Is Streaming the Future of Gaming?

As most of our Xbox crew takes a well-deserved vacation, Brandin and Miranda are left to hold down the fort and talk about whether streaming will be the future of gaming. Plus: the Gears 5 technical test kicked off with Arcade multiplayer mode and it was a blast, Overwatch unveils a brand-new hero who delved too deeply into the mysteries of the universe and weirdly doesn’t wear shoes, Netflix’s upcoming The Witcher series has us cautiously optimistic, and more!

Subscribe on any of your favorite podcast feeds, or grab an MP3 download of this week’s episode. For more awesome content, check out this month’s episode of IGN Unfiltered, featuring an in-depth interview with Remedy writer Same Lake, his unexpected career, from how helping a friend led to writing Max Payne, creating Alan Wake, the elusive Alan Wake 2, lessons learned from Quantum Break, and how it’s all led to Remedy’s new game, Control:

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Call Of Duty Modern Warfare Teases New Weapon Customization System

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is just a few months away, but more information about the upcoming first-person shooter keeps trickling out. Ahead of next month’s multiplayer gameplay reveal, Activision pulled the curtain back on a new “robust weapon customization” system.

A blog post on the official Activision website details the breadth of options available once the Modern Warfare reboot launches on October 25 for PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. The system is called “gunsmithing” and it allows you to find “the precise type and style of firepower you require for any type of multiplayer game mode.” You’re allowed to customize both the Primary and Secondary weapons to your heart’s content, changing things like muzzles, optics, magazines, and more. But there’s a catch–you can only fill five slots on any given weapon. So, an assault rifle will have nine different areas–the muzzle, laser, optic, stock, rear grip, magazine, underbarrel, barrel, and a perk–but only five of them can be filled at once.

No other details about gunsmithing were revealed, but the blog post claims that Modern Warfare will boast “an impressive array of options.” The official Call of Duty Twitter account posted a teaser showcasing the many variations available thanks to gunsmithing. You can check out the video below.

We got a chance to check out the game’s new 2v2 Gunfight mode, noting that the mode “is an excellent reminder of what gives Call of Duty’s multiplayer its lasting popularity.” It’s likely that this new mode and gunsmithing will make an appearance during Infinity Ward’s livestream on Thursday, August 1 at 10 AM PT / 1 PM ET / 6 PM BST on August 1 (3 AM AET on August 2).

New Star Wars Vader Immortal: Episode 2 Story Details Revealed

New story details and images for Vader Immortal: Episode II have been revealed. The Star Wars VR experience sees you take control of a nameless salvager who’s been captured by Darth Vader.

“You will get to use the Force in Episode II,” Vader Immortal director Ben Snow said in an interview with StarWars.com. “The way we thought about this was, we wanted to give you the Vader equivalent of Yoda teaching Luke about the Force in Empire Strikes Back. So we wanted it to be slightly darker and more twisted. He talks about the power of the dark side as well as the things you can do with the Force.”

No Caption ProvidedGallery image 1Gallery image 2

In Vader Immortal: Episode I, your character is captured by the Galactic Empire and taken to Vader’s castle on Mustafar–first seen in the movies in Star Wars: Rogue One. After escaping from the castle’s prison, you discover a lightsaber and attempt to sneak your way to freedom. Things ultimately don’t go very well for you though, and Vader discovers you. Impressed with your skill with a lightsaber, the Sith lord makes you his apprentice–although seemingly only temporarily as you’re just a means to an end for him.

“Our goal is to make the Force in Episode II as satisfying as the lightsaber felt in Episode I,” Snow said. To that end, you’ll primarily be using the Force–and not a lightsaber–to defend yourself and take on the enemies you encounter in Episode II.

New concept art for Vader Immortal: Episode II (embedded above) reveals that the next chapter of the story will include more scenes of Black Bishop as well. Introduced in the first episode, Black Bishop is helping Vader discover the secrets to mastering death, most likely to revive Padmé Amidala. “[Black Bishop] becomes quite important in Episode II, and we learn about his background,” Snow said.

