The death of actor Chadwick Boseman from cancer has shocked not just the film industry but the entire world. Boseman was a man and an artist in the prime of his life and career, the star of one of the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s most significant films and biggest creative and commercial successes … and now he’s gone.
Those who worked with Boseman, including the community of the MCU, have been sharing their condolences and thoughts on his death on social media. They hail an actor and filmmaker with so much more left to contribute and a passionate advocate for social causes.
Marvel Studios saluted Boseman, promising: “Your legacy will live on forever.”
Our hearts are broken and our thoughts are with Chadwick Boseman’s family. Your legacy will live on forever. Rest In Peace. pic.twitter.com/DyibBLoBxz
The extended Marvel Studios community have been sharing their tributes to Boseman on social media, including War Machine actor Don Cheadle, Captain Marvel’s Brie Larson, Shang-Chi star Simu Liu, Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson, future Captain Marvel 2 director Nia DaCosta, and Deadpool’s Ryan Reynolds:
Chadwick Boseman, the star of Black Panther in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, has died at the age of 43.
Boseman’s family confirmed his death, first reported by AP, with a message:
“It is with immeasurable grief that we confirm the passing of Chadwick Boseman. Chadwick was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer in 2016, and battled with it these last 4 years as it progressed to stage IV.
“A true fighter, Chadwick persevered through it all, and brought you many of the films you have come to love so much. From Marshall to Da 5 Bloods, August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, and several more, all were filmed during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy.
“It was the honor of his career to bring King T’Challa to life in Black Panther.
“He died in his home, with his wife and family by his side.
“The family thanks you for your love and prayers, and asks that you continue to respect their privacy during this difficult time.
As mentioned in the note by Boseman’s family, the actor had starred in a number of productions throughout his life, playing real-life figures Jackie Robinson in 42, James Brown in Get on Up, and Thurgood Marshall in Marshall.
He is perhaps most well-known for his role as T’Challa/Black Panther, a role he took on in Captain America: Civil War, Black Panther, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame, and would have again in the upcoming Black Panther 2, which was previously planned for a 2022 release. Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, based on the play by August Wilson, has yet to be released.
Chadwick Boseman, the actor best known for his starring role in Black Panther, has passed away at 43. He had been fighting a four-year battle with colon cancer.
The news was reported by the AP and then confirmed on Boseman’s Twitter account, which states that he was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer in 2016. Over the last four years, it progressed to stage IV.
“A true fighter, Chadwick persevered through it all, and brought you many of the films you have come to love so much. From Marshall to Da 5 Bloods, August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and several more, all were filmed during and between countless surgeries and chemotherapy.
“It was the honor of his career to bring King T’Challa to life in Black Panther.”
The tweet goes on to say he died at home with his wife and family.
Boseman is best known for his role in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, having debuted as T’Challa in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War. But his credits extend back to the early 2000s, with roles on shows like Law & Order, Third Watch, and CSI: NY. In 2013, he starred as Jackie Robinson in 42, a well-received biopic about the life of the first African American player in Major League Baseball.
His appearance in Civil War paved the way for 2018’s Black Panther, the first Marvel Studios film centered around a Black star. He has since appeared in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, and Black Panther 2 was slated to release in May 2022 as part of MCU’s Phase 4. The yet-to-be-released Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, a Netflix drama based on the play, may now be his final acting role.
In reaction to the news, co-stars and admirers have been sharing their reactions and memorials on Twitter. These include Marvel co-stars Don Cheadle and Brie Larson, Black Panther comic writer Evan Narcisse, and Joe Biden, among many others.
Hard to hear about this. Rest in love, brother. Thank you for shining your light and sharing your talent with the world. My love and strength to your family. https://t.co/hNAWav7Cq8
The true power of @ChadwickBoseman was bigger than anything we saw on screen. From the Black Panther to Jackie Robinson, he inspired generations and showed them they can be anything they want — even super heroes. Jill and I are praying for his loved ones at this difficult time.
