Halo Infinite Brings Back Veteran Writer And Director Joseph Staten

Halo Infinite is bringing on one of the most veteran developers in Halo’s history. Developer 343 Industries has confirmed that Joseph Staten–who wrote Bungie’s original Halo, as well as Halo 2, Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, and Halo Reach–is joining the Halo Infinite team as its project lead for the campaign.

Staten’s title at Microsoft is senior creative director, and in that position, he helps numerous developers on their projects. He recently helped finish Tell Me Why, which is out soon, and now he will contribute to Halo Infinite. “The team has been working hard realizing our vision for campaign and we’re happy to have Joseph’s help to get it to the finish line,” 343 said in a blog post.

The statement added: “Joseph will be focused on supporting the campaign team’s existing, talented, creative leaders and ensuring they have everything they need to create an awesome Halo game.”

Staten will work on Halo Infinite “for a bit,” according to the statement, so this is seemingly a temporary position. From the sound of it, Staten is coming aboard to help finish Halo Infinite in a similar fashion to when Rod Fergusson joined the BioShock Infinite team as a “closer” to help get that game out the door.

In addition to his work on the Halo series, Staten was the writer and co-creative director on Bungie’s Destiny. He also worked with Lord of the Rings movie director Peter Jackson on the Halo movie, though it eventually all fell apart.

Writing on Twitter, Staten said he expects to stay quiet, so don’t expect to hear much from him about his involvement with Halo Infinite.

343 has also confirmed that The Master Chief Collection‘s head of publishing, Pierre Hintze, has joined the Halo Infinite development team as well as the project lead for Halo Infinite’s free-to-play multiplayer. “He and his team have demonstrated an amazing ability to deliver new content, an excellent flighting program, and substantive updates across MCC over the past year,” 343 said. “We look forward to having his expertise directly on the Halo Infinite team as we look to deliver a quality free-to-play multiplayer experience for everyone.”

343 also reiterated in its blog post that you should only trust Microsoft when it comes to news about Halo Infinite.

“Over the past two weeks we’ve seen the internet fabricate numerous stories and fake ‘leaks’ that have made people … scratch their heads,” 343 said. “From rumors of dropping support for the Xbox One to releasing the game in 2022, there seem to be new headlines popping up every day. As we get closer to sharing more and more news, please only trust statements that are made by official Halo channels, members of our studio leadership, or members of the Community Team.”

343 recently delayed Halo Infinite from holiday 2020 to an unspecified date in 2021. The company pushed the game to next year due in part to development complications related to COVID-19 and the impact of working from home.

Now Playing: What Halo Infinite’s Delay Means For Xbox Series X’s Launch | Generation Next

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Fortnite’s Marvel Crossover Characters Announced

Fortnite: Chapter 2 – Season 4, bringing with it, as teased earlier this week, a Marvel universe of heroes, villains, character skins, weapons, and new challenges.

With Galactus threatening to devour a new world – that of Fortnite – the new season, dubbed The Nexus War, sees a new set of Marvel characters arrive to fight against him and be unlocked in the new Battle Pass including:

  • Thor
  • Iron Man
  • Storm
  • Doctor Doom
  • She-Hulk
  • Mystique
  • Groot
  • Wolverine

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Each character has their own special quest which will unlock a built-in Emote related to the hero or villain. The Battle Pass features 100 unlockable rewards, with plenty of Marvel-related new items included. New Marvel-themed super powers can be adopted in battles, like Doom’s Arcane Gauntles, Groot’s Bramble Shield, Silver Surfer’s Board, and more to come in the new season. New weapons like the Stark Industries Energy Rifle will be introduced.

And new locations, both currently added and more to come, feature a Marvel twist, like Doom’s Domain, Sentinel Graveyard, and more. And as you can see from the season’s first look, it looks like you’ll have a Helicarrier to call home, too, as it appears to be the new Battle Pass hub for players.

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The Fortnite Chapter 2 Season 4
The Fortnite Chapter 2 Season 4 map

Leading up to the new season, a series of comic pages introduced how Thor and Galactus would factor into the Fortnite universe, with teases of other heroes to come.

This of course isn’t the first Fortnite and Marvel crossover — Captain America was previously released as a purchasable character, and last year featured a major Avengers: Endgame crossover, which was preceded by an Avengers: Infinity War crossover in 2018.

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Fortnite Season 4 Battle Pass Includes Multiple Marvel Heroes

Fortnite has unveiled Chapter 2 Season 4: Nexus War, the next Marvel-themed season of the game. Alongside this new season comes the next Battle Pass, which will, it seems, be Marvel-themed too.

The new Battle Pass trailer, below, shows off the S.H.I.E.L.D. helicarrier, and suggests that Galactus will serve as the “big bad” of the season.

You can watch the trailer below.

