The North Face X Gucci Collection Is Coming To Pokemon Go

A big part of the Pokemon Go experience is customizing your trainer avatar with different hats, accessories, and clothes. Now, you can take that customization to the designer level with items inspired by the North Face x Gucci collection.

Starting January 4, Trainers will be able to find hats, t-shirts, and backpacks based on this high fashion athlesiure collection via geo-drop at 100 PokeStops around the world, including at Gucci pins. These are pop-up Gucci shops where the real-life versions of these avatar items can be purchased, in case you want to match your stylish Pokemon Go avatar in your daily life. But just because these are pop-up shops, you can’t just pop in. If you want to snag IRL North Face x Gucci, you will need to find the closest pin to your location and make an appointment.

Pokemon Go’s Unova event is going on now, so you won’t be all dressed up with nowhere to go. Considering Niantic is looking to add player avatars into the game as Trainer NPCs in the Kanto event, it might not be a bad idea to add some designer flair to your Trainer’s look.

Cities with North Face x Gucci items

Europe, the Middle East, and Africa

  • Milan
  • Florence
  • Rome
  • Paris
  • Cannes
  • Madrid
  • London
  • Moscow
  • Vienna
  • Brussels
  • Berlin
  • Frankfurt
  • Munich
  • Kuwait City
  • Monaco
  • Amsterdam
  • Doha
  • Cape Town
  • Johannesburg
  • Barcelona
  • Geneva
  • Istanbul
  • Dubai
  • Abu Dhabi

North America

  • Toronto
  • Vancouver
  • New York City
  • Los Angeles
  • Chicago
  • San Francisco
  • Atlanta
  • King of Prussia
  • Palm Desert
  • Scottsdale
  • Houston
  • Honolulu
  • Orlando
  • Paramus
  • Manhasset
  • Las Vegas
  • Beverly Hills
  • Miami
  • Tysons
  • Boston
  • Troy
  • Costa Mesa
  • San Diego
  • Seattle
  • Dallas
  • Washington DC
  • Nashville

Latin America

  • Sao Paulo
  • Santiago
  • Monterrey
  • Mexico City

Asia

  • Bangkok
  • Hong Kong
  • Singapore
  • Osaka
  • Tokyo
  • Macau
  • Kanazawa
  • Nagoya
  • Fukuoka
  • Sendai
  • Yokohama
  • Kobe
  • Sapporo
  • Hiroshima
  • Kyoto
  • Taipei
  • Taichung

Australia

  • Sydney
  • Melbourne

Now Playing: Pokemon Presents – New Pokemon Snap, Pokemon Go, Pokemon Smile And More

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Tetris 99 Adds A New Kirby Theme This Weekend

Nintendo is holding another crossover event in Tetris 99 this weekend. The online puzzler’s 19th Maximus Cup competition kicks off this Thursday, January 7, and this time, the prize is a theme based on the recent Kirby spin-off, Kirby Fighters 2.

Like previous Maximus Cups, this weekend’s event is a point-based competition. You’ll earn points depending on how well you place each round, and if you can amass 100 points by the end of the event, you’ll unlock the aforementioned Kirby Fighters 2 theme.

The Maximus Cup runs until 10:59 PM PT on January 11 (1:59 AM ET on January 12). You’ll need to have a Nintendo Switch Online subscription to participate in the event. Individual memberships cost $4 for one month, $8 for three months, and $20 for one year, while an annual Family Plan costs $35 and covers up to eight Nintendo Accounts.

Kirby Fighters 2 launched for Switch last September and is a Smash Bros.-style fighting game featuring various Kirby characters and power-ups. We scored the game a 6/10 in our Kirby Fighters 2 review and called it “a solid entry point into the fighting genre” that was marred by steep difficulty spikes in its story mode. You can download a free demo of the game from the Switch eShop.

In other news, Switch Online subscribers can grab another free item pack for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. For a limited time, Nintendo is giving away the Spirit Board Challenge Pack 7, which includes a handful of items that will help you overcome tough opponents in the game’s Spirit Board mode. Like previous freebies, however, you’ll need to have an active, paid membership to claim the pack.

Now Playing: Tetris 99 Video Quick Review

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Jumanji’s Rhys Darby To Star In Pirate Comedy Our Flag Means Death

Rhys Darby (Jumanji, What We Do in the Shadows) has been cast in the lead role of Thor: Ragnarok director’s upcoming HBO Max comedy series, Our Flag Means Death. The casting announcement, first reported by Deadline, marks the latest collaboration between Darby and Waititi who go all the way back to the hilarious, musical landmark 2007 HBO series Flight of the Conchords.

