Fortnite‘s 9.30 content update is now live on PS4, Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch, and mobile devices. As developer Epic’s patch notes detail, this week’s update not only marks the start of the 14 Days of Summer event, it also introduces yet another new gun to the game and makes some balance adjustments to a handful of existing weapons and items.
Fortnite has received some unique weapons over the past few seasons, but this week’s addition to the arsenal is a classic: the Revolver, which Epic describes as “simple, reliable, [and] powerful.” It comes in Epic and Legendary variants and can be found as floor loot or in chests, vending machines, supply drops, or Loot Carriers.
To make room for the Revolver, Epic has vaulted a handful of older weapons, namely the Impulse Grenades, Rift-to-Go, Pirate Cannon, and rare Tactical Assault Rifle. The developer has also slightly reduced the availability of the Flint Knock Pistol and the Semi-Auto Sniper Rifle, while a few other weapons have gotten balance adjustments. The Drum Gun’s fire rate was reduced from 9 to 8, while the Heavy Assault Rifle’s damage was slightly increased. Supply Llamas have also been adjusted; there will now be five per match rather than three, and they now hold 350 of each material rather than 200.
Epic has also unvaulted a few weapons as part of the aforementioned 14 Days of Fortnite event. The uncommon and rare Pump Shotguns are now back, as are Shockwave Grenades and the Suppressed SMG. Epic has said it will unvault a different weapon for 24 hours every day of the 14 Days of Summer event. You can find the patch notes for Battle Royale mode below, while the full patch notes are available on Epic’s website.
Epic is offering lots of other daily content during the 14 Days of Summer event. Players will have a new challenge to complete and reward to unlock every day, and there will be a new outfit and other items for purchase from Fortnite’s in-game shop. Finally, a new limited-time mode will be featured every day, and they and include the John Wick crossover LTM, Wick’s Bounty, as well as a handful of new modes like Splashdown Squads, which has players trying to eliminate each other with water balloons.
Available from Floor loot, Chests, Vending Machines, Supply Drops, and Loot Carriers.
Vaulted
Rare Tactical Assault Rifle
With the unvaulting of the Suppressed Submachine Gun, we wanted to make sure loot distribution in this class of item was well distributed.
Impulse Grenades
Rift-To-Go
Pirate Cannon
Unvaulted
Uncommon and Rare Pump Shotgun
Available in floor loot and Vending Machines
There’s been a lot of feedback around the Tactical Shotgun and Combat Shotgun effectiveness, and so we’re experimenting with a world where the Pump Shotgun joins the current shotgun lineup.
Shockwave Grenade
Suppressed SMG
We feel the Suppressed Submachine Gun can fill a complementary role to the Burst Submachine Gun as a viable alternative.
Common, Uncommon, and Rare Revolver
Tactical Shotgun
Availability from floor loot reduced from 8.19% to 5.4%
Headshot Multiplier increased from 2 to 2.25
Burst SMG
Availability adjustments
Availability from floor loot reduced from 5.03% to 3.1%
Availability from chests reduced from 18.66% to 10.32%
Balance adjustments
Base accuracy increased by 13.6%
Jumping accuracy penalty reduced from 15% to 5%
Sprinting accuracy penalty reduced from 30% to 20%
Base damage increased from 23/24/25 to 24/25/26
The Burst SMG was dropping a bit too frequently for the role it was intended to fill. Additionally, it was underperforming when compared to similar items.
SemiAuto Sniper Rifle
Availability from floor loot reduced from 0.65% to 0.44%
Availability from chests reduced from 5.1% to 3.4%
FlintKnock Pistol
Availability from floor loot reduced from 1.97% to 1.32%
Infantry Rifle
Increased the Epic and Legendary Infantry Rifle clip size from 8 to 10
Minigun
Increased player damage from 18/19 to 20/21
DrumGun
Reduced clip size from 50 to 40
Reduced fire rate from 9 to 8
Since the unvaulting, the Drum Gun has outperformed in unintended areas. This adjustment should help create more counterplay in combat.
