 12, 1998 - Game Boy
  3. Pokemon Gold and Silver - November 21, 1999 - Game Boy Color
  4. Pokemon Crystal - December 14, 2000 - Game Boy Color
  5. Pokemon Ruby and Sapphire - November 21, 2002 - Game Boy Advance
  6. Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen - January 28, 2004 - Game Boy Advance
  7. Pokemon Emerald - Sepember 16, 2004 - Game Boy Advance
  8. Pokemon Diamond and Pearl - September 28, 2006 - Nintendo DS
  9. Pokemon Platinum - September 13, 2008 - Nintendo DS
  10. Pokemon HeartGold and SoulSilver - September 12, 2009 - Nintendo DS
  11. Pokemon Black and White - September 18, 2010 - Nintendo DS
  12. Pokemon Black 2 and White 2 - June 23, 2012 - Nintendo DS
  13. Pokemon X and Y - October 13, 2013 - Nintendo 3DS
  14. Pokemon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire - November 21, 2014 - Nintendo 3DS
  15. Pokemon Sun and Moon - November 18, 2016 - Nintendo 3DS
  16. Pokemon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon - November 17, 2017 - Nintendo 3DS
  17. Pokemon Sword and Shield - November 15, 2019 - Nintendo Switch
  18. Pokemon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl - November 19, 2021 - Nintendo Switch
  19. Pokemon Scarlet and Vilolet - November 18, 2022 - Nintendo Switch
  20. Pokemon Legends Z-A - TBA Late 2025

Upcoming Pokemon Games

We finally got an official gameplay reveal of the next mainline Pokemon game during this year's Pokemon Day. Titled Pokemon Legends: Z-A, the upcoming game is set in Lumiose City, within the same Kalos region as Pokemon X and Y. The city itself is in the midst of a technological evolution to support trainers and Pokemon thriving together.

As a Legends game, Z-A's starter Pokemon are a throwback: Chikorita and Totodile from Gen 2 alongside Tepig from Gen 5. Like in Legends: Arceus, these familiar starters will be getting new final evolutions. The gameplay trailer also showed off new battle mechanics, like positioning, dodging, and aiming your Pokemon's attacks.

Pokemon Legends: Z-A will launch on the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 on October 16, with a Switch 2 bundle with the game (sorry, no special edition) releasing on the same day.

That wasn't the only game reveal from the 2025 Pokemon Day announcements. Game Freak and The Pokemon Company also announced Pokemon Champions, a new battle game for both Switch and mobile devices. This is most likely the "multiplayer Pokemon game" that was alluded to in earlier leaks. More like Pokemon Showdown than other Pokemon releases, Pokemon Champions will allow trainers to battle with Pokemon they've caught and trained in other games through the Pokemon Home app. No release date information has been revealed.

Looking for additional Pokemon content? Check out our guide to the best Pokemon movies and Pokemon Video Games for more. You can also shop for the coolest Pokemon merchandise at the IGN Store for some of our favorite Pokemon toys.

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The Home Review

The Home opens in theaters Friday, July 25.

From Danny McBride writing Halloween sequels to Chris Rock starring in a Saw movie and Jordan Peele’s entire career shift, recent years have found a lot of famous funnymen prove they can also do horror with the best of them. As the latest comedian to jump into that world, Saturday Night Live veteran Pete Davidson does decent work in The Home, playing things straight and doing his best to make his character Max feel relatable, but it’s an uphill battle he can’t win in a movie that is as flimsy and inadvertently silly as this one.

The story focuses on Max, who we know is Very Troubled because he wakes up in a drug den and then goes and tags a building with graffiti that reads “Our future is burning” as his red spray paint splatters back on his face, evoking blood. It’s subtle, but you might get the idea this guy is in a bad place in his life! And that sort of clumsy and awkward storytelling unfortunately is par for the course here.

