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9 Months Away From GTA 6's November Release, Retailer Cheekily Promises Free Copies to Anyone Who Gives Birth on Launch Day

Norwegian electronics retailer Komplett has promised it will give away free copies of GTA 6 to anyone giving birth on the game's launch day, exactly nine months ahead of its arrival.

The cheeky store chain has even encouraged fans to, er, get busy with their efforts to ensure this happens. Images on social media and reddit show posters for the campaign have been spotted, while the retailer's Instagram has confirmed that this offer really isn't just a joke.

"GTA 6 dropping in 9 months ;)" declares advertising posters seen in the Norwegian capital of Oslo this week, designed to promote the country's major electronics chain. The posters also feature an image of a messy bed, strewn pillows, and a scattering of rose petals. It's not subtle.

You can get GTA 6 for free if you give birth to a baby on the game's release date in Norway. pic.twitter.com/d4fANWhAnr

— YabaLeftOnline (@yabaleftonline) February 12, 2026

On Instagram, Komplett describes the idea of having a baby on GTA 6 launch day as a "life hack" — with the obvious implication being that you could time your parental leave perfectly for when Rockstar's highly-anticipated blockbuster drops.

(Of note, Norwegian parental leave offers a total of 49 weeks at 100% salary, or a total 61 weeks at 80% salary, shared between two people.)

"This is actually not nonsense," Komplett wrote in a caption for an accompanying Instagram video. "GTA 6 is released in 9 months (🤞) and if you have a baby on the launch date, we'll give you the game for free."

Of course, the campaign is primarily designed to make headlines and get Komplett some attention — and it's certainly doing that, even if the responses on social media are full of people pointing out that having a baby is quite a time-consuming thing all on its own.

"Lol, you're not getting time to play gta 6 if you have a screaming baby at home," wrote Low_Possibility_8893 as part of a lengthy thread on reddit.

"That baby is gonna cost alooooot more than 70 dollars..." suggested sopedound, hinting that actually this didn't represent much of a financial saving.

"Haven't slept in 6 days, nipples are like bullets and I've been hit in the face with explosive diarrhea," concluded the appropriately-named PloppyTheSpaceship, suggesting what life with a newborn was actually like. "I don't even know what my name is right now let alone how to turn on a game, but I'm sure it's good."

Komplett's offer comes in the wake of GTA 6 publisher Take-Two giving its strongest indication yet that the long-awaited blockbuster will make its current November 19, 2026 launch date, after several previous delays. Last week, as part of its latest financial results, Take-Two said marketing for what will surely be the biggest entertainment launch of all time kicks off this summer. Take-Two also denied rumors that GTA 6 will be a digital-only release upon its initial launch.

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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X-Men Star Halle Berry Doubles Down on Not Showing Up in Avengers: Doomsday, but Suggests She Could Still Reprise Storm for Secret Wars

X-Men actress Halle Berry is adamant she won't be reprising her role as Storm in Avengers: Doomsday, but has left the door open to a return in future — potentially in the subsequent Avengers: Secret Wars.

Marvel fans have been eager to see Berry return in her role from the 2000s X-Men films alongside other classic characters who are back for Doomsday — but the actress has now made a point of doubling down that she's "not there."

“Storm’s not there,” Berry told Variety this week at the premiere of her new film Crime 101 in Los Angeles. “I promise you. You all think I’m being coy and I’m being silly, but I’m not there.”

Interestingly enough, this isn’t the first time this month Berry has spoken about the hope that she’ll appear in Doomsday. Last week, she had a chat with ScreenRant during which she opened up more about Storm and the film. “Storm is a very special character to me. I've been so blessed when I gotten to play her," she explained.

“[Those movies] have so much to say that I thought has been really important, especially for my children as they've grown. So they're beloved,” she added, before dropping what fans hope could be a major hint. “And while I'm sad I won't be in Doomsday this round, there are other rounds. And I would do that in a heartbeat."

There is, of course, still the possibility that Berry is being exceptionally good at staying tight-lipped about her involvement and that her Storm will end up gracing our screens along with the rest of Doomsday’s massive and exciting cast. But considering how long she’s been effusive about not joining the fray, the chances are pretty low at this point. Time to reset our hopes for Secret Wars, then?

Berry first revealed to fans she would not be appearing in Avengers: Doomsday back in April 2025, when Black Girl Nerds told the actress on the red carpet at CinemaCon that fans were waiting for her to show up in the next major Avengers entry. Her response? “Keep waiting. Not gonna be there.”

Avengers: Doomsday is set to arrive in theaters on December 18… without Berry, as far as we know.

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

Presidents Day is Monday, February 16, but Best Buy isn’t waiting to pull the trigger on its annual store-wide mega sale. The sale is live now, and runs through February 16. You can check out the whole sale here, or read on to see our picks for the best deals available right now. Pretty much every item category Best Buy sells has gotten the discount treatment, from TVs and video games to PC gaming and Apple products.

Let’s take a look.

Top Deals in Best Buy’s Presidents Day Sale

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

4K TVs

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

Gaming Computers

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

Video Games

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

Apple Products

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

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

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

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Magic's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Collector Booster Boxes Are In Stock Right Now

Magic: The Gathering is kicking off its Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles set in a few weeks, and while we’ve seen plenty of deals on upcoming sets, Collector Boosters have been like gold dust… until now.

Amazon is offering a box of 12 Collector boosters for $449.99, but you’ll need to act swifter than one of the titular turtles to grab one.

MTG x TMNT Collector Boosters Are Back In Stock

How much?! That’s right, the fee is high. The reason for this is that Collector Boosters are the best way of grabbing the most expensive cards in any given Magic: The Gathering set because they’re full of alternative art treatments and foil variants.

The rub in this instance is that we don’t know what the most valuable cards in the set are going to be because Wizards of the Coast hasn’t started card reveals outside of a handful just yet.

If you want to snag some great Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cards for your Magic: The Gathering collection, this is the way to go, but with the $37 per pack around the same price you’d pay anywhere, don’t expect any discounts.

Honestly, in the time it’s taken us to write this article, there’s a good chance a bunch more of these have been sold, and they’re not likely to be reprinted after the fact, either.

As a reminder, Collector Boosters don't necessarily contain 'better' cards than Play Boosters, they just contain rarer versions. If you're looking for cards to play with, you can grab a bundle at a discount right now.

For more deals on Magic’s TMNT set, be sure to check out the Turtle Power Commander Deck, also discounted at Amazon, while June’s Marvel Super Heroes set is also seeing discounts nice and early.

Lloyd Coombes is an experienced freelancer in tech, gaming and fitness seen at Polygon, Eurogamer, Macworld, TechRadar and many more. He's a big fan of Magic: The Gathering and other collectible card games, much to his wife's dismay.

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Monster Hunter Stories 3 Preview: Me and My Pet Rathalos

At some point, somebody at Capcom must have looked at Monster Hunter and said, out loud, “You know, the monsters in this bad boy are actually pretty cute. And there’s these talking cats, and they’re pretty cute, too. We’re kinda leaving money on the table by not making this a turn-based monster-capturing RPG.” And the executives did grin, and the sky opened, and the money rained down. And they saw that that somebody was right, and they said, “We gotta make more of these.”

Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection is the third one of these, in fact, if the number didn’t give it away, so that somebody’s idea had some staying power, but it’s this writer’s first. Not my first Monster Hunter; like most folks in the West, mine was Monster Hunter World. But it’s the first one of these babies. And after spending several hours with it, I’m pretty impressed. There’s a lot to get used to, but I enjoyed my time in this world and with these characters, and I’m itching to head back and do some monster huntin’.

Twisted Reflection starts with a pretty fantastic character creator that does a lot to introduce you to its gorgeous art style. I made a woman with long red hair and mismatched eyes, and not knowing that I was making a princess, kept Leia as her default name. Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection 1, Will 0.

Pull off the right moves in combat, and you’ll build kinship with your Monstie. Max out that meter, and you can mount your Monstie and unleash a beautifully animated, cinematic smackdown.

Our story begins with a woman discovering a monster egg preserved in crystal. Naturally, I thought this was Leia. Extremely loud incorrect buzzer. It was actually her mamma, who is the queen of Azuria. She hacks the egg out of the crystal and brings it home, where it hatches into the Monster Hunter poster child, a Rathalos. The Rathalos is extinct in Azuria, so everyone’s pretty stoked about this, especially little Leia, who says she hears two sounds coming from the egg. Turns out she’s right, and a second Rathalos has hit the throne room. As Leia, enamored, reaches out for her new friends, a vaguely vizier-shaped dude informs the king that while one monster is all fine and dandy, two monsters, especially two Skyscale Rathalos (Rathaloses? Rathalosi?) is Bad News, Chief ™ and only one may be allowed to live. Cut to black. Surely this will not irrevocably traumatize my girl Leia for the rest of her days and become a crucial part of her backstory. Surely.

