25 Movies Black Panther Outgrossed in 4 Days

Black Panther has made a lot of money at the box office already — $242 million in its first four days of domestic (U.S.) release. It had the second-biggest four-day domestic debut of all time and set a new record for Monday box office numbers, surpassing The Force Awakens ($40.11 million) with $40.167 million.

There’s also been some buzz about how BP has already made more money than Justice League did in its entire domestic run (JL ended up with $229 million in U.S. receipts). But the truth is, the latest Marvel film has actually beaten the domestic numbers of a bunch of superhero movies. In the following slideshow, we’ve broken down the top 25 grossers whose entire domestic run wound up being less than BP’s four-day haul. But please note, we kept this list to superhero movies released just in the past 10 years. And also, these numbers are not adjusted for inflation. (All figures via Box Office Mojo.)

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Super Mario Odyssey Balloon World Update Out This Week

It looks as though the Super Mario Odyssey Balloon World update is coming to Switch this week.

The Nintendo Australia website momentarily showed a listing saying the new free update would be available for download this Friday, February 23.

IGN has reached out to Nintendo for comment on this information.

Announced last month for a February release, the update boasts a new mini-game mode called Balloon World which unlocks after completing the main story. Players will need to find Luigi in each world to begin either hiding or finding balloons hidden by other players.

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Fans Can Experience Westworld at SXSW

A Westworld  theme park is coming to South by Southwest, HBO announced today.

HBO is building the entire town of Sweetwater, including the luxury hotel The Coronado and the Mariposa Saloon, to celebrate the upcoming second season of the hit series. SXSW conference and festival badge holders can visit the theme park from March 9 through March 11.

Those interested in attending can register at DiscoverWestworld.com. After your registration, you will need to make your way to downtown Austin’s EastSide Tavern to check in. A Delos Shuttle will then drive you to the two acres of custom-built parkland, located outside of Austin.

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Angry Birds Takes On Esports With New Competitive iOS App

Angry Birds is coming to the esports scene with a new title aimed at competitive play.

Dubbed Angry Birds Champions, Games Industry reports the new game will allow players to pay an entry fee to enter competitions for the chance at winning a cash prize.

Typically, the fee is under $1 and winners are credited around $4 for their victory. Players can also opt out of the payment and compete, but will not be awarded a cash prize.

Champions is being developed by Angry Birds creator Rovio Entertainment in conjunction with WorldWinner, which is already known for work on skill-based tournament desktop games such as Tetris Burst and Bejeweled.

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Dell S2716DG Gaming Monitor Review

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When people think of gaming monitors Dell isn’t usually the first name that comes to mind. For years the company has built some great color-accurate multipurpose monitors with all the features you ask for, but recently Dell has started to focus more on the gaming market specifically. The S2716DG (See it on Dell.com) / (See it on Amazon UK) is one of two gaming monitors the company is offering without the Alienware badge, and the only one that measures 27 inches diagonally. With a 144Hz refresh rate, a 1ms response time, and G-Sync, Dell is diving in feet first. So how does it measure up?

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9 Things We Learned on the Set of A Wrinkle in Time

Last year, I was among the press invited to visit the Los Angeles set of A Wrinkle in Time, the film version of the beloved children’s book by Madeleine L’Engle. The Ava DuVernay-directed film, which opens March 9, is the story of young Meg Murray (Storm Reid) who goes on a magical journey to rescue her father, with help from some supernatural beings along the way.

The book has pretty heavy themes about the concept of goodness vs. evil, and what we can do to change the world. There is also, however, a simple story of love and friendship at its core. We observed a scene being filmed between Reid and Levi Miller, who plays Calvin, where they share their first kiss. The scene was very short, but it gave us a good look at both the poise of two young actors and the way the kids got to joke around between takes. Oprah Winfrey, who plays Mrs. Which, told us that the other actors loved the days they were on set with the kids because they “pumpkin” early, meaning that everyone got to end the day when the kids were legally required to.

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Diablo Creator on Difficulty Bringing Diablo 2 to Modern PCs

David Brevik, the co-founder of Blizzard North and creator of Diablo, recently shared his thoughts on the potential of Diablo II coming to modern PCs and the challenges involved in making that happen.

“I can say from a technical standpoint it’s gonna be extremely difficult,” Brevik said on the latest episode of our monthly interview show IGN Unfiltered. “You will not be able to capture it exactly the way it was, and the number one reason is because of the shape of the screen.”

