The Witcher: Season 1, Episode 1 – ‘The End’s Beginning’ Review

This review contains full spoilers for The Witcher Season 1, episode 1, titled “The End’s Beginning”. 

Anyone who has read Polish fantasy author Andrzej Sapkowski’s plethora of novels, or played through the gargantuan trilogy of CD Projekt Red video games, will know that the world of The Witcher is a sprawling, knotty landscape. It’s a place of conflicting kingdoms, tragic families, and murky politics. To describe the saga’s plot to a newcomer without getting caught up in its many overlapping strands is a difficult task. Smartly circumnavigating this issue, Netflix’s The Witcher show starts small, and exactly where it needs to: with Geralt.

While the first episode of The Witcher – “The End’s Beginning” – has one eye on the larger picture, it is predominantly a small-scale introduction to Henry Cavill’s slayer of beasts, Geralt of Rivia. Stripping the story back to essentials is a sensible choice, and by the episode’s conclusion we have a pretty solid understanding of who he is, what drives him, and where he stands in the greater narrative. His destiny to meet Ciri helps anchor him in the episode’s ‘B plot’, and it’s clear where the character needs to go both in narrative and personal development.

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The Witcher: Season 1, Episode 3 – ‘Betrayer Moon’ Review

This review contains full spoilers for The Witcher Season 1, episode 3, titled “Betrayer Moon”. For a refresher, check out our review of episode 2, “Four Marks”.

From the get-go, The Witcher has been content to focus on its leading characters and their smaller stories, leaving any sense of a grand plot simmering in the background. Episode 3, “Betrayer Moon,” continues that trend, once again opting to delve deeper into Yennefer’s origins and adapt yet another short story for Geralt’s quest-of-the-episode. That means we’ve now had a trio of tales dedicated to plot establishment, rather than development. But while it’s hard not to feel a little impatient about the season’s pace, “Betrayer Moon” does provide a consistent third chapter to Netflix’s fantasy series.

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The Witcher: Season 1, Episode 4 – Review

This review contains full spoilers for The Witcher Season 1, episode 4, titled “Of Banquets, Bastards and Burials”. For a refresher, check out our review of episode 3, “Of Banquets, Bastards and Burials”.

We’ve reached the halfway mark of Netflix’s The Witcher, and episode 4 marks somewhat of a watershed moment for the show. The ties that bind Geralt and Ciri have finally been revealed, putting at least one of the show’s mysteries (partially) to bed. But the episode also feels as if it slams on the brakes, allowing for time to fill in the cracks of mysteries laid in previous stories. This creates what feels like a chapter designed to iron out creases rather that move the journey forward.

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The Witcher: Season 1, Episode 2 – ‘Four Marks’ Review

This review contains full spoilers for The Witcher Season 1, episode 2, titled “Four Marks”. For a refresher, check out our review of episode 1, “The End’s Beginning”.

The first episode of The Witcher eased us gently into Geralt’s world, much as the White Wolf himself would slowly slip into his famous bathtub. But that smooth and steady introduction halts here, as episode 2 – “Four Marks” – opens the floodgates on The Witcher’s lore, creating an at-times breathless rush of information, exposition, and history. If the first episode was a side-quest, then “Four Marks” is evening-long session of reading background information on the official Witcher wiki.

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Netflix’s The Witcher: Season 1 Review Roundup

The Witcher is finally out on Netflix, recounting the adventures of Geralt of Rivia, Yennefer and Ciri on a whole new medium. We will have our full Season 1 review coming on Monday, but in the meantime, we’ve done individual reviews of each episode in Season 1, which you can read below.

Star Wars: Who Are Rey’s Parents in The Rise of Skywalker?

One of the biggest questions that have been circulating since Star Wars: The Force Awakens released four years ago, is Rey’s backstory – specifically, who her parents really are.

Rian Johnson abruptly concluded the curiosity in Star Wars: The Last Jedi with Kylo Ren saying Rey’s parents were “nobody.”

“They were filthy junk traders. Sold you off for drinking money. They’re dead in a pauper’s grave in the Jakku desert. You come from nothing. You’re nothing. But not to me,” Kylo said.

It was heavily teased before going into Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – even by director J.J. Abrams himself – that Rey’s backstory and who her parents were, would be revealed, despite the events of The Last Jedi having left fans somewhat disappointed at the halt of the previous build-up to where Rey came from.

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The Witcher: Season 1, Episode 5 – ‘Bottled Appetites’ Review

This review contains full spoilers for The Witcher Season 1, episode 5, titled “Bottled Appetites”. For a refresher, check out our review of episode 4, “Of Banquets, Bastards and Burials”.

It’s been a long time coming, but with episode 5 The Witcher finally gets a move on with its overarching plotlines. Geralt and Yennefer meet for the first time, and Nilfgaard actually enacts a plan to capture Ciri. There’s notable character development across the board, and a stronger feeling of coherence between the show’s separate threats. But despite this, episode 5 notably suffers from many of The Witcher’s production woes, which overshadow several of the story’s triumphs.