The heroes shown off in the trailer are:

  • Thor
  • Wolverine
  • Iron Man
  • She-Hulk
  • Doctor Doom
  • Storm
  • Mystique
  • Groot

More details are likely to arrive soon, but Marvel fans will be able to play as these heroes with the Battle Pass, if the trailer is any indication. According to the trailer’s YouTube description, Wolverine will be unlockable later in the season.

Of course, not everyone will be able to play Season 4 of Fortnite–if you have an iOS device or only have access to the Google Play store on your phone, you won’t be able to play. Players on both MacOS devices and iPhones will be left behind in the 13.40 version of the game, according to an official statement from Epic.

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Tenet Stars Robert Pattinson, John David Washington, And Elizabeth Debicki Tell Us Their Favorite Video Games

Inception and The Dark Knight director Christopher Nolan’s newest movie, Tenet, is now in theatres in Australia ahead of its premiere in the US on September 3. We recently had the chance to speak with the three main stars, John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, and Elizabeth Debicki about their experience working on the film and more. We couldn’t resist asking about their favorite video games, and they supplied some excellent responses.

Speaking about the movie first, though, John David Washington–who plays the lead character, known only as The Protagonist–said he was eager to take on a role that was physically demanding. In the movie, Washington constantly finds himself in the middle of a brawl, and he gets creative at times with the weaponry he uses. In one particularly memorable fight scene in a kitchen, Washington grabs the nearest object–a cheese grater–and uses it against a foe with great effect. Washington joked (we think!) that Nolan specifically asked for more cheese grater scenes–here’s to hoping that makes it into the director’s cut.

“It was great to be able to learn how to fight and train with [stunt coordinator] George Cottle and the stunt team and the fight coordinators. It’s funny you talk about the cheese grater, because that’s one of the notes that Christopher Nolan had, ‘I need more cheese grater, John David. Really get it in there! [laughs].'”

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The Protagonist is not just a robotic killing machine, however. He is a man who uses both his brawn and his brains to save the day. He cares about people, and he also becomes wrapped up in those close to him. Sometimes it leads to suffering and tribulations, but he pushes through and it informs his character.

“Really just the way he was physically, the arc of the character, really informs the audience of the kind of man he was. He is a weapon. He’s a force to be reckoned with. That combination of vulnerability and sensitivity, I think was what actually gives him his powers,” Washington said. “Because he cares so much about humankind, I think he gets really invested in the people he’s working with. It informs how violent he has to get to protect them. To protect the mission. And so what you saw in the kitchen [with the cheese grater] was him just at work; what he does best.”

“He is a weapon. He’s a force to be reckoned with.” — John David Washington on his Tenet character, The Protagonist

Debicki, meanwhile, said she was excited for the opportunity to play a character, Kat, who is a “flesh and blood” human with deep complexities.

“When I first opened the script and I read her, I was so delighted to see what [Christopher Nolan] had poured into that character and the complexity of her and the contradictions that exist in her and the depth of her,” she said. “It’s rare, and in this genre as well, to be given a woman who has that kind of psychological trajectory to get to play that. So I was just really excited and in a way you feel relief. In a way it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, there is a real flesh and blood human on that page.'”

The character Kat is the estranged wife of the villain, who is played by Kenneth Branagh. Without giving too much away, Kat is a central character in Tenet, and her storyline connects the entire film in unique and haunting ways.

Pattinson plays a character named Neil, who is perhaps not all he seems. The actor tells GameSpot that it was a challenge to play Neil, in part because he is a mysterious man holding many secrets.

“Even just the nature of time being inverted, I think most people would just want to step off the world if that happened.” — Robert Pattinson

“It was kind of surprisingly tough because you’re having to hide things from other characters, but at the same time you’re trying to present things to the audience at the same time,” he said. “It’s very much this weird push and pull. I think it added to what I thought the character was. He likes chaotic things. He likes things that most people would really, really struggle to deal with. He enjoys them. Even just the nature of time being inverted, I think most people would just want to step off the world if that happened. And I think Neil is one of those people who just likes the abstract nature of what happens.”

We also asked Pattinson about how he might use his experience on Tenet to play another moody and broody character, Batman. Without giving too much away, Pattinson said part of the challenge of being an actor, at least in his experience, is that it is only at the very end of production that you begin to truly understand how to play a character.

“Bringing it to other characters, I think every character … at the end of every movie, you just feel like you just figured out how to play the character the day you finished playing it,” he said. “And you think, ‘Ah, I’ll just play that last character in the new movie.’ [laughs].”

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Also in our conversation, we asked about video games because Tenet is sort of a video game movie in some capacities. John David Washington’s character is known only as The Protagonist, after all, and the story is a high-stakes thrill ride not unlike a blockbuster action game.

Debicki said she doesn’t play video games currently, but she was enamored with a Harry Potter game for PC when she was a child.

“I don’t play video games, but when I was a kid, the closest thing I’ve ever come to becoming truly consumed and obsessed with a game was Harry Potter on my computer,” she said. “Obsessed. Summer holidays just vanished, but that was a long time ago.”

