Enter for a Chance to Win Cultist Simulator

Welcome to Daily Win, our way of giving back to the IGN community. To thank our awesome audience, we’re giving away a new game each day to one lucky winner. Be sure to check IGN.com every day to enter in each new giveaway.

Today we’re giving away Cultist Simulator for PC/Steam. To enter into this sweepstake, fill out the form below. You must be at least 18 years old and a legal U.S. resident to enter. Today’s sweepstake will end at 11:59 p.m. PDT. Entries entered after this time will not be considered.

Our frog and possum adventurers defeated yesterday's mushroom boss, and now appears a diamond reward! Poof!

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17 Most Shocking Home Invasion Movies Ever, Ranked

Felicity Huffman Pleads Guilty in College Admissions Fraud

Felicity Huffman, best known for her work on Desperate Housewives, will plead guilty as part of an elaborate college admissions scandal, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced today.

Per Variety, Huffman is one of thirteen parents that are confirmed to plead guilty for the scandal today. Huffman specifically was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud. For her part in the scandal, she allegedly paid $15,000 to William Singer, who fronted as an admissions consultant, to increase her daughter’s SAT score.

Huffman’s plea hearing has not yet been scheduled.

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Game Release Dates Of April 2019: PS4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, And PC

April is officially underway, which means we’re almost halfway through 2019. This year has already has seen some major titles arrive across PS4, Xbox One, PC, and Nintendo Switch, and while this month is fairly quiet compared to March, there are still some big-name games on the way to each platform.

Headlining April’s releases are Mortal Kombat 11 and Days Gone, Sony’s long in-development zombie game for PS4. While those may have garnered the most attention, they are hardly the only titles worth looking out for. This month also sees a number of older games arrive on new platforms. Two of 2017’s most acclaimed titles, Cuphead and Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice, hit Switch in April, while Square Enix is bringing Final Fantasy X/X-2 Remaster and Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age to Switch and Xbox One.

There are plenty of other titles on the way this month as well, from the anticipate Super Meat Boy sequel, Super Meat Boy Forever, to SteamWorld Quest: The Hand of Gilgamech and BoxBoy + BoxGirl, the first Switch installment in HAL’s clever puzzle-platforming series. You can see all of the biggest game releases for April 2019 below. For a wider look at what’s ahead this year, be sure to check out our complete list of game release dates in 2019.

Nintendo Labo VR Kit (Switch) — April 12

Nintendo’s marquee Switch release this month is the Nintendo Labo VR Kit, the fourth set in the company’s growing line of DIY games/peripherals. The full package comes with a game card and an assortment of crafting materials used to assemble six unique Toy-Con accessories, which when combined with the Switch hardware will allow you to play a handful of minigames–and even some Switch titles like The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild–in basic VR. The full Labo VR Kit costs $80, while the starter set runs for $40.

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Cuphead (Switch) — April 18

More than a year after it first released on Xbox One and PC, Microsoft and developer Studio MDHR are bringing their critically acclaimed platformer, Cuphead, to Nintendo Switch on April 18. Not only will the Switch version will feature the same challenging run-and-gun gameplay and hand-drawn 1930s-style visuals that made it such a beloved hit on other platforms, it’ll also receive Xbox Live support through a post-launch update, allowing you to unlock Achievements for the game even when you play on Nintendo’s hybrid console.

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Mortal Kombat 11 (PS4, Xbox One, Switch, PC) — April 23

The latest entry in NetherRealm’s long-running fighting game series, Mortal Kombat 11, arrives on PS4, Xbox One, PC, and Nintendo Switch later this month. Picking up after the events of 2015’s Mortal Kombat X, the game tells a time-bending story in which past and present versions of characters come face to face and must stop the machinations of Kronika, the Keeper of Time. It also boasts an impressive roster of fighters, from returning favorites like Scropion and Liu Kang to entirely new characters like the Elder God Cetrion.