Madden NFL 21 is a tale of two games, really. It introduces The Yard, the best new Madden game mode in more than a decade, situating itself nicely alongside the breezy and fun Superstar KO mode that arrived last year. But outside of these exciting inclusions that are well-suited for short sessions, Madden NFL 21 feels all too familiar, even for an annual sports sim. The tentpole modes that require a deep investment haven’t received meaningful updates, and the on-the-field gameplay doesn’t do much to move the series forward and is hampered by surprising technical issues.
EA Sports has done well as of late with recognizing that not every player wants to sink a dizzying number of hours into Franchise or Ultimate Team. With Madden NFL 20, EA added Superstar KO, a sudden death overtime mode where each player gets one possession. It returns in Madden NFL 21 largely unchanged, retaining its excellent high-stakes matches. With Madden NFL 21, EA has added a second casual game mode that is even better than Superstar KO.
The Yard is easily the most over-the-top game mode to ever appear in Madden. Inspired by backyard football, teams of six compete on an 80-yard field, getting three possessions each to try and score. You can play against the computer, team up with one or two friends, or see how you stack up online against other players. While it doesn’t feature NFL Blitz-esque hits, you can get really imaginative with the stripped-down playbooks. You’re allowed to throw unlimited forward passes behind the line of scrimmage, and many of the plays are set up to encourage this. Adding to this mechanic is the ability to snap the ball to any of your teammates. The Yard hinges on extravagant plays, as it requires you to move the ball 20 yards for a first down. Due to the limited number of blockers, there’s a delay before the defense can pass the line of scrimmage.
Where things really get interesting is the scoring system. After scoring a touchdown, you can choose to go for one-, two-, or three-point conversions, which require you to score from different yard lines. There’s a risk-reward element in play here, as you can lose by a decent margin even if you score three touchdowns. Bonus points are rewarded for passing the ball multiple times on a scoring play. The basic setup and chaotic variables in play create some of the most thrilling Madden moments I’ve ever experienced, and games typically only last around 20 minutes or less. It’s both brief and delightful, making it the antithesis of Madden’s long-running Ultimate Team mode.
Unfortunately, Madden NFL 21 begins to show its blemishes in the familiar modes. Franchise, once again, hasn’t received any noticeable improvements. It still gives you the opportunity to manage every aspect of your team over the course of many NFL seasons, but it’s essentially the same loop that’s been in place for the past few years, giving little reason to upgrade if you primarily play Franchise. This is particularly disappointing because The Yard and Superstar KO show that it’s possible to rework the best aspects of Madden to create an experience that’s fresh and exciting again.
Face of the Franchise: Rise to Fame, the single-player story mode, is the worst part of the package by far. EA Sports hit its stride with Madden NFL 18’s Longshot, thanks to a surprisingly moving cinematic story. Since then, the story mode has been altered significantly to give players more time on the sticks and less time watching cutscenes. This year’s iteration of Face of the Franchise attempts to reintroduce more narrative after last year’s lackluster Face of the Franchise: QB1.
It doesn’t work–at all. Rise to Fame is set up as flashbacks told to a reporter back at the high school where your legendary journey began. Of course, there’s a stereotypical brash starting QB named Tommy who gives you a hard time. Quickly, it’s revealed that the starter has a health condition that he’s been hiding, which thrusts you into the limelight in the second half of a game.
After playing a few games in high school, you pick to play at one of 10 NCAA programs, and your rival-turned-wide-receiver joins you. It flashes forward to your junior year when you’re told by the coach that you’ll split time as quarterback with your frenemy–yes, he wants to play QB again–in the upcoming season. The problem here is that your play on the field really doesn’t matter at all. Despite winning in blowout fashion in the two collegiate games I started, all of the cutscenes mentioned how the team was struggling. Even after winning the College Football Playoff semifinal in dominant fashion, I was benched in the first half of the National Title game for Tommy. The story only gets more ridiculous from there, but quickly leads you to the NFL, where it starts to play out more in the fashion of the traditional Franchise mode.