Heavy Assault Rifle
Increased damage from 36/38/40 to 38/40/42
The Heavy Assault Rifle usage rates aren’t quite where we’d like. This adjustment to Damage is intended to offset some of the downsides of the weapon.
Gameplay
Supply Llama
Increased the material count from 200 of each to 350 of each
Increased the total number of Llamas per match from 3 to 5
Bond 25 might have suffered a somewhat troubled production so far, but filming is well and truly underway. While we’re yet to receive a proper trailer or even a final title, production company Eon has now released a behind-the-scenes video for the new film.
The teaser, which you can watch below, gives us a first glimpse at Daniel Craig’s fifth (and likely final) adventure as James Bond. Alongside Craig in the trailer is director Cary Fukunaga, Jeffrey Wright (Felix Leiter), and Lashana Lynch (Nomi).
Filming of Bond 25 hit a snag earlier in June when a controlled explosion went wrong on set, injuring one person. Craig also needed about two weeks of downtime to recover from an ankle injury and surgery sustained while filming in Jamaica. Despite that, the production team said at the time that the movie will not be delayed.
James Bond 25, or whatever it ends up being called, hits theatres in April 2020. In addition to Craig, Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, and Lea Seydoux will all reprise their roles for the 25th James Bond movie. Wright and Ben Whishaw also return, while Rami Malek has joined the movie as the villain.
Bond 25’s story begins with Bond no longer on active service but instead enjoying himself in Jamaica. “His peace is short-lived when his old friend Felix Leiter from the CIA turns up asking for help,” reads a line from the film’s official description. “The mission to rescue a kidnapped scientist turns out to be far more treacherous than expected, leading Bond onto the trail of a mysterious villain armed with dangerous new technology.”
The Wii U has been a dormant part of the Nintendo hardware lineup, in favor of the newer and much more successful Nintendo Switch. But it isn’t entirely dead and gone yet, as the company still issues occasional firmware updates. Like one this week, in the year 2019.
The Nintendo Support site doesn’t list the update yet, but Nintendo Everything reports that the firmware update brings the system up to version 5.5.4. The update doesn’t mention what exactly it does, but it likely adds “improvements to overall system stability and other minor adjustments have been made to enhance the user experience.” That has been the trend for Wii U updates since the last major feature addition in 2014. The last system update came in September 2018.
It’s unsurprising that Nintendo hasn’t paid much attention to the Wii U since the Nintendo Switch launched. Two years into the Switch, the newer system has already almost tripled the hardware sales of the Wii U, and nearly doubled its software sales. Nintendo has made a habit of re-releasing overlooked Wii U games on the Nintendo Switch, like Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker.
Third parties have moved on as well. Though curiously, the still-massive 100-million install base for the Wii means it still gets some attention where the Wii U doesn’t. Ubisoft’s Just Dance 2020, for example, is slated for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, and Nintendo Wii.
Brace yourselves, gamers: The biggest shopping event of the summer is going down in just a few weeks. Amazon has officially announced the dates and times for Prime Day 2019, its annual sitewide sale akin to Black Friday. Prime Day 2019 will begin July 15 at 12 AM PT / 3 AM ET / 8 AM BST / 5 PM AET and run for exactly 48 hours, ending on July 17 at midnight PT. Last year’s sale ran for 36 hours, so this year’s Prime Day will be the longest-running yet. And that doesn’t even account for all the pre-Prime Day deals that are likely to pop up between now and July 15.
First of all, to take advantage of Amazon Prime Day 2019, you’ll have to be a Prime member. Amazon’s annual premium membership comes with a one-month free trial; after that, it costs $119 a year (or $13 per month). If you’re a currently enrolled student, you can take advantage of Prime Student, which has a six-month free trial and afterward costs only $59 a year (or $6.49 per month). Besides access to Prime Day deals, Prime membership has plenty of benefits year-round, including free two-day (or faster) shipping, unlimited Prime Video access, automatic Twitch Prime membership (which offers free monthly PC games and in-game loot), music streaming, and more. If you’re not ready to commit to the full package, you can still sign up for a free one-month trial to participate in Prime Day–just make sure to cancel after.