Several years later, Leia, now a young woman, is following in her mother’s footsteps and studying a monster preserved in egg quartz when her buddy Simon appears and summons her back to the castle. Once there, we learn that Leia is the Captain of the Rangers and that she’s studying something called the Encroachment. Proper nouns are generally bad, and Leia has really made progress on the Encroachment, but that’s maybe not the most pressing concern. Relations with the neighboring kingdom of Vermeil are fraying, and her father warns Leia that the Rangers might see combat. Leia protests, as that’s not what Rangers exist for (they’re here for the monsters), but she rides Azuria’s only Rathalos (uh oh), and they may need her. My girl is also informed that she will attend talks with Vermeilian envoys, and that her conspicuously absent mother was Vermeilian. In a later conversation with Simon, Leia reveals that her mother is known as “The Turncoat Queen.” The plot thickens.

But Leia can’t spend too much time thinking about that. She’s the captain of the Rangers, and she has a job to do. That means training new recruits, and you’re got a fresh one in Thea, who is stoked to be here and learn from Azuria’s only Rathalos rider and Rudy, my Felyne. This is where my time with Twisted Reflection really takes off. In training Thea, Twisted Reflection is training me.

I learn how to ride my Rathalos (your monsters are called Monsties), but things really kick into gear once we enter combat for the first time. Like I said at the jump, combat is turn-based. Attacks come in three types; Power, Technical, and Speed. Power beats Technical and Technical beats Speed, which loops around and beats Power. Normally, these attacks work, well… normally. But if a monster is targeting you and you attack it, you’ll enter a Head-to-Head where the rock, paper, scissors of it all will play out. And if and your Monstie are attacking the same foe and a Head-to-head happens, you’ll get a Double Attack. Monsters have their own attack preferences. Velociprey, for instance, will prioritize Speed, so you gotta go Technical if you want to win. If you’re in the market for something a little fancier, you’ve also got abilities, though these take Stamina, so you can’t just spam them.

Of course, you’ve also got your Monstie. You don’t control them directly so much as give them standing commands that they carry out when it's their turn, whether that means going for a regular attack or an ability, some of which carry elemental properties like fire, lightning, or water. Since Leia’s the main character, she’s also got additional Monsties she can switch to if the one she needs isn’t right for what you’re up against. Thea and her Monstie, Kaguchi, are also in my party, but I don’t control them. They do their own thing, for better and worse.

Because of this, combat goes quickly, and like your more traditional Monster Hunters, there’s strategy when it comes to which part of the monster you’re fighting that you target. Break the right body part, and you can weaken an attack or open it up to more damage. Stagger a monster, and you can unleash a Synchro Attack where everyone in your party lays on the hurt. The biggest spectacle, though, comes in the form of kinship attacks. Pull off the right moves in combat, and you’ll build kinship with your Monstie. Max out that meter, and you can mount your Monstie and unleash a beautifully animated, cinematic smackdown. I dig it.

Once Thea and I are broken in, we get to explore a bit. We pick up plants and bugs and other items on the ground, get into some fights, and I give Ratha a break so I can use my Tobi-Kadachi to scale a lookout point and meet an Explorer Felyne who gifts me a map. We continue on, learning how to use melee and breath attacks to interact with the environment and start fights early for an advantage, or roar and get monsters out of the way. We also manage to rescue a Poogie, an adorable, pig-like creature who somehow got up somewhere my Rathalos needed wings to reach, and even get Thea a taste of the Encroachment, which seems to be what causes those egg quartzes we saw earlier.

Yeah, things are looking pretty good for the home team, until we come across a nest and make a Paolumu mad. Once we whack him enough, he transforms, altering his attacks and weaknesses. Since he’s inflated an air pouch, it’s bow time. It’s a fun fight that puts everything I’ve learned so far to the test, but it’s nothing compared to what comes next.

Here, we run into our first feral monster, which has been altered by the Encroachment. Crystals sprout from its back, and it’s extremely powerful. Hitting the crystals provokes a backlash attack, so we have to be smart. It tests our smarts and our patience, but eventually he wears down, and we destroy the crystals. Then it’s game on. Eventually, he falls, and we take the eggs we’ve gathered home and add some new Monsties to our ranks.

Before we start feeling too good about ourselves, Leia is called into that meeting with the Vermeilian envoys. Things are going badly – Vermeil is getting hit hard by the Encroachment, and they’re convinced salvation lies in the Sacrosanctum, which would mean breaching an ancient pact. They’ve come to ask Azuria for help getting there – and war seems inevitable until Vermeil’s Princess Eleanor offers herself as a hostage until Azuria relents. Unwilling to treat her like a prisoner, Leia offers to show her around, and she ends up palling around with the Rangers.

If bringing Thea along was about learning the game, Eleanor’s arrival is really where things open up. Before setting out, we acquire new skills and forge new armor and weapons. It’s a good thing, too, because while we’re showing Eleanor around, we run into a new feral monster. Eleanor, her Anjanath (which I’m pretty jealous of, honestly), my Monstie cohort, and I take it down, but not before we’re knocked down a few times ourselves. Losing all your HP isn’t fatal. You can get back up a limited number of times, but it lets us know that the challenge is ramping up.

Soon after, we set up a camp, and Eleanor shows off her cooking skills. This is a Monster Hunter game, so eating food naturally boosts your stats and the cooking cutscene is immaculately rendered. I go for some experience-boosting bread, because who doesn’t love bread? Leia and Eleanor also bond over their shared realization that their countries don’t really understand each other. The situation in Vermeil is worse than Leia realized, and Azuria isn’t at all like Eleanor thought. Neither is as bad as they’ve been led to believe.

Our goal now is to investigate invasive monsters and track them to their dens so we can save eggs from the species they’re crowding out. From here, the world is essentially our oyster. We have to operate at night to track these invasive species, but otherwise we can kinda do what we want, whether that means fighting monsters in the field, or completing side quests where we reunite a Felyne with his lost master or help another Felyne get rid of some bug monsters.

Eventually, we find an invasive Yian Garuga. We steer clear long enough to analyze its tracks and get a feel for how it works, but eventually, the fight is on. The Yan Garuga is incredibly strong; in a stand-up fight, we probably wouldn’t stand a chance, and we’ve got to pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off a few times before it’s over. But our goal isn’t to kill it, it’s to make it retreat to its lair. That means figuring out its weakness – in this case, its legs – and piling on the hurt fast enough that it stumbles when trying to hit us with a powerful charge attack and retreats. Once it does, we track it to its lair and steal a Rathian egg, but we’re not looking to make it a Monstie. By releasing it into the wild, we can restore the natural ecosystem. That means new and better monsters for us to catch. Restoring a habitat has benefits for us, too. You might get monsters with elemental skills unique to that habitat, or unlock mutations that imbue monsters with elements outside of the norm. It’s sad to see our Rathian go, but it’s for the greater good.

Our task complete, the Rangers return to the castle. The king’s still focused on what might happen if the Rangers have to go into battle, and we learn why Leia’s so opposed to it. Remember that other Rathalos that came out of that egg? She saved it as it was about to be executed and fled. Everyone assumes she headed to her native Vermeil. The whole Traitor Queen thing makes a lot more sense now, and it explains why Leia’s so fond of her own Rathalos – he got her through her mom leaving – and why she’s so devoted to the Rangers. She wants to find out what happened to her mom.

As if inspired by this revelation, Twisted Reflection decides to open up Side Stories – escapades you can head on with other Rangers to get to know them better. I decide to pal around with Eleanor, who, impressed with Azuria’s beauty and abundance, tasks us with tracking down some items that are native to Vermeil: a Sucklebug, Witherweed, and a Molted Gumshell. After getting the lay of the land from a nearby lookout tower – and a few side excursions where we grabbed some eggs from monster dens – we headed out. The first couple were easy enough. Hitting a Paolumu with a breath attack snags us our Gumshell, and we find Witherweed in a shady area.

The real bugaboo turns out to be the Sucklebug, which likes to hide behind rocks. I searched for it behind rocks for a while before realizing that “behind the rock” means “break the rock, Will, you doofus.” Once we’ve got all the ingredients – yes, ingredients – Eleanor turns them into Vermeil Dumplings. Leia and Rudy are grossed out, but it’s a nice moment that helps them understand just how dire things are in Vermeil – and how lucky Azuria is by comparison. Plus, it unlocks a new recipe for our camps, and Eleanor is excited to share her local cuisine with everyone else.