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Netflix’s The Witcher Review – Out Of Order

There was plenty of hubbub over the casting of Superman as the brooding Witcher Geralt, but Henry Cavill is not the problem with Netflix’s Witcher series. In fact, Cavill is great–he grumbles and growls like the Geralt that fans know from the Witcher games, and the actor thrusts and pirouettes during action scenes just as author Andrzej Sapkowski originally described in the books.

The Witcher’s problems run much deeper than any arguably questionable casting. They’re in the show’s very bones, its core structure, and the way it communicates information to viewers–or, more accurately, doesn’t.

It’s impossible to convey how The Witcher is so fundamentally flawed without revealing information that some viewers might consider spoilers, so be warned–from here on out, that’s what we’ll be doing.

As anyone who’s played the games or read the books knows, The Witcher concerns the adventures of Geralt of Rivia, a monster-killing mercenary with special abilities granted to him via extensive training, magical procedures, and a deep knowledge of potions and elixirs. His destiny is tied with those of Ciri, a young princess without a kingdom, and Yennefer, a beautiful and powerful sorceress with whom Geralt has a complex relationship.

The Witcher’s fundamental, unfixable flaws have their roots in the way this story was originally told. The Last Wish–considered the first “book” in the Witcher saga–is actually a series of loosely connected short stories. Book 2, Sword of Destiny, is the same. All the stories in both are told entirely from Geralt of Rivia’s perspective; Yennefer and Ciri are important in several of these tales, but they’re also undeniably side characters. When showrunner Lauren Schmidt Hissrich decided to base the Netflix show primarily on these first two books, but also try to make Geralt, Yennefer, and Ciri equal co-protagonists, she created for herself a problem with no easy solution. And the solution that she did come up with doesn’t even come close to working.

The Witcher attempts to seamlessly weave Yennefer’s totally new backstory and Ciri’s existing (albeit remixed) origins into the stories that originally featured only Geralt. That makes the show a nearly incomprehensible mess in which it’s often practically impossible to tell when in the larger story each disparate plotline is taking place, which characters are alive or are dead in any given scene, and what each character’s story has to do with any of the others.

In any given episode, scenes that take place decades apart and are completely disconnected from one another might nevertheless be edited together as if they’re somehow related. Major events that take place in Episode 1–including a battle and several character deaths–literally take place again in later episodes, from slightly different perspectives, without the show ever clearly communicating that one character’s storyline was set in the build-up to that war, while another’s took place in the battle’s aftermath. Characters who died in one episode will pop up again looking perfectly spry later on, while one character appears as a child in the background of one scene, while also featuring as an adult in a different storyline during the same episode. And the show never, at any point, gives any direct indication that it’s jumping around in time not just from episode to episode, but even from scene to scene.

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The result is hopelessly confusing, even if you’ve read the original short stories and/or the novels that came afterward. It’s simply too difficult to parse what’s going on when the show is constantly jumping back and forth between scenes that take place decades apart with no title cards or other markers to indicate where or when anything takes place. Every time you start a new episode, it feels like you accidentally skipped one in between, and the show actively refuses to put any work into catching you up, because it unreasonably assumes you’ll put an inordinate amount of work into following along.

The problem is, there’s very little reason to get invested enough to attempt to make sense of the whole thing. From the jump, in the very first episode, characters constantly yammer at Geralt about “destiny” this and “destiny” that, which isn’t nearly as interesting in 2019 as it might have been in the 1980s when the stories were originally published. Even if you love the original stories and books, they’re remixed and altered here to the point that they often no longer make sense. For example, Geralt’s famous fight in the market at Blaviken totally lacks the context that gave it weight in the story “The Lesser Evil,” while a major change to Ciri’s storyline makes her eventual intersection with Geralt borderline nonsensical. The show attempts to keep these and other key moments intact while changing major plot points around them, with disastrous results.

At other points, The Witcher is hopelessly convoluted even without taking the multiple separate timelines into account. The show invents a hefty backstory for Yennefer based on a few lines in the original stories about Geralt suggesting she used to be hunchbacked before transforming into a beautiful sorceress. Actress Anya Chalotra does a truly terrific job embodying the character through every phase of her life, but thanks to inadequate writing and shoddy editing, Yenn’s storyline overflows with baffling moments.

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The show takes that opportunity to flesh out several side characters better than the books ever did, including the sorcerers Istredd, Fringilla, Stregobor, and Tissaia, but it also invents its own rules for how magic works and then constantly breaks those rules. Magical events like portals opening and characters teleporting happen at random or simply whenever the plot demands, often with no explanation as to what exactly is going on. There’s one moment in Yenn’s storyline that’s so mind-numbingly irrational that it overshadows several entire episodes, and when the show revisits the moment later, it still doesn’t satisfactorily explain how it could conceivably have taken place. The show’s stiff, often pointlessly cryptic dialogue rarely helps (I’m still unsure what “sometimes the best thing a flower can do is die” is supposed to mean).