One thing leads to another and Max ends up being given a community-service sentence to work a temporary job as an orderly at a retirement home, where he discovers some very strange and disturbing goings-on. Yes, it’s a time-honored horror movie tradition to leave us to ponder why characters don’t just leave when things get weird and dangerous, but The Home is especially egregious in this regard. Without any sort of genuine, slow build-up to let us believe Max might first feel some connections to this place, it’s preposterous that he doesn’t bail on his very first day after discovering two of the elderly residents having sex wearing bizarre masks, and then witnessing a woman suddenly begin to bleed from the head while doing pool exercises. His legal issues don’t hold up as a credible reason for him to stick around or to not at least contact someone about the hugely troubling signs that something is very off, and yet Max initially seems more curious or bothered than properly freaked out by the rapidly escalating strangeness.

Co-writer/director James DeMonaco is best known for The Purge series, and while those films are certainly inconsistent, there is a lot to enjoy in them and the heightened world DeMonaco created. The Home, though, seems like it’s trying to at least begin in a more grounded, realistic setting, but feels incredibly and often laughably heavy-handed from the start.

To its credit, there is some mildly interesting mystery to be found as Max begins to do some investigating into what’s going on in this place, especially in regards to the fourth floor and what he’s been warned are especially troubled occupants. Yet Max’s reactions continually don’t read true, and would-be scary scenes often play as more goofy as a result. When Max inevitably ventures onto a forbidden floor and a snarling, out-of-control old man lunges at him, his response is to say “I’m not gonna hurt you,” rather than, you know, getting the hell away from this guy.

DeMonaco is going for some messaging here, but it’s muddled and hard to decipher until near the end, where parallels to real life discussions and debates about different generations and who’s in control are made blatant. It feels like too little, too late as far as resonating or helping The Home to hit home, even if there is some last-minute amusement to be had with how things suddenly get a lot more direct and pointed. The final sequence does at least allow for some over-the-top visceral confrontations that feel like DeMonaco veering back into The Purge terrain, where he’s much more in his element. (Also, while most of the gore isn’t done with much panache, if you’re sensitive to harm being done to eyeballs, this movie might elicit a reaction.)

Davidson does his best to make his character relatable, but that's an uphill battle in a movie this flimsy and inadvertently silly.

Prior to that, though, The Home pays lip service to how the elderly can often be discarded or overlooked, while mostly leaning into a lot of easy and tired, “Aren’t these old people so creepy?” imagery. It doesn’t help that some of the scenes here are very similar to 2022’s X, including Max seeing an old woman hauntingly staring out a window at him or a sequence where one of the residents crawls into bed with him while he sleeps. But unlike Ti West’s film, where the elderly Pearl was an evocative character given enough nuance to allow us to understand the twisted pain and jealousy that guided her, here it all feels surface level and hollow.

The supporting cast is at least filled with a pretty impressive, recognizable group of, “Hey, it’s that guy/gal!” veteran character actors as the retirement home’s staff and residents, including John Glover, Bruce Altman, Ethan Phillips, and Mary Beth Peil. Their presence at least keeps The Home a bit more engaging than it might otherwise be, particularly Glover, who looks to be having a lot of fun as an eccentric acting class teacher. But with such a weak story at the center, all the support in the world can’t hold this up as a horror movie worth watching.

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Critical Role's Prime Video Show The Mighty Nein Finally Has a Release Date — and a Star-Studded Guest Voice Cast | SDCC 2025

The Legend of Vox Machina spinoff The Mighty Nein finally has a release date and guest voice cast confirmation.

As announced during a panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2025, The Mighty Nein hits Amazon's Prime Video on November 19. While it of course stars the main Critical Role cast, The Mighty Nein also includes a long list of guest voice actors, including Alan Cumming (Nightcrawler in the X-Men movies and the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday), Mark Strong (Kingsman, Assembly Mage in The Legend of Vox Machina), and singer-songwriter Tim McGraw.

Other big names to guest star include Anika Noni Rose from The Princess and the Frog, Ming-Na Wen (bounty hunter Fennec Shand in Star Wars), Moana star Auli’i Cravalho, and the one and only Number One himself, Star Trek’s Jonathan Frakes.