Unlike most everyday sales, Prime Day includes a few different types of deals to be aware of before the event rolls around. Besides the Prime Day-exclusive deals that will be available during the entire 48 hours (or until they go out of stock), there will also be Early Access deals available in the days leading up to Prime Day to get people excited. These deals will most likely showcase Amazon devices such as the Echo Show and Fire TV Stick. Spotlight Deals will run for 24 hours, and Lightning Deals, which tend to be the best, are available for only a short time and have a limited stock–sometimes, they’ll sell out within minutes. We’ll keep you updated on the best Lightning Deals via GameSpot Deals on Twitter, so be sure to give that a follow and check back often during Prime Day.
Even though you can’t see lines out the door and people shoving their way through crowds to fill their cart, Prime Day is as hectic as Black Friday, which can cause the site to crash and products to sell out faster than you can blink. While we can’t predict how Amazon’s servers will hold up during Prime Day 2019, we can make your shopping experience a bit easier by curating the best game and console deals so you’re aware of all the options. We’ll be covering the best PS4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, and PC game and console deals, as well as discounts on VR hardware, tabletop games, Funko Pops, and more, right here at GameSpot. Whether you’re shopping for yourself or getting in some early holiday shopping, Prime Day 2019 will be an excellent chance to grab anything that’s been sitting on your wishlist.
New Zealand director Taiki Waititi is one of the most in-demand filmmakers currently working. Following the success of Thor: Ragnarok, Waititi has produced the TV spin-off from his vampire comedy What We Do in the Shadows, directed the soon-to-be-released World War II satire Jojo Rabbit, and is also set to helm the long-awaited live-action movie version of Akira. It’s now been reported that he’s involved with a new animated Flash Gordon film.
According to Deadline, Waititi has been brought on board to “crack” a new version of Flash Gordon. The site states that Waititi won’t necessarily direct or write the movie, but is involved in the early development stages. A new Flash Gordon movie has been in the works for several years, with both Matthew Vaughn (Kingsman) and Julius Avery (Overlord) attached a various stages.
Flash Gordon is an intergalactic adventurer who first appeared in comic strips in 1934. There were TV adaptations in 1954 and 2007, and a Hollywood movie in 1980. Although the film was a critical and commercial failure, it has since become a cult favorite.
Waititi was first announced as the director of Akira in 2017, and the movie was given an official release date last month. The adaptation will hit theaters on May 21, 2021. Waititi has previously explained that he won’t be making a direct adaptation of the 1990 anime movie, but would instead be going back to original manga it was based on.
Speaking to Game Informer, Schafer said he was initially “very concerned” in regards to the impact an acquisition might have on Double Fine’s “culture and identity.” However, after speaking with Microsoft, he determined Double Fine would be able to retain its identity.
“I was very concerned about our culture and identity,” Schafer said. “They explained the new way they’re doing these acquisitions with unplugged studios that are not integrated into Microsoft. They’re left alone, they do their own thing and stay independent, but are well funded. It sounds like a good deal.”
In the end, Schafer said it’s a “perfect” deal for Double Fine. The studio will get to keep making its “inspired weird games” but now it won’t have to worry about securing funds for its next project, Schafer said. Independent studios like Double Fine before the buyout are known to have multiple plates spinning between developing games and constantly seeking funds for what’s next.
Also in the interview, Schafer said it will decide on a “case by case” basis if other teams inside Microsoft could potentially work on Double Fine IPs in the future.
