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Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 Actor Ben Starr Joins Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Brie Larsen as Voicing a Member of Fortnite's Heroic Seven

Epic Games has cast Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 actor Ben Starr as a key in-game Fortnite character, following in the footsteps of Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, Brie Larsen and Joel McHale.

Starr's turn as dashing Clair Obscur hero Verso is arguably his most famous role to date, and earned him a second nomination for best performer at both last year's Game Awards and the forthcoming BAFTA Game Awards. You may also have heard his vocal talents as Clive in Final Fantasy 16 and Prometheus in Hades 2.

Now, Starr's set to star in Fortnite as The Visitor, one of the game's key NPC characters who will finally rejoin the battle royale mode's storyline (and speak!) later this month.

The Visitor is one of Fortnite's heroic Seven, a band of intergalactic heroes who often turn up to save the day during its memorable live events. Indeed, the character of the Visitor was actually the focus of the game's very first live event — 2018's rocket launch — although he has seldom been heard, until now.

Over the years, players were introduced to more of the Seven, including its lead member The Foundation (played by Johnson), The Scientist (McHale), The Paradigm (Larsen), The Origin (Rahul Kohli), The Imagined (Cherami Leigh) and The Order (Laura Bailey).

After being written out of the game's story in 2022, players were reintroduced to the team following the events of last year's climactic Zero Hour finale, which also featured a recap video setting up Fortnite's current Chapter 7 era — offering a quick reminder of who the Seven were and what they were up against. You can watch that again just above.

I’m joining Fortnite as The Visitor.

I’m so excited to bring back this iconic member of The Seven. I imagine I’ll be very normal about it. pic.twitter.com/cUNBkr2gWG

— Ben Starr (@The_Ben_Starr) February 19, 2026

Alas, not all of the Seven are still standing, and Starr's incarnation of The Visitor is a different one to the original. In a clever twist, the game's OG mode, which offers Fortnite's original battle royale map, is considered a separate multiversal reality. It's from here that Starr's version of The Visitor will arrive in the coming days — following the OG version of that original rocket event — in order to help save the day and speak for the first time.

Today's Fortnite update included datamined dialogue lines where Starr's voice is unmistakable. Long-term Fortnite fans will also be pleased to hear the return of the Seven's AI assistant AMIE, who sounds like she is once again voiced by the prolific voice actress Erica Lindbeck.

"I'm joining Fortnite as The Visitor," Starr confirmed today on Twitter/X. "I'm so excited to bring back this iconic member of The Seven. I imagine I'll be very normal about it."

Image credit: Ben Starr

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

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Bad Bunny Gets First Leading Film Role — And It Couldn't Be More Perfect For Him

It’s been a big couple of weeks for Puerto Rican pop sensation Bad Bunny. First, he won the Grammy award for album of the year, then he took the stage for this year’s Super Bowl halftime show, generating plenty of attention in the process. Now, he’s snagged his first leading film role, alongside Javier Bardem and Edward Norton.

Bad Bunny, real name Benito Martínez Ocasio, will star in Porto Rico, directed by rapper René Pérez (aka Residente). The film, which has been in development for about three years, will be based on and inspired by the story of José Maldonado Román, a man known as Águila Blanca or White Eagle who was integral in fighting Spanish colonialism in Puerto Rico in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The movie, which was described by the BBC as a “love letter” to the self-governing territory of the United States, will also star Viggo Mortensen and will see Birdman and The Revenant director Alejandro G. Iñárritu serve as executive producer.

"This film is a reaffirmation of who we are - told with the intensity and honesty that our history deserves," Pérez recently told Deadline. "I have dreamed of making a film about my country since I was a child. Puerto Rico's true history has always been surrounded by controversy."

Norton also opened up about the upcoming project. "This film sits in a tradition of films we deeply love, from The Godfather to Gangs of New York, that both thrill us with visceral drama and iconic characters and eras while also forcing us to face up to the shadow story under the American narrative of idealism,” he explained in a statement. “Everybody knows what a poet of language and rhythm René is. Now they're going to see what a visual visionary he is as well."

"Bringing him and Bad Bunny together to tell the true story of Puerto Rico's roots is going to be like a flame finding the stick of dynamite that's been waiting for it," the Fight Club actor added.