Pattinson, meanwhile, was quick to provide an example of a video game that impacted him deeply. “Mine, I think it’s a lot people’s favorite game–Final Fantasy VII. Probably one of the only times I’ve cried in my life was when Aerith dies. My first love,” he said.

“Mine, I think it’s a lot people’s favorite game–Final Fantasy VII. Probably one of the only times I’ve cried in my life was when Aerith dies. My first love.” — Robert Pattinson on his favourite video game

John David Washington said Tenet is like a first-person shooter because the audience is getting pulled through the action and experiencing everything The Protagonist is. He doesn’t necessarily have a single favorite video game, but he is clearly a fan of the medium.

“This gets me really excited because that’s how I felt … even the name, The Protagonist, to me, it’s like the protagonist is you, the audience members,” he said. “It’s almost like a first-person shooter. What he’s going through, so is the audience. So you can put yourself into this character and experience everything that he is. So if you’re confused, it’s probably because he is. If he’s feeling something, hopefully you’re feeling something as well. Even with the violence, you don’t know why he’s kicking ass, but you just know that he needs to at this moment.”

He added: “Video game wise, Red Dead Redemption was a big one. I’m a big fan of NBA 2K, all day long. And ESPN NFL 2K; they stopped making it back in 05. I think that was the best sports video game ever made. And I would actually love to campaign the NFL licensing to make another video game.”

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For more on Tenet, check out GameSpot’s full interview with Pattinson and Debicki above, while you can watch our chat with Washington here.

GameSpot’s Tenet review scored the film a 9/10. “Christopher Nolan’s latest movie is a mind-melting stunner, with lots of action and memorable performances told through a non-linear time-travel story,” we said in our review.

Now Playing: Tenet Stars Robert Pattinson and Elizabeth Debicki Discuss Their Mysterious Characters & Favorite Games Ever

Call Of Duty: Black Ops Cold War Revealed, Nintendo Direct Mini, & Fall Guys PlayStation Plus Record | Save State

In this video, Persia talks about the official reveal of Call Of Duty: Black Ops Cold War. The in-game event in Warzone showed the full trailer after players completed the special mission and made it to the stadium. We know now that Cold War will be a direct sequel to Black Ops 1 and will take place mostly in the 80s. You will play as your own customizable character, play open-ended missions, side objectives, and more in the campaign. For multiplayer, the game will be cross-platform and cross-gen, Zombies are back to some extent, and Warzone will continue once the release of Cold War.

Persia also talks about the surprise Nintendo Direct Mini that released this morning that showcased various third-party games coming to the Switch. Among the games announced, a few were Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory and Puyo Puyo Tetris 2. Melody of Memory is a rhythm game where you battle to the beat of songs from the entire series, revisit iconic scenes, and more. Puyo Puyo Tetris 2 is returning with the same cross-over style as the first title but is adding a new card-based skill battle mode and a new story.

Lastly, Persia talks about the recent announcement that Fall Guys has become the most downloaded game on PlayStation Plus ever. Devolver Digital announced that the game also crossed the 7 million unit mark on Steam alone. More content updates are already planned for the future of Fall Guys and it Season 2 outline will be revealed on the opening night of Gamescom.

Be sure to check out store.gamespot.com to get some merch and support Black Lives Matters and Covid 19 relief efforts. Our donation drive ends on August 31st.

This is your Save State for Wednesday, August 26th.

Halo Infinite Adds Another Co-Developer

Halo Infinite has added yet another co-developer in a move that is not uncommon for AAA games and the Halo series specifically. Developer Certain Affinity announced on its website that it is working with 343 Industries on Halo Infinite. In fact, Certain Affinity has been working with 343 on the project since December 2019.

On a wider basis, Certain Affinity has been collaborating on the Halo franchise across numerous titles at 343 and Bungie since 2006, so they are a veteran partner.

Certain Affinity’s president is Max Hoberman, and he himself is the former multiplayer and online lead for Halo at Bungie.

“Halo Infinite has huge long-term ambitions, while also giving a respectful nod to the franchise’s past,” Hoberman said in a statement. “This is an exciting combination. Given our own deep roots and long-time connections to the series, we couldn’t be more excited to help 343 realize this vision.”

It is not immediately clear how Certain Affinity is contributing to Halo Infinite’s development.

Certain Affinity is the third co-developer on Halo Infinite that we know about. The others are Sperasoft and SkyBox Labs.

Some people have wondered if having multiple co-developers might mean that Halo Infinite might lead to a “too many cooks” situation, but 343 says this is not the case.

“It’s normal for big games these days [to have co-developers],” Halo’s community manager John Junyszek said.

Three studios working on Halo Infinite is small by comparison to other AAA games. This year’s Assassin’s Creed Valhalla was worked on by 15 different studios. It was also recently reported that 14 studios helped Naughty Dog to complete The Last of Us: Part II.