My time with Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection ends shortly thereafter. I could have kept going – we had access to a generous amount of the game – but my next story mission saw me getting absolutely rocked by a pair of Feral Velocidomes. I clearly needed to get some new Monsties with different elements and upgrade equipment to continue, but it felt like a natural end. I’d spent half a dozen hours with Twisted Reflection by that point, and gotten a feel for what it was shaping up to be: a gorgeous RPG that combines the traditional elements of Monster Hunter with a turn-based RPG and a surprisingly compelling cast and narrative that invited me to befriend and train monsters, not just hunt them. Don’t get me wrong, those Velicidomes are going down the next time I fire Twisted Reflection up, but for now, I have a feel for this world, these characters, and the game they inhabit. And it was more than enough to convince me to turn this snack into a meal. I might just stick with the bread, though, you know? Vermilian Dumplings don’t really seem like my bag.

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Save on Magic’s Next In-Universe Set, Secrets of Strixhaven, With a Discount on Play Boosters

Magic: The Gathering has plenty of Universes Beyond on its contentious 2026 roadmap, but Secrets of Strixhaven is a fan-favorite plane we can’t wait to get back to.

The set, which will feature a whopping five Commander decks, is getting a tie-in novel and sees us slinging spells with the students again, but if you’re looking to build an instant collection, you can grab a Play Booster Box at Amazon at a discount already - despite the fact it doesn’t launch until late April.

Save Money On Magic’s Secrets of Strixhaven

Amazon is offering a box of 30 Play Boosters for $149.99, reduced from its $164.70 list price. That 9% discount might not sound huge, but Amazon’s preorder price guarantee means if it drops even lower, you’ll pay less.

That makes each pack of 14 cards $4.99, down from $5.49, and if you’re excited about the return to Strixhaven, you’ll no doubt be grateful for it.

It’s also worth noting that, as we get closer to release, we’ll find a lot of the chase cards in terms of gameplay and financial value. Depending on how previews go, demand could pick up and make it harder to grab a box at MSRP, let alone below. You’ll have a better chance of grabbing a pricey card with a Collector Booster, but for actually opening cards with which to play the game, this is a great way to get an instant collection.

For more on the game’s current set, Lorwyn Eclipsed, be sure to check out our list of the best chase cards in the set right now, and our rundown of its Commander offerings. You can also check out our list of the best Commander precons from recent years that are still worth picking up - including The Lord of the Rings, Fallout, and some great beginner options.

Lloyd Coombes is an experienced freelancer in tech, gaming and fitness seen at Polygon, Eurogamer, Macworld, TechRadar and many more. He's a big fan of Magic: The Gathering and other collectible card games, much to his wife's dismay.

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Avengers: Doomsday Directors Clarify Their Remarks About the Movie's Trailers Not Actually Being Trailers: 'I Would Argue That Doomsday Has Already Started'

Avengers: Doomsday directors Joe and Anthony Russo have further discussed their claim that the film's four recent trailers were not actually trailers — and now described them as "narrative information."

Disney released a quartet of Doomsday trailers through subsequent weeks in December and January, premiering first in theaters with Avatar: Fire and Ash before eventually also appearing online. Successive instalments saw fans reintroduced to Chris Evans' character Steve Rogers, catch up with a newly-solemn Thor, get a glimpse at an aged selection of X-Men, and finally see The Thing turn up in Wakanda.

Discussing the trailers, the Russo brothers previously said that they did not actually see them as teasers or trailers, but instead something else. And now, speaking to Empire magazine, the Russos have elaborated further on what exactly they had meant.

"Each one of these trailers is narrative information," Joe Russo said, "and it's all part of larger story. So I would argue that Doomsday has already started for you."

Is the suggestion here that these sequences were filmed just for the trailers? Or that they're more filmic because they are more akin to clips than action-packed highlight reels? His next answer seems to lean more to the latter.

"Look, the movie is very complex," Joe Russo continued. "We thought one of the best ways to celebrate what the movie is was to give characters their own space and highlight some moments."

As part of the same interview, the Russo brothers doubled down on their previous statement that the newly-returned Chris Evans would play a "central role" in Doomsday, despite his character's apparent retirement in Avengers: Endgame and a whole host of new heroes being introduced in the years since.

"We have a special affinity with the character," Anthony Russo said of Steve Rogers, referencing the directors' past work on Captain America films. "We can't see this narrative without his central role in it, basically. The special place he holds among the ensemble, he sort of retains that moving forward."

Marvel's decision to bring back Evans in Doomsday has proved controversial among fans, who have variously complained that the move is a desperate-feeling attempt to win back lapsed audiences at the expense of newer characters, and especially Anthony Mackie's Sam Wilson — the current Captain America.

Mackie's only lead movie in the MCU saga is Captain America: Brave New World, which unfortunately is one of the worst-reviewed instalments in the entire franchise. Marvel boss Kevin Feige raised eyebrows by pinning the film's financial failure on being "the first without Chris Evans." No plans have since been announced for a fresh Captain America sequel.

So, what's next? Well, Marvel is still running its live countdown clock to the release of Avengers: Doomsday that's set to run for the next 10 months. In the meantime, however you want to describe them, Marvels four Avengers: Doomsday teaser trailers have passed a combined 1 billion views.

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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Pokémon Squishmallows Get a Massive Discount at Amazon Ready for 30th Anniversary Celebrations, But the Deal Will Expire Soon

Amazon has a great range of Pokémon Squishmallows on sale today as part of its ongoing efforts before Pokémon Day, and the franchise's 30th anniversary, on February 27.

The Pokémon range of Squishmallows makes for some of the best franchise plushies around, and Amazon has made them better by letting you buy select 8 to 20-Inch plushies from just under $9 each.

The lowest price tag in particular is on Rowlet, which is available for just $8.43 for the adorable 8-inch plush.

On the other side of things, both in price and size, the 20-inch Torchic and Eevee Squishmallow plushies are also on a limited-time lightning deal discount at Amazon. Torchic is down to $38.20, while Eevee is an even better deal at just $30.

While both are a bit more expensive compared to Rowlet, you've just got to remember that they are significantly bigger as well, with the 20-inch plushies easily being the size of most people's torso, if not bigger.

Plus, both are down from $49.99, so they are still significantly good deals. I wouldn't wait around on these, however, as both are lightning deals, so once the allocated stock has been sold, the deal will expire immediately.

The next best deals are on Sprigatito, with its 8-inch plus down to just $10.10, alongside Fuecoco and Marill, with their 14-inch plushies available from $17.99 to $19.47, respectively.

An important thing to keep in mind is that Amazon has seemed to have made it very hard to find these deals when you're browsing directly, with some plushies' lower product pages only appearing with very particular searches.

With that, we'd recommend clicking through our dedicated catalogue above so you can go to each page directly, buy quickly, and save without none of the fuss. As more become aware of these massive offers, grab yours quickly before you lose out on this very limited-time deal.

If you're still after the generally best Squishmallows in the entire Pokémon range—like Pikachu and Snorlax—most seem to be available to still buy on Amazon as well, albeit listed at $24.99, at least for now.

Here's hoping we see more discounts on some of these as well soon, but still, they're worth the investment if you want some squeezable and comfortable cushions added to your living space with some Pokémon flair.

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

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Disco Elysium Successor Zero Parades Is Getting a Demo for Steam Next Fest

Development studio ZA/UM has announced that a free demo for its upcoming espionage-flavoured RPG, Zero Parades: For Dead Spies, will be available to play on PC as part of Steam Next Fest.

Launching on February 23 and available until March 16, the demo features a “tailored” version of Zero Parade’s opening hours. While not everything from this section of the full game will be available as part of the demo, it does include two full quests, a variety of side activities, and the freedom to explore the city state of Portofiro. You can get a small taste of what awaits in the gameplay video below, which showcases the very first minutes of Zero Parades.

The demo also allows you to choose from three different character archetypes, which dictate the skills and stats of protagonist Hershel Wilk. ZA/UM encourages replaying the demo with each of the archetypes to see how a physical, soulful, or analytical build affects your choices and opportunities.

IGN recently interviewed several developers from ZA/UM to learn more about Zero Parades, which tells the story of a spy brought out of retirement to complete one last job. Its key theme is failure, and ZA/UM states that it has designed its dialogue system around that. “Every door closed is an open opportunity to go through the window instead,” said the studio in a press release.