Vader Immortal is canon in the Star Wars expanded universe of stories, taking place directly after the events of Star Wars: Secrets of the Empire (between Revenge of the Sith and Rogue One). The VR experience is available for Oculus Quest. A release date for Vader Immortal: Episode II has not been announced.

Fortnite Season 9 Overtime Challenges: Visit Loot Lake; Eliminate Opponents With A Friend; And More

Fortnite Season 9 is coming to a close very soon. The final set of weekly challenges from this season rolled out earlier this month, and a giant robot recently did battle with the monster that was once encased in ice beneath Polar Peak, changing the landscape of the island and setting the stage for Season 10 to begin in August.

Before we get there, however, developer Epic Games still has some Season 9 content in store for players. Not only is there a Fortnite birthday event coming up this week (which is expected to introduce its own assortment of tasks to complete and rewards to unlock), the studio has released a set of Overtime challenges. These tasks encourage players to make the most of the remaining time in Season 9 by powering through Battle Pass levels and unlocking cosmetics.

The first set of Overtime challenges is now live across all platforms, with additional tasks on the way over the next few days. Like weekly challenges, these are divided up into two categories, one of which is available to everyone, while the other is reserved for those with a Season 9 Battle Pass.

We’ve rounded up all of the Fortnite Season 9 Overtime challenges available so far below. Check back often, as we’ll continue to update this list as more challenges become available. If you need a little assistance with some earlier missions, you can check out our comprehensive Fornite Season 9 challenge guide, which we’ve been updating with guides and helpful information from the very start of the season. It has everything you could possibly need to know to get caught up fast.

Fortnite Season 9 Overtime Challenges

Battle Pass

  • Stage 1 of 2: Reach Battle Pass tier 23 — Skin reward
    • Stage 2 of 2: Complete free Overtime challenges (3) — Skin reward
  • Stage 1 of 2: Reach Battle Pass tier 71 — Skin reward
    • Stage 2 of 2: Complete free Overtime challenges (6) — Skin reward
  • Stage 1 of 2: Reach Battle Pass tier 87 — Skin reward
    • Stage 2 of 2: Complete free Overtime challenges (9) — Skin reward

Free

  • Eliminate others with the assistance of a Friend in your party (25) — 2,500 XP reward
  • Damage opponents with shotguns [try Party Assist!] (2,500) — 2,500 XP reward
  • Visit Loot Lake, Polar Peak, and Pressure Plant — Ready to Fight loading screen

Visit Loot Lake, Polar Peak, And Pressure Plant

Most of the initial Season 9 Overtime challenges are fairly straightforward, but the one that’ll require the most legwork asks you to visit three different locations: Loot Lake, Polar Peak, and Pressure Plant. Fortunately, this task is easy enough to complete. All you need to do is make your way to the aforementioned locations at some point during a match. You don’t need to visit all three within a single round, so you can land in one, get yourself eliminated, then jump into a new match and glide to the others until you’ve visited all three. Complete the challenge and you’ll unlock a special loading screen for your troubles.

Here’s What CD Projekt Red Really Said About Religion in Cyberpunk 2077

A Polish interview for Cyberpunk 2077 that was recently translated into English claimed CD Projekt Red would depict real religions in Cyberpunk 2077, even if the depictions were offensive. That translation is inaccurate, and CD Projekt Red has provided a more accurate translation of its answers.

An interview between CD Projekt Red and Polish news site Gry Online WP was recently translated into English on the video game message board NeoGAF.

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Once Upon A Time In Hollywood Review: Not The Movie You Expect

The less you know about Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, the easier it will be to simply sit back and enjoy it–up to a point. Here’s a quick summary that, honestly, should tell you everything you need: OUATIH is Quentin Tarantino’s ninth film, it follows a washed-up TV cowboy and his stunt double in Hollywood during the late 1960s, and it’s a love letter to what Tarantino clearly believes is the golden age of Hollywood. If you enjoy Tarantino movies, go see Once Upon a Time in Hollywood–full stop.

However, if you already know (or think you know, in this case) that OUATIH is about the Charles Manson cult’s murder of Sharon Tate and her friends in the home she shared with director Roman Polanski on the night of August 9, 1969, then your enjoyment of this movie might be compromised. Let me explain.