Double Fine had operated as an independent studio since its founding in 2000. Some of its popular early games included Psychonauts, Brutal Legend, Costume Quest, and Sesame Street: Once Upon a Monster, all of which were published by different companies. In 2012, Double Fine kicked off a “Kickstarter revolution” of sorts with an adventure game that would go on to be known as Broken Age. The studio’s next game is the post-apocalyptic rogue-like Rad, which is published by Bandai Namco and due for release in 2019. Psychonauts 2 will follow in 2020.
It remains to be seen what Double Fine will develop under its new ownership by Microsoft. Terms of the Microsoft acquisition were not disclosed.
If you’re running an Nvidia GPU you should consider a G-Sync monitor for more fluid gaming. They can be a bit pricey, so here’s our rundown of the best cheap G-Sync monitors.
The Minecraft movie has been in development for years already, and now it’s reached another stage of production. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Warner Bros. has hired Allison Schroeder (Hidden Figures, Frozen 2) to write the newest script.
She’s just the latest writer for the Minecraft movie. Aaron and Adam Nee (Band of Robbers) wrote an earlier draft, while Wonder Woman writer Jason Fuchs wrote the draft before that.
Schroeder earned an Oscar nomination for co-writing Hidden Figures. She also co-wrote the Winnie the Pooh movie Christopher Robin and the upcoming Frozen 2.
It’s also been revolving door for the Minecraft movie when it comes to directors. Warner Bros. hired Stranger Things director Shawn Levy, but he dropped out. The company later brought on It’s Always Sunny star Rob McElhenney to direct, but he left the project, too.
Peter Sollett (Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist) is now attached to direct.
According to Minecraft developer Mojang, the Minecraft movie will focus on a teenage girl and her “unlikely group of adventurers.” They must defeat the evil Ender Dragon and save Overworld. It’s not clear, however, if any of these plot details have changed now that Schroeder has been hired to write a new draft.
“We want to make the movie–just as we make the game–for you,” Mojang said. “We’re inspired by countless things, but none as much as the incredible stuff our community creates in Minecraft every day.”
The Minecraft movie is scheduled for release in theatres on March 4, 2022. There is no word yet on if it will be animation or live action, or a hybrid, nor do we know who may star in it. At one point, Steve Carell was apparently connected to the project, though it’s unclear if that’s still the case.
“We always knew that Legion is technically a villain character,” Aubrey Plaza said. She was speaking to journalists on a phone call just ahead of Legion’s Season 3 premiere. We had visited the FX show’s set at Paramount Studios in Los Angeles, we’d seen several of the third season’s episodes, and one question hung over it all: Can David Haller be redeemed after what he did in Season 2?
“Up until now, we’ve sympathized with his character, and we’ve understood why he does the things that he does,” Plaza continued. “I think that this season is a little bit more about kind of showing the David Haller in the comic books–the character that we’ve been waiting for, in a way.”
A show’s protagonist turning into its villain is nothing new in a post-Breaking Bad world. But David’s turn in Legion Season 2 had the uniquely tragic air of a self-fulfilling prophecy; there are dozens of points throughout Legion’s first two seasons where, had things gone differently, David may have never reached this point. Yet here’s where we are at the start of Season 3: David is alienated from his friends, having sexually assaulted the woman he loves, and, we’re led to believe, is going to destroy the world. Is it possible to come back from what he did and avoid that terrible fate?
“That’s a good question,” Dan Stevens, who plays David Haller, told journalists during the visit to Paramount Studios. “I mean, again, the nature of Legion, the character, is that he is both the hero [and the] anti-hero figure. And there’s a sort of diabolical sense of mischief through the comic book storylines that you find with him. And that’s what makes him such a treat to play, is that dichotomy. Whether I think he can be redeemed–or should be–is not really for me to say. I think he wants to–he wants to see if he can sort of unpick this unholy mess that he’s created.”
That’s where Season 3’s main new character, Switch (Lauren Tsai), comes in. She’s a time traveling mutant who David recruits in the Season 3 premiere to help him undo the bad things he’s done. “Which is one way of attacking the problem,” Stevens said.