As the show’s title suggests, Our Flag Means Death is a period comedy about pirates–more specifically, loosely based on the life and misadventures of a real-life man named Stede Bonnet, who in the 18th century was known as The Gentleman Pirate. Bonnet was a wealthy aristocrat on the island of Barbados, who gave up his privileged life to become a pirate. Waititi will produce Our Flag Means Death alongside showrunner David Jenkins, and direct the pilot episode. No release date has yet been set for the series.

This is far from the only project Waititi has in the pipeline. Additionally, the director is making for Netflix two animated Charlie and the Chocolate Factory series based on the classic Roald Dahl book and Reservation Dogs, an upcoming FX series about Native American teens fighting and also committing crime in rural Oklahoma. Darby and Waititi will also be collaborating in another Waititi project, the upcoming sports comedy Next Goal Wins, which Waititi is co-writing and directing.

It was also recently announced that Waititi will be directing an upcoming Star Wars film, following his work on The Mandalorian. It’s unclear when–or if–the impressively prolific Waititi also finds time to sleep.

Cyberpunk Mod Adds Male V Romance Option With Surprise Full Dialogue

A mod for the PC version of Cyberpunk 2077 allows male V players to romance Judy, who can only be romanced by V with a female body and female voice in the unmodified version of the game.

As reported by Eurogamer, modders recently discovered a way to unlock Judy’s romance scene using V with a male body type and male voice. The modded scenes with Judy include full voice work for male V, which had some fans thinking Judy was initially supposed to be romanceable by both male and female protagonists.

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However, a CD Projekt Red representative told Eurogamer Judy was always intended to be a romance option just for female V, saying they still recorded the male V dialogue, “so we could avoid missing something by mistake that would require future recordings.” The rep said the team recorded all lines with both voices, just to be safe. And, CDPR confirmed there was no male romance option cut from Cyberpunk 2077.

If you want to see how to access the scene in Cyberpunk 2077, you can check out an NSFW video from YouTuber FrederickFlower.

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There are four romanceable characters in Cyberpunk 2077, and each one has different requirements for V’s voice and body type. You can check out our Cyberpunk romance guide to see how to progress with each character. Besides romance, you’ll also want to find out how to improve your relationship with Johnny Silverhand.

This isn’t the first big mod we’ve seen in Cyberpunk. Modders have also created a way to play Cyberpunk 2077 in third-person.

Cyberpunk 2077 is out now, check out our separate reviews for Cyberpunk 2077 on PC, and on PlayStation and Xbox consoles. For more, you can read why some think Cyberpunk 2077 deserved better.

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Logan Plant is a news writer for IGN, and the Production Assistant for Nintendo Voice Chat, IGN’s weekly Nintendo show. You can find him on Twitter at @LoganJPlant.

Pokemon Masters New Year’s Event

Pokemon Masters, the mobile spin-off game from DeNA, has gotten a New Year’s update packed with new sync pairs, limited-time special events, and more in-game rewards.

To start, the game is offering special New Years versions of two sync pairs, Lillie & Ribombee and Lance & Gyarados. Both of the sync pairs can reach the 6-Star EX rating, which was introduced in a recent update that unlocked the EX ratings for some other existing sync pairs. Plus they’re sporting new outfits.

An in-game story called Season’s Greetings is now available. It features Lillie and Lance and will grant you some rewards as you make your way through the story. Both of the new sync pairs and the Season’s Greetings story are available through January 13 at 9:59 PM PT.

Login rewards have gotten a boost as well. Some special timed missions available through January 13 can net you 1,200 gems, and simply logging in by January 31 gets you an additional 3,000. Daily login bonuses can net you a total of 3,000 more, for a grand total of 7,200 gems. That’s enough to scout for 26 sync pairs in total, or more if you take advantage of bundles.

Meanwhile, a number of other in-game events are ongoing as well. The Champion Stadium is currently featuring the Johto Elite Four, presenting an ultra-hard challenge for experienced trainers. An Electric- and Steel-type Egg event starting January 6 will grant new species like Pichu, Elekid, and Magnemite from eggs. And finally, a legendary event called Pure Hearts and Rainbow Wings will let you form a sync pair with the legendary Ho-Oh.