Zero Parades features a similar design to Disco Elysium, ZA/UM’s previous game, and has been created by a team made up of both old and new employees. The full game is scheduled to launch in 2026, first on PC through Steam, GOG, and Epic Games Store, and then later on PlayStation 5.

Matt Purslow is IGN's Executive Editor of Features.

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Lara Croft Rides Proudly in New Tomb Raider Motorbike Statue

Dark Horse Direct and Crystal Dynamics are teaming up for another Tomb Raider statue, and it's one that will appeal to anyone with nostalgia for the original games.

IGN can exclusively debut the first images of Dark Horse Direct's Tomb Raider: Lara Croft - Classic Motorbike Premium Statue. Check it out in the slideshow gallery below:

The Tomb Raider: Lara Croft - Classic Motorbike Premium Statue features the iconic treasure hunter perched atop her motorcycle with gun in hand. This statue was sculpted by Bigshot Toyworks, with prototyping and paint by J.W. Productions.

The statue is 9 inches tall atop a base that measures 10.3 inches by 6 inches. The statue is exclusive to the Dark Horse Direct website and is limited to 500 units worldwide. It's priced at $249.99 and is slated to ship between July and September of 2026.

Will you be adding this Lara Croft collectible to your collection? Let us know in the comments below. You can also check out the Tomb Raider: Legend of Lara Croft statue available on the IGN Store.

And for more recent toy debuts, check out Mondo's latest X-Men: The Animated Series figure and Hasbro's new Marvel Legends reveals.

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 6 Review - Return to the Miyazaki!

Spoilers follow for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Episode 6, “Come, Let's Away,” which is available on Paramount Plus now.

The latest episode of Starfleet Academy is exciting at times, touching at others, but then there’s another mode that it sinks into here or there which I can only describe as, well, boring. Essentially, “Come, Let's Away” tries to do too many things in one episode, and as a result it feels overly long and bloated – and as such it’s indicative of one of my biggest complaints about the show so far this season.

I’ve been pretty positive about Starfleet Academy through the first half of this first season, but one element that I’ve found consistently troublesome is the streaming bloat of the individual episodes. So far, each segment has been roughly an hour long (not including the pilot, which was 75 minutes), and frankly, that’s too long for a standard episode of TV, Star Trek or not. We don’t need all of our TV to be 60-minute episodes if they don’t need to be 60-minute episodes, and in the case of Starfleet Academy Episode 6… well, this definitely did not need to be a 60-minute episode!

So in what could’ve been a tight adventure tale with a dose of character development in the classic Star Trek mode, we instead get an overly-stuffed story with too many characters, too many detours, and not enough oomph.

Things start interestingly enough with the reveal that Caleb (Sandro Rosta) and Tarima (Zoë Steiner) have taken their relationship to the “let’s get down to business” level, which is a refreshingly realistic approach for the often staid and chaste relationships of much of Trekdom. While Captain Kirk was doing his thing with various alien ladies of the week back in the day, the 1990s era of Star Trek more often than not played the sexual side of its characters down in a big way. Anyone writing off Starfleet Academy as just a kids show should take note here.

Of course, the scene isn’t about the sex, but rather is an opportunity for us to learn more about Tarima’s telepathic abilities and the troubles they’ve caused her (and will continue to cause). It turns out she’s the reason her father, seen in Episode 2, is deaf, having inadvertently injured him when she lost control of her heightened powers as a child. And even here, she doesn’t quite have control, as she accidentally violates Caleb’s trust by pulling from his memories of his mother. It’s a nice little wrinkle in their relationship that adds depth to things, where the couple could’ve topped out at batting eyelashes and flirting. And by episode’s end, not only does Tarima use her abilities to help save the day, but she also winds up the worse for wear as a result. To be continued there.

The idea of a lost relic of a ship that's at least a century old is pretty compelling, and the lighting and atmosphere for the scenes onboard the Miyazaki are effectively creepy.

The other major thread of Episode 6 involves a training exercise on a long-abandoned Starfleet ship, the USS Miyazaki, which really does have all the makings of a great Captain Picard (“Starship Mine”) or Captain Kirk (“The Doomsday Machine”) story. The Academy kids team up with the War College gang for what is apparently a ritual for the Federation's finest students to go on a joint mission to the wreck, but of course things don't go as planned once they're onboard.

The idea of a lost relic of a ship that's at least a century old is pretty compelling, and the lighting and atmosphere for the scenes onboard the Miyazaki are effectively creepy. This also goes for the new villainous race introduced here, the Furies, who we're told are “human/alien hybrids.” We don't get much more on them beyond that, and I kind of assumed that the episode was going to culminate in the reveal that the failed singularity drive of the Miyazaki actually led to the creation of these mutant freaks (who by the way are also described as cannibals). The fact that they're not the lost crew of the Miyazaki and are instead simply puppets of a returning Paul Giamatti’s Nus Braka is kind of disappointing, actually.

Still, putting Caleb and Jay-Den and Sam and the rest in the situation of having to fight these things off is pretty exciting, and there's lots of cool bits and pieces to be found in solving the puzzle of how they're going to get out of this mess, including Sam plugging into the ancient computer and the Vulcan B’Avi (Alexander Eling) falling back on his knowledge of a Star Trek comic book about Starfleet history in order to troubleshoot their situation. (B’Avi’s interest in, or perhaps reliance on, comic books to learn about Starfleet as a child actually makes a ton of sense when you consider that these kids grew up in the era of The Burn, when it was no easy task to visit or even communicate with other worlds.)

It's a shame then that the Vulcan is killed in the climax of the episode, even if it’s somehow dramatically satisfying in that we now know that Starfleet Academy is at least willing to kill off its B-tier characters. Not everyone is safe here, it seems. Still, B’Avi had seemed as though he was being set up to be a recurring player, and now he's gone, which is kind of a bummer.

But where the episode really does stumble, and this gets back to my earlier point about a 60-minute episode that should have probably been 52 minutes, is in the return of Giamatti's character and his tête-à-tête with Holly Hunter’s Captain Ake. Sure, the history between these two is of some interest, and we knew that Giamatti would be back after the pilot eventually. But this doesn't seem like it's the right place for it, and their scenes frankly drag. The charged character dynamics that the writers and actors are striving for between these two just don't feel like they're there in these scenes, and I hate to have to say that because I've really been hoping that the show would find some kind of center to Ake/Braka’s adversarial relationship since the pilot. Of course, we still have four more episodes to go this season, so there's still a chance that they'll get there. But this wasn’t their week.

Questions and Notes from the Q Continuum:

  • A USS Miyazaki apparently was featured in a piece of fan fiction called Harry Potter and the Return of James T. Kirk (!)… but this is the first time it’s appeared in actual canon as far as I can tell.
  • I wonder who the ship is named after?
  • Captain Ake says the Miyazaki was destroyed after its singularity drive failed back in the day, but that seems like a weird turn of phrase since the ship, while damaged, seems mostly intact.
  • Speaking of which, the “ship graveyard” that the Miyazaki is in… is it composed just of the one ship? What’s all the debris floating around it?
  • The creature design of the Furies is pretty scary in that they seem to be trans-spatial or otherwise displaced in time and space, which again would have supported the idea of them being the byproduct of some kind of singularity/wormhole event gone wrong.
  • I love the comic book bit, but why are the characters in the book – who are supposed to be from a century before this episode – wearing 23rd century uniforms? What did I miss?
  • They’re still quoting Spock in the 32nd century, eh?

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Best Buy Drops Ninja Gaiden 4's Deluxe Edition Down to Just $43 For One Day Only on Xbox

Best Buy's latest Deal of the Day has dropped the critically acclaimed Ninja Gaiden 4 down to just $42.99 for one day only on Xbox. Not only that, but this is the Deluxe Edition as well, making this discount all the more impressive.

The Deluxe Edition of the game retails for $89.99, so that's a serious $47 saving, and available for just a few dollars more than the game was listed on sale for at the start of the year ($40), and you're getting a whole lot more for it as well.

So what's included? For just over $40, you're getting the base game, future gameplay content (The Two Masters DLC), exclusive character skins (Traditional Dark Blue, Legendary Black Falcon for Ryu; Divine Chimera, Raven Master for Yakumo), the Blade of the Archfiend weapon skin, 50,000 bonus NinjaCoin, and additional in-game items.

The standout is definitely the DLC content, The Two Masters, which is still expected to release in early 2026, so stay tuned for more news on that.

But, as I mentioned, this deal is also not long for this world. You've got until the end of the day at 11:59 PM ET, February 12, 2026, to secure the discount.