Halo Infinite was recently delayed to 2021 due in part to complications related to COVID-19 and working from home. There was a rumor that Halo Infinite might get pushed again to 2022 and drop the Xbox One edition, but this is false.

Now Playing: What Halo Infinite’s Delay Means For Xbox Series X’s Launch | Generation Next

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New Mutants Was Inspired By Horror Classics, Director Says

New Mutants has had a strange, winding road to theaters–but the wait is nearly over. The movie is definitely, for-real coming to theaters (or drive-ins, depending on where you’re at) this Friday, August 28.

Sure, it’s a superhero movie–but more than that, it’s a horror movie. In fact, just how horrific it is has been a matter of some intense speculation as the delays wore on. The movie was never put through reshoots–a matter director Josh Boone was quick to clarify during a virtual press junket for the film. But balancing the tone and the genre was less challenging than you might imagine. In fact, Boone and the cast had some pretty clear inspiration outside of the cape-and-cowl bubble.

“I was trying to give kids a Breakfast Club for today, but also had a real Nightmare on Elm Street 3: The Dream Warriors kind of energy injected into it,” Boone explained in an interview with GameSpot.

This was a sentiment Blu Hunt, who plays Dani Moonstar, was quick to echo. “I love scary movies–it’s really my favorite genre,” she explained. “Nightmare on Elm Street is really such a clear inspiration.” She went on to elaborate that while they may not be directly connected to the film itself, she spent a considerable amount of time looking at movies by Sam Raimi for inspiration for Dani. “I spent a lot of time watching horror movies over and over again to see what actors did to act scared–I watched Drag Me To Hell a lot, and we all watched Evil Dead together. Just as an actor, watching those really crazy female performances was an inspiration.”

But not everyone in New Mutants came to the project already a fan of horror classics. Henry Zaga, who plays Roberto De Costa AKA Sunspot, admitted he’d never seen Nightmare On Elm Street prior to watching it with the cast. “The movies I grew up with were like, Scream and The Goonies,” Zaga said. “I think there are elements of those in here, too. Josh [Boone] loves them and draws a lot from them–we even have a moment that is a homage to Psycho. He loves to weave in those little hints and moments.”

A clear love of horror will no doubt play a large part in Boone’s upcoming project, a TV adaptation of Stephen King’s The Stand, which is set to debut on CBS All-Access on December 17.

New Mutants is headed for theaters, both traditional and drive-in, for real this time, Friday, August 28.

Now Playing: The New Mutants: Comic-Con 2020 Panel Reaction & What We Learned

Gotham Knights Devs On If Batman Is Really Dead, Gameplay Structure, And More

After rumors, teases, and a few unexpected leaks, WB Montreal’s Batman game has stepped out of the shadows. Except, it turns out it’s not a Batman game as much as a Bat-family game. Gotham Knights brings together Batgirl, Robin, Nightwing, and Red Hood for an ambitious open-world crime caper that will pit players against iconic villains to keep Gotham safe.

The big twist is, in this game, Bruce Wayne and Batman are believed to be dead, which means the Bat-family needs to rise up to the challenge and establish themselves as the city’s new saviours. It’s an interesting premise that separates itself from the Batman: Arkham series in distinct ways, the most obvious of which is a greater focus on an RPG experience, and one that can also be played in co-op at that.

To get a better insight into WB Montreal’s ambitions for the game, as well as clear up some details on the gameplay experience, we spoke to creative director Patrick Redding and senior producer Fleur Marty about the concept and structure of the game, as well as where it drew–or didn’t draw–inspiration from.

It’s been a while since you guys have been in the public eye and a lot has changed around the last game that the studio has made and the narrative around it has evolved. You folks aren’t exactly the same team that made that game, but I’m interested in what your image of yourself as a studio is? A lot of people think of you guys as the underdog next to Rocksteady, and over time people have shown a lot of love for Arkham Origins. How do you guys think of yourselves, your legacy in the Arkham franchise, and what you want to bring to Batman?

Fleur Marty: Well, so as you said, we are not the team who made Origins. Of course, we are living with the legacy of the studio and the games that have been put out before. But right now, we are so excited to have the opportunity to take on a whole new take on the Batman franchise and to explore a completely different universe than the Arkham one. And to just introduce to the gaming world our Batman family and present this, we call them the new guard, those new heroes. They’re young and they’re full of possibilities and opportunities. And I think actually that speaks to the studio itself. A lot of the team is actually new and full of hope and exploring new opportunities.

Patrick Redding: Yeah. And to echo that, being in the Montreal development space, obviously we’re pulling together people with a huge range of AAA game development experience. And it does feel like a new guard in a lot of ways. And at the same time, it’s also bringing in and integrating people at the studio who worked on Arkham Origins and had worked on, in a supplemental way, on our Arkham Knight. And so we have this interesting DNA that combines a lot of different influences and experiences and is kind of the perfect soup just to start working on this new take on the franchise and on the IP.