DeNA changed the name to Pokemon Masters EX in August, when it issued the update that added the 6-Star EX sync pairs. That came alongside a new sync pair, as the studio has been adding them regularly. Unlike many Pokemon games, Pokemon Masters features “sync pairs”–famous trainers from the series with their associated Pokemon partners, along with a player-created character that can pair off with multiple monsters.

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Minari Review

Minari is scheduled to open in wide theatrical release Feb. 12.

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The Golden Globes’ recent decision to classify Minari as a “foreign language” film feels ironic given its subject matter. Korean has been spoken on American shores, by American citizens, since the 1800s — it’s as foreign to the United States as English is — and the Korean-American community has been evolving and growing exponentially since the 1970s when director Lee Isaac Chung’s family first immigrated. Generally, it can be difficult to extrapolate from the life of a filmmaker in order to decipher their work, but Minari is an uncannily autobiographical piece about Chung’s childhood in rural Arkansas, and it lends itself directly to real-world comparisons.

While not shown in the film, Chung’s childhood photos were part of a brief introductory video that played before digital press screeners, and he appears to have re-created everything from the costumes to his mobile home in striking detail. The film feels like walking through his memories. Of course, any story based on real events is bound to use fictional elements too; Minari has several, and they’re all deployed to tremendous dramatic effect. But the result is a film that, regardless of its veracity, glows with a poetic honesty — with what Werner Herzog calls “ecstatic truth” — mining unspoken corners of immigrant and first-gen experience to create something that feels intimate and familiar.

The story of a South Korean couple and their two children adjusting to life in rural America, Minari lives and breathes through its performances. Chung’s touch as a visual artist is light and precise, but his biggest strength as a filmmaker might be the way he photographs and directs his actors, letting them dictate the rhythm of his scenes while capturing their differing relationships to their new environment. To western eyes, the most recognizable cast member is Steven Yeun of The Walking Dead, a mainstay of American television, though his film success includes Bong Joon-ho’s South Korean-American co-production Okja (2017) and South Korea’s first Oscar-nominated film, Lee Chang-dong’s Burning (2018). Yeun plays Jacob Yi, a diligent immigrant father who balances a utilitarian outlook with unapologetic dreams of starting a farm for Korean produce. He moves from California to Arkansas with his headstrong wife Monica (Han Ye-ri) and their bilingual pre-teens, the older, more responsible Anne (Noel Kate Cho) and the younger David (Alan Kim), a demure boy who needs constant supervision owing to his heart murmur. When the move proves difficult for Monica, and her job keeps her away from home too many hours (and away from David), she asks her mother Soon-ja to fly over and assist her with the children. The foul-mouthed Soon-ja is played by screen legend Youn Yuh-jung — likely the film’s most recognizable actor to South Korean viewers — who lights up the screen and brings a mischievous glimmer to the household.

Jacob and Monica work as chicken sexers in the 1980s, navigating their workplace with broken English while sorting newly hatched chicks by gender so that the females can be sent to poultry farms and the males can be “discarded” — which is to say, burned as waste material. When explaining this to his son, Jacob cheekily expresses his fears about feeling useless as a man, in the hopes that David will inherit his tireless work ethic. Though what Jacob doesn’t seem to recognize is that the female chicks don’t really have a say in the matter either. The chicken sexing job paid Jacob and Monica well in California, and it pays them a decent wage in Arkansas, but they’ve moved here to make a living on their own terms — or at least, Jacob has. Monica, on the other hand, is willing to put her own dreams and comforts on hold if it means supporting her husband. After striking water on his plot and hiring local farmhand Paul (Will Patton), who fought in the Korean War, Jacob seems poised to achieve his “American Dream” of hard work and self-sufficiency — even at the cost of his family’s well-being, though he certainly believes he’s doing it for their benefit.

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The most striking change for the Yi family, upon moving from the city to the farmland, is their immediate sense of isolation. Their house may technically be on wheels, but they feel tethered to this plot of land with no one else around for miles, and certainly no other Koreans or a Korean church. Instead, they join the local, mostly white Evangelical congregation, where they’re welcomed, but treated as exotic outsiders. The children who Anne and David come across seem to vocalize whatever overtly racist sentiments their parents keep to themselves. These kids aren’t malicious, they just don’t know any better. Anne and David even make friends with a few of them and begin to rely on their company more and more as their parents get busier with the factory and the farm.