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Days Gone (PS4) — April 26

It’s been a long time coming, but Sony’s PS4-exclusive zombie survival game Days Gone is finally set to release on April 26. The game puts players in the role of Deacon St. John, a bounty hunter who travels around the open-world, post-apocalyptic remains of the Pacific Northwest on his motorcycle, battling zombie-like creatures known as Freakers and coming to the aid other survivors.

Further reading:

Full April Release Schedule

Game Platform Release Date
Bomber Crew: Complete Edition PS4, Switch April 2
Darksiders: Warmastered Edition Switch April 2
Super Dragon Ball Heroes: World Mission PC, Switch April 5
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney Trilogy PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch April 9
Dangerous Driving PS4, Xbox One April 9
Neo Atlas 1469 Switch April 9
Shovel Knight Showdown PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch April 9
Zanki Zero: Last Beginning PS4, PC April 9
Earth Defense Force: Iron Rain PS4 April 11
Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice Switch April 11
Nintendo Labo VR Kit Switch April 12
Konami Anniversary Collection: Arcade Classics Switch April 18
Anno 1800 PC April 16
Final Fantasy X/X-2 HD Remaster Xbox One, Switch April 16
World War Z PS4, Xbox One, PC April 16
Cuphead Switch April 18
Dragon’s Dogma: Dark Arisen Switch April 23
Mortal Kombat 11 PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch April 23
SteamWorld Quest: Hand of Gilgamech Switch April 25
BoxBoy + BoxGirl Switch April 26
Days Gone PS4 April 26
Super Meat Boy Forever PS4, Xbox One, PC, Switch April 26
Final Fantasy XII: The Zodiac Age Xbox One, Switch April 30

AI: The Somnium Files, A Trippy Detective Adventure With Zero Escape’s Spirit

Investigations, interrogations, serial murders, and a whole lot of plot twists–it’s all here in the upcoming puzzle-adventure mystery AI: The Somnium Files, the latest game from Zero Escape director Kotaro Uchikoshi and the team at Spike Chunsoft. It’s not much of a surprise that AI borders on bizarre and grotesque, as you can see in the latest trailer (see below). Having seen it in action briefly and getting a taste of its early gameplay, it appears to be in the same vein of Uchikoshi’s past work, but with it’s own unique flair.

Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors (colloquially known as 999), Zero Escape: Virtue’s Last Reward, and Zero Time Dilemma formed a trilogy of mind-bending narrative experiences built around puzzle-solving. But Uchikoshi has traded the twisted escape room premises of those games for putting you in the shoes of a detective. With Uchikoshi and assistant director Akira Okada on-hand during my demo time, I asked about their approach in creating something new and thematically different that still had the spirit of past games.

“What I had in mind is that I wanted to make this for adventure game fans around the world, including investigations into a separate dream world,” Uchikoshi said. “I can’t go into details right now, but as an adventure game, you want to expand as much as you can so everybody can have fun. Everyone knows what an adventure game is like, but in 2019 I wanted to make that a little more fresh.”

People who haven’t played adventure games: first go home, try to drink a gallon of tequila, make sure your mind’s loose, and then just accept what it is. Then you’ll get used to the game, and it’ll just suck you in. – Kotaro Uchikoshi

There is a thematic twist that’s new for Uchikoshi, which shares a few similarities to aspects of Quantic Dream’s Heavy Rain or even Suda51’s The Silver Case. Okada even points to games such as The Walking Dead and Life Is Strange as influences. However, a lot of AI: The Somnium Files’ DNA can be traced to Zero Escape, since you’re still trying to investigate and unravel mysteries from a first-person perspective, at least when you’re taking the role of the main protagonist Kaname Date.