Production-wise, The Witcher lives up to expectations. The show features several battles that were discussed in the books, but never described, and they’re appropriately huge and impressive. Ditto for the effects–the monsters Geralt fights look great, particularly the Striga, and magic effects ranging from illusory gardens to massive fireballs look like they could have been plucked from Game of Thrones. In addition to Cavill, Chalotra, and Ciri’s actress Freya Allan doing wonderful jobs embodying their characters, The Witcher is filled with well-cast side characters, from Jodhi May as Queen Calanthe to Mahesh Jadu as Vilgefortz. Joey Batey deserves special praise for his portrayal of Jaskier, who fans of the Witcher games, or of the translated books, know as Dandelion. Batey’s Jaskier is charismatic, talented (the actor really plays the lute), and full of life. He brightens every scene that he’s in, providing the perfect contrast to Cavill’s mirthless Geralt–as it should be.

But in the end, Netflix’s The Witcher is simply broken. Like the original stories, it begins in media res for Geralt of Rivia, so game fans hoping to learn more about the witcher himself won’t find an origin story here. And by trying and utterly failing to cram new and remixed backstories for Yennefer and Ciri in without making any attempts to place each plotline within the larger story, The Witcher completely falls apart. Game fans who haven’t read the books will be totally befuddled, and book readers will be scratching their heads just as frequently. If you’re utterly devoted to the world of The Witcher, you’ll certainly enjoy the familiar aesthetic and characters, but beyond that, this series is hard to recommend.

How Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker Handles The Legacy of the Jedi

This post contains spoilers for Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker and the rest of the Star Wars movies and TV shows, including Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars Rebels. Check out our Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker ending explained, plus a Rise of Skywalker review roundup from IGN’s staff.

Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker is not only the conclusion of Disney’s new trilogy, but also designed to be a culmination of the entire franchise in much the same way that Avengers: Endgame capped off a decade of Marvel storytelling – there will undoubtedly be more Star Wars stories, but the Skywalker Saga is officially at an end. So it’s fitting that, in the film’s climactic showdown between Rey and a resurrected Emperor Palpatine, Rey channels the strength of every Jedi who came before her (“a thousand generations,” as Luke Skywalker tells her) in order to defeat Palpatine and the power of every Sith that is imbued in him.

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Xbox One X And More Discounted In Microsoft’s Last-Minute Holiday Deals

The holidays are nearly upon us, and Microsoft has revealed a slate of last-minute deals, in addition to the Xbox One’s winter sale. Many of these discounts closely mirror what the Xbox One company had during Black Friday, so if you missed out, Microsoft is giving you a second chance.

That means Xbox One X and S bundles are discounted by $150 and $100 respectively. However, now the Xbox One X bundles include a second controller at no additional charge. You can also grab an extra Xbox One controller for $10 off or get free engraving for a custom Xbox One Design Lab controller. Microsoft is also still offering its awesome Xbox Game Pass Ultimate deal, where new subscribers can get their first three months for $1. The subscription also includes one month of EA Access, three months of Discord Nitro, and six months of Spotify Premium–however, you do need to be a new Spotify subscriber to take advantage of that bonus.

Of course, Microsoft has also discounted some of the best games from Xbox Game Studios. You can see those below or check out the full Xbox One winter sale. There are discounts on some of the best games of 2019, including Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, A Plague Tale: Innocence, and Resident Evil 2, in addition to Mortal Kombat 11, The Division 2, and Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice.

Xbox One deals

Xbox One X console bundles - $350.Xbox One X console bundles – $350.

Xbox One X bundles with free second controller | $350 ($500)

The Xbox One X bundle deals are exactly the same as they were during Black Friday. However, these deals are slightly better, as they include a second free controller. You can grab any Xbox One X bundle for $350 from Microsoft, including the limited edition Gears 5 console, the special edition Hyperspace Xbox One X, and more.


Xbox One S bundles - starting at $150.Xbox One S bundles – starting at $150.

Xbox One S bundles | up to $100 off

Unfortunately, the Xbox One S bundles do not include a second controller, but at $100 off, they’re still a great deal. This includes both the All-Digital edition and Xbox One S consoles with disc drives.


Xbox One controllers - Starting at $50

Xbox One controllers - Starting at $50

Xbox One controllers – Starting at $50

Xbox One Wireless Controllers | $10 off

The Xbox One wireless controllers deal isn’t quite as good as the Black Friday $20 off, but it’s still a solid discount that’s worth taking advantage of if you need an extra pad before the holidays. This deal applies to every single first-party controller available on Microsoft’s website, except the Xbox One Elite options. Unfortunately, stock is limited, so the controller you’re looking for may be sold out.


The Xbox One Design Lab lets you customize a controller by changing its color and adding rubber grips for an additional fee.

The Xbox One Design Lab lets you customize a controller by changing its color and adding rubber grips for an additional fee.

The Xbox One Design Lab lets you customize a controller by changing its color and adding rubber grips for an additional fee.

Get free engraving with your Xbox One Design Lab controller

There’s currently no discount on Xbox One Design Lab controllers, but Microsoft is offering free engraving with every purchase–a $10 value. Xbox One Design Lab lets you customize the colour of every single part of the controller, and the engraving option lets you adorn it with any message you like.


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