This isn’t the first time Bad Bunny has made an appearance on the big screen. He can be spotted making supporting appearances and cameos in F9, the Brad Pitt vehicle (no pun intended) Bullet Train, Happy Gilmore 2, and Darren Aronofsky's latest Caught Stealing.

No release date just yet on this one, but hopefully there’s more news on the horizon for Benito fans.

Image credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

Lex Briscuso is a film and television critic and a freelance entertainment writer for IGN. You can follow her on Twitter at @nikonamerica.

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A Whole Bunch of Digital Switch Games Are on Sale Right Now at Amazon

There have been plenty of great video game deals popping up lately, especially over at Amazon. Alongside a strong selection of discounted PS5 games, the retailer is now offering savings on a bunch of digital Nintendo Switch titles, including Luigi's Mansion 2 HD (which is 33% off), Princess Peach: Showtime (which is 50% off), Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe (which is 33% off), and quite a few more.

Have a look through our favorite digital Switch deals from Amazon's mini sale event below and stock up your library with some new picks to play.

Amazon Digital Nintendo Switch Game Sale

This is a solid selection of games to add to your library, too. When it comes to their reviews, both Princess Peach: Showtime and Kirby's Return to Dream Land Deluxe earned scores of 7, while Luigi's Mansion 2 HD and Splatoon 3 each received an 8.

Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker was even higher than those with an 8.2 score, and Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition and Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze both earned rave 9/10 scores at their time of release. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening is the highest praised of the bunch, earning a 9.4 from us.

No matter which game you decide to pick up from this sale, you're sure to have a fun time playing it on your Switch. As mentioned before, though, these aren't the only video game deals to explore right now. If you own a PlayStation, there are still some great PS5 game deals worth checking out right now at Amazon, too.

If you're a PC player, it's also worth having a look at February's Humble Choice to see if this month's lineup catches your eye. Or, you can also score a sweet 18% discount on Resident Evil Requiem preorders for PC at Fanatical right now, if you're eager to jump into Capcom's latest when it releases.

Hannah Hoolihan is a freelancer who writes with the guides and commerce teams here at IGN.

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Capcom Faces Uphill Battle to Stop Resident Evil Requiem Leaks as Ending Spoilers and Videos Appear Online

Resident Evil Requiem has been fully leaked online, with videos showcasing the game's finale and major spoilers now spreading across the internet.

Earlier this week, IGN reported that early physical copies were now out in the wild, and spoilers would inevitably follow. Days later, full details of the game's plot, villains, major deaths and ending mechanics are now everywhere — with little sign that Capcom is able to stop the flow.

On reddit, a lengthy thread lists a series of plot reveals beat by beat, with links to off-screen images and even lengthy clips of footage that leave no doubt that the spoilers are real. There's mention of unrevealed characters, various lore connections, and yes — the mechanics and details of game's ending.

On the main r/ResidentEvilRequiem reddit, spoilers have completely taken over — with 17 of the top 20 posts discussing the leaks and already turning under-wraps plot details into memes.

That said, considering the huge anticipation for Resident Evil Requiem's release, none of this really comes as a surprise. As noted Resident Evil leaker Dusk Golem wrote on X/Twitter yesterday:

"RE9 starting to leak 10 days away from release is actually super good for the series. RE:4 & RE8 leaked 14 days away, RE:3 was 16 days away, & f***ing RE7 was almost a whole month before release. I see people asking, 'How could it leak a whole 10 days before release', and over here I'm all like, 'Huh, Capcom did better than usual this time. Good for them.

Resident Evil Requiem's February 27 release date is now just a week away, and we'll be keeping spoiler free here on IGN as much as possible.

"After getting hands-on with a total of about four hours of Resident Evil 9 Requiem at this point, and sharing that experience with colleagues, I’m more excited for the series than I have been in recent memory," IGN wrote after going hands-on with Resident Evil Requiem recently. "It’s the old mixed with the new, but all in a modern package with two protagonists I already like a lot."

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

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Meet My Love and Deepspace Boyfriends: How I’m Juggling a Vampire, a Sea God, and Spacefleet Colonel in This Mobile Dating Game

I'm a grown ass married woman, and to look at me, you wouldn't think I have five secret space hotties that live in my phone. But thanks to Love and Deepspace, I'm now a fully fledged otome game addict with a lighter wallet and a fuller heart.