The problem is that, although Once Upon a Time in Hollywood has been hyped up as a movie featuring the infamous Manson family murder, it really isn’t the focus. If you’re expecting a grisly retelling of the events leading up to Sharon Tate’s slaying, you won’t get it here. Tate is a character–played by Margot Robbie–but, surprisingly, she’s barely in the movie. The Manson cult plays a small part in a few scenes, and Tarantino uses the audience’s belief that we know what’s coming as a tool–to build tension, to subvert our expectations, and to misdirect our attention.

OUATIH is really about Leonardo DiCaprio’s Rick Dalton, a fictional actor who once played Jake Cahill on the fictional hit TV western Bounty Law, but now takes odd guest star roles as villainous “heavies” to be killed off by heroic younger actors. Brad Pitt’s Cliff Booth joins him as Dalton’s stunt double, driver, handyman, and best friend. This movie is about the end of an era in Hollywood–an era Tarantino clearly misses, despite having been six years old when, in the early morning hours of August 9, 1969, it reached an abrupt and bloody end. The Manson cult’s activities are a subplot, their presence simply another nail for the coffin lowering Rick Dalton and Cliff Booth–TV cowboys past their prime–into the dusty ground.

The film is a mishmash of styles. Scenes between DiCaprio and Pitt play like a buddy comedy, while at other times the movie simply follows an entire day in Rick Dalton’s life as a professional guest star. We watch Dalton shoot an episode of the (very real) TV show Lancer as if we’re simply watching that show, then see Dalton beat himself up in his trailer between scenes over getting too drunk the night before. Once Upon spends ample time in flashbacks and asides, as well–at one point, Booth sits on Dalton’s roof and recalls a whole day spent on another show’s set, including a humorous confrontation with Bruce Lee (a strangely unflattering scene for the latter–wonder what Tarantino’s beef with Bruce Lee is?). The flashback goes on so long, you’re liable to forget it’s a flashback at all, and it’s jarring when the film returns to the “present.”

As Sharon Tate, Margot Robbie is mostly enshrined here, hardly feeling like a real person at all, but more a glorified embodiment of innocence and beauty–which maybe is alright in this case, because she’s not what the movie is really about, and her presence mainly adds to the atmosphere. At one point, she goes to a theater and simply watches herself in the 1968 Dean Martin comedy The Wrecking Crew. Notably, although the movie occasionally inserts DiCaprio’s likeness into old movies and such, the Sharon Tate we see onscreen in Wrecking Crew is actually Tate. Small touches like that add to the simple, pervasive sadness that flows under the entire movie, right up through the credits.

If it sounds like OUATIH lacks focus, it’s because it does–the movie lumbers unhurriedly from scene to scene, seeming to linger wherever Tarantino felt like expanding on a conversation, set piece, or idea. It opens at a seemingly random point in time, then later jumps forward six months, with sporadic and randomly inserted narration from Kurt Russell–who also plays a stunt director on one of Dalton and Booth’s sets–filling in the gaps. But the movie works, thanks mainly to the chemistry and commitment of DiCaprio and Pitt. They don’t exactly disappear into these roles, but the two legends somehow completely embody their characters in spite of that. They both seem larger than life, even when one struggles to keep it together and the other lives in a nasty old trailer and eats macaroni and cheese from a box.

The whole movie seems to be Tarantino’s attempt to convince himself that the era he worships had real, tangible value beyond the superficial remembrance of figures past their prime. These two aging Hollywood cowboys aren’t worthless just because the world is leaving them behind. Dalton and Booth remain sympathetic characters, even when we glimpse their darker sides–much like the era itself. And that’s clearly how Tarantino wanted it.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is much more than a retelling of certain events–in fact, it fails spectacularly at being that. But it succeeds immensely at being a fairy tale–a recounting of a time and place, an attempt to capture the essence of Hollywood’s golden age, one that came to an end in 1969–but, maybe for Tarantino, never really ended at all.