Yeah, yeah, this is also on Xbox Game Pass, but you remember when we used to own games? Those were the days! I have personally been trying to buy more physical games and more physical media in general, and I'd highly recommend others do the same as well.

Think about it this way as well: Game Pass Ultimate is $29.99 per month, and at just $13 more, you can own the game to revisit and play the DLC on as well. That's worth it, at least in my opinion.

Our review from IGN’s Mitchell Saltzman said, “Despite its disappointing story and bland level design, Ninja Gaiden 4's excellent combat still make it one of the best 3D action games in recent memory.”

It even earned a runner-up nomination for Best Action Game of 2025, as it’s a “pure action fan’s action game, featuring some of the best melee combat we've seen in years, bolstered by aggressive enemy AI, excellent weapon design, and the ability to let your creativity run wild by giving you the freedom to hotswap between all of your weapons on the fly.”

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

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Arc Raiders Publisher Boasts That the Game Has 'Significantly Exceeded Expectations' and Now Sold 14 Million Copies

Arc Raiders continues to be an enormous hit for publisher Nexon, with 14 million copies sold and almost a million concurrent players online at one point last month.

In Nexon's latest financial results, the Korean publisher boasted that its sticky extraction shooter had "significantly exceeded expectations" and had "approximately six million weekly active users."

January's player peak saw roughly 960,000 people online at the same time — an impressive figure indeed, especially three months after its late October 2025 arrival.

"Since its October 30 launch, the game sustained top-ranking spots on Steam's Top Sellers list as well as PlayStation and Xbox," Nexon wrote in a presentation shared with investors today. "[It] showed exceptional retention and strong player metrics... [and we] expect to sustain strong player engagement and sales momentum with monthly content drops and live events."

Developed by Swedish company Embark Studios, which is led by a team of former employees from Battlefield maker DICE, Arc Raiders enjoyed an explosive launch last year. The game shifted four million copies in under two weeks, and had sold 12 million by the start of January. Another month on, and Arc Raiders has now sold two million more.

Steamcharts figures show ARC Raiders with a peak of over 465,000 players at the beginning of January, though numbers have begun to trail off slightly in February — with the game dipping below 250,000 concurrents for the first time over the course of the current week.

Still, player sentiment for the game continues to be positive, even as it suffers from a spate of item duplication glitches. Just yesterday, fans applauded Embark Studios for swiftly stopping another set of exploits – though its efforts appear to have left a fresh inventory glitch in its place.

Since laying out a plan to deal with widespread reports of cheaters last month, the studio has done its best to keep players coming back with frequent gameplay adjustments, new content, and a four-month roadmap. Its post-launch plan currently has it sitting in the middle of its Headwinds update, with its next chapter, Shrouded Sky, set to bring a new map condition and a new Arc threat later this month.

For more, you can check out our interview with Embark CEO Patrick Söderlund, where we talked about the past, present, and future of Arc Raiders. During our chat, we also learned more about what’s next for the company following its extraction shooter’s success.

As for Nexon, today's financial briefing made no mention of the mysterious StarCraft shooter project that it has been reported as forming a team to start work on.

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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Amazon Has an Excellent New Sale on Magic: The Gathering Cards Today, Including on Discounts Boosters, Precons, and More

Magic: The Gathering is set to have another big year in 2026, and there's already some excellent new deals to check out now that we've got a good chunk of this year's sets up for preorder.

My favorite deal in Amazon's latest MTG sale is on preorders for the Marvel Super Heroes Play Booster Box, which is down to just $189.99 is you order today.

That's $20 off the original list price, and with Amazon's preorder price guarantee, if the price drops further, you're certain to get the best price possible from now until release day in June.

However, that's not all. You can also find preorders for Secrets of Strixhaven boosters down to $149.99 as well right now. That's another serious discount for some cards that aren't even out yet, and worth checking out if you haven't locked in your preorder yet. Just as a reminder as well, Amazon won't charge you for preorders until at dispatch closer to release day for Marvel, Strixhaven, and TMNT.

Moving away from preorders, another notable set on sale is Bloomburrow's Play Booster Display, down to just $142.99 at Amazon. That's an impressive price drop from its $203.99 list price, and a good example of its market price value falling -28.51% over the past few weeks.

There's also some notable discounts on 2025 Universes Beyond sets, like Avatar: The Last Airbender, and Marvel's Spider-Man, at low, low prices right now as well. My favorite from this selection is on the Avatar Beginner's Box, which is down to just $23.13 at Amazon.

You can also score the Collectors versions of these Universes Beyond sets as well, both of which have seen tidy price drops since last year, and are your best bet of finding the rarest cards from each set.

Play Boosters are now the standard way to crack open Magic packs, having replaced both Set and Draft Boosters. But if you're on the hunt for rare cards, Collector Boosters are the best option.

These packs are more expensive, but are much more likely to include various foil treatments, extended arts, and all sorts. There are usually 5 Commons, 4 Uncommons, 5 Rare or Mythic Rare cards, a Land and a Token, but the rub here is that 6 of the included cards have a 'booster Fun frame' and 12-13 of them are foil.

In other TCG news, there are also some great deals on Pokémon cards right now at Amazon and TCGplayer, including a great deal on the most recent expansion's booster bundle, Mega Evolution - Phantasmal Flames. It's down to its lowest price ever at Amazon.

Unsurprisingly, stock is still running low on Amazon for a lot of Pokémon cards, even from last year, and even upcoming MTG sets like Marvel Super Heroes, Strixhaven, and TMNT.

That said, sites like TCGplayer still have a solid supply, and in some cases, better prices too, so are definitely worth checking out while on your hunt for cheap boosters.

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

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After Years of Wait, Mewtwo is Finally Returning to Pokémon Go

After years of wait and fan expectation, Pokémon Go players will finally be able to capture Mewtwo once more — in just a few months.

The fan-favorite Legendary Pokémon was last available to battle in Pokémon Go all the way back in July 2022, though its Shadow form was available more recently — over a weekend in March 2024. Still, fans have been clamouring for another chance to add the creature to their Pokédex ever since — and now it's almost time.

Further details for this summer's Go Fest celebrations have now been announced at a press event held in Tokyo, which will host one of three in-person meetups, ahead of the game's usual global Go Fest celebration. Artwork shown at the event confirms that Mewtwo will return — and hints at the debut of a Mythical Pokémon species, too.

Artwork for the Tokyo event shows the usual array of Kanto species, as well as popular croc Sandile. Of most note, though, is the Mewtwo floating within the image — confirming its long-awaited return.

"I can't say anything specific, but look forward to the Pokémon featured in the key visual," a spokesperson told Japanese Pokémon outlet rocketnews24go, via machine translation. "Especially Mewtwo — I think it'll be heart-pounding excitement for people who’ve been participating in GO Fest since the early days."

Will this finally be the moment Mewtwo's Mega Evolutions become available, after years of wait? Mega Mewtwo X and Y remain the only missing evolutions from the franchise's original batch of Mega Pokémon. Meanwhile, the game will soon be moving on to the release of Megas from Pokémon Legends: Z-A, with the arrival of Mega Malamar and Mega Victreebell later this month.

While Mewtwo is only shown here for Pokémon Go Fest's Tokyo event, artwork such as this usually shows species also available (to a greater or lesser extent) at the following global Go Fest — and it seems inconceivable that the creature would only be made available in a local version, when there has been such hype for its return generally.

The same is true of this year's Go Fest logo, which as ever features a subtle hint at the latest upcoming Mythical creature to become available. Looking at the mini blue lightning bolts on the 2026 design, Mythical Pokémon Zeraora seems a safe bet. The creature recently gained a new Mega Evolution, which would also make for a fitting release.

This year is, of course, the 30th anniversary of Pokémon and the 10th anniversary of Pokémon Go — a pair of milestones that fans expect to be celebrated fully this summer. Word on what else is coming to the Pokémon franchise this year will follow shortly on Pokémon Day — February 27 — which is when it's expected that the series' 10th generation of games and creatures will be unveiled.

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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Union Says 1,200 Ubisoft Staff Went on Strike This Week, Protesting Closures, Cost-Cutting and Return-to-Office Mandate

At least 1,200 Ubisoft staff have gone on strike this week, as part of a planned protest over the Assassin's Creed maker's recent cost-cutting, studio closures and enforced return-to-work policy.

Hundreds of employees gathered with banners and flags outside Ubisoft's Paris headquarters — which itself will be the subject of staff cuts, with 200 jobs at risk. Staff have called for the impending return-to-work mandate to be changed, and to show their general displeasure at the constant bleed of staff and projects.