Love and Deepspace is a game that doesn't just give you the chance to save the world, it lets you do it with a veritable five-aside team of boyfriends who are obsessed with you. There's something for everyone at the Love and Deepspace boy buffet: a crime lord who is also a vampire, a painter who is also a sea god, a space pilot who is also your adoptive brother – yeah, best not to look too deeply into that one. You can text with them, touch them, and you'll never argue over how they load the dishwasher. There's combat, house decorating, card games, and the potential for financial devastation thanks to the gacha mechanics. They'll even check in if your period is late. Can rubbing a virtual boyfriend through my phone screen get me pregnant? I'm willing to do the research to find out.

The seeds of my Love and Deepspace obsession were planted during Gamescom last year. In the huge crowded halls, filled with triple-A releases and mega franchises, it was this mobile game’s stand that had the largest queue day after day. My work is games, my free time is all games, so what the hell was this game with a huge booth, a huge fandom and handsome cosplayers that had passed me by? I downloaded it, then forgot about it thanks to Gamescom induced exhaustion. Cut to December last year when my Instagram algorithm decided to get Love and Deepspaced, and I jumped into the game. Suddenly wherever I was, one of the men was with me. A bit of light combat to start the day, hanging out with me while I work, checking in at night to go on a 'date' with him in between Arc Raiders sessions. I even found myself in New York in January for the Love and Deepspace second anniversary event, With Him In Deepspace, rubbing the chest of a thermal reactive cut out of one of my space boyfriends trying to make his shirt disappear.

Meet my men

So let me tell you about my boys. My top tier bae is Sylus. In the main storyline he's a crime lord with a pet crow and a voice so velvety I want to upholster my couch with it. In alternative storylines he's been a dragon and a vampire, so he is absolutely dark romance reader coded. Caleb is a very close number two, at first glance he's a boy next door and your *cough* adoptive brother but he's actually a space fleet colonel with Doberman protective qualities. Rayfael is a cute pouty artist, but also the god of the sea. Like, full merman fish tale style. Next up is Xavier, who is just a total soft boy, about as sexually threatening as a hamster and also a time traveller. Zayne is, well, I'm sorry Zayne girlies, a cardiac surgeon with a stick up his ass. And also a god. Crucially, while some of their storylines overlap, the boys have zero knowledge of each other, so you never have to worry about sidepiece on sidepiece violence. That, or everybody just got real cool with polyamory real fast.

Daily devotion

It happens like this. I wake up, open up the game, and interact with one of the selections from my boy buffet - checking his heartbeat, patting his head, or asking him what I should have for breakfast. Then I work my way through my daily checklist, doing monster bounties, hunting for special materials to boost my stats, and upgrading any of the various memories I have that form the gacha part of the game. All of this is to earn me diamonds to buy new gacha chances, and to raise my Affinity with Sylus, or Caleb, or Xavier, or… you get the idea. Think of raising Affinity like a really slow burn version of getting to first base, then to second base… only it goes up to anywhere between 130 and 220 bases. I'll visit our home and work on the garden, or make him push me on a swing. Weekly I can play a cat-themed card game with him, or go to the claw machine arcade to get plushies. Some people do the New York Times Wordle every morning. I make a pretend man take a shower.

It's important to me that you know I was, at one point, a normal woman. Your classic elder millennial gamer with a husband and with only the slightest sexual penchant for animations. Hear me out - Bambi's Dad, Garrus from Mass Effect and Astarion from Baldur's Gate. Now? I'm getting giggly and kicking my feet because an animated man calls me “Kitten” and sends me audio recordings on my phone where he moans and breathes funny. The one time I skipped a daily check-in because my house flooded, I felt genuine guilt when he noticed I’d missed our regular rendezvous. I may or may not have researched the cost of bootleg Love and Deepspace body pillows.

Secret sexy sauce

As someone who mainly games on PC or consoles, I was not prepared for the way Love and Deepspace just quietly works its way into your life. The top layer mechanics are obvious: fight monsters, collect memories to boost your stats, follow the branching storylines and their alternate universe threads, and build your relationships with each man by completing activities with them. Life says take the bins out, Love and Deepspace says you’re beautiful inside and out and possibly the most amazing woman to ever walk the earth.