Fortnite Birthday Event Starts Soon With Special Rewards

It’s been about two years since the initial release of Fortnite, and as it did last year, Epic Games plans to celebrate with an in-game birthday event. For Battle Royale players, this will kick off soon and run for one week, adding some birthday-themed elements and offering special rewards–and presumably challenges–for a limited time.

The Fortnite Birthday Celebration event begins on July 24 and runs until July 31 (coinciding with the end of Season 9). As referenced in the newest Fortnite patch notes, birthday cakes and birthday presents will both be added to the map in Battle Royale. The presents can be opened for various in-game loot, while the cakes can be eaten to gain health and shields. Although the event begins on July 24, these two elements won’t arrive until July 25.

Also part of the Birthday Celebration is a bit of an overhaul to the Battle Bus, which will be adorned for the occasion and will have a music track to match.

A pickaxe, wrap, and “more cosmetics” will be available during the event, although Epic has not yet shown off what these rewards look like or how you’ll earn them. The safe assumption is that birthday event challenges will be offered. According to a dataminer, these will be fairly straightforward, with the exception of one that involves dancing in front of birthday cakes, which players were asked to do last year, too. Completing each challenge will reportedly net you a corresponding reward, while doing all four will earn you a fifth reward.

Datamined Fortnite Birthday Challenges

  • Play matches (10)
  • Dance in front of different Birthday Cakes (10)
  • Outlast opponents (100)
  • Gain health or shield from Birthday Cake (50)

This event coincides with the Birthday Event in Fortnite’s Save the World component and the introduction of Overtime challenges in Battle Royale, both of which are already live. The latter present some mostly simple objectives for players to earn last-minute XP before Season 9 ends. Season 10 is expected to follow, possibly as soon as August 1, although Epic has not yet announced a specific launch date or details.

Fortnite first officially launched in July 2017 with what’s now known as its Save the World mode, a PvE experience which remains in paid early access. The popular free-to-play Battle Royale mode followed later that year in the wake of PUBG‘s massive success, and it’s this component of the game that has elevated Fortnite to its incredible heights. Fortnite, and Battle Royale in particular, continues to evolve on a regular basis, with one of its most recent events taking the form of a giant monster-robot fight.

DC Universe’s Harley Quinn Cartoon Will Tackle Abusive Joker Relationship

As long as the character of Harley Quinn has been around, there’s been a discussion among Batman fans about her relationship with Joker, which is incredibly abusive. It was revealed in the 1994 comic The Batman Adventures: Mad Love that Harley was a former psychiatrist that fell in love with the Clown Prince of Crime, even though he regularly insulted and demeaned her–and held very little regard for her life.

That’s an aspect of Harley’s history that was largely ignored in 2016’s Suicide Squad, which saw Margot Robbie lay the character. However, the upcoming DC Universe Harley Quinn animated series, in which Kaley Cuoco voices the character, won’t be shying away from it. Speaking at the TCA press tour, executive producer Justin Halpern explained, “That is something that we felt we needed to address in the show.”

Instead, Harley Quinn will deal with the horrible nature of the relationship as Harley removes herself from it in a bid to strike out on her own as a criminal queenpin. It’s explored in the first episode of the series, which was screened at San Diego Comic-Con, but the aftermath of the breakup will seemingly reverberate throughout future episodes of the series.

“The idea was that we’ve all been in relationships with someone we felt maybe wasn’t right for us, all the way to someone who was toxic for us,” Halpern continued. “How you extricate yourself from that is really what this show is about. How you get out of that kind of relationship and figure out, ‘What am I going to do now that I’m out of it? What do I want? I’ve been living somebody else’s life for a really long time.'”

So who will Harley lean on once Joker is out of the picture–or, rather, is kind of an enemy as she fights for control of Gotham City’s criminal underworld? It’s Poison Ivy (Lake Bell) that becomes the character’s closest ally and friend, taking a page from the comics.

It should also be noted that Harley Quinn is a very violent and vulgar animated series with blood flying as freely as the foul language. So while it likely isn’t the right animated series for kids, it’s refreshing to see this show deal with the incredibly problematic relationship between Joker and Harley, rather than simply treating it as an in-universe status quo.

Harley Quinn will premiere later this year on the DC Universe streaming service.