When their grandmother enters the picture, life becomes topsy turvy for young David, who’s never met her or been to South Korea. She brings minari seeds (a zesty herb) to plant by the nearby creek, along with other local goodies and recipes from home, which brings Monica to tears. The film intrinsically understands the power of familiar aromas and the nostalgia they trigger, even though audiences can’t be made privy to smell. David, however, is reticent. Already in a new environment, he rejects these unfamiliar smells, like Soon-ja’s teas and other delicacies, defaulting instead to Mountain Dew.

In his first on-screen role, young Alan Kim impressively captures David’s impatience with his new hometown, and with his shrewd and sharp-witted grandma. She doesn’t fit his perception of a typical American “granny” (an image he likely learned from TV), who bakes cookies, and doesn’t swear, and dresses in matronly ways. Soon-ja has no intentions of fitting that image. She prefers American wrestling to soap operas, and the veteran Youn Yuh-jung plays her as a carefree soul, but one whose immediate affection for her impish grandson fills the screen with warmth, despite his stubbornness (the way she teases him in return is delightful).

Anne is the quickest of the five to acclimate to the new church and her new surroundings, a home where the water sometimes runs out and her parents don’t return until nightfall. Noel Kate Cho plays Anne with withheld resignation — a silent acceptance of her predicament, as she plays compassionate older sister to David, and unwitting caretaker of a household barely kept together. She feels not unlike Asian immigrants I’ve known, some in my own family, who moved to the United States as children and had to immediately grow into new identities and new responsibilities to help their hardworking parents. Child actors are rarely able to embody this sort of realism, let alone with this much complexity. There isn’t a false note to be found in either Cho’s or Kim’s performances. They’re both remarkable to watch.

The story’s anchors, however, are Yeun and Han, who imbue Jacob and Monica with silent tensions that shift beneath their feet like quicksand. Theirs is a relationship where casting feels key; Yeun, though he doesn’t set a foot out of line as a recent Korean immigrant, has lived in the U.S. since he was five, and he feels much more in tune with his surroundings in the film (he grew up largely in Michigan). Meanwhile, Minari is Han’s first time filming in America, and she seems to draw on a sense of outsidership. Where Jacob, Anne, and David gradually begin to relax, Monica never seems quite comfortable with her surroundings. Han uses a gesture as simple as hands folded in front of her, with interlocked fingers, to make even her sense of poise feel stilted and forced. You can practically feel the tension building in her hands as she attempts to stay centered — for her children, if not for herself — though Monica isn’t afraid to challenge her husband when her kids’ happiness is at stake.

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On the more operatic end of the spectrum is Will Patton’s performance as Paul, a former soldier seemingly plagued by some past slights or actions, whose every present moment feels like penance. He’s religious and superstitious and brings frenzied, spiritual energy to his interactions with the grounded Jacob. Their dynamic on the farm makes for an intriguing contrast. Through Jacob’s eyes, Paul is fanatical and impractical, a stereotype of a religious man and a “stupid American” who seems consumed by baseless belief. Jacob’s self-image, meanwhile, is that of a thinker who follows reason and knowledge in his pursuit of success. Though what he doesn’t recognize is that his belief in a single-minded financial pursuit can be just as fanatical. At the end of the day, Jacob’s “American Dream” of immigrant success, through some unwritten outdated rule of work-for-reward in Reagan’s USA, is no less a superstition than any of Paul’s little rituals. His belief in himself — both at the cost of his family’s happiness and in service of it — is no less religious.

Chung and cinematographer Lachlan Milne film each character’s uncertainty in a two-fold manner. In private, they capture their frustrations as sweat falls from their brows (the sweltering heat, both inside and outside their home, practically radiates off the screen). Meanwhile, in moments where the family shares the frame, the filmmakers present us with characters attempting to balance frustration with façade, navigating the expectations of fitting some pristine image of an archetypal “all-American” nuclear family, each with their own designated roles. They hide and release these frustrations to varying degrees, like steam from a pressure cooker. As this pressure builds, we grow to know each family member as intimately as they know each other. The camera begins to navigate each narrow hallway with more familiarity — as the film goes on, it uses fewer establishing shots of the house or of specific rooms — resulting in a unique visual paradox that reflects the family’s predicament. The more they settle into the space, the more constricted they feel.