The Mighty Nein guest voice actor cast:

  • Mark Strong
  • Alan Cumming
  • Tim McGraw
  • Anika Noni Rose
  • Ming-Na Wen
  • Auli’i Cravalho
  • Rahul Kohli
  • Robbie Daymond
  • Jonathan Frakes

Critical Role is the Dungeons & Dragons livestream sensation, which now has two of its fantasy role-playing campaigns adapted into animated shows for Prime Video. The Legend of Vox Machina (Season 4 is on the way) is based on Critical Role’s first tabletop adventure, whereas The Mighty Nein adapts Campaign 2. It is set in the same world as Vox Machina (Exandria), but takes place around 20 years later, with its main cast playing different characters.

Here’s the official blurb:

The Mighty Nein follows a group of fugitives and outcasts, bound by secrets and scars. But when a powerful arcane relic known as The Beacon falls into dangerous hands, they must learn to work together to save the realm and stop reality itself from unraveling.

Expect an hour-long new animated series starring Critical Role founders and cast members Laura Bailey (The Last of Us: Part II), Taliesin Jaffe (World of Warcraft), Ashley Johnson (The Last of Us), Liam O’Brien (Marvel’s Avengers), Matthew Mercer (Baldur’s Gate 3), Marisha Ray (Fallout 76), Sam Riegel (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles), and Travis Willingham (Marvel's Avengers). The Mighty Nein is described as being "intentionally darker, grittier, and edgier" than Vox Machina. A clip shown during the Comic-Con panel featured the main characters very much not taking an interrogation seriously.

Which is it - The Mighty Nein or The Sensual Seven? Whatever it is, looks like it comes exclusively to Prime Video on November 19th! pic.twitter.com/OE5Lc5IQOR

— The Legend of Vox Machina and The Mighty Nein (@LVMandM9onPrime) July 24, 2025

The Mighty Nein main character descriptions:

  • BEAU (Marisha Ray): Beau is a Cobalt Soul monk with attitude. Part MMA fighter, part kickass detective, she's on a secret mission to root out corruption within her own organization and abroad.
  • CALEB (Liam O’Brien): Caleb is a disheveled – some might say filthy – wizard with a penchant for fire magic. He's on the run from his past that continues to haunt him.
  • FJORD (Travis Willingham): Fjord is an orphan sailor. After his ship blew up in a deadly scheme, Fjord washed ashore without a scratch and with magic powers. But he's still trying to figure out if the powers are a gift or a curse.
  • JESTER (Laura Bailey): Jester is a loveable chaotic prankster who was born and raised in an upscale brothel. After pranking a powerful politician with no sense of humor, she's forced to go on the run with her best friend, an invisible god named the Traveler.
  • MOLLY (Taliesin Jaffe): Molly is the flamboyant tarot reader for a traveling carnival. His endearing wit is a stark contrast to his mysterious ability to manipulate blood to his will.
  • NOTT (Sam Riegel) : Nott the Brave is a foul-mouthed alcoholic goblin girl and a master of stealth and crossbow. She drinks to hide from her painful past, which she hopes her new friend, Caleb, can help her solve.
  • YASHA (Ashley Johnson): Yasha is a barbarian woman from the wastes of Xhorhas in the Kryn Dynasty. Her roving mercenary work has earned her the harrowing moniker: “The Orphan Maker.”
  • ESSEK (Matthew Mercer): Essek Thelyss is a Kryn elf and elite spy for the Dynasty. He will stop at nothing to protect the ones he loves.

It's a busy time for Critical Role, which just this week confirmed it has a video game on the way.

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.

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How to Watch the Spider-Man Movies in Order

Spider-Man is one of the most iconic superheroes of all time, but he didn’t swing onto the big screen until director Sam Raimi helped bring 2002’s Spider-Man to life. Since then, Spider-Man has become one of the most profitable superheroes, with pretty much every film adaptation taking the box office by storm.

While it may be easy to watch the films in release order, there are those of us who love watching stories in chronological order to experience these stories in a whole new way. Luckily, the release order and chronological order of the Spider-Man movies and spin-offs are the exact same, so it really just comes down to how you want to watch all the films that tell the complete story of the Spider-Verse (pun intended!).

This guide will help you in your quest to watch all the Spider-Man movies and their spin-offs. Whether you want to watch just the main movies with Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland, or you want to have the complete picture and future-proof your Spidey knowledge with various spin-offs, we have you covered.