It’s nice that Madden has continued its focus on narrative modes that mirror offerings in NBA 2K and MLB The Show, but Rise to Fame entirely misses the mark. Unless you really want to guide a player with your name to the Hall of Fame, it’s not worth checking out–you’re far better off jumping straight into the normal Franchise mode. Groan-inducing writing, stiff animations, and a disjointed story arc make Rise to Fame every bit as lackluster as last year. Since there’s more of it here, it’s actually even more disenchanting.
The card-collecting Ultimate Team mode doesn’t fare any better than Franchise when it comes to new features. At this point, EA has added so many superfluous details that half the time it feels like you’re playing a tedious management sim rather than a football game. It also doesn’t help that Ultimate Team remains steadfastly committed to microtransactions, which puts players who don’t feel like spending money on digital cards at a disadvantage.
Though Ultimate Team has a long list of solo challenges that introduce you to the basics, they’re all relatively bland. Rather than emphasizing the mostly solid on-the-field simulation gameplay, Ultimate Team demands that you spend an inordinate amount of time in the menus micromanaging a growing collection of players with attributes that are often quite lower than reality. To get them closer to their real-life counterparts, you have to sink a dizzying number of hours into the mode, much of it spent completing mundane tasks and playing online against those who sometimes buy their way to a good team.
While there’s much to do in Ultimate Team whether you play solo against the CPU or online, nothing here moves MUT in a positive direction. Assembling and modifying your team is a monotonous task that forces you to examine a slew of different attributes in addition to a player’s overall rating to compose the best team possible. It’s certainly deep and filled with customization, but now more than ever, the dullness of it all is much more apparent.
Despite its shortcomings in the most prominent game modes, Madden NFL 21 still offers better on-the-field gameplay than in previous years–most of the time. The biggest change I noticed came with run defense. Last year, the run game was far too challenging to stop, but this time CPU defenders smartly fill gaps and notice ball carriers more often while engaged with offensive linemen. Tackling in the open field also received noticeable improvements, including new animations and fewer (unrealistic) broken tackles.
On the offensive side of the ball, the main improvement comes with your evasive moves, which can now be utilized with the right stick. Making cuts in the open field to evade defenders feels far more intuitive than before. Two new moves, a side hurdle and dead leg, add to the number of ways you can make the defender miss. Since hesitation running is big in football, it’s nice to see the dead leg added. Directional hurdles–called jurdles–let you jump left and right rather than just forward, which comes in handy when you’re running along the sidelines. All told, ball carrier moves are more dynamic, giving you new ways to catch defenders off guard.
Quarterback play is a tad more in-step with the real thing, as there’s more nuance to throws made with defenders breathing down your neck. While QBs can now hasten their release, the accuracy of passes when under pressure can vary wildly depending on the player. This also means that attempting throws with a backup QB in the same fashion as you would with, say, Patrick Mahomes can lead to some big misses. And new Superstar and X-Factor abilities further emphasize the disparity between the stars and role players, including numerous new receiver abilities that give those with hot hands high-percentage opportunities to nab anything thrown in their direction.
When Madden NFL 21 is running without a hitch, the football gameplay is quite good, even if it’s only incrementally better than last year. Sadly, in its current state, Madden NFL 21 has some real issues, especially in regard to kicking. On more than half of my kickoffs, field goals, and punts, there was some fairly extreme lag with the kicking meter, which led to laughably errant kicks. More than usual, receivers simply do not turn back to look at the ball at all, even when it hits them directly in the back of the head.
There are also bigger-picture issues with the overall experience. Sometimes the field didn’t fully render, forcing me to quit and reload. Other times the game got stuck in a loading loop after finishing a contest. Lagging animations aren’t super common, but I encountered one or two every few games. While I assume these issues will get patched with the planned day-one update, they add up to create an inconsistent and sometimes frustrating experience.