If Minari falters at all, it’s in the way the film is packaged, rather than the way it’s made (so it’s likely no fault of the filmmakers). In their private conversations, Jacob and Monica refer to each other by their Korean names and other honorifics, but the subtitles still have them addressing each other as “Jacob” and “Monica,” the western names they probably chose when they immigrated. It brings to mind the subtitling in Lost, which ignored the cultural specifies of how Korean characters Jin (Daniel Dae Kim) and Sun (Yunjin Kim) addressed one another; Sun would often refer to Jin as “Jin-soo shi” (Jin’s given name followed by a respectful honorific) or she would use a term of endearment (eg. “Yeobo”) — but the subtitles would simply say “Jin.” The issue is a minor one, but in Minari, this simplification runs counter to the nuances and the sense of duality Chung sets out to portray. “Jacob” and “Monica” aren’t translations of how they address each other, but rather, they’re the characters’ public-facing personas, adopted for assimilation and American comfort. When addressing each other in Korean, they inhabit a private world of sorts, as a matter of familiarity, or intimacy, or even serious conflict when discussing doubts about their family’s future.

Still, Chung portrays the characters’ cultural duality in a number of other ways, deftly capturing the internal doubts plaguing each of them as they question their place in the world. Their identities aren’t under immediate threat from some outside force, and they seem plenty comfortable switching between Korean and English when necessary. But the less they feel like they belong in this mobile home, on this plot in rural Arkansas, the less it seems they feel American at all. In David’s case, in particular, being told the multitude of ways he is or isn’t Korean — he has even less of a connection to Korea than his parents — seems only to frustrate him, at an age where he can barely comprehend ideas of cultural duality. The film doesn’t make it clear whether Anne was born in Korea or simply visited as a child, but regardless, she has memories of a “homeland” David doesn’t truly know, except as cultural remnants passed down to him by his parents.

To David, “Korean-ness” is a kind of phantom, which takes physical form when his grandmother arrives, while “American-ness” is an idea his father attempts to plant and nurture. David’s grandmother doesn’t always make sense to him. His father’s farm doesn’t always succeed. And so, David is caught in a spiritual struggle for identity — one that will likely last for years — but ultimately, it’s the love and care of his parents, even when they disagree on how best to love him, that makes him feel like he belongs, even for a few brief moments.

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Women Directed More Top-Grossing Movies Than Ever In 2020, According To New Study

In what was certainly an unprecedented year, as the coronavirus upended various industries and lives, women set a new record in 2020 for directing more top-grossing films than ever before.

According to a new San Diego State University study from the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film (via Variety), women represented 16% of directors leading the 100 highest-grossing films in 2020. This is an increase from 12% in 2019 and 4% in 2018.

The center’s director, Dr. Martha Lauzen, who has overseen the study for the last two decades, celebrated the consecutive increase in women directors over the past two years while saying more work needs to be done as “80% of the top films” are still led by men.

“The good news is that we’ve now seen two consecutive years of growth for women who direct,” Lauzen said. “This breaks a recent historical pattern in which the numbers trend up one year and down the next. The bad news is that fully 80% of top films still do not have a woman at the helm.”

While women directed more films last year than ever before, the credits reflect that up-and-down nature Lauzen alluded to. The study found that women made up 18% of editors, 12% of writers, and 3% of cinematographers on the top 100 grossing films. The number of female cinematographers did increase, but only by one percentage point. Meanwhile, the number of editors and writers dipped by five and eight percentage points, respectively. Still, women held 28% of producer and 21% of executive producer roles on the top 100 grossing films last year.

For the first time in the study’s existence, Dr. Lauzen and her team at San Diego State University tracked the employment of women on films featured on the Digital Entertainment Group’s “Watched at Home Top 20 Chart” from March to December 2020. In this category, women comprised 19% of all directors, writers, executive producers, producers, editors, and cinematographers working on some of the most-watched films at home. Only 10% of the directors of these films were women, six percentage points less than the top-grossing films.

The study doesn’t account for movies scheduled to release in 2020 but were unceremoniously delayed due to the coronavirus’ effect on the film industry. This includes titles like Chloe Zhao’s The Eternals (February 12) and Cate Shortland’s Black Widow (May 7), among others.

This comes around the same time as Wonder Woman 1984 director Patty Jenkins revealed an “internal war” at Warner Bros. over the way the heroine should have been portrayed in 2017’s Wonder Woman. Jenkins is poised to return to direct the forthcoming third Wonder Woman entry, which is being fast-tracked following Wonder Woman 1984’s impressive box office sales.

Now Playing: 18 Biggest Movies To Watch in 2021: Dune, Top Gun Maverick, Snyder’s Justice League

Minecraft Earth AR Game Is Shutting Down

Mojang Studios has announced that it is shutting down its augmented reality mobile game Minecraft Earth, which lets players interact with a Minecraft game superimposed onto real-world GPS data.