The numbers of staff on strike were shared with GamesIndustry.biz by the Solidaires Informatique union, which also confirmed a small number of employees had gone on strike in Italy, at Ubisoft Milan.

One attendee held up a sign stating: "From offices to courts, no respite for the Guillemots," referencing Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot, and presumably the members of his family also employed within the company. Another, who wore a Rabbids mask to obscure their face, shared a sign that read: "There is money in the coffers of the employers!"

In Milan, employees held up signs including "Shareholders cannot make games" and "Don't play with our lives." An impromptu disco session also broke out, with striking staff dancing to chiptunes while waving banners.

"At this stage, it seems clear to us that Yves Guillemot has no knowledge or understanding of his company or its employees," Solidaires Informatique union representative Marc Rutschlé said. "The company is continuing its cost reduction and layoff plan. Our teams are already working under pressure, often understaffed. After several years without pay rises (or very small increases), we understand that once again, employees will not receive a raise this year."

Ubisoft's Parisian offices have previously been the sight of protests against the company's previous return-to-office stipulations. Last month, Ubisoft said its company reorganization would now reintroduce five-day office work as standard (albeit with an annual pool of remote working days).

The year began with Ubisoft announcing the cancelation of six games, the closure of two studios and further job losses at another three locations as part of its sweeping company reshuffle. Of the half dozen games that have now been fully scrapped, Ubisoft only publicly named one — its long-awaited Prince of Persia: Sands of Time remake.

The firm also confirmed it had delayed a further seven games, including an unannounced title set for launch within the next two months that is widely expected to be the company's under-wraps Assassin's Creed: Black Flag remaster.

Image credit: Solidaires Informatique

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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Assassin's Creed Black Flag Remaster Art Book Appears at Amazon UK, Now Up for Preorder

The heavily rumoured, but yet to be confirmed, Assassin's Creed Black Flag Remake/Remaster is getting its very own art book, at least according to this recent Amazon listing in the UK.

Preorders are also now available, strangely, before we've got official confirmation of the game actually being real and given its own release window. Its art book is listed at £29.95 right now, a slight reduction from its initial £39.99 RRP, and the Amazon listing also mentions a release date of March 24, 2026.

Titan will be publishing the art book, and the publisher already has a history of releasing art books for the gaming franchise since 2012. That includes Assassin's Creed III, Unity, Syndicate, Origins, and more.

More recent Assassin's Creed art books have also been published by Dark Horse, a separate publishing house, including Shadows, Mirage, and The Making of Assassin's Creed: 15th Anniversary.

According to recent listings on the PEGI European ratings board website, the official name of the long- awaited remake is Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced.

And yet, after years of internal leaks, relentless fan speculation, and even not-so-subtle nudges from the original game’s lead actor, Ubisoft still refuses to officially acknowledge that a Black Flag remake is real.

Earlier reports claim Black Flag Resynced is shaping up to be a full-scale overhaul of the series' fan-favourite pirate outing, with meaningful visual and gameplay upgrades designed to bring it more in line with the production standards of last year's Assassin's Creed Shadows.

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

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'A Hero': Katie Holmes Leads Tributes to Dawson's Creek Star James Van Der Beek

Dawson's Creek actress Katie Holmes has paid tribute to her former co-star James Van Der Beek, who passed away yesterday aged just 48 after living with bowel cancer.

Holmes, who played the best friend and sometimes girlfriend of Van Der Beek's lead character Dawson Leery, posted a hand-written note on Instagram where she described her on-screen partner as "a hero."

"Bravery, compassion, selflessness, strength," Holmes wrote. "An appreciation for life and the action taken to live life with the integrity that life is art — creating a beautiful marriage, six loving children — the journey of a hero."

Fellow Dawson's Creek actress Busy Philipps also posted to Instagram, where she described Van Der Beek as "one in a billion." Philipps added: "He will be forever missed and I don't know what else to say. I am just so so sad."

Van Der Beek was initially diagnosed with cancer in late 2023, and went public with his condition a year later. Also writing on Instagram, The Fresh Prince of Bel Air star Alfonso Ribeiro shared that he had been one of many friends to visit Van Der Beek in recent days to say goodbye, following a "roller coaster" of a battle.

"I was with him through this horrible journey to beat cancer," Riberiro said, describing Van Der Beek as a "true friend, brother and life guide." He added: "His family and friends went on this roller coaster ride. The highs when it looked like he had it beat to the breaking lows of it coming back."

"Rarely am I at a loss for words," shared Dawson's Creek actress Mary-Margaret Humes, who played Van Der Beek's on-screen mother. "Today would be the exception. James, my gracious warrior, you fought a hard battle against all odds with such quiet strength and dignity."

Chad Michael Murray, who appeared in the show in a recurring role, wrote that Van Der Beek had been "a giant" whose "words, art and humanity inspired all of us."

The Dawson's Creek cast remained close following the show's 2003 finale, and reunited for a cancer fundraiser last September — though Van Der Beek was only able to appear via video message due to illness. The event was ultimately hosted by Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda, who also has now paid tribute — saying his "whole heart" was with the actor's family.

Van Der Beek is survived by his wife Kimberly Van Der Beek and their children Olivia, Joshua, Annabel, Emilia, Gwendolyn and Jeremiah.

Image credit: SGranitz/WireImage via Getty Images

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

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Ranger's Path: National Park Simulator Preview: Pick Up Litter, Snap Wildlife Pics, and Police Permits in This Chill Sim

About halfway through my hands-on demo with Ranger's Path: National Park Simulator, I find myself cautiously stalking an American Black Bear. Using a sixth sense-like ability that'd make one of Assassin's Creed's cloaked killers proud, I prepare to shoot the intimidating beast…with a camera, of course.

If it isn't evident by the game's title, Ranger's Path isn't another open-world stealth and stabbing affair, but rather a cozy outdoor simulator that'd sooner have you protect a wild animal with your life than slaughter it for crafting resources.

But we're getting a bit ahead of ourselves.

In the spirit of the increasingly sought-after genre that's made everything from house-flipping to power-washing popular gaming pastimes, Ranger's Path is the latest sim to let players live out their real-life job fantasies. But before you can join the respected ranks of the U.S. National Park Service – and earn that iconic, broad-brimmed dimpled hat – you need to customize your rookie ranger in the game's modest character creator.

With my selected female ranger eager to get started at the fictional, Pacific Northwest-inspired Faremont National Park, I'm introduced to Effy Morales, a friendly supervisor-type who gives me the lay of the land via radio. Morales directs me to head to the ranger's headquarters – where I'm to grab my walkie talkie and uniform – but I'm immediately drawn from the critical path by National Park Simulator's postcard-perfect visuals and lush forest vibes. Sunlight realistically filters through trees, casting equally convincing shadows on dirt paths, while chirping birds, buzzing insects, and hovering butterflies do their part to further ratchet the immersion.

Upon pausing at a landscaper dutifully tending to some of the park's beautiful flora, I eventually make it to the headquarters, where a fellow employee's complaints of a jammed printer snaps me back to reality; I'm not a hiker or camper leisurely enjoying the great outdoors, after all, but a park employee with plenty of work to do. That workload includes fixing up the park in preparation for the day's visitors. A broken trailhead sign soon leads to me learning about Ranger’s Path's radial wheel. A quick shoulder-bumper press on my controller brings up a variety of useful tools and supplies, including an axe, saw, litter picker, paint sprayer, and hammer.

I'm immediately drawn from the critical path by National Park Simulator's postcard-perfect visuals and lush forest vibes.

Given the dilapidated look of the trailmarker, I go with the latter, and am introduced to one of Ranger's Path's mini-games. The simple but satisfying challenge has me attempting to match an on-screen prompt, triggering my ranger to successfully hammer away and repair the damaged sign.

That only covers half the task, however, as another straightforward challenge has me wielding the paint sprayer and coloring in an arrow that appears on-screen. With my first true ranger duty successfully completed, Morales suggests I follow my mini-map to the marker in need of repair. But while I'm not looking to tick off the boss on my first day, I am again tempted to stray off the beaten path and take in more of Faremont's natural beauty. Also, I spot an overturned trash can and its discarded contents scattered nearby, a scenario I can't imagine any good park ranger ignoring.

After absorbing a bit more eye candy, including some adorable bunnies crossing my path and a small pond sporting impressive reflections, I equip that litter picker I spotted earlier in the radial wheel. I use the tool to snatch up some plastic bags and empty cans off an otherwise pretty cobblestone walkway.