How did you reach the Gotham Knights idea and the team-based thing. Obviously the Arkham series is massively important and with Rocksteady moving on from it, most people would have thought, “Oh, it makes sense for WB Montreal to pick up where they left off and carry on.” But you’ve gone full pivot in another direction. How did you reach that and was there any trepidation around that? It is quite an ambitious move going from one character to four.

Redding: I mean, it was very much a decision that we arrived at relatively early. And what I would say is it’s about finding a new formula. It’s not about trying to replace or just continue or prolong the thing. It’s about saying, “Okay, let’s take a step back and take a different look at the Batman universe and what are some of the opportunities that haven’t yet been explored?”

And I think the first thing that we arrived at was we have this amazing Batman family. We have a bunch of characters who, while they have some of the Batman crime fighting DNA, are all different, distinct in terms of the style of play that they support, their temperament, their narrative background. And I think what we loved about that was they’re all awesome crime fighters in their own right, even at the start, but there’s clearly a lot of room for growth, right? There’s room for each of the four characters to evolve and become something that’s really different and special. And you see it explored from time to time in the comics, in the movies and other media. And we said, “This is an area that we haven’t really dug into,” which is what happens when I as a player find this hero that really matches my style and my whole sensibility. And then I’m allowed to kind of grow them into knighthood in a sense, turn them into Gotham’s new Dark Knight.

Marty: And as it relates to Gotham city, it was also what bomb can we throw in there to shake up things too? So what bigger bomb can there be then say, “Okay, Batman’s gone.” How does it affect the city? How does it affect the criminals or the villains that start to crawl out of the shadows? It’s very much about, yeah, shaking up the status quo and bringing new life to all this.

Redding: Yeah. It really did come with a different look at Gotham City. Gotham City suddenly has this whole other spotlight shone on it as a consequence of that first choice.

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Right. So the Batman thing–Bruce Wayne/Batman, is dead. Are we talking dead dead, undercover dead, Lazarus Pit dead? What kind of dead are we talking about?

Redding: Dead dead.

Dead dead?

Redding: He’s dead. He is dead from the start of the game.

So is it fair to say that Bruce Wayne/Batman will not be in this game?

Redding: Not playable.

Marty: Yeah. No. Only characters that you can play are Batgirl, Robin, Red Hood, and Nightwing.

Because the running theory is, “Oh, he’s embedded in the Court of Owls.”

Redding: Right. Sure.

Marty: No. We see all the theories, but yeah. No. He’s dead dead.

How did you avoid falling into the same grooves that other media has done with these characters? For example Bruce Wayne has been dead in the comics a bunch of times. And in that scenario, Dick Grayson takes up the cowl and Damien comes along. Did you look to those kind of stories and say, “We can do this as well”? Or was it as a conscious case of, “Let’s not do that. Let’s move away from that. Let’s not make Dick, Batman. Let’s not do this kind of stuff”?

Redding: I mean, we were really fortunate in a way, because of our relationship with DC that we could get into a room, not only with the books, but with some of the creators of those books and say, “Okay, we don’t want to literally do a battle of the cowl game. That’s a different plane of experience. And we have this sort of underlying mystery and the kind of mystery that brings together a family that maybe hasn’t talked to each other for a while and then puts them in a position to try to figure out, “Who’s going to step up and try to fill that vacuum?” Because as a player, that becomes my story. If I’m reading about it, then of course it’s awesome to see all of the weird dynamics of that. But as a player, I want to know that whatever choice I make, the game supports it and it validates it and it gives me huge potential to grow.

We could look at those original stories, but we knew we had to have our own thing. We knew we were going to be coming up with our own original narrative, our own original take on these characters as they evolved, and the range of possibilities for each of the four. And yeah this frankly was one of the reasons why we had to do our own interpretation and really kind of build our own take on the DC Batman and DC universe. It was to kind of build it in a way that would support this game and this player experience.

Marty: And we know that some players, well, probably all of our players will have their one favorite. And it’s really important for us to say, “Well, whoever is your favorite, there is a cool outcome for them and you won’t be forced to just stop playing them because the story dictates that you have to play another character and grow that other character into the Dark Knight.”

A while back Scott Snyder tweeted a reference to the Court of Owls before anything else had happened. And as we all know, Paul Dini worked on the Arkham Asylum. What kind of relationship have you had with Scott Snyder or Capullo or anyone else within DC when making this?

Redding: Yeah. I mean, one, it’s been great in the sense that when we originally arrived at the direction we wanted to take with DC, right away, they were like, “Great, well, this is awesome if you guys want.” And it was very much, “If you want, we can get you into a room with Scott, with Jim Lee and some of the other major stakeholders of the Batman universe and you guys can go through your ideas on it.”

And we did. And honestly, it was a remarkably collaborative and really supportive relationship with that. Those guys, I mean, they’re creators, so they could easily put themselves in our shoes. They do both happen to be gamers. That helps. So we had an opportunity to get into a room for almost a full day with Scott and just kind of workshop these things and talk about the arcs that we were interested in. And he made recommendations, but it was very much he understood that what we were doing was by its very nature going to be an original story.

