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If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for the latest deals.
Rage 2 is this month’s IGN First, and earlier this week we gave you an in-depth look at its upgrades and skill trees. But now it’s time for more hands-on demonstration of how you’ll use them. Watch the video at the top of the page for a minute and a half of pure creative destruction that shows off some of the spectacular ways that you can dispatch your enemies – including a bit of Wingstick mayhem!
There’s lots more where that came from too, and you can find all of our exclusive coverage from our Rage 2 IGN First this month right here. That includes more gameplay, how it has evolved from the first game, and our hands-on preview.
If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.
Buying your own internet equipment is an easy way to make your cable bill shrink. Typically ISPs charges you between $6 and $11 to rent their modem or gateway, but you can find much better options that will cost you a lot less in the long-run, and modems aren’t super expensive either, as pricing typically starts at only $60. There are plenty of options to choose from, but I’ve done the research and narrowed the field down to my top picks from brands that have been in the game for ages. However, you’ll have to double check that a particular modem is compatible with your ISP before you buy any of the modems I’ve listed below.
DO NOT WORRY, we won’t be spoiling Avengers: Endgame this week, but good lord if we don’t talk around it in excited tones. Once we finally tear ourselves away from that little chat, we’ve got lots to say about Days Gone (“Days Long”), Mortal Kombat 11 (“generous”) and Katana Zero (f**king wicked).
The Endless Search™ makes its inevitable appearance too, with a Rotten Tomatoes quiz that thrills and confuses us, in that order.
IGN UK Podcast #485: We’re Out of the Endgame Now
And remember, if you want to get in touch with the podcast, please do: [email protected]
The release of Avengers: Endgame kicks off 2019’s summer movie season. This year, we’re foregoing a traditional summer movie preview — a single list-style film preview — in favor of a month-long series of IGN First summer movie spotlights, featuring exclusive video debuts, image reveals, interviews and more.
IGN First is IGN’s editorially-driven month-long spotlight of exclusives around upcoming film titles that both our audience — and our staff — are excited about. We’ll be rolling out exclusives on some of the most exciting new movies opening between the beginning of May until the end of August, so make sure to check back for even more exclusives throughout April.
Today, we have the exclusive new look at Margot Robbie in writer-director Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
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Avengers: Endgame has finally arrived, bringing the Marvel Cinematic Universe Infinity Saga to a close. And it does so in epic fashion. The film is loaded with superheros, massive battles, and just about everything you’d expect from an MCU movie–on a much grander scale. But who’s left dead by the end of it, if anyone? While we’re prepared to answer that question, stop reading now if you haven’t seen the movie. Warning: The Following contains spoilers for Avengers: Endgame–and Infinity War, for that matter.
With Endgame being the end of the first decade of MCU stories, we all knew there would likely be casualties when all was said and done. There was plenty of speculating about which character would bite the dust forever and how they would go. Now that the movie’s out, though, it’s time to talk about who was lost.
Both sides, good and evil, lost plenty between Infinity War and Endgame. So let’s go through each “permanent” casualty of this massive war. For more Endgame goodness, make sure to take a look at GameSpot’s review, as well as a look at what the true end of MCU Phase 3 is–it’s not an Avengers movie. And remember, if you don’t want to know who dies, stop reading now. The following is loaded with spoilers.
If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.
There’s a new iPad Mini in town, but the cheapest configuration costs $399. If you’d like the most adorable tablet in Apple’s lineup but don’t want to spend quite so much, we have some good news for you. Walmart is trying to clear out its inventory of the last-gen iPad Mini by dropping the price a full 25% while supplies last. That’s a great deal if you’re looking for an easy-to-hold tablet for yourself, or as a gift for Mother’s Day (which will be here before you know it, on May 12).
Hideo Kojima has revealed some new details about Death Stranding at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. But, as with so many things Death Stranding related, the details are vague and leave us with more questions than answers.
“It’s an open-world action game, but it’s really something new,” said Kojima (via GamesRadar+). Part of that something new appears to be a focus on connections: “There are so many things happening in the real world – in America, in Europe – everything is actually connected by the internet, but in a way we’re not connected in the real world these days,” Kojima revealed.
Sony recently started to explain its plans for the next generation of PlayStation, suggesting it could be closer than we had previously thought. But it still isn’t too close, as the company has now ruled out seeing it anytime in the next year.
Sony Interactive Entertainment followed up with an earnings announcement, and Wall Street Journal reporter Takashi Mochizuki tweeted about the company’s comments (via Engadget). The company announced that the next PlayStation will not be coming in the next fiscal year, which rules out any new console on shelves by April 2020. The company also recommitted a heavy investment into developing the next PlayStation.
Last year we had heard that the next-generation PlayStation was still three years away, which would put it in 2021. Cerny taking the wraps off with first details suggested that Sony could have moved that timeline up, possibly for a 2020 launch. This revelation doesn’t rule out 2020 altogether, but it does mean the company would need to aim for a summer or fall launch instead of spring.
PS4 architect Mark Cerny began detailing plans for the next PlayStation–presumably to be named the PlayStation 5–in a recent interview. The upgrade sounds like a significant improvement that still relies on a lot of PS4 architecture, even down to allowing for backwards compatibility. Other features include a solid-state drive, and the potential to support 8K resolution. You can read up on all of the technical specs we know so far.
Cerny also specifically ruled out the PS5 being an all-digital device. Microsoft has taken the first step into offering an all-digital console with the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition, but it remains to be seen if its next generation will be all-digital as well. This could tie into Microsoft’s plans to launch a streaming platform, code-named Project xCloud, which could reduce the need for physical media. Meanwhile, both of them will face a new competitor with the coming launch of Google Stadia, an all-streaming gaming platform.