As the PS5 and Xbox Series X loom–PS4 and Xbox One editions come with free upgrades to next-gen–Madden has reached a crossroads. One side of the road is freshly paved and inspired thanks to the shenanigans featured in The Yard, while the other is beaten down and filled with potholes. With far more technical issues than normal and large chunks of recycled content, Madden NFL 21 feels more like an update than a brand-new game.
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Season 4 of Fortnite: Chapter 2 is officially here, and as usual, a lot has changed in the battle royale shooter. This season is themed around Marvel, and a ton of superheroes, from Thor to Iron Man and more, have made their debut in the game to stop an impending invasion by Galactus.
While the arrival of Marvel’s superheroes is the most prominent change in Fortnite, that’s not the only thing that’s different this season. In the video above, we break down the six biggest changes in Season 4. Be sure to give it a watch before you jump in and join the fight against Galactus.
Of course, a new season also means new challenges, and this time you can unlock some exclusive Marvel cosmetics as you level up your battle pass. Check out our Fortnite Season 4 challenges roundup as the season rolls on for our latest maps and challenge guides.
Disney’s The New Mutants is finally hitting theaters this weekend, albeit after heftydelays. This is director Josh Boone’s first foray into superhero movies, and the movie has taken some weird turns to finally make it into theaters, but the most surprising thing about it might be the role one recognizable x-men character would have played, according to a new report from Vulture.
Citing various unnamed sources, that report says that the initial 2015 screenplay drafts written by Boone and collaborator Knate Lee failed to deliver the kind of vividly drawn teen drama the filmmaker had pitched to the studio. Boone had said he was drawing inspiration from 80s teen classics like The Breakfast Club, but nothing was clicking.
One of the biggest changes though was the treatment of Storm, a classic character and on-again off-again leader of the X-Men. In New Mutants, Storm was envisioned more as a “sadistic jailer” who enjoyed torturing the kids.
“It felt like the kids were being tortured. If the X-Men are holding [the young mutants] there, it can’t feel different from the mental furniture that audiences bring into the theater knowing that the X-Men are good guys. Storm like that made no sense.”
The past few X-entries have been less than stellar to both fans and critics. Last summer’s Dark Phoenix was considered joyless and abysmal, and had a calculated loss of about $133 million, when factoring expenses and revenues. Apocalypse, while a financial blockbuster, failed to hit with critics and has a 47% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Boone has yet to confirm or deny the radical change. It’s far from the first time something like this has happened in the X-Men franchise however. Both Deadpool and the Blob had completely different origins and mannerisms from Wolverine: Origins, Angel in Apocalypse was a cage fighter, and of course the whole timeline with Havoc.
In our review for The New Mutants we say “it’s not the worst entry into the X-Men franchise you’ve ever seen, but it’s not likely to be a very memorable one, either.” You can read the full review here.
Fortnite: Chapter 2’s Season 4 costumes have some entertaining Easter eggs for players to uncover. Mjolnir, Thor’s magical hammer, can only be wielded by skins that it deems worthy. The hammer will transform into a boring pickaxe if you hold the hammer as someone else besides Thor or Captain America.
The hammer became a big part of Season 4 after it created a crater in the map last season. Players had to visit the crater while wearing the Thor skin in order to unlock it. Thor’s not the only one that can hold it–Captain America deemed himself worthy in both the comic books and franchise of blockbuster movies by picking the hammer up.
Other costumes have special accessories and Easter eggs as well, but they are limited to the specific Season 4 battle pass skins. Some players are disappointed; they wish they could use the special Marvel back blings and pickaxes with any costume.
Mystique, one of the costumes that unlocks later on in the Season 4 battle pass, lets players disguise themselves as other players they’ve killed. The camouflage doesn’t last long–it’ll go away if you travel too far from the scene of the fight. It’s one of several emotes that unlock alongside the battle pass skins.