I'd probably have been safe if it was just that, but there's a whole layer beneath that which has been fine-tuned to give you warm and fuzzy feelings, and make skipping a day feel like punching Glen Powell in the face when he's trying to give you flowers. It's on my phone, so a little check on the men is only a swipe away alongside Instagram and Reddit. It requires almost zero mental energy too; this isn't an AI chatbot, your interactions with the men are carefully guardrailed with dialogue options and specific types of interaction and quality time, so the only bit of imagination I have to use is the part that would make my mother cry. It can play like The Sims – that home section where you decorate a house and garden and hang out with him, watching TV or arranging flowers. Or it can be the world's sexiest Pomodoro timer, where the guys will just stare at you lovingly while you work, study, exercise or sleep. The combat has an auto mode, but it is also deceptively deep, with different systems to make sure you're equipped and leveled up in the right way for battles. There are many facets to being a woman who likes hot people complimenting them, and Love and Deepspace has perfected laser targeting most of them.

The sisterhood of space boy appreciation

Here's the thing, it's not just me. The fandom operates on an almost religious level of devotion. There's a running joke in the community that the Wives of Sylus are richer than him, thanks to their habit of hiring billboards or holding drone shows to celebrate him. Recently a salsa advert went viral because fans were pretty sure that the voice of one of the jars was provided by Sylus's English voice actor. At the fan event I met cosplayers – one in a wedding dress – and found a supportive and passionate community that is fully aware of the funnier parts of falling for a boy tamagotchi, and loves the game anyway. Online, too, there's an impressive fan-fueled industry providing homemade merch, content creators that break down the storylines and timelines, and artists who create spicy comics that offer an explicit idea of life with the LADS lads. I have, of course, researched the last one extensively. For science.

Spending time with the rest of the girlfriends of my space boyfriends, I'm only more certain that I'm going to have a long term relationship with Love and Deepspace. The creators of the game are clearly very in tune with what its audience are craving – hello, vampire Sylus – and it's nailed making itself into a habit instead of just a way to kill time. Some people wake up and do Wordle, I wake up and do Sylus.

In 2026 I'm embracing cringe, and if playing claw machines with a pretend man is going to make surviving on the burning dumpster fire that is this planet a little easier, I refuse to be ashamed. Just don't look at my gacha spending or indeed, my search history as it relates to Sylus fan art.

Rachel Weber is the Head of Editorial Development at IGN and an elder millennial. She's been a professional nerd since 2006 when she got her start on Official PlayStation Magazine in the UK, and has since worked for GamesIndustry.Biz, Rolling Stone and GamesRadar. She loves horror, horror movies, horror games, Red Dead Redemption 2, and her Love and Deepspace boyfriends.

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PC is the lead platform for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3

In an interview with Automaton, director Naoki Hamaguchi has confirmed that PC is the lead platform for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3. This is something that may please PC gamers who have been looking forward to it. Hamaguchi confirmed this when asked whether the PC serves as the lead platform for Final Fantasy 7 Remake … Continue reading PC is the lead platform for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3

The post PC is the lead platform for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 appeared first on DSOGaming.

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REPLACED has been delayed until April 14th

Sad Cat Studios and Thunderful have announced a short delay to their highly-anticipated cyberpunk action platformer, REPLACED. The game will now be releasing on PC on April 14th. The delay will give Sad Cat Studios a few more weeks to add a final layer of polish and deliver a game true to the studio’s vision. … Continue reading REPLACED has been delayed until April 14th

The post REPLACED has been delayed until April 14th appeared first on DSOGaming.

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Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition Launches Today on Switch 2, With a $5 Upgrade Pack

A Switch 2 version of Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition has been announced and simultaneously released by Nintendo, with a $4.99 upgrade fee for existing Switch owners.

This upgraded edition of the Nintendo role-player adds 4K/60fps support in TV mode, or 1080p/60fps action when playing on Switch 2 in handheld. It doesn't look like any other changes have been made.

If you don't own the game already, digital copies of the Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition — Switch 2 Edition are available to buy now separately from the eShop. Alternatively, a physical release is coming on April 16.

The sprawling alien world of planet Mira, now enhanced on #NintendoSwitch2 with improved frame rates and up to 4K resolution in TV mode!

Join the fight for survival in #XenobladeChroniclesX: Definitive Edition – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition, available now! pic.twitter.com/raA1XhIimC

— Nintendo of America (@NintendoAmerica) February 19, 2026

Originally released for Wii U back in 2015, Xenoblade Chronicles X was one of the many games from Nintendo's failed former console to get a new lease of life on Switch, with additional story content and character. Now, this Switch version has made the jump forward to a further console generation, although other than a visual polish, everything else sounds similar.