Below, you can find a mostly spoiler-free look at how to watch all the Spider-Man movies and their spin-offs in chronological order. You'll also see a few lists on Spider-Man movies in release order or with a particular actor. And if you want to just find out how to watch the Spider-Man spin-offs like Venom and Kraven and the like, check out Sony's Spider-Man Universe in Chronological Order.

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How Many Spider-Man Movies Are There?

While the wider Spider-Man Universe includes over a dozen movies, there are ten total films led by Spider-Man himself. Eight of those movies are live-action — three led by Tobey Maguire, two by Andrew Garfield, and three by Tom Holland — and two are animated, featuring a variety of Spideys. That animated film, Into the Spider-Verse and the sequel Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse will be followed by Beyond the Spider-Verse.

For a full list of how to stream all of the films, take a look at our guide on where to watch the Spider-Man movies in 2025.

Spider-Man Movies in Chronological Order

1. Spider-Man (2002)

2002’s Spider-Man is the one that brought Peter Parker into the world of live-action on the big screen. Starring Tobey Maguire as everyone’s friendly neighborhood Spider-Man and Kirsten Dunst as Mary Jane, this film gave us many memorable moments, including the upside-down kiss that may still be one of the most iconic kisses of all time.

Oh, and it features Willem Dafoe and his fantastic first performance as Harry Osborne/Green Goblin and J.K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson, roles they would both reprise in future films beyond the Maguire-era.

Read our review of Spider-Man.

2. Spider-Man 2 (2004)

Tobey Maguire’s journey as Spider-Man continues in 2004’s Spider-Man 2, and this time he must face off against Alfred Molina’s Doctor Otto Octavius when a tragic lab accident turns the Doctor into a supervillain. This second film in the Maguire era took place two years after the first and gave us the legendary scene featuring Spider-Man saving a runaway train with nothing but his spider-strength and web-slinging prowess.

Read our review of Spider-Man 2.

3. Spider-Man 3 (2007)

Spider-Man 3 is the last film of Sam Raimi’s trilogy and the final entry starring Tobey Maguire as the titular hero. Whereas the first two films focused on one main villain, this third entry packed three baddies into its runtime, including Sandman (Thomas Haden Church), Venom (Topher Grace), and a new Green Goblin (James Franco). This movie, which takes place about a year after Spider-Man 2, is probably the most polarizing of the first three films, but it did give us Spider-Man’s Black Suit and that must give it some points, right?!

Read our review of Spider-Man 3.

4. The Amazing Spider-Man (2012)

2012’s The Amazing Spider-Man saw Marc Webb swing into the director’s chair, and was the first to star Andrew Garfield as the web-slinging hero opposite Emma Stone’s Gwen Stacy. The Amazing Spider-Man is another take on Spidey’s origin story and features some history about Peter’s parents. The big bad in this movie is Rhys Ifans’ Lizard, a mutated scientist who once worked with Peter’s father.

Read our review of The Amazing Spider-Man.

5. The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 was the second and last film in the Garfield era and, much like the last film in the original Spider-Man trilogy, it featured a trio of villains. like. Taking place two years after the original, this sequel introduced Jamie Foxx’s Electro, Paul Giamatti’s Rhino, and Dane DeHaan’s Green Goblin, and was supposed to set up future entries in the franchise featuring Venom and the Sinister Six. Unfortunately, the film’s mixed review and lower box office performance contributed to all of those plans being scrapped.

Read our review of The Amazing Spider-Man 2.

6. Captain America: Civil War (2016)

While Captain America: Civil War is obviously not a Spider-Man movie, it did introduce the world to Tom Holland’s version of Spider-Man. Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) recruits Holland’s Peter Parker after he has already become Spider-Man, and we get to see him facing off against or teaming up with many of the MCU’s greatest heroes.

Read our review of Captain America: Civil War.

7. Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017)

Spider-Man: Homecoming, Tom Holland’s first solo film as Spider-Man, arrived in 2017 with Jon Watts at the helm. It takes place after the events of Captain America: Civil War, and tells the story of Peter Parker handling the twin challenges of high school and proving to Tony Stark that he’s ready to join the Avengers. Despite that, he still takes it upon himself to improve his skills and stop crimes as Spider-Man alongside hanging out with his friends MJ (Zendaya) and Ned (Jacob Batalon). Homecoming also introduces us to Michael Keaton’s Adrian Toomes/Vulture, a villain who will appear again down the line.

Read our review of Spider-Man: Homecoming.

8. Venom (2018)

While there is no Spider-Man in 2018’s Venom, Tom Hardy’s version of the iconic Spidey villain does have a role to play in Holland’s Spider-Man story as future films will see their paths almost cross. It remains to be seen if Holland’s Spider-Man will ever actually run into Hardy’s Venom, but this character will undoubtedly have an important part to play in the future of the web-slinger, one way or another.

Read our review of Venom.

9. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018)

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is another Spider-Man story separate from the mainline films, but it is one well worth a watch. The story centers around Shameik Moore’s Miles Morales, but Spider-People from many different multiverses quickly enter the picture and build a cast of characters, including Hailee Steinfeld’s Spider-Gwen, Jake Johnson’s Peter B. Parker, John Mulaney’s Spider-Ham, Nicolas Cage’s Spider-Man Noir, and more.

Read our review of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.

10. Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

Avengers: Infinity War features a large cast of the MCU’s greatest heroes, and Tom Holland’s Spider-Man is one of them. He plays an important role in Infinity War and his growing friendship with Tony Stark is one of the highlights.

Read our review of Avengers: Infinity War.

11. Avengers: Endgame (2019)

While certain plot reasons keep Tom Holland’s Spider-Man out of Avengers: Endgame for much of the movie, he still makes his presence felt in key moments of this film’s story. Also, it is the culmination of 21 MCU films before it and deserves a spot on the watch list.

Read our review of Avengers: Endgame.

12. Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019)

Taking place after the events of Avengers: Endgame and dealing with much of what happened in that film, Spider-Man: Far From Home begins in New York City before taking Holland’s Peter Parker to Europe for a school trip. He wants to take a trip undisturbed from the world of superheroes, but the universe has other plans for him. Throughout Far From Home, Holland crosses paths with Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders), and Quentin Beck (Jake Gyllenhaal), who claims to be a hero from a different universe. Make sure to stick around for the post-credits scene here!

Read our review of Spider-Man: Far From Home.

13. Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021)

Much like the first Venom film, Venom: Let There Be Carnage is very much adjacent to the Spider-Man films rather than directly tied in. However, this film builds up the world of Tom Hardy’s Venom, and includes a post-credits scene that brings these two worlds closer together than ever.

Read our review of Venom: Let There Be Carnage.

14. Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)

Spider-Man: No Way Home picks up right after the post-credits of Spider-Man: Far From Home and is the most recent mainline Spider-Man film to be released. After Peter and his friends’ lives are turned upside down, he goes to Doctor Strange and asks him to make things right by making everyone forget that Peter Parker is Spider-Man.

However, things go awry and the multiverse opens up, bringing many familiar faces from previous films into the MCU. No Way Home is as much the next chapter in Holland’s story as it is a continuation of the Maguire and Garfield eras, and the fan service is just so wonderful, especially if you have seen the previous films.

Read our review of Spider-Man: No Way Home.

15. Morbius (2022)

Morbius, much like Venom, has very little in the way of Spider-Man specifically, but it helps build out the wider universe. We know Morbius takes place in the same universe as Venom as there are certain nods like a reference to the events “in San Francisco,” but the connection to Spider-Man is a bit more unknown. Morbius is a Spider-Man villain, and the film also sees the return of Michael Keaton’s Vulture, who looks to have a bigger role to play in the future of Spider-Man, hinting that Morbius could take place in the MCU or Sony or even a bit of both.

Read our review of Morbius.

16. Spider-Man: Across the Spiderverse (2023)

Across the Spider-Verse is another animated film that seemingly sits outside of the MCU. That being said, it dives deep into the multiverse and could eventually be pulled into the rest of the Spider-Man universe similar to how the other films were brought into the fold with No-Way Home. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is a direct sequel to Into the Spider-Verse, taking place about a year after the last film ended.