In a new blog post, the Minecraft Earth team confirmed that it is winding down its game with plans to end support on June 30, 2021. Although never explicitly mentioned, the devs cite the complications of managing an AR game during the COVID-19 pandemic as part of its decision to shut down Minecraft Earth.

“Minecraft Earth was designed around free movement and collaborative play — two things that have become near impossible in the current global situation,” the staff writes in a blog post. Other AR games, like Pokemon Go, faced similar COVID-related obstacles during the pandemic.

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Still, the developers will support Minecraft Earth until June 2021 and are releasing one more update before the end that will let players enjoy the game before the shutdown.

As part of the update, Minecraft Earth will remove real-money transactions, drastically reduce ruby costs, add all content — complete and unreleased, reduce time requirements for crafting and smelting, replace unused crafting and smelting boosts with radius boosts, and grant a set of Character Creator items to anyone who signs in between January 5 and June 30.

Then, on June 30, Mojang will discontinue all content and service support for Minecraft Earth. This will also mean people will no longer be able to download or play Minecraft Earth. On July 1, Mojang will delete any Minecraft Earth player data unrelated to Character Creator

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As another bonus, anyone who has paid for the in-game currency will receive Minecoins which can be used in the Minecraft Marketplace, and anyone who has made a purchase in Minecraft Earth will receive a free copy of the Minecraft Bedrock Edition.

IGN has a brief overview of Minecraft Earth here if you’re interested in checking out the AR game before it sunsets for good on June 30.

Kid Cosmic’s First Trailer Is An Animated Take On Why Saving The World Is Hard

Netflix has released an official trailer for Kid Cosmic, the upcoming new animated series from Powerpuff Girls creator Craig McCracken. The series’ first season will be premiering on the streaming service February 2.

According to an official synopsis, the show “follows the adventures of an imaginative and enthusiastic boy” who is able to achieve his dream of becoming an intergalactic hero after discovering five cosmic stones in a wrecked spaceship–but he learns that “his fantasy of being a hero is very different from the reality of what it actually means to become one.” Check out the trailer below.

Season 1 will run 10 episodes, and has a voice cast that includes Tom Kenny (SpongeBob SquarePants), Fred Tatasciore (American Dad!), Amanda C. Miller (Sailor Moon Crystal), and Keith Ferguson (Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends). The episodes will span 22 minutes each.

Meanwhile, an updated version of McCracken’s iconic series the Powerpuff Girls is still in the works. The series made a rebooted return in 2016, and this newer live-action version being developed by The CW sounds interesting–whereas the animated series focused on a team of very young superhero crimefighters, this upcoming one will feature the Powerpuff Girl as “disillusioned twentysomethings who resent having lost their childhood to crime fighting,” and who must reunite to help save the world.

Check out the biggest shows that are just over the horizon in 2021.

Madden 21: EA Teases A Crossover With SpongeBob, And It’s Not As Strange As You Think

EA Sports appears to be teasing some kind of crossover between Madden and SpongeBob, and it’s not actually as random as you might think.

A teaser from the Madden NFL Twitter account today asks fans, “Are you ready?” Attached to the tweet is an image of SpongeBob’s face and the date: January 7. This is presumably when all will be revealed about this strange Madden 21 campaign.

It was previously announced that CBS Sports and Nickelodeon–which are owned by the same company–are teaming up for a special NFL Playoff broadcast. This Sunday’s Wild Card game between the Chicago Bears and the New Orleans Saints will be broadcast on Nickelodeon, and the televised event will include a variety of Nickelodeon-themed elements.

Nickelodeon star Gabrielle Nevaeh Green (All That) will be in the booth alongside the play-callers to give her insight, while another All That actor, Lex Lumpkin, will be a sideline reporter. The broadcast kicks off with a SpongeBob SportsPants Countdown Special, too, with NFL star Von Miller recounting some of SpongeBob’s most famous sports moments.

Here is a glimpse at what the broadcast this weekend may look like on TV–it’s pretty wild stuff. Bear in mind, however, that a more traditional broadcast will also be available on CBS.

During halftime, Nickelodeon will air a special teaser for the new SpongeBob TV show, Kamp Koral, which premieres in 2021 on the streaming platform Paramount+ and later on regular TV.

It’s not exactly clear, however, what role EA Sports and the Madden series may play in all of this, but it seems something is in the works and will be revealed very soon. Keep checking back with GameSpot for more.

Now Playing: Madden NFL 21 Video Review

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