How much does this game focus on the Court of Owls? You teased a load of other symbols and that kind of stuff. There’s the thought that, “Oh, this is kind of like the Origin set up where a bunch of different factions are attacking, like League Of Assassins and that kind of stuff.” Is it very much a Court of Owls story?

Redding: [Laughs] It’s impossible for me to answer that question without giving away a bunch of stuff that I don’t want to give away. No, here’s what I’ll say. The Court of Owls is a really important foundational piece for the game because their connection to Gotham’s history is part of how we made our Gotham. So our Gotham City, it’s built on these five boroughs and each of the boroughs has a history. It’s connected to different families. It’s very much a Gotham City that has been built up historically. And so obviously that’s one of the big things that the Court of Owls gives us.

Does not having Batman limit the kind of villains that you are able to pull into the game in any way? Obviously people tie Batman to Joker, but does that mean if there’s no Batman, you can’t have him or you can’t have Hush show up? Can you have other major villains or do they need to be a certain type of villain that kind of can be applied to the entire family?

Marty: No, actually, I don’t think this gives us any limit on whatever we want, because those ones you mentioned, they’re not just tied to Batman, they’re tied to Gotham. That’s at the heart, that’s the connected piece. And so yeah, the full answer is nope, it doesn’t limit it.

Redding: Yeah. And I think one thing that’s great is when Batman is gone, because of the weird relationship he has with his villains, they’re also struggling to reinvent themselves. So you have the heroes that are going on their arc of evolution and then the villains, I mean, part of what makes the villains that we’re going to be showcasing is that they are also in a position where they have to adjust their approach and their agenda and who they are as a consequence of losing their greatest nemesis.

So one of the big questions is the actual format of the game and the gameplay structure. A lot of people are trying to find other points of reference to liken it to, and the one that keeps coming up is Destiny, where it’s like a kind of persistent universe. Can you, in your own terms, explain what this game is and how you play it?

Marty: It’s pretty simple. It’s a third-person, open world action RPG. And I mean, that kind of sums it up. The whole game is fully playable solo. You can play on your own offline if you want to. There is no always online. And on top of that, if you want to experience that with a co-op partner in a very seamless drop in, drop out way, you can do so. And so there are no game as a service elements designed into the game. Yeah, that’s pretty much it.

Redding: Yeah. That’s the simple, short answer that I think people are looking for.

I guess structurally, is it similar to older Batman games, where you’re going to points to find quest markers and then the story beat plays out and then you go to another point and solve a thing? Or is it more traditionally like Witcher style with quest givers?

Redding: Well, comparing ourselves to Witcher is probably a … don’t do that situation. But what I’d say is it’s not what I would call the oatmeal chocolate chip cookie model of just go here and then trigger that. I mean, it’s a living breathing ecosystem that supports a robust set of crimes out in the open world that could be committed by different factions, under different circumstances, with different objectives and goals. And your ability to go in and disrupt that night after night is also what’s helping to [shape the city] … You’re completing certain challenges and doing things for NPCs, all these things that are going to ultimately lead you to, in some cases, another major piece of the storyline. And I’m saying that both in terms of the major mystery arc as well as, for example, the villain storylines.

So like everybody else, we work, we try to balance out how much of it is an open world experience versus how much of it is a narrative-driven experience. And what we came up with was a model, kind of a system of tracks for the player that they can kind of change lanes at their own liberty, which is great because it means different players are going to frankly experience that content different ways.

Marty: And I just want to riff off something that Pat mentioned just in passing, but the night after night thing is actually really important because our game doesn’t take place in just one night–it’s over many nights.

Redding: Many weeks and months of crime fighting.

Marty: And exploring our villain stories and all that.

Can you clarify how the story part of that works? Does each character have their own story happening or is it like different perspectives on the same overall story?

Marty: Yeah, I think the story is the same. You will get some nuances of course, because some characters have special relationships with certain people in Gotham City, but the overall story is the same whoever you’re playing.

So if I start the game as Batgirl and then replay it as Nightwing, they generally will be on the same path, but with minor nuances to it?

Redding: Yeah. I mean, when you get into a major narrative beat, the person you’re talking to for example, like if you’re speaking to a villain, their history with your character is often going to be reflected in the kind of dialogue that you’re seeing. So even if the overall structure of the story remains consistent and it becomes something, you can dip into and out of with different characters if that’s how you want to play, as Fleur put it, there’s nuance, there’s moments of nuance, the relationships in particular, that is reflected.

One of the interesting things that you talked about during the narrated gameplay video was, as you grow in your abilities, the enemies grow with you. That makes a lot of sense in terms of level scaling and that kind of stuff. From a design and player experience perspective, how do you balance keeping that challenge and maintaining the wish fulfillment, empowerment fantasy that people get out of being Batman or being one of these characters?