The film is largely centered around Miles Morales getting pulled further into the multiverse to join Gwen Stacy and a team of Spider-People to take on a powerful new threat.

Read our review of Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

17. Madame Web (2024)

While the Spider-Man spin-off Madame Web is connected to our favorite web-slinging hero, the events of the film don't feature him. Sure, there may be some spoilery links we won't ruin here, but this is a mostly standalone story in the Spidey-verse that you can watch at any time.

This film stars Dakota Johnson as Cassandra Webb and tells her origin story. We follow her as a paramedic in Manhattan who begins to develop powers to see the future and and tries to come to grips with trying to change what's to come. She is joined by Sydney Sweeney, Isabela Merced, and Celeste O'Connor, who are all "bound for powerful destinies... if they can all survive a deadly present."

Read our review of Madame Web.

18. Venom: The Last Dance (2024)

Tom Hardy had his last go-round as Eddie Brock, as well as Venom, in 2024's Venom: The Last Dance. Our review said "Venom: The Last Dance trips over its own tendrils and lets a boring, generic plot, and bad action distract from the surprisingly resilient central relationship between Eddie Brock and his symbiote bestie."

Read our review of Venom: The Last Dance.

19. Kraven the Hunter

The Aaron Taylor-Johnson-starring Kraven the Hunter didn't fare well with critics, and appears to be the last live-action movie for now in the Sony/Marvel universe. And just think, none of these guys ever even got to meet Spider-Man!

Read our review of Kraven the Hunter.

Spider-Man Movies in Order of Release

  • Spider-Man (2002)
  • Spider-Man 2 (2004)
  • Spider-Man 3 (2007)
  • The Amazing Spider-Man (2012)
  • The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)
  • Captain America: Civil War (2016)
  • Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017)
  • Venom (2018)
  • Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018)
  • Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
  • Avengers: Endgame (2019)
  • Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019)
  • Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021)
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)
  • Morbius (2022)
  • Spider-Man: Across the Spiderverse (2023)
  • Madame Web (2024)
  • Venom: The Last Stand (2024)
  • Kraven the Hunter (2024)

Tobey Maguire Spider-Man Movies in Order of Release

  • Spider-Man (2002)
  • Spider-Man 2 (2004)
  • Spider-Man 3 (2007)
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)

Andrew Garfield Spider-Man Movies in Order of Release

  • The Amazing Spider-Man (2012)
  • The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)

Tom Holland Spider-Man Movies in Order of Release

  • Captain America: Civil War (2016)
  • Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017)
  • Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
  • Avengers: Endgame (2019)
  • Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019)
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)

Upcoming Spider-Man Movies

Following the release of Kraven the Hunter, Sony's Spider-Man Universe appears to be on hold, at least in terms of live-action movies not starring Tom Holland as Spidey. But still, there are more projects on the way...

Beyond the Spider-Verse

The third Spider-Verse movie, Beyond the Spiderverse, is in development. While originally slated to release in 2024, we got official confirmation at CinemaCon that the new release date is June 4, 2027.

Nic Cage will also be continuing in his Spider-Verse role as Spider Man Noir for a live action Amazon series from producers Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and Orien Uziel.

MCU Spider-Man

Tom Holland's Spider-Man will continue in the MCU with Spider-Man: Brand New Day. It's scheduled to release on July 31, 2026, with Destin Daniel Cretton (Shang-Chi) on board as director. Sadie Sink (Stranger Things) recently joined the cast; she'll reportedly play either X-Men character Jean Grey or Mary Jane Watson. Jon Bernthal will also be reprising his role as the Punisher.

Outside of those two movies, other updates include Kevin Feige confirming Miles Morales won't appear in live-action in the MCU. We've also gotten exclusive reveals of the upcoming Spider-Man Magic: The Gathering expansion. For more info, check out our full list of upcoming Spider-Man movies and shows.