This task too, while simple enough, also has some extra layers to it. A small recycling icon in the bottom right of the screen must be monitored to track how much space is available in your current trash bag, while the overturned barrel has to be righted before you can empty any of the litter.

Having completed that optional good deed, I continue checking tasks off my supervisor's list. Fixing another sign restores the trail completely, which apparently not only makes the park safer for visitors, but also opens up more of the map, allowing access to previously locked locations. I also tidy up a campsite by repairing its busted-up picnic table and collecting more trash, and later clear a path that's been obstructed by a fallen tree. The latter job requires the saw and axe, but the accompanying mini-games are a bit of a downgrade from the hammering and painting interactions.

Sawing, for example, just calls for mimicking some incredibly simple up-and-down motions with the left stick. Still, while the action isn't particularly compelling, the sound of the tool's teeth aggressively working – and the resulting dust flying off the freshly cut wood – is an immersive touch that adds to the illusion of getting your hands dirty.

My more menial, albeit satisfying, duties are interrupted by an urgent call from Morales – a bear's been spotted nearby, and she'd like me to snap a photo of the beast. As referenced earlier, this objective includes using an eagle vision-like mechanic that highlights objects of interest. Aptly dubbed "Ranger Sense," the ability grays out the world, save for critical items and interactions – like the food chain-dominating animal roaming dangerously close to me – which it turns bright yellow.

The Lexicon is filled with a variety of animals, as well as Flora and Landmarks, that you can access additional intel on by taking more pictures of them.

Leveraging an intuitive camera interface, I'm able to easily photograph the furry friend from a safe distance. More than just taking a frame-worthy picture, the action adds an entry – "American Black Bear" – to my Lexicon. This also introduces one of Ranger's Path's more interesting, and possibly addictive, meta-games. The Lexicon is filled with a variety of animals, as well as Flora and Landmarks, that you can access additional intel on by taking more pictures of them.

For the wildlife specifically, you earn badges by carefully observing animals and catching them performing different behaviors and actions, such as eating, drinking, and resting. Once all badges are unlocked, the animal is added to the Visitor's Center's museum – in taxidermy form – allowing you to work toward filling out a sort of gallery you can visit.

My encounter with the bear represents one of the demo's highlights, but my first interaction with Faremont's human visitors is a bit of a let down. While it's rewarding to witness the camp site I'd cleaned up earlier now bustling with, well, happy campers, policing their permits is less satisfying. On paper, the potentially compelling system sees you approaching hikers and campers, asking to see their permits, then taking action – like booting them out or letting them go about their business – based on the info, such as allowed access, hours, and activities, on their document.

But based on my interactions, there seemed to be little rhyme or reason to the information on the permits, especially in relation to the resulting decisions I made. At one point, I arbitrarily fined a man because I didn't like the fact he was ignoring his majestic surroundings in favor of staring at his smartphone (honestly, I didn't much like his orange turtleneck either) even though he had a seemingly valid permit. Ultimately, the dude didn't seem to care all that much, and I didn't face any sort of consequences. The permit system definitely packs plenty of promise that'll hopefully surface with more polish.

My permit-policing is soon interrupted by another urgent call from Morales – not more wildlife photography, but a lost park patron. Upon locating a panicked man deep in the woods, I used my ranger sense to assess his condition. Based on him suffering from hypothermia and a bruised knee, I chose to administer an emergency blanket and a first aid kit from a selection of options that also includes water. This was enough to ensure the visitor's safety and conclude my first day as a park ranger.

While my workday was done, my Ranger's Path demo still had a bit more to show me. After a good night's sleep – you are required to return to your hut for rest once the sun begins to set – I rose bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, and owning a brand new hat. That's right, with my training complete, I'm officially made a Faremont Park Ranger, an honor that's literally capped with that iconic hat worn by rangers. I'm also granted the keys to a U.S. Park Ranger pickup truck, which I eagerly use to take me to my demo-closing destination. It seems the park's Lake Kiku needs some updated documentation, leading me to drive to the beautiful, mountain-bordered body of water and snap some pics, which adds my first "Landmark" to the growing Lexicon.

This final objective doesn't introduce anything new in terms of gameplay, but that's probably not the point. My leisurely drive, through an especially scenic stretch of the park, punctuated by my equally eye-pleasing destination, ensures I'll happily don the hat again, if only to appreciate Ranger's Path's ability to capture the majestic awe of the great outdoors.

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Where to Stream Every Harry Potter Movie Online in 2026

The Harry Potter franchise may have started as a book series, but it quickly became one of the biggest entertainment franchises in the world. With a total of 11 movies, a Broadway play, and an upcoming TV series, there's seemingly no end in sight for the Potterverse.

With the Harry Potter TV series set for an early 2027 premiere date, there's never been a better time to binge all of the movies again. If you're planning yourself a magical little movie marathon, I've got you covered with all of the different places you can stream the Harry Potter movies online right now.

Where to Watch the Harry Potter Movies Online

Every Harry Potter movie is currently available to stream with an HBO Max subscription. You can also watch all of the original eight films with a Peacock subscription. Warner Bros. still holds the rights to the film franchise and will continue to do so unless a deal goes through. It's possible that if Netflix is actually able to acquire Warner Bros. that you'll eventually be able to watch Harry Potter on Netflix, but for now it's still just HBO and Peacock.

Outside of HBO Max, you can also rent or purchase all of the films from VOD platforms like Prime Video and Apple TV. Here's the full breakdown of how to watch the Harry Potter movies online in 2026:

How to Stream Harry Potter Movies for Free

There aren't any free streaming services that are currently offering the Harry Potter movies, but that doesn't mean it's impossible to watch them for free legally. Neither HBO Max or Peacock have free trials available, but you can actually get a Peacock Premium subscription through Walmart+. There's a 30-day Walmart+ free trial available for new subscribers, which includes either Peacock Premium or Paramount+. This will only get you access to the original eight movies as the Fantastic Beasts films are only available on HBO Max.

4K Blu-ray Collection

If you'd prefer to actually own the Harry Potter movies, there's a 4K UHD Blu-ray collection currently available that includes all eight of the original movies in a nice little package. You do need a 4K capable Blu-ray player to actually watch these discs, but you'll no longer be reliant on streaming services to watch them. You can stream them in 4K on HBO Max, but that level of resolution is only available to those with the highest tier subscription.

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AU Deals: Serious Games at Silly Prices Across Every Major Platform

There is a specific sting that comes from paying full price for a game, loving it, and then watching it tumble to pocket change six months later. I know that sting intimately. The upside is I can now tell you, with zero buyer’s remorse left to protect, which of these are actually worth your weekend.

Contents

This Day in Gaming 🎂

In retro news, I’m getting an Armacham Black Ops Pyro to light 16 candles on a cake baked for F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin. I loved this nerve-shredding (at the time) sequel that continued the supernatural suspense story of Alma “just call me the chick from The Ring” Wade.

The tense atmosphere and jump scares from the original were ramped up with more intimidating enemy types and actual, physical interactions with ol’ Beelzebedhead herself. All talk aside, my most enduring memory of this whole thing was spamming an automatic nail gun to hang dudes like picture frames with 14mm depleted uranium spikes. How did that ammo go out of style?

Aussie birthdays for notable games.

- Delta Force (PC) 1999. Redux

- Myth II: Soulblighter (PC) 1999. eBay

- F.E.A.R. 2 (PC,PS3,X360) 2009. Get

- Flower (PS3) 2009. Get

- Star Ocean: The Last Hope (PS3) 2010. eBay

Nice Savings for Nintendo Switch

  • Monster Hunter Rise + Sunbreak (-84%) - A$12.70 Still the cleanest feeling Monster Hunter to actually play, not just admire. The early hours can overwhelm, but once it clicks you are scheduling hunts like meetings.
  • Sonic Origins Plus (-44%) - A$35.40 Classic Sonic is still about momentum and muscle memory. A few levels remain mildly rude, yet as a nostalgia capsule it mostly earns its speed.
  • Scribblenauts Mega Pack (-90%) - A$4.40 A puzzle game that asks “what if anything worked” and then sometimes regrets it. Messy, clever, and absurd value at this price.
  • Little Nightmares II (-67%) - A$13.10 Quiet horror that trusts atmosphere over noise. A few trial and error deaths sting, but the imagery lingers long after the credits.
  • Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Col. (-67%) - A$13.10 A playable museum where not every exhibit has aged well. Still, throwing pixelated fireballs for thirteen bucks feels historically responsible.

Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.

