New James Bond Movie’s New Director Confirmed

The next James Bond movie has a new director. Following the departure of Danny Boyle last month, it has been confirmed that True Detective‘s Cary Fukunaga will helm the 25th movie in the long-running series, which hits theaters in 2020.

As reported by Variety, Fukunaga will start shooting the currently-untitled Bond movie in March. The film was originally set to start production later this year, with the release date set for December 2019. However, following weeks of uncertainty over who would helm the movie after Boyle’s exit, it has been confirmed that it will now arrive on February 14, 2020.

Fukunaga is best known for directing the entirety of the hugely popular first season of HBO’s True Detective. He also directed the acclaimed movie Beasts of No Nation and the Mexico-set thriller Sin Nombre, plus the new Netflix series Maniac, which arrives on the service this week.

Boyle left the Bond film in late August due to “creative differences.” He signed on in May and the film was set to use the script he had written with his regular scriptwriting partner John Hodge. With Boyle no longer attached it is unknown whether the movie will his script, and it is possible that the producers might return to veteran Bond writers Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, who had been initially attached to the project.

Daniel Craig is set to play the iconic British superspy for the fifth time. There had been much speculation about whether he would return as 007 after 2015’s Spectre, particularly as Craig himself didn’t seem very keen on the idea. However, he confirmed will play Bond again in August last year.

The Bond series remains a hugely popular franchise. Craig’s first movie, 2006’s Casino Royale took in almost $600 million worldwide and Spectre made $880 million. The biggest success from Craig’s run was 2012’s Skyfall which grossed $1.1 billion across the globe.

Bond 25: New Director and Release Date Announced

Cary Joji Fukunaga, director of the entirety of True Detective Season 1, will now take the reins on the 25th Bond film, which will now be released on 14 February, 2020.

Announced this morning on Twitter, filming will commence on 4 March, 2019:

A Tour of Tokyo Game Show’s Best Booths and Geekiest Merch

Tokyo Game Show has come around once again, and while the show is perhaps not what it once was, there are always a few publishers that go all out and do something special. I mean, if you’re going to bring Resident Evil 2 back, it really only makes sense to recreate the Raccoon City P.D. building – complete with body bags – on the show floor, right?

See snaps of this and a few other highlights in the slideshow below.

There’s also a whole load of sweet gaming merch to buy, and as always Square Enix’s store had a heap to see.

Here’s a look at merch from several of the other stores at the show.

And in case you missed it, you can read about the Kojima Productions merch here, or check it out below!

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Jump Force – Official TGS 2018 Trailer | Killua, Kurapika, Yusuke, Toguro Revealed

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6 Minutes of Jump Force Gameplay – Rukia, Gon, Naruto, Vegeta and More | TGS 2018 (Off-Screen)

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Katamari Demacy Reroll Switch Gameplay – TGS 2018 (Off-Screen)

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First 8 Minutes Of SoulCalibur VI’s Libra Of Soul Mode Gameplay | TGS 2018

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5 Minutes Of SoulCalibur VI VS. Gameplay With Mitsurugi, Seong Mi-Na, Siegfried, And Sophitia | TGS 2018

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New Resident Evil 2 Remake Story Trailer Premieres At TGS

A new story trailer for Resident Evil 2 Remake premiered at Tokyo Game Show, giving a further glimpse at Claire Redfield and Leon Kennedy’s stories.

Claire and Leon are separated and must fight and survive through Raccoon City, meeting different characters and horrific creatures on the way. Take a look at the trailer in the embed above.

As announced previously, the new remake gets rid of the original game’s “zapping” system for its parallel campaigns. Now, the two campaign are unique to Claire and Leon. In addition to the new trailer, Capcom has released a series of new screens–you can see them here on Capcom’s blog.

Resident Evil 2 Remake launches on January 25, 2019 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC.

Halo Infinite Will Not Have Paid-For Loot Boxes

Halo Infinite is likely to have microtransactions, but don’t expect it to feature paid-for loot boxes. 343 Industries FPS Studio Head Chris Lee said on Twitter that the team has not yet decided on its final plans for microtransactions. But what he can say for sure right now is that the game “will not include real-money loot boxes.”

“Keep the faith, it’s appreciated!” Lee said to a fan who was dismayed about Halo Infinite having microtransactions. “We’re still working through final plans and will share more when we are ready, but I can definitely say that Halo Infinite will not include real-money loot boxes.”

A job listing at 343 Industries mentioned that Halo Infinite will likely have microtransactions, leading some to express their concerns about how the game implements them. Until 343 comes forward and explains how microtransactions will work in Halo Infinite, fans are likely to envision the worst-case scenario.

Loot boxes rub some people the wrong way, and border on gambling in the eyes of some, because you pay for a chance to get an item you want. While some games today disclose loot box odds, it remains a controversial business practice.

The microtransactions in Halo 5: Guardians came in the form of the Reqs, short for Requisitions, which Nick Offerman explained to fans back in 2015. Microtransactions in Halo 5 proved to be incredibly lucrative, so it’s expected that Microsoft brings back some form of this in Halo: Infinite.

Intriguingly, the job advertisement that revealed the microtransactions suggested they come in the form of cosmetics, which games like Fortnite and Overwatch use.