"The year is 2054 and Earth has been destroyed," reads a blurb for the game. "A colony ship of human survivors — including your customisable main character — has narrowly escaped the devastation and crashes on the mysterious planet Mira. Trek across a massive, dangerous world and fight for humanity’s future in this sci-fi RPG. Immerse yourself in an action-packed battle system with a variety of special attacks and skills to employ, enemies of all shapes and sizes to take down and more. You can even pilot a Skell that can fly, transform into a vehicle and wield immense strength in combat – if you can prove yourself to the BLADE organisation, first."

If you've not played a Xenoblade Chronicles game, X is a pretty standalone entry into Monolith Soft's RPG series — and also pretty well received. "Xenoblade Chronicles X was already one of the Wii U’s best games, and this Definitive Edition does more than enough to justify another trip to planet Mira," IGN wrote in our review of the game's Switch port, awarding it 9/10.

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

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Keanu Reeves and China Miéville Reunite for BRZRKR: Light Draws Breath

The world of Keanu Reeves' BRZRKR continues to expand in 2026. IGN can exclusively reveal that Reeves is reuniting with author China Miéville for a new spinoff comic called BRZRKR: Light Draws Breath #1.

Check out the slideshow gallery below for an exclusive first look at BRZRKR: Light Draws Breath #1, including uncolored interior pages and character designs:

Miéville previously penned the 2024 spinoff novel The Story of Elsewhere, but this will mark the first time he's co-written a BRZRKR comic, or any comic outside of DC. Reeves and Miéville are collaborating with artist Alessio Avalone. Esad Ribic provides the main cover to this one-shot issue, while Ronald Wimberly, David Lafuente, Dillon Snook, and Sweeny Boo will handle variant covers.

Like the other BRZRKR spinoff comics, Light Draws Breath is set earlier in the life of immortal warrior B. Set in the Bronze Age, this issue explores what happens when B temporarily dies and part of his protoplasmic body is harvested by rogue scientists. The resulting creation will have to learn who it is and what its place in the world is meant to be.

BRZRKR: Light Draws Breath #1 will be released on May 20, 2026. You can preorder a copy at your local comic shop.

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

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

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Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Episode 7 Review - ‘Ko'Zeine’

Spoilers follow for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Episode 7, “Ko'Zeine,” which is available on Paramount+ now.

After last week’s adventure – and tragedy – on the USS Miyazaki, Starfleet Academy slows down for what we once would’ve called a “bottle episode.” Of course, these days the digital “volume” AR wall that allows for the creation of virtually any setting or backdrop means that even a bottle episode can take place on some crazy alien landscape, even if the whole idea of such an episode is to save money and production time (often to make up for a bigger, costlier segment like last week’s “Come, Let's Away”).

So in “Ko'Zeine” the focus is on two of the friendships among our main cast: that of Genesis (Bella Shepard) and Caleb (Sandro Rosta), and Darem (George Hawkins) and Jay-Den (Karim Diané). It’s the kind of story that is classic bottle episode, and the result is a nice if slight hour that plays off of some well-worn Trek tropes but also serves to further solidify how engaging this cast of young actors can be.

It’s the spring semester already, as the blooming cherry tree in the Academy makes clear, and that means it’s time for the school’s “all worlds break,” which has the cadets travelling to see their families or for some R&R to locales all over the globe (and beyond) – none of which seem to be Ft. Lauderdale or Cancun. Caleb however, as the boy with no home, has nowhere to go – or nowhere he wants to go, anyway – while Darem is called back home for an inconvenient, if quite heady, family matter.

When Darem is suddenly whisked away from the Academy and into an artificial wormhole by two apparent kidnappers, it’s cute how Jay-Den is like “whelp, there goes Ibiza” and jumps in to help his friend. That their destination winds up being the Sunset Moon of the Khionian Realm, where everything is rock and sand and red-hued, can only be seen as an homage to the original Star Trek “surprise wedding” episode, “Amok Time,” where Spock was forced to return to the similar setting of his homeworld of Vulcan in order to the tie the knot with his betrothed, T’Pring.

Because that’s why Darem has been called back to the Khionian Realm – to fulfill his obligation to marry his hometown sweetheart. Sure, it also means that he and his bride will become the new rulers of the realm, but what are ya gonna do?

