Castlevania Showrunner Wants to Make Live-Action My Hero Academia

Castlevania showrunner Adi Shankar has become well known for his dark retellings of the nerdy franchises that we hold near and dear to our hearts, but which fandom does he want to tackle next?

Last week, Shankar added a gritty, violent Pokemon parody, The End of Pokemon, to his Bootleg Cinematic Universe. After the trailer debuted exclusively on IGN, we caught up with Shankar to ask if there are any anime series he dreams of adapting for live-action. He told IGN’s Jacki Jing that the anime at the top of his wishlist is My Hero Academia.

“It’s that tone that Pixar really nails – adult themes, not watered down,” Shankar said of how he would approach adapting a series that is much lighter than the likes of Castlevania or his upcoming Devil May Cry series for Netflix.

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Amazon’s Lord Of The Rings Show To Film In New Zealand

Amazon’s new Lord of the Rings TV show will film in New Zealand, just as Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings and Hobbit trilogies did. This is according to The New Zealand Herald, which reports that a “huge” part of the show will be made in the country; Auckland and Queenstown were specifically called out as potential filming locations.

An Auckland films industry senior member told the publication that at least two different New Zealand film production companies, Kumeu Film Studios and Auckland Film Studios, are already doing pre-production work on the show. In fact, it’s reported they’ve been working for more than a year already on the project in various endeavors such as building studio locations.

It was previously rumored that the Amazon Lord of the Rings TV show may film in Scotland. It’s still possible the production will shoot in other locations outside of New Zealand. The NZ Herald reported that a “huge” part, but presumably not all, would be filmed in New Zealand.

An official announcement is presumably expected soon.

The new Lord of the Rings show is set in the Second Age, which is a 3,441-year period that covered major events like the forging of the Rings of Power, including the One Ring; the War of Sauron, the beginning of the Ringwraiths, and when Numenor the island sank into the ocean. Also, it was during the Second Age that the Elven city of Rivendell was developed and that the great battle where men, elves, and dwarves fought together for the first time against Sauron. A popular rumor was that the show would focus on a young Aragorn, but that may not happen.

JD Payne and Patrick McKay are writing Amazon’s Lord of the Rings show. They have no TV writing credits to their name, but neither did David Benioff and D.B. Weiss when they made the massively popular Game of Thrones series. Amazon’s Lord of the Rings show recently brought on Game of Thrones series producer Bryan Cogman, who was known as the “third head of the dragon” for Game of Thrones, along with Weiss and Benioff.

There is no word yet on when the Lord of the Rings show will premiere or who will star in it.

In other news, a new Lord of the Rings video game focused on Gollum is in development at Daedalic Entertainment, while a AAA online Lord of the Rings game is also on the way.

Reports: Overwatch League to End GOATS Meta With New Role System

According to multiple reports, Blizzard plans to effectively end the three tanks, three healers (or “GOATS) meta that has become the norm in most Overwatch League matches, and been a common complaint among viewers

In an original report from Upcomer, the esports news site claimed that multiple sources it had within the Overwatch League had told them that Blizzard will implement a 2-2-2 role lock for teams starting in the league’s fourth stage starting July 25.

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Daily Deals: 4K RCA TVs for Cheap, iPad Sales and More

Welcome to IGN’s Daily Deals, your source for the best deals on the stuff you actually want to buy. If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

We bring you the best deals we’ve found today on video games, hardware, electronics, and a bunch of random stuff too. Check them out here or like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter to get the latest deals.

Amazon Prime Day 2019 Starts July 15

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Netflix’s Stranger Things Season 3 Review: Third Time’s The Charm

The eagerly awaited third season of Stranger Things premieres July 4 on Netflix. In advance of Season 3’s release, Netflix sent us all eight new episodes. Read our review below, and head to our sister site TV Guide for more Stranger Things Season 3 coverage.

There were a lot of varying reasons to criticize Stranger Things Season 2, but the vast majority of viewers seemed to agree that Eleven’s field trip to Chicago in Season 2, Episode 7, “The Lost Sister,” was the low point. Here’s a very minor spoiler to get you hyped for Season 3: The events of that episode, including all those wonky characters, are never mentioned or referenced a single time throughout this season.

Under different circumstances, it would be disappointing for a whole slew of new characters and all the potential they should have brought with them to be completely dropped in the next season, like when Game of Thrones so thoroughly butchered the Dorne storyline in Season 5 that the writers simply murdered all those characters in the Season 6 premiere. But in this case, it’s a gift; “The Lost Sister” derailed Season 2 into another dimension, killing the show’s momentum just as it was finally getting good after a slow, somewhat frustrating season characterized by infighting and separation among the main characters.

Season 3 has no such issues. Trimmed back down to Season 1’s length of eight episodes after the extra long nine-episode Season 2 (like they had to literally jam the Chicago episode into the middle), Stranger Things Season 3 is as tight as Billy’s abs as he sits by the Hawkins community pool in his lifeguard uniform.

It’s summer vacation in Hawkins, Indiana, and the gang’s all here: Mike and Eleven are in full on make-out-every-day mode, much to Hopper’s chagrin; Nancy and Jonathan have internships at the local paper; Dustin has just returned from summer camp; Lucas and Max are going strong; Will hasn’t been possessed by anything lately; Billy sits by the pool getting gawked at by a squad of local moms (including Mrs. Wheeler); and Steve slings ice cream scoops at the brand new Starcourt Mall, where he lets the kids sneak through the back to access the movie theater for free. Honestly, summer break 1985 seems like quite a time to be alive.