But given what show we’re talking about, it won’t be nearly that easy.
“Syd confronts him with this very sophisticated element, I think, of like, ‘Yeah, you can go back and you can change all these things, but does that really change who you are as a person?'” Stevens continued.
In Season 2, David essentially slipped Syd (Rachel Keller) a psychic roofie, erasing her bad memories of him, and then had sex with her. She technically consented to the sex, but only because David had erased part of her mind–without his interference, she would never have consented. Therefore, she wasn’t really capable of giving informed consent at all. David clearly didn’t look at it that way–he still doesn’t view himself as the villain–but to Syd, and to anyone looking at it objectively, what David did to her was rape.
“We’re dealing with the truth of people, and what they’re capable of doing,” Rachel Keller told GameSpot during a one-on-one interview on the show’s set. “What I’ve really enjoyed this year is that kind of self-reflection, and the full range of experience that someone goes through after something violating like that. There’s anger and doubt and shame and regret,” Keller said.
“If there’s a love story in there for her, it’s her own forgiveness, and taking the responsibility for where she’s at,” she continued. “That’s the love story for her. I don’t know what you’re supposed to do with sick egotistical men. I’m not sure. It’s a big question. I feel like we’re asking it. Do they deserve to heal and forgive themselves? Maybe. I hope so. Yeah, we’ll see. I don’t know.”
Some Superhero
Noah Hawley, Legion’s creator, doesn’t think David’s actions can be so easily distilled.
“He has these abilities, but because he’s at 20-odd years hearing voices and seeing things that he didn’t know if they were real or not, he built a personality disorder around those abilities in a way that really hindered his ability to function,” Hawley told journalists during the set visit. “He filters the world through his own sense of injustice, and he really felt like, as he said, ‘I’m a good person. I deserve love.'”
Amahl Farouk, aka The Shadow King, emerging as the show’s villain during Season 2 gave David a focal point for his growing hero complex, fueling his belief that he was the victim of the story and that he could do no wrong–even as Farouk influenced the rest of Division 3 against David.
“[He] bought himself time,” Hawley explained. “He feels like deep down, she really loves him, she’s just confused. So he uses his powers to make her forget, and then because he just feels like he loves her so much, he goes to her in the night and has sex with her, and just tries to feel that feeling that he’s so desperate to feel. Of course, when she realizes what’s happened, it’s a huge betrayal, because he took away her consent.”
Season 3 won’t shy away from the consequences of that act, but it also won’t paint these characters–people who we’ve grown to empathize with and understand–as caricatures of heroes and villains.
“It’s not an accident that we told a sexual assault storyline in the show,” Hawley said. “Telling the adult version of a comic book show involves dealing with complicated issues, and what I was interested in looking at is not ‘Good vs. Evil’ in capital letters, it’s the things that we do to each other–the way that people are together–and that it turns out you can extrapolate out the larger evils of the world. That idea, that David would do something to Syd where he literally removed her consent and then had sex with her–in his mind, it was a romantic act. And obviously, an objective and rational person wouldn’t see it that way, but part of it was to show the audience how ungrounded David was in reality–that he could still perceive that as a romantic act–as a clear sign of his mental illness.”
“It’s not an accident that we told a sexual assault storyline in the show.”
“What’s driving David is not mustache-twirling, supervillain, destroy the world things–he’s being driven by this very human desire to feel loved,” Legion’s creator continued. “In order to achieve that feeling, he’s doing some things that are hard to root for, but I think what’s interesting is to kind of challenge the audience to say, well, are you with him still?…I think the fact that this show is built around a love story, that there is this very human desire for love stories to work out, and I think that’s part of what drives the story here, is to figure out: Is there any way for these two people, if not to be in a relationship together, than at least to get to the other side of what David has done to her?”