Redding: Right. So the long story short is there are multiple axis for the player to progress on, right? It’s their abilities, it’s their gear. It’s the specific loadout that they’re bringing to the fight with them. So the player is constantly being presented with choices that they need to make. The second part of it is that when you’re out in the open world, it’s not to say that, “Oh, I’m level 10. So now everybody I face is level 10.” There is kind of a range and a mix of encounters and enemies types that you’re going to be dealing with. So players still, they’re going to occasionally find themselves in situations where they have a very strong sense of being more powerful than their enemies. And in other situations, they’re going to be more of the underdog. And I think what’s great about that is we’re not level gating our content. It’s something where players have access to this content and to the whole world and to the crimes that are available to it. But they can at least assess whether this is a higher or lower risk situation for themselves.

Marty: Yeah. I think it’s really important to mention there is no situation of, “I can’t go to that part of the city because the enemies are too high level. I need to climb my way to there.” The game is going to be scaling with you.

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How big is the city and is there a convenient excuse to remove civilians from it like in previous Batman games–it’s Christmas in Origins, for example, and the people are scared and evacuate in Knight. Will the city be fully populated with cars and people, and is there a day-night cycle?

Marty: In terms of size, we have five boroughs that are across several islands, connected by bridges and all that. So it’s a fairly big city. But also to tie it with your question about population, it’s also a very dense city. That’s something we really wanted to go and do–provide that fully living, breathing Gotham City experience to players. It’s not a city where the population is missing or whatever. Of course it takes place at night. So again, day night cycle, where you’re playing at night. Daytime is when you’re in the Belfry and you’re busting and gearing up for your next night of crime fighting. So of course you won’t have crowds, but we have citizens. And that’s really important for us because it’s also, they are the one at the heart of all this, of the criminal factions and the GCPD going a bit rogue and chasing vigilantes. So the population is also at the heart of this.

Redding: Yeah. I think it’s an ecosystem, right? And to have an ecosystem, you need all the pieces of it, which means you need citizens and you need the way they react to you as a vigilante or as a crime fighter versus how they’ll react to you eventually when you kind of become known and trusted for them. You have a police force that is ostensibly protecting the citizens, but doing it in the most brutal, heavy-handed fashion possible. And then you have these criminal factions. And so that ecosystem demands a dynamic, very interactive version of Gotham. Also, like Fleur mentioned, it’s not just one night. You’re going back night after night of patrol, night after night of party crashing on crime, which means that the city needs to be very much alive and has traffic and all of those sorts of things.

Marty: Yeah. And big enough to give you all of those things to do. And also, we like to think about it also in terms of layers, because as a crime fighter, a lot of what you do is patrolling the streets, but you’re also gliding over it or parkouring through it, grappling. So it also has that notion of layers.

One very quick follow up. Bit dumb. I’m not going to do this but people will want to know: what does the game do if you try and run someone over?

Redding: [Laughs] Well, so, yes, that is a very specific question. There are systems in place. Our AI, one of the things that they are good at trying to do is avoid getting run over, particularly if they’re a citizen. Obviously we don’t want to take away your fun. So if you’re going to drive your batcycle into the middle of a criminal activity in progress, there’s a number of ways you could use the batcycle to springboard yourself–and if you want to go super loud, just a launch an attack, you can absolutely do it. And yeah, we make sure the AI is designed around that.

Amazon in September Includes The Boys Season 2, Utopia, and More

Amazon Prime Video in September is debuting the highly anticipated second season of The Boys on September 4, with a special three-episode premiere. Opting for a weekly release schedule instead of Amazon’s usual binge model, the remaining five episodes will air every Friday through October 9. In our Season 2 premiere review, we say, “The Boys’ second season kicks off with even more irreverent and gratuitous drama than the first.”

Be sure to check out our full review in the video below:

[ignvideo url=”https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/08/24/amazons-the-boys-season-2-review”]

The streamer is also dropping the entire first season of Utopia. Per Amazon, Utopia is an “eight-episode conspiracy thriller about saving the world, while trying to find your place in it. Inspired by the British series of the same name, the new Amazon Original series was written by Gillian Flynn, who also serves as showrunner and executive producer. Utopia centers on a group of comic fans who meet online and bond over their obsession with a seemingly fictional comic called, Utopia.” Be sure to check out the bonkers official trailer featuring John Cusack and Rainn Wilson, below:

[ignvideo url=”https://www.ign.com/videos/2020/08/18/amazons-utopia-season-1-official-trailer-2020-john-cusack-rainn-wilson”]

On the movie front, Amazon Prime Video is releasing Casino Royale on September 1, The Adams Family animated movie on September 22, the 1967 classic The Graduate on September 1, and more!

If you’re not a Prime member, you can sign up for a 30-day free Amazon Prime trial and reap all the benefits, including streaming Amazon Video. That means you have the opportunity to check out every new video this month without having to pay for it. Read on to discover everything else coming to Amazon Prime Video in September.