The antics of Genesis and Caleb aren’t particularly interesting or funny, but the reveal of why Genesis is willing to get into trouble is worth the wait.

It’s notable that both of these pairings were initially framed early in the season as being potential romantic partners (Genesis/Caleb, Darem/Jay-Den), but that this episode serves to strengthen their respective friendships instead. Yes, the spark of something is still there between Genesis and Caleb (and maybe Darem and Jay-Den too), but Caleb’s all wrapped up in his Tarima drama, and who can blame him after the events of last week? As for Darem and Jay-Den, obviously the Klingon and Kyle (Dale Whibley) – aka the nicest guy in the War College – are a thing now, and, you know, Darem needs good friends more than anything else anyway.

The antics of Genesis and Caleb aren’t particularly interesting or funny in this episode, but the reveal of why Genesis returned to the Academy during the break and is willing to get into trouble is worth the wait. The outsized sense of responsibility that both she and Darem feel is a weight that each must contend with in “Ko'Zeine,” and that their friends help them through these situations is gratifying. Again, the Darem/Jay-Den portion of the episode works better, not just in holding the viewer’s interest but also in terms of this thematic throughline. Jay-Den’s speech as best man/Ko'Zeine is ultimately what sparks Darem and his bride’s ability to break with tradition and allow Darem to leave for the life he actually wants to pursue, whereas Caleb is more just there to hold Genesis’ hand when the source of her insecurity is revealed.

But hey, even Caleb gets some nice moments this week as he tries to navigate the Tarima situation. The closing scene of him finally writing an honest letter to Tarima while the meteor shower kicks in outside is a great capper to an understated episode.

Questions and Notes from the Q Continuum:

  • “You brought like four pairs of boots in here. You don’t even wear shoes!”
  • “Say hi to your sister.” Darem really is an asshole!
  • I just realized that the show is going to follow a “one year of school per season” format, which means these kids will graduate at the end of Season 4…? Is that how many years you go to the Academy?
  • Good thing Caleb clarified that it was Caleb “Mir” who was sending that initial message, just in case Tarima wasn’t clear on it.
  • It’s notable that it rains on Earth, or at least in San Francisco, as we know that Federation worlds were able to control the weather at least as far back as the 24th century. But you know, sometimes the rain is just cool, especially when you feel like brooding.
  • When all the cadets were beaming (I guess we still call it that?) off to their “all worlds” locations, I was reminded of Discovery’s introduction and constant use of personal transporters in the 32nd century, and boy am I grateful that Starfleet Academy has mostly avoided that gimmick.
  • If there’s a holotech rehab spa, and apparently there is since Sam (Kerrice Brooks) goes to one, does that mean that there are multiple sentient holographic individuals out there? I’m not talking about on Sam’s homeworld, but right here on Earth.
  • For some reason, Jay-Den’s Karloffian-sized boots really stood out to me this week. (Maybe it was the skirt.)

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Paradise Timeline: What Led to the End of the World... and What Happened Next

Spoilers follow for Paradise through the end of Season 1. Paradise Season 2 will debut on February 23.

Paradise, the wildest post-apocalypse series on TV, is back on Hulu for a second season this week. Starring Sterling K. Brown, Julianne Nicholson, and James Marsden, the Dan Fogelman-created series was a huge hit in Season 1, and it looks like it won’t let up in the second season either. But even with a short-for-streaming gap between seasons (a year instead of the now default two- to three-year hiatus), you might be a little confused about the timeline as you jump into Season 2…

…And that’s because the timeline is confusing. Like other flashback shows such as Lost – or more to the point of the whole Fogelman of it all, This Is Us – while there’s plenty of action happening in the “present,” there’s also a lot of jumping back into different points in the past. So with that in mind, particularly given some plot points coming up in Season 2 (no spoilers here), you’re probably going to want to check and recheck the timeline of Paradise to make sure you know who was where, when.

While we won’t hit every single plot point from the first season, we are going to break down major events – and some seemingly minor ones that may have ramifications as the series moves forward. So let’s get into it, starting back in… the ’90s?

The Paradise Timeline

1997

Actually, before we even explain why we’re in 1997, aka the year Titanic took over the box office, it’s also important to note that this timeline is gonna ditch the dates pretty soon. The reason for that? Most of Paradise takes place in the “present day,” all centered around the before and after of a future (for us, the viewers) event that’s referred to as “The Day.” Again, we’ll get there in a second, but for the moment we’re starting with a real year, when Bill Clinton started his second term as President.