As Date, you talk to folks around the crime scene and examine your surroundings, but that’s only half the work. His cybernetic eyeball named Aiba (pun intended)–and partner in crime-solving–can enter an alternate dimension to unlock deeper secrets, new pieces of evidence, and more abstract thoughts of the specific characters involved. It almost reminds me of Persona 5’s Phantom Thieves entering the Metaverse to uncover the true nature of others, and ultimately affect those people’s reality. Aiba gets a moe anthropomorphization in these sequences, where you roam around a deformed version of the crime scene from a third-person point of view. The catch is you have a limited amount of time to investigate this dimension, and interacting with story-critical objects will consume time depending on the action you take. Thus, AI offers branching narrative paths dictated by your decisions and actions.

I got a sense of pressure in these moments and asked Okada how they approach balancing difficulty for a narrative-based adventure game.

“In general you would play more and more of the game, doing puzzles, and that was the challenging part, for me as well, playing a ton of puzzles and trying to balance the levels together,” Okada responded. But in general, playing the game multiple times will help the player out, help understand the puzzles.” It seems that players have to live with the result they earn in AI, at least for chunks of the game, and that’s how branching paths are constructed–something like 428: Shibuya Scramble came to mind. Okada continued, “We think a lot about accessibility, options for difficulty, options for games that aren’t entirely story based. So I think that’s still a big concern.”

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A heavy narrative is the driving force in AI: The Somnium Files, and in that department, there’s been a bit of an unconventional lead-up to this game. If you haven’t been following, I’ll catch you up a bit. Uchikoshi first revealed AI as his next game at Anime Expo 2018, and held a panel covering some of the design philosophies. Promotion for the game then pivoted to shining the spotlight on one important character: Iris Sagan, an in-universe influencer and pop star under the stage name A-set. She spilled into the real world with songs, music videos, and interactions with fans through Twitter and YouTube–hell, I even ‘interviewed’ her and Uchikoshi at the start of all this. We learned a lot about her, like her favorite Hatsune Miku song and opinion on the best boy/best girl of the Danganronpa series.

However, it was pretty clear where things were going once Iris’ own YouTube videos were corrupted with creepy subliminal messages. A few horrifying videos went up a couple weeks ago, one of which was just camera footage of her apartment left running without a trace of her presence, and another showing a bi-pedal polar bear about to chop her in half with a saw blade. Since then, her channel has had two hilarious video in promotion of the game featuring her commentary on Uchikoshi himself and different parts of the game’s lore. In the game itself, we’ve seen her crying for Date’s help and on the verge of getting killed Saw-style in the latest trailer. It’s wild.

There’s been a heavy focus on Iris, but what about the other characters? We don’t know much about Date yet, other than the fact that he works for the Tokyo MPD and lost his memory six years prior. So I asked about how they approach creating characters and what we could expect from the game’s cast, to which Uchikoshi responded, “First of all, the care and balance of personalities is very important to me. So the character types don’t double up. If we have a sad person, we don’t want another sad person. And the game is based on a murder mystery, so we kind of want you to try to figure out who these characters are, while everyone’s working together.”

One of A-set's new videos features a cheery Uchikoshi-san.One of A-set’s new videos features a cheery Uchikoshi-san.

Admittedly, I couldn’t get much out the rest of the game’s cast, but character design appears to be a major appeal. Having employed the talent of Yusuke Kozaki (known for his work on No More Heroes, Fire Emblem, and Pokemon Go), it’s an important aspect. Okada agreed, saying, “I think since the illustration and art is visually attractive, during the whole game, while you’re playing, it’ll draw you to the story also. Looking at the characters, that’s how I started getting hooked. The visuals would get you first, then the mysteries will get you to keep on playing.”

AI seems to be really going for it with its outlandish pretense, and I wouldn’t expect anything less from Uchikoshi. I think his continued response to my questions about why people should keep an eye on his new game says a lot. “So, for the people who already played adventure games, I understand they’ll really like this one,” Uchikoshi said. “But people who haven’t played adventure games: first go home, try to drink a gallon of tequila, make sure your mind’s loose, and then just accept what it is. Then you’ll get used to the game, and it’ll just suck you in.” Please don’t try this at home, or anywhere, really.