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Exciting Bargains for Xbox

  • Borderlands 4 (-42%) - A$69 Loud, colourful, and allergic to subtlety. The humour still swings wildly, but the gunplay with mates remains irresponsibly moreish.
  • Far Cry 6 (-43%) - A$56.70 Yes, it is the Far Cry template again. It is also still good at letting you cause structured chaos for 40 hours straight.
  • Dead Space (-58%) - A$46.20 Clinical, oppressive, and refreshingly confident. It does not shout. It waits. Then it removes a limb.
  • Diablo IV (-73%) - A$30 The loot loop still hooks like it means it. Endgame arguments aside, thirty dollars for this much demon deleting is tidy business.
  • Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus (-85%) - A$8.20 Ridiculous, political, and surprisingly tender. The tone swerves hard, yet the shooting remains outrageously sharp.

Xbox One

  • Dying Light 2: Stay Human (-70%) - A$29.60 Parkour first, zombies second, story somewhere after that. When the movement flows, you forgive almost everything else.
  • Darksiders III (-56%) - A$24.10 Leaner and meaner than expected. Difficulty spikes can bruise, but boss fights feel properly earned.
  • Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 + 2 (-56%) - A$30.70 Still the gold standard for remakes. Tight controls, immaculate vibes, and absolutely no time for nonsense.

Or just invest in an Xbox Card.

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Pure Scores for PlayStation

  • Street Fighter 6 (-45%) - A$54.90 Deep without being smug about it. Online will humble you quickly, but the systems are generous enough to keep you learning.
  • Mafia: The Old Country (-34%) - A$59 Slow burn crime drama that values mood over mayhem. Not flashy, but it knows exactly what tone it is chasing.
  • Suikoden I&II HD Rem. (-43%) - A$39.70 Political intrigue and 100 plus recruitable characters. Some old school friction remains, but the writing still carries weight.
  • Far Cry 6 (-81%) - A$19 At nineteen dollars the repetition barely matters. You are here for explosions and a charismatic villain, not subtle reinvention.
  • Grand Theft Auto V (-52%) - A$29 You know what this is. It is still absurdly detailed, still massive, and still somehow relevant.

PS4

  • Octopath Traveler II (-47%) - A$44.80 Stunning HD 2D visuals and far stronger character arcs this time. Structure stays familiar, but the storytelling finally sings.
  • Kingdom Hearts All-In-One Package (-49%) - A$63.90 A glorious tangle of Disney, anime hair, and existential angst. Confusing, ambitious, and absurd value for the sheer volume alone.
  • Crisis Core FF7 Reunion (-56%) - A$37.20 Surprisingly punchy combat wrapped around a heartfelt prequel. Side missions pad it out, yet the core story still lands.

Or purchase a PS Store Card.

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Purchase Cheap for PC

  • Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut (-48%) - A$49.30 Patient duels, postcard vistas, and combat that rewards timing over panic. Side content blends together, but the core loop is quietly addictive.
  • No Man's Sky (-60%) - A$35.10 From cautionary tale to quiet triumph. It will not hold your hand, but if you meet it halfway the scale is still staggering.
  • Hogwarts Legacy (-86%) - A$12.50 A lavish wizarding playground that absolutely nails atmosphere. The checklist design shows through, yet twelve dollars feels almost cheeky.
  • Super Meat Boy (-90%) - A$2.10 Brutal, precise, and allergic to excuses. You will blame the game. It will almost never be the game.
  • Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy (-85%) - A$13.40 A linear surprise with sharper writing than expected. Combat is fine, but the banter and character work do the real lifting.

Or just get a Steam Wallet Card

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Adam Mathew is a passionate connoisseur, a lifelong game critic, and an Aussie deals wrangler who genuinely wants to hook you up with stuff that's worth playing (but also cheap). He plays practically everything, sometimes on YouTube.

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Most of Highguard Studio Has Been Laid Off Says Former Dev, Wildlight Confirms Cuts

Layoffs have hit the development studio Wildlight Entertainment, makers of the recently released multiplayer shooter Highguard. This comes just over two weeks after the free-to-play game's January 26 launch.

Former senior level designer Alex Graner posted on LinkedIn, "Unfortunately, along with most of the team at Wildlight, I was laid off today." While the number of people who were laid off has not currently been confirmed, the studio's LinkedIn page states that its size is/was 51-200 employees.

Wildlight's official X/Twitter account confirmed the layoffs with a statement reading, "Today we made an incredibly difficult decision to part ways with a number of our team members while keeping a core group of developers to continue innovating on and supporting the game."

On BlueSky, Mat Piscatella from Circana (which tracks game sales and engagement) highlighted, "Highguard debuted in the top 10 in weekly active users on US Steam, was top 20 on both US PlayStation and Xbox (Circana Player Engagement Tracker week ending 1/31/26) and yet..." According to SteamDB, Highguard reached a peak concurrent player count of 97,249 on PC via Steam on release day and experienced a sharp decline with only 4,524 players two weeks after launch.

Graner also said, "This one really stings as there was a lot of unreleased content I was really looking forward to that I and others designed for Highguard." While it initially had a 3v3 competitive mode, a 5v5 mode was implemented just days after release due to player reception to the small scale of the original mode. The team revealed a content roadmap on launch day that included updates with new items, modes, and characters each month throughout the year packed into seven separate episodes; it's unclear how the layoffs will affect the studio's plans as of now, but Widllight says it'll continue to support the game.

This story is developing.

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Amazon Launches Its Presidents Sale Early With New Deals Ahead of Valentine's Day

Presidents Day may not be one of the biggest sales of the year, but it is one of the first. Pretty much every major retailer will have some sort of sale this weekend and Amazon has already launched its own. And although the discounts don't look quite as inviting as you'd expect from a Prime Day or a Black Friday sale, right now is still a pretty good time to find some savings.

Amazon has had various sales going on in the lead-up to Valentine's Day, but today is the first day the official Presidents Day sale page has gone live. Some of the featured deals include an Apple Watch, Beats wireless headphones, and various household appliances.

The Amazon Presidents Day Sale Is Live for 2026

Amazon's Presidents Day sale will run from now until actual Presidents Day, which lands on February 16 this year. You'll be able to find all of the discounts via Amazon's official landing page, which can be sorted by all categories to find what you're looking for. The only thing you won't find on this page is a specific tab for coupons. For whatever reason, any time Amazon switches from its regular deals landing page to a specific event one, it always makes its coupons harder to find.

There's a buy 1, get 1 half off sale

One such promotion you won't find featured on this landing page is Amazon's 'Buy 2, get 1 50%' off sale it kicked off earlier this week. That promo includes books, 4K movies, and even some popular board games. It's definitely worth checking out if you're hoping to save on a Valentine's Day gift ahead of Saturday.

Do you need to be an Amazon Prime member to shop the sale?

Unlike some of Amazon's exclusive sales events, you don't need to have a Prime membership to access the savings. You do still need an Amazon account to actually buy anything, but the majority of the discounts are for anyone. There are, of course, still some Prime-exclusive coupons that are only available to Prime members, but those will be clearly marked.

If you want to grab an Amazon Prime membership before you do some shopping, there is currently a 30-day free trial available for new subscribers. There are quite a few benefits to a subscription, but the most important ones are access to fast and free shipping and Amazon's Prime Video streaming service. With Amazon just wrapping up season 2 of Fallout, now is a great time to grab a free trial and binge the whole season while enjoying the shopping benefits.

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The Sabrent 5-in-1 USB-C Docking Station with 100W of Power Delivery Drops to Just $15 After Coupon

If you need more USB inputs than what's available on your PC or laptop, then here's a deal that will provide an instant solution. For a limited time, Amazon is offering the Sabrent 5-in-1 USB-C Docking Station for a mere $15.24 apply coupon code "XFQ47RMD". You're saving 68% off the original retail price. Sabrent's USB hubs have nearly 200,000 user reviews on Amazon with an average 4.6 star rating.

Sabrent 5-in-1 USB-C Docking Station for $15.24

Clip $5 coupon and apply code "R2SN6S9M"

The Sabrent docking station can serve double duty for both data transfer and charging. In terms of data transfer, there are a total of four outputs: two USB-C (10Gbps), two USB-A (10Gbps), and one HDMI 2.0 (4K @ 60Hz). All five ports can be used simultaneously. In terms of charging, a built-in USB-C cable delivers a maximum power output of 80W. Note that the hub also has a separate USB-C input that you'll need to use in order to power it and the 80W USB charging cable.

This docking station can be easily stowed away in a bag or backpack, since it's so compact. It's plug and play with Windows, MacOS, ChromeOS, and Linux, which means there are no additional drivers required.

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

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