“This battlepass is by far the best [..] in terms of innovation for cosmetics,” said Redditor Jonathan287. “All the different types of transformations with Iron Man, She Hulk, etc, Mystiques cool feature, new pickaxe animations, different new gliders with animations, amazing emotes, and pickaxes. This is by far my favorite battle pass.”
Star Wars has had a major presence in video games for decades, but the franchise is expanding to somewhere it’s never gone before this September: The Sims 4. During Gamescom Opening Night Live, EA announced The Sims 4 is getting a Star Wars expansion, Journey to Batuu, and it’s now available to pre-order as a bundle for PS4 and Xbox One at Amazon. The Sims 4 Star Wars bundle gets you the base game and the new Star Wars expansion for $40, so it’s a great intro to The Sims 4 if you’ve never picked up the game. If you already have the base game, you’ll be able to download the expansion on its own for $20 when it releases September 8.
The expansion takes your Sims to the Black Spire Outpost on the world of Batuu, which is occupied by both the Resistance and the First Order. Your Sim will have to choose which side to align themselves with, and as you complete missions, you’ll earn reputation points with the faction you’ve associated yourself with, which in turn affects how the locals react to them.
In Journey to Batuu, you’ll also collect parts to assemble your perfect lightsaber, with different hilt and kyber crystal options available at Savi’s Workshop, and you can earn rare pieces by completing missions. Your Sim can also purchase droids by collecting scrap metal around Batuu–once assembled, you can name your doid and it’ll follow you around, help you out on missions by searching crates or distracting foes, and even return home with you after your Sim leaves Batuu. Besides keeping your droids, you’ll also receive a bunch of Star Wars-themed updates in decor, home design, and recipes once you return to the normal Sims world.
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The Sims 4 Star Wars expansion: Journey To Bautu Official Trailer | Gamescom 2020
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The Star Wars expansion for The Sims 4 is only the latest video game venture announced for the popular franchise. Space shooter Star Wars: Squadrons releases October 2, while Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga is slated for Spring 2021.
Fall Guys is getting a $50,000 Twitch Rivals tournament today. Top streamers from all around Twitch will be competing in ten rounds of the game show battle royale. May the best blob win.
The tournament kicks off at 1PM PT / 4PM ET / 6AM AEST on the official Twitch rivals channel. Big names like Félix “xQc” Lengyel and Edwin “Castro1021” Castro will be competing alongside their four-person squads.
On August 27 we got a special preview of the medieval content coming to Fall Guys Season 2, though it won’t arrive until October. New games where players need to dodge giant axes and push blocks in order to get over high walls, alongside special knight and wizard skins, are on the way. Developer Mediatonic hopes this keeps the hype around its game alive as the initial honeymoon phase wears off.
Just like every other major gaming event this year, Gamescom adapted its show to fit the current state of the world. Instead of filling the halls of Koelnmesse with far too many people, Geoff Keighley delivered Opening Night Live, a liveshow that showcased trailers, made announcements, and provided in-depth looks at upcoming games.
On this episode of Generation Next, Lucy, Jordan, and Tamoor sit down to discuss the major beats of the show. More importantly, they compare 2020’s Gamescom with 2013’s, which occurred shortly before the PS4 and Xbox One launched. They compare and contrast how Sony and Microsoft’s approached messaging around the launch of new generation hardware in both years.
And because you asked, GameSpot’s techspert Michael Higham also joins the show to offer some insight into how to buy a new TV or monitor for PS5 and Xbox Series X, so if you’re in the market for an upgrade, you’ll get some information on what to look out for before handing over your hard-earned money.
Generation Next is GameSpot’s weekly video show all about the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X. Each Friday, join PlayStation Pro Tamoor Hussain, Xbox Xpert Jordan Ramée, and Console Connoisseur Lucy James as they discuss the biggest stories about the new consoles.