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

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LEGO Just Announced a New Wicked Set and It's Perfect for Adults

Wicked: For Good isn't arriving in theaters until November later this year, but LEGO is getting ahead of the upcoming release with some really cool sets. Alongside several other major announcements (including a LEGO Game Boy) LEGO has revealed a new Emerald City Wall Art set. At just over 1,500 pieces, it's the latest addition to the LEGO Art line targeted specifically at adults and it's set to release on September 1.

LEGO released a line of Wicked sets for the first movie last year, but they were designed mostly for kids. This year the company seems to be putting more of a focus on its adult audience as this is the second Wicked set specifically made for the 18+ market.

LEGO Wicked Emerald City Wall Art Preorders Are Live

The Emerald City Wall Art set is meant to be built and then displayed on your wall. This isn't a playset that is designed to be interacted with, which is what earns it that 18+ age rating. The build itself is made up of 1,518 pieces and measures over a foot tall. So it isn't a massive piece of art, but it is perfect for an office or a smaller bedroom. In addition to the art itself, the set also comes with seven minifigures. Glinda and Elphaba are featured in the main display and little versions of Dorothy, Cowardly Lion, Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Toto can also be placed in a hidden compartment.

This is the second adult LEGO set that has been announced for Wicked fans. Earlier this month, the Glinda & Elphaba bookends were also revealed. This set comes at a slightly lower price tag, but as an 18+ set it's also meant to be a display model. Similar to the book nook sets LEGO released back in June, this particular model is designed with your shelf in mind.

LEGO Wicked: Glinda & Elphaba Bookends Are Also Available

The bookend set is made up of 845 pieces, so it's a much smaller build. The two ends are designed around both Glenda and Elphaba's respective looks and personalities; Glenda's side pink and vibrant with flowers and a butterfly, while Elphaba's half is darker with her signature green and a witchy potion. It comes with six minifigures, each a faithful recreation of their movie counterpart: Glenda, Elphaba, Madame Morrible, Fiyero, and Pfannee.

Wicked: For Good is set to release in theaters on November 21, 2025. It's unclear at this time if there will be any more new LEGO sets released before the film arrives.

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First Image From Avatar: Seven Havens Revealed | SDCC 2025

Hot off the press from Nickelodeon's Avatar: The Last Airbender 20th anniversary panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2025 is the first image from Avatar: Seven Havens.

IGN was in Ballroom 20 for the reveal, and captured the image below.

BREAKING: The first image from Avatar: Seven Havens has been revealed at #SDCC pic.twitter.com/W0hxqy6MgK

— IGN (@IGN) July 24, 2025

Co-creator Bryan Konietzko said this Earthbender is named Pavi, who we see with her cat monkey, Geet, and her mentor Jae, who is an Airbender. This image shows the city in which they live, Allura.

Avatar: Seven Havens is a 26-episode, 2D animated series following a young Earthbender who is the next Avatar following Avatar Korra. It's co-created by Avatar: The Last Airbender creators Michael DiMartino and the aforementioned Konietzko.

Konietzko said: "It's something totally different. We like to change up the style. We like to make each project its own thing. As you can see, it still feels like Avatar, but the world is very different. You'll have to tune in to find out why."

Nickelodeon has said Seven Havens is set in a world “shattered by a devastating cataclysm. A young Earthbender discovers she’s the new Avatar after Korra - but in this dangerous era, that title marks her as humanity’s destroyer, not its savior. Hunted by both human and spirit enemies, she and her long-lost twin must uncover their mysterious origins and save the Seven Havens before civilization’s last strongholds collapse.”

Avatar: Seven Havens will be split into two seasons comprising a 13-episode Book 1 and a 13-episode Book 2. This is the first mainline TV series from Avatar Studios.

Meanwhile, during the panel, Konietzko also teased The Last Airbender: The Legend of Aang, a new animated feature film due out October 9, 2026. Konietzko didn't show anything of the film, but did say the footage that has been animated is 2D animation with deep canvass environments. "There is nothing that looks like this," he said, before adding: "it's just gonna blow you away." Expect more at next year's SDCC.

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.