You can take up the role of detective and adorable eyeball sidekick in AI: The Somnium Files when it launches for PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, and PC on July 25, 2019.

Editor’s Note: Translations for the interview portions with Kotaro Uchikoshi and Akira Okada were done by Spike Chunsoft.

Mortal Kombat 11 Unveils Kitana As A Playable Character

Fighters are finally coming from the cover of the shadows as we rapidly approach the release of NetherRelam’s Mortal Kombat 11. Alongside returning characters like Kung Lao and Liu Kang, and the announcement of another brand-new fighter named The Kollector, Kitana is sharpening her fans. A new trailer/TV advertisement reveals that Kitana will join the Mortal Kombat 11 roster.

The minute-long trailer’s nothing more than a tease, featuring no actual gameplay footage. Instead, it starts with eyes whitening out and an announcer pondering what people fight for. A series of people walk in a straight line in what looks to be a dark, abandoned warehouse, representing confirmed Mortal Kombat 11 characters Sub-Zero and Raiden before Kitana whips out her fans and toss one at Scorpion, initiating a short but sweet CG fight. It may not be that long of a trailer, but it’s tantalizing nonetheless. You can watch the trailer above.

Mortal Kombat 11 will feature no loot boxes whatsoever, according to a rapid-fire Game Informer interview with series creator Ed Boon. In the same interview, Boon confirmed that while The Matrix’s Neo won’t appear in Mortal Kombat 11–he did get dangerously close to appearing in Injustice 2–the game will boast 25 characters at launch, with “30-something to finish.” Before The Kollector was announced, Mortal Kombat 11 saw a new fighter enter the fray, the Elder God Cetrion.

Ahead of the game’s release, we recently had the chance to try out the Nintendo Switch version of Mortal Kombat 11. Though the graphics are obviously downgraded and development isn’t being done in-house–NetherRealm handed the port job off to Miami-based Shiver Entertainment–the fighting mechanics and consistently smooth frame rate haven’t been compromised. You can conveniently take your gore with you.

Mortal Kombat 11 launches on Nintendo Switch, PC, PS4, and Xbox One on April 23.

Marvel Won’t Announce Their Future Plan Until After Far From Home

While there have been a slew of reports about upcoming movies for Black Widow, Shang-Chi, Black Panther 2, Captain Marvel 2, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, and The Eternals, it must be noted that Marvel hasn’t officially announced any of them. So if you thought we’d finally get those official announcements of what’s next for the Marvel Cinematic Universe once Avengers: Endgame opens, it turns out Marvel won’t announce their five-year plan until after Spider-Man: Far From Home opens in July.

IGN spoke one-on-one with Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige on Sunday at the Avengers: Endgame press junket where he told us that to even reveal whether or not Marvel Studios would attend this July’s San Diego Comic-Con would itself be a spoiler. SDCC runs from July 18-July 21, 2019.

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Shazam Easter Eggs: All The Obscure DC References And Clues You Missed

PS4 Deals: Save on The Division 2, Kingdom Hearts 3, and More

If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

PlayStation 4 owners looking to score a deal on a new game don’t have to look far this week. Amazon and Walmart have some terrific deals that can save you up to 50% off PS4 games and hardware. So let’s hop in and see what we good stuff we can save money on today.

PlayStation Hardware

ps4-dualshock-4

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The Significance of Iron Man’s New Armor in Avengers: Endgame

The latest Avengers: Endgame Special Look trailer is full of tantalizing new secrets, but one thing that stuck out is how much it featured Tony Stark. Whereas the first trailer made it seem like he might not even make it back to Earth, this one shows he not only survives but reunites with Pepper Potts, makes up with Captain America, and built a new suit of Iron Man armor.

But that’s not just any Iron Man suit. It’s a very specific look for Iron Man from the comics, and it actually tells us a great deal about what might be going on with Tony in Endgame.

Image Credit: Marvel Image Credit: Marvel

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