We got this specific year in Season 1, Episode 5, "In the Palaces of Crowned Kings," when future President Cal Bradford (Marsden) told his dad that he wants to be a teacher. Instead, the overpowering father Kane (Gerald McRaney) forces him into politics, kicking off a series of events that leads to Cal’s murder at the beginning of Season 1.

19 BTD

At this point, given the TV show doesn’t provide years, we’ve got to establish a time scale of our own. So we’re going to use Before The Day (BTD) and After The Day (ATD). For example, 19 years BTD, the billionaire Samantha Redmond, later known by her codename “Sinatra,” met her husband, Tim (Tuc Watkins), in a bar after selling her tech startup.

(We’ll also note that a lot of these dates are approximate, and some of it doesn’t quite add up. We’re flying slightly by the seat of our pants here, though ultimately it does lead to the correct order of events, even if things might be off by a year or so.)

16 BTD

For example! Sinatra’s daughter Hadley (Kate Godfrey) is born in about 16 BTD. We know this because she’s about 16 years old when we meet her on the show in – you guessed it – the present day. However, she seems to be much younger than this when we see her in flashbacks during Season 1, Episode 2, “Sinatra.” She also has an older brother, Dylan (Peter Gorbis) who was born before her, but we don’t know when. Gotta love it!

13 BTD

While outside a store riding a horse (not a real one), Dylan collapses and is diagnosed with some sort of unspecified Child Sickness. They proceed to get him treatment over the next year and a half, but…

11 BTD

Dylan dies. Before he does, he tells his mom he wants to see heaven and he wants it to be full of horses, which sets her off on a journey to, as Belinda Carlisle might say, make heaven a place on Earth. Though she doesn’t quite get there with the whole “full of horses” thing.

Just before this, Sinatra meets Dr. Gabriela Torabi (Sarah Shahi), a therapist who helps Sinatra with her grief and becomes a good friend, assisting Sinatra as she builds her plan to save the world. There’s not much you need to worry about with this in terms of the overarching plot, though Torabi and Sinatra’s friendship timeline does get brought up a lot on the show.

10 BTD

Sinatra attends an international finance summit where she sneaks into a lecture by Dr. Louge (Geoffrey Arend), who is less concerned about finance and more concerned about the end of the world. Basically, he thinks the world has 10 years until there’s a global catastrophe caused by a super volcano, and he is weirdly spot-on as it turns out. Sinatra, still distraught about the death of Dylan, hooks right into this and begins to put all her time and resources into constructing a plan to weather the end of the world.

Also at this finance summit? Cal Bradford, who is now a US Senator and well on his way to his destiny as President.

Dr. Louge thinks the world has 10 years until there’s a global catastrophe caused by a super volcano, and he is weirdly spot-on as it turns out.

9 BTD

Moving quickly on her plan, Sinatra recruits Anders (Erik Svedberg-Zelman), a brilliant architect who she wants to design an underground bunker in the mountains in Colorado, where she plans to build Dylan’s heaven on Earth – and save as many people as she can, of course. By this point, she’s already begun hollowing out the mountain, and Anders agrees to help.

Then, in a good chunk of the Season 1 finale, "The Man Who Kept the Secrets,” we see them building and hollowing out the mountain more, under the partial direction of Trent (Ian Merrigan), a construction project manager. Trent discovers his workers are getting sick thanks to arsenopyrite residue, but given the accelerated construction schedule instead of waiting until it becomes non-toxic, Trent is fired. More on him later.

7 BTD

Cal is elected President for the first time. Yay, Cal!

3 BTD

Cal is elected the second time, and meets his new Secret Service agent Xavier Collins (Brown). While the free-wheeling President and locked-up Collins seem at odds at first, in December of this year Cal is almost assassinated by a man posing as a cameraman who brought a 3D-printed gun to the lawn of the White House. That man? Trent, who shoots Xavier instead accidentally. Trent knows about the bunker, of course, and wants to expose it to the world. Instead, Cal survives, Xavier survives, Trent is sent to jail, and the world is none the wiser.

On the other hand, due to saving his life, Cal tells Xavier all about the Colorado project, bringing him into the loop and promising to save his wife and kids when the time comes.