Brevik went on to explain that because the screens during the time of Diablo II’s release were 800×600 resolution in a 4:3 aspect ratio—which is much different in shape than the 16:9 and 16:10 aspect ratio screens we have today—many of the programming tricks they used when developing Diablo II would no longer work.

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Fullmetal Alchemist Live-Action Movie Review

Say whatever else you want about last year’s Ghost in the Shell adaptation, which pissed off most fans by changing the ending and allegedly missing the point. At least it looked great, sporting the budget, design, and effects it deserved. The same can’t be said for director Fumihiko Sori’s live-action Fullmetal Alchemist adaptation, which manages to feel cheap in every imaginable way.

Fullmetal Alchemist follows the Elric brothers Al and Ed in a pseudo-European world where the science of “alchemy” is nearly indistinguishable from magic. As kids, the brothers became disfigured after an alchemical ritual gone wrong–Ed loses an arm and a leg, and Al his entire body, his soul coming to rest inside a hulking suit of armor. Years later, the boys have joined the army as official State Alchemists in the hopes their adventures will lead them to the Philosopher’s Stone, which Ed can theoretically use to reunite Al with his real body.

The movie’s issues start immediately, as it brushes over the Elrics’ origin story in a weird hurry to get it over with. The scene of the ritual gone wrong cuts off halfway through, followed by a jarring jump several years into the future. Audience members unfamiliar with the source material are likely to simply scratch their heads at the ensuing action scenes, in which a young man in an ill-fitting blonde wig chases down a magic priest with the help of an empty suit of armor. When the movie finally revisits that opening scene, it’s as a flashback Ed sees while dreaming. And to add to the confusion, it’s the adult version of the character–not the child–who loses his limbs and strikes a deal to get his brother’s soul back.

There are some things that simply seem less plausible in live action than in an animated format, and Fullmetal Alchemist seems eager to brush past as many of them as possible. The movie uses multiple early scene info dumps to lamely get its core rules across: Alchemy isn’t magic, despite looking like it, because of the “law of equivalent exchange,” which doesn’t seem to have an actual definition except in rare instances the plot requires it to. Someone early on marvels at Ed’s ability to do alchemy “without a transmutation circle,” but characters throughout the movie snap their fingers to summon fireballs and perform other unexplained feats.

Fullmetal Alchemist is infinitely more interested in parroting the sights and sounds of its source material than in exploring the anime’s ideas or adding anything original to the formula. Unfortunately, those sensory elements are poorly imitated as well. The movie’s ample CG effects, from alchemical spells like rippling cobblestones to a goopy army of groaning golems, look so bad you’ll actually marvel that this was made last year and not in the late ’90s. Al’s suit of armor is the one exception, as it looks like they mixed some practical effects with the CG there.

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Fullmetal Alchemist overall suffers from unimaginative visual design, particularly in the characters’ outfits and many terrible wigs, neither of which ever seem to fit right. The “Homonculi” Lust, Envy, and Gluttony–three ghoulish baddies whose motivations or purposes the movie never bothers to explain–are especially corny, with cheap-looking outfits and terrible CG “powers.”

To top it off, what little alchemy the Elric brothers actually perform in the movie boils down almost entirely to laying their hands limply on the ground and summoning barriers from the pavement. These boys–especially Ed–are supposed to be inhumanly skilled alchemists, and yet they remain totally unimpressive for the entire film.

This is more than just cutting things out to fit dozens of hours of story into a two hour-plus movie; what they did cram in meanders between poorly set-up, rushed emotional pivots, like the infamous Nina twist, to scenes that simply feel boring or pointless. There’s one extended fight scene between the brothers themselves that manages to simultaneously make no sense, feel completely pointless, have no bearing on the story, and break the already vaguely defined rules of this world all in one.

Despite its high profile and fan hunger, Fullmetal Alchemist is everything wrong with live-action anime adaptations. It both adds nothing to the original and does a poor job imitating it. If you’ve never experienced FMA before, go watch the anime (preferably the Brotherhood series); if you’re already a fan, boot up Netflix and watch the Fullmetal Alchemist live action movie at your own risk.

The Good Column Head
Al’s suit of armor looks good in most scenes The world’s rules are poorly explained
Bad CG throughout entire movie
Jams too much in while still feeling boring
Adds nothing to the original
Even the alchemy isn’t cool