The Full Spectrum
Time travel may allow David to change the events of the past, but it won’t let him change who he is on the inside. The character’s extreme narcissism will be front and center this season; as Stevens put it, “Could David go back and prevent the holocaust? Sure, but he doesn’t–you know, because he thinks he’s got more important things to do.”
“A lot of what Rachel and I talked about was that idea that if we were going to tell the sexual assault story, we were going to tell it,” Hawley explained. “We were going to deal with it, we weren’t just going to gloss it over. And because we have this time traveler, David births this idea: Maybe he just goes back and makes that not happen. He can go back in time and then not do that to her, and what she says is, ‘Yeah, but then what would happen is you would still be the person who was capable of doing that. I just wouldn’t know.'”
“Could David go back and prevent the holocaust? Sure, but he doesn’t.”
That’s hard for David to understand, but not for Legion’s other characters. Navid Negahban, who plays Amahl Farouk, told journalists that the former Shadow King actually cares deeply for David–in his own way. David carried Farouk around as a passenger in his head for most of his life, and Farouk identifies with David more than the other characters do. In Season 3, Farouk genuinely tries to save the world, but he also believes he can save David–whether or not David is capable of being saved.
“That’s one of those questions that makes you think about what’s good, what’s bad, who’s the villain, who’s the hero?” Negahban said. “The Shadow King, even if you go back and look at his journey, in his mind, he has always been a hero.”
Bill Irwin, who plays the male half of the being that comprises both Cary and Kerry Loudermilk, told GameSpot he believes that every actor has to “think of one’s own character as good.” Amber Midthunder, who plays Cary’s female counterpart Kerry, said that’s one of the central questions everyone in the show will ask themselves in Season 3. “Everybody has a different scale of what is right and wrong, and what crosses the line and what’s forgivable,” she said. “I think the thing about this year is that we’re we’re watching each character wade through [those questions]. I think as an audience, you’re going to be wading through a sea of questions.”
At the center of David’s quest to redeem himself–or at least to undo some of the bad things he’s done–is Switch, the time-traveling new character played by Lauren Tsai. “I think that’s going to be a very fun thing for the viewers to experience, is this uncertainty of what is good and what is bad, and just how complex we all are,” Tsai told GameSpot during a one-on-one interview on set. “You can understand. You can feel the human, the imperfection that lives within all of us, and the regret, and what comes of all of that.”
Stevens said one of the big questions Season 3 will ask is one of the big questions of existence: nature vs. nurture. In other words, “how much you can attribute unspeakable acts to a disturbed childhood and how much is your own volition.” Among many other things, Season 3 will introduce David’s parents, Charles Xavier (Harry Lloyd) and Gabrielle Haller (Stephanie Corneliussen).
“That’s a massive part of David’s struggle, and by keeping it selfish and keeping it to that thing, we get to really examine somebody who’s struggling with that question,” Stevens described. “How much was it Farouk sitting at the helm of this thing wreaking havoc, and how much of it was inherited from his parents?”
Hawley said David’s complex characterization is one of the things that drew him to Legion in the first place.
“It just seemed like a fascinating character to me to explore at the center of a show–someone who clearly has legitimate complaints,” Hawley explained. “He does and did have a profound psychiatric issue. He was in a psychiatric hospital. He did try to kill himself. He did have addiction problems. He’s not, at heart, it seems, a bad person–he’s not malevolent toward others. He’s just kind of a raw nerve, and we meet that guy in the first hour, and he falls in love, and we want that for him.
“We want there to be something positive for him, and he goes on this journey with [Syd] of self discovery, and part of that self discovery, for us, is to realize he’s actually much more damaged than we thought he was. There’s part of it for me that’s about–it’s always about empathy, it’s always about challenging the audience on some level to care about people who aren’t like them, and also maybe over the course of the story to realize that there are some people who can be saved, and there’s some people who can’t be saved–and to try to learn to tell the difference.”
Which type of person David Haller is, we’ll have to watch to find out.