THE DAY

The time comes. As detailed in the devastating seventh episode of Season 1, a super-volcano erupts, sending a massive tsunami around the world and destroying nearly all of human civilization. A lot goes down this episode, but the short version is the tsunami is just the beginning of the destruction that includes an ash cloud covering the Earth. And Cal ends up activating an EMP to stop nukes that have been launched worldwide from adding “nuclear armageddon” to the list of horrors.

Also worth noting, while Xavier’s daughter Presley (Aliyah Mastin) and son James (Percy Daggs IV) – as well as Xavier – make it onto a plane headed to Colorado, Xavier’s wife Teri Rogers-Collins (Enuka Okuma) is stuck outside Atlanta as the bombs drop and the tsunami hits. Xavier believes she’s dead, but as we find out in the Season 1 finale, she, along with other people on the outside, have somehow survived.

Meanwhile, everyone else is locked in Sinatra’s suburban bunker, known as – get this – Paradise. And in the process, Cal’s presidency is extended to a third term.

6 MONTHS ATD

As detailed in Season 1, Episode 4, “Agent Billy Pace,” six months into their new life in Paradise, Cal authorized an exploratory mission to the outside. And that four-person mission discovered that life had indeed survived, thanks in part to Cal successfully stopping the nukes with his EMP. However, Sinatra had other plans and sent a mercenary, who was posing as a secret service agent, Billy Pace (Jon Beavers), out to kill them. The folks in Paradise thought they died from outside exposure; they did not.

Some time after that, Cal discovers the truth about the exploratory mission and that the outside is safe(ish), confronts Sinatra… and is shut down. However, he begins constructing an elaborate plan to reveal the truth that involves a mixtape to his son and other weird little clues and stuff.

3 ATD

Trent – remember him? – managed to break out of jail and sneak into Paradise posing as the community’s librarian. While he actually lived (and enjoyed) his new life, three years in Cal walks into the library and Trent gets pissed all over again. He gets in his old construction uniform, sneaks into Cal’s house, and conks him on the head with construction equipment, killing him (he actually has to hit him twice, but that’s neither here nor there).

This kicks off the events of Season 1, which all take place over a series of a few days, ending with, in no particular order: Xavier leaving the bunker via plane to go find his wife, Sinatra shot but alive, and Paradise in chaos as many of the residents – thanks to a rebellion led by Xavier – know things are not what they seem.

Got it all? Good. Now you’re ready for even more timeline wackiness on Paradise Season 2. Strap in, because it’s gonna be a wild ride.

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God of War Actor Christopher Judge Says 'You'll Be Hearing About What We're Doing Probably Late Summer'

The legendary voice behind God of War's recent iteration of Kratos, Christopher Judge, has teased that we'll likely get more news about the franchise in "late summer."

According to a recording from streamer and YouTuber Fuzhpuzy at Canada's Fan Expo, Judge, who may not have known he was being recorded at the time, confirmed that while he would not be "playing in the remake" — that role is for Kratos' original voice actor, TC Carson — "you'll be hearing about what we're doing probably late summer."

The suggestion here is that Judge is back working with Sony Santa Monica on a separate God of War project unrelated to the studio's early work beginning to remake the franchise's original trilogy (and the new side-scrolling spin-off Sons of Sparta, which was largely made elsewhere).

Interestingly, Judge also explained that the recently announcement remake starring TC Carson will boast "all the new technology in it, add more stuff, a new fighting system."

It's our biggest clue yet that an all-new Sony Santa Monica God of War game is on the way. It's been pretty quiet ever since 2022's God of War: Ragnarök in which Kratos and Atreus set out on a mythic journey for answers before Ragnarök arrives, visiting each of the Nine Realms in the brutal and epic sequel.

There had been a live-service multiplayer game in the works, but at the beginning of 2025, Sony canceled two unannounced live-service projects that had been in development at Bend Studio and Bluepoint Games, with the latter thought to be a multiplayer God of War game. Then, towards the end of the year, details and images of the canceled game leaked online, confirming the rumors had been true.

As for Amazon's upcoming adaptation of Sony Santa Monica's God of War series? The live-action Prime Video TV series based on the popular ancient mythology-themed video game is picking up speed. Ryan Hurst will play Kratos, Callum Vinson will play Kratos’ son, Atreus, and Teresa Palmer, Max Parker, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson, Alastair Duncan, and Mandy Patinkin join as Sif, Heimdall, Thor, Mimir, and Odin, respectively.

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

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