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Ranking the Fantastic Four Movies From Worst to Best

Marvel's First Family launches back onto the big screen this week with The Fantastic Four: First Steps - a retro-futuristic Jack Kirby-inspired endeavor that officially brings this pioneering comic book supergroup into the MCU. This isn't the first Fantastic Four movie, of course; heck, it isn't even the first Fantastic Four movie to feature Silver Surfer and Galactus as its villains. But it does, however, look like it will be the first FF flick to deliver the goods.

With Reed, Sue, Johnny, and Ben once again clobberin' their way into our hearts, we've decided to rank the four (yes, four) Fantastic Four movies that came before this.

Where will The Fantastic Four: First Steps ultimately rank on this list? Well, we'll need to give that a little bit of time, so that everyone gets a chance to see it and also to sidestep any possible recency bias. We do know that our reviewer, Clint Gage, gave the film a 7 out of 10, saying it's a "family dramedy that only stops working when it tries to be too much of a superhero movie."

For now though, we'll dip into the past and list these suckers from terrible to "it's fine." Here is our official ranking of the previous Fantastic Four flicks!

4. Fantastic Four (2015)

Josh Trank's abysmal Fantastic Four movie was naturally going to come in dead last. It's a colossal misstep on just about every level, swapping out the family dynamic and cosmic camaraderie elements for humorless sci-fi slog. It all feels like stoic strangers sharing a nightmare, tweaking so much of the standard formula that it barely feels recognizable as a Fantastic Four movie. Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara, and Jamie Bell starred in a catastrophe that Trank himself even disavows, claiming that his version, a better version, of the film was buried by Fox, who then made their own theatrical cut. We'll have to take his word for it, but consider that just about anything would be better than this film.

3. The Fantastic Four (1994)

Even though most everyone involved was tricked into thinking this movie would get a theatrical release, and even though indie cinema icon Roger Corman made it on a nothing budget, it's still an earnest, honest Fantastic Four movie. So it just so happens that an impressively faithful-to-the-material Fantastic flick, which was fated to be shelved, came about because producer Bernd Eichinger needed to make a movie to retain the superhero rights. Everyone looks the part down to their hairstyles; we even got the best, or at least most accurate, Dr. Doom to date. So aside from rubber costumes and shoddy effects, this film is eons better than the $120 million dollar fiasco listed at number four.

It's worth noting that the actors from this movie -- Alex Hyde-White, Rebecca Staab, Jay Underwood, and Michael Bailey Smith -- all have small roles in The Fantastic Four: First Steps.

2. Fantastic Four (2005)

The 2005 Tim Story Fantastic Four film is...fine. It gets the quartet right as characters for the most part and offers up a serviceable full-costumed Dr. Doom, albeit with a villain arc that feels very Norman Osborn-esque from 2002's Spider-Man. It's an origin story that spends two-thirds of the movie dealing with the Four's origin, though to be fair, no one was necessarily burned out on origins back in 2005 when Marvel franchises like Spider-Man and X-Men were still shiny and new. Where the movie is most lacking is in the third act, which falls flat as a climactic clash between our heroes and a rather low-blood sugar Doom. There's nothing drastically wrong about this movie, even with its tweaks, but it's also a rather unexciting outing. Still, it's because this movie was a modest hit that we actually had, briefly, a Fantastic Four franchise.

1. Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)

Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, and Michael Chiklis returned for this souped-up sequel, which allowed the Fantastic Four to exist as public-facing celebrity superheroes without having a lengthy origin story to bog things down. Aside from the new Phase 6 movie coming out, this is the only other Fantastic Four movie where we just get dropped into a lived-in FF universe where our heroes are beloved global champions. Sure, Rise of the Silver Surfer has Reed doing a silly, stretchy dance at his bachelor party, and it wasn't confident enough to give us Galactus as Galactus (he appears as a cloud, which was the way superhero movies solved adversaries for a long time - see also: Green Lantern, Dr. Strange, the Loki series, etc.), but it was also a better team adventure than the first film, even borrowing a bit from Superman II by having Dr. Doom remain as a secondary antagonist to the new cosmic threat.

Which is your favorite past Fantastic Four movie? Let us know down below...

Matt Fowler is a freelance entertainment writer/critic, covering TV news, reviews, interviews and features on IGN for 17+ years.

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