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September 1

  • 1/1 (2018)
  • 1 Million Happy Nows (2018)
  • A Birder’s Guide To Everything (2014)
  • Abe & Phil’s Last Poker Game (2018)
  • Addicted To Fresno (2015)
  • Alex Cross (2012)
  • American Dragons (1998)
  • Bachelor Lions (2020)
  • Barney Thomson (2016)
  • Beach Party (1963)
  • Bewitched (2005)
  • Big Time (1988)
  • Bitter Melon (2018)
  • Bully (2019)
  • C.O.G. (2013)
  • Carrington (1995)
  • Casino Royale (2006)
  • Close Encounters Of The Third Kind (1977)
  • Dark Matter (2007)
  • De-Lovely (2004)
  • Defense Of The Realm (1986)
  • Die, Monster, Die! (1965)
  • Don’t Talk To Irene (2018)
  • Dr. Goldfoot And The Bikini Machine (1965)
  • Eaten By Lions (2020)
  • Employee Of The Month (2006)
  • Enemy Within (2019)
  • Extreme Justice (1993)
  • Face 2 Face (2017)
  • Gas-s-s-s (1970)
  • I’d Like To Be Alone Now (2019)
  • I’m Not Here (2019)
  • Kart Racer (2003
  • Kramer Vs. Kramer (1979)
  • Lakeview Terrace (2008)
  • Lord Love A Duck (1966)
  • Man Of La Mancha (1972)
  • Microbe And Gasoline (2016)
  • Miss Nobody (2010)
  • Muscle Beach Party (1964)
  • Music Within (2007)
  • No Way To Live (2017)
  • Patriots Day (2017)
  • Rambo (2008)
  • Sex And The City: The Movie (2008)
  • Sex And The City 2 (2010)
  • Slash (2007)
  • Slow Burn (2007)
  • Snapshots (2018)
  • Sunlight Jr. (2013)
  • The Bank Job (2008)
  • The Billion Dollar Hobo (1977)
  • The Birdcage (1997)
  • The Dunning Man (2018)
  • The Festival (2019)
  • The Go-Getters (2018)
  • The Graduate (1967)
  • The Hanoi Hilton (1987)
  • The Haunted Palace (1963)
  • The House On Carroll Street (1988)
  • The Last House On The Left (1972)
  • The Mechanic (1972)
  • The Ring Thing (2018)
  • The Video Dead (1986)
  • The Visitors (1972)
  • The Weight Of Water (2002)
  • The White Bus (1967)
  • The Woods (2006)
  • The Yes Men (2004)
  • To Keep The Light (2018)
  • The Turkey Bowl (2019)
  • Twice-Told Tales (1963)
  • Tyler Perry’s Daddy’s Little Girls (2007)
  • Warrior Road (2017)
  • Weather Girl (2009)
  • What Children Do (2018)
  • What If It Works? (2018)
  • Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? (1972)
  • Yongary: Monster From The Deep (1967)
  • Zoom (2016)
  • A Chef’s Life: Season 1 (PBS Living)
  • Cedar Cove: Season 1 (Hallmark Movies Now)
  • Codename: Kids Next Door: Season 1 (Boomerang)
  • George Gently: Season 1 (Acorn TV)
  • Hero Elementary: Season 1 (PBS Kids)
  • How to Become a SuperStar Student, 2nd Edition: Season 1 (The Great Courses)
  • I’m Dying Up Here: Season 1 (Showtime)
  • Keeping Faith: Season 1 (Acorn TV)
  • Last Hope with Troy Dunn: Season 1 (UP Faith & Family)
  • Nazi Mega Weapons: Season 1 (PBS Documentaries)
  • Stuck With You: Season 1 (Urban Movie Channel)
  • Texas Metal: Season 1 (MotorTrend on Demand)
  • The Blood Pact: Season 1 (PBS Masterpiece)
  • The Bureau: Season 1 (Sundance Now)
  • The Celtic World: Season 1 (The Great Courses)
  • The Crimson Field: Season 1 (PBS Masterpiece)
  • The Jack Benny Show: Season 1 (Best TV Ever)
  • The Roy Rogers TV Show: Season 1 (Best Westerns Ever)
  • Wrong Man: Season 1 (STARZ)

September 2

  • Hell On The Border (2019)

September 4

  • Dino Dana The Movie – Amazon Original Movie (2020)
  • The Boys – Amazon Original Series: Season 2

September 16

  • Blackbird (2020)

September 18

  • All In: The Fight for Democracy – Amazon Original Movie (2020)
  • Gemini Man (2019)

September 22

  • The Addams Family (2019)

September 25

  • Judy (2019)
  • Utopia – Amazon Original Series: Season 1

September 28

  • Force of Nature (2020)
  • Inherit The Viper (2020)

September 29

  • Trauma Center (2019)

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David Griffin still watches DuckTales in his pajamas with a cereal bowl in hand. He’s also the TV Editor for IGN. Say hi on Twitter.