Of course, this is Hawkins, so the peace doesn’t last. We won’t spoil anything, but suffice to say the Upside-Down isn’t done with Hawkins, and vice versa. But this isn’t a re-tread of Seasons 1 and 2; things play out way differently this time, with different characters at the epicenter. Eleven is fully in command of her powers, while other characters’ roles are greatly transformed thanks to the time that’s passed since Season 2, as well as some other factors that affect their abilities and motivations. Season 3 feels extremely fresh when it comes to the characters and the forces at play.

Two of Stranger Things’ main strengths have always been its cast and its setting, and both are in top form in Season 3. The main crew of Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, Sadie Sink, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLaughlin, and Noah Schnapp all bring their respective talents–particularly Brown. She’s always been at the show’s emotional core, embodying both vulnerability and power, but the actor shows off more sides of Eleven in Season 3–including a newly confident side influenced by Max. Their scenes together are some of the most fun in all of Season 3.

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David Harbor, meanwhile, gives Hopper a new look and a new attitude, with a running gag about him being a low key Tom Selleck/Magnum P.I. fan. And Winona Ryder brings the same lovable, just-short-of-manic energy to Joyce, who by the third time around has learned her lesson about strange goings-on in Hawkins and doesn’t hesitate to get right into the action. Lastly, Nancy (Natalia Dyer) and Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) have some of the season’s best scenes, including some sequences that take the show’s horror genre flavor to new heights.

Likewise, 1980s Hawkins remains a place you wish you’d grown up (if not for all the interdimensional monsters and sociopathic g-men running around). ’80s nostalgia is obviously all the rage right now, but in the case of Stranger Things, we’ve yet to have too much of this good thing. And as usual, Stranger Things deploys its targeted blasts-from-the-past in smart ways that fit well with the world and themes–although some of this season’s apparent product placements, including 7-Eleven, Burger King, and New Coke, are completely over-the-top.

Starcourt Mall isn’t just a backdrop for much of Season 3–it’s the main setting for a surprising amount of the show’s action. In many ways, the mall seems like paradise–Stranger Things perfectly captures that hyperbolic 1980s “Material Girl” lust for all things capitalistic. But it also shows the other side–the effect that a mega-mall has on the local businesses in Hawkins. The second-best new character is Mayor Larry Kline (played by The Princess Bride’s Cary Elwes), a slimy politician who’s in way over his head trying to run the show in Hawkins. He’s introduced with anti-mall protests taking place outside his office.

The absolute best new character is Robin (Maya Hawke), who works at the mall’s nautical-themed ice cream joint Scoops Ahoy with Steve (Joe Keery). Season 3 may have forgotten about some of Season 2’s worst additions to the show, but it doesn’t disappoint when it comes to Steve and Dustin’s bromance. And Lucas’s little sister Erica (Priah Ferguson) just happens to be a mallrat who pesters Steve and Erica for endless free samples. The four of them have their own adventure throughout Season 3, and although we won’t spoil where it goes, the four actors’ chemistry with one another makes their scenes a highlight of the season.

It’s hard to say much more about Stranger Things Season 3 without giving away too much. There’s going to be a lot of discussion about what happens to various characters, questions about the ways certain things were revealed, and debate about Season 3’s ending, but that will come after the glorious July 4 weekend binge. For now, it’s safe to say that Stranger Things creators Matt and Ross Duffer have pulled it off: After a lackluster sophomore slump, Stranger Things is back at the top of its game.

Attack on Titan: Season 4 Will be the Final Season

Following the premiere of the last episode of Attack on Titan’s third season in Japan, the series has confirmed a fourth and final season.

According to CrunchyRoll, the final season of Attack on Titan is scheduled to air on the Japanese NHK Entertainment channel in the Fall of 2020. You can find the brief teaser trailer here. It teases one major character behind what appears to be jail cell bars.

Notably, the third season of Attack on Titan was split into two halves. The first half aired in the Fall of 2018, and the second half began in April this year. The final episode of season three will debut tonight at 5:45 p.m. PDT.

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Ni no Kuni Sequel Confirmed by Developer Level-5

In an interview with Japanese magazine Nikkei, translated and reported on by Dualshockers, Level-5 president Akihiro Hino confirmed that a new Ni no Kuni game is in the works, and will release sometime after the upcoming Ni no Kuni movie, which premiers on August 29 in Japan.

Hino didn’t give many details beyond that, unfortunately, but did comment on how Level-5 is currently reviewing its development process, according to Dualshockers. Level-5’s recent  projects, Yo-kai Watch 4 and Inazuma Eleven Ares no Tenbin, were both delayed. In the interview, Hino implied that Level-5 is aiming to regain the trust of its fanbase after these delays.

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Stranger Things: The 10 Best ’80s References

Stranger Things Season 3 will debut on Netflix on July 4th, and so we’re counting down to its launch this week with a new story each day about the beloved series. Today, we get nostalgic for that crazy time known as the ’80s!

We’re feeling sentimental — not just for Stranger Things’ first two seasons, but for the halcyon 1980s Stephen King meets Steven Spielberg inspired universe in which the series takes place. The show’s creators, The Duffer Bros., were born in 1984 and, like all good Gen-Xers, are obsessed with the pop culture of their childhoods, directing modern audiences to look to the 1980s as the glory days for a thriving pop horror environment that we may never have again. They achieve this by jamming Stranger Things full of innumerable pop culture references, both obvious and subtle, to things they likely grew up with.

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Spider-Man: Far From Home’s Elementals Explained

A number of surprises concern the new web-slinging MCU film, Spider-Man: Far From Home, which debuts on July 4 with returning star Tom Holland. Not least is the fact that – at least initially – Jake Gyllenhaal’s Mysterio (get the full story on Mysterio right here) may very well be an ally and not an antagonist (a situation that may evolve during the film, of course). But as for the villains we do know about, Spidey is called in by Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) to help out against a little group known in the comics as… the Elementals.

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