Space Jam Sequel Reveals New Character Posters

As we get closer to the release of Space Jam: A New Legacy, Warner Bros. has released a handful of new character posters, including our first look at Roadrunner and Speedy Gonzales in their spiffy new Toon Squad jerseys.

The new posters show star LeBron James along with key animated characters Bugs Bunny, Tweety, and the newly-redesigned Lola Bunny. Also included are their fellow toons Daffy Duck and Taz, as well as the previously-unseen Speedy Gonzales and Roadrunner.

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Speedy has been the subject of some controversy in the movie’s production, with some claiming the character perpetuates negative stereotypes about Mexican people. Speedy’s voice actor Gabriel Iglesias has defended the character, however, and others have pointed out that the character is generally much-loved within the Spanish-speaking community.

While we know Porky Pig and Marvin the Martian will be appearing in the film, neither have gotten a poster this time around. Also missing is Pepé Le Pew, who originally had one scene in the movie that has since been cut by director Malcolm D. Lee.

Space Jam: A New Legacy is due out on July 16, 2021, and will release simultaneously in theatres and on HBO Max.

Ludwig’s Never-Ending Twitch Subathon Enters Its Third Week

On Sunday March 14, popular Twitch streamer Ludwig started a subathon on his channel with the promise to keep streaming as long as people kept subscribing. The stream has now been live for over two consecutive weeks, and while it’s slowing down a little, it’s still showing no sign of stopping.

Ludwig mainly games with friends on the stream, but it also features hours of the streamer sleeping in his distinctive bright red racecar bed. In the early days of the stream, Ludwig even became the most-watched streamer on Twitch while he was sleeping. While he rests, the channel’s mods take over and play videos requested by viewers, turning the 24-hour stream into what is essentially a community YouTube party.

Initially, every subscription to Ludwig’s channel added 20 seconds to a timer that dictated how long he would stay live for, but in the wake of huge numbers of subscriptions, that has since been lowered to 10 seconds. Ludwig has also added extra conditions to a stream that seemed to have endless momentum, such as limiting users to 100 gift subs each, and adding a hard cap of 31 days in case the stream doesn’t end naturally before that.

Now 15 days in, the counter on Ludwig’s stream has dwindled to around 4 hours at the time of writing. It’s dropped quite a bit after staying in the double digits for all of last week, though loyal viewers seem determined to keep it going. The subathon has been hugely successful for the streamer, who has become the most subscribed to streamer on the site, according to The Verge.

Ludwig took his first proper break from the stream over the weekend, handing it over to some friends for a day so he could rest. After just one day’s respite he was back online again and will continue to stay live for as long as the counter lasts–which could be just for another day or two, or for another 15.

Pokémon Go Dev’s Pikmin Game Is Already Playable in Singapore

Niantic, the creator of Pokémon Go, has announced that it’s begun testing for its Pikmin AR game in Singapore.

The game, which was only teased for the first time last week, will be released this year globally, but Singaporean players will be the first in the world to try it. No matter where you are, you can pre-register to test the game in when it comes to your region.

At time of writing, exactly how the game works is still unknown, with Singaporean player Elias Chew explaining on Twitter that the game displays confidentiality notices when played. Chew did explain to another Twitter user that the game uses a Google Fit step count to grow Pikmin as you walk.

Niantic hasn’t said when the game will be coming to other countries, although it has previously soft-launched both Pokémon Go and Harry Potter: Wizards Unite in Australia and New Zealand, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see it hit those regions earlier than full release.

The Pikmin game is the start of a new partnership between Niantic and Nintendo, who will “jointly develop mobile titles” using Niantic’s AR technology and Nintendo’s characters. The news comes a day after Niantic CEO John Hanke seemed to tease that the company was creating AR glasses to help aid its games.

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Joe Skrebels is IGN’s Executive Editor of News. Follow him on Twitter. Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

Can’t Drive This Review

The tangled result of taking Tetris and Trackmania Turbo and tossing them into a tumble dryer, Can’t Drive This is a clever and compulsive co-op puzzle racer. With one player literally building a road out of random tiles as the other navigates the chaotic, impromptu track that results, Can’t Drive This is one of the most inventive driving games I’ve played in recent years, although its modest selection of modes makes it a multiplayer experience best enjoyed in short bursts rather than an all-night party classic-in-the-making.

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Replace Tetris’ iconic tetronimoes with assorted chunks of stunt racing track and you’re most of the way to understanding how Can’t Drive This delivers its own brand of puzzle-like track pieces. Every new slab will be something random – one might be a simple square of asphalt while the next has a devilish swinging hammer designed to hamper your progress. However, some may not be square at all – they’ll be 90-degree bends or banked corners that need to be rotated before they’re placed – and others won’t even be asphalt – they’ll be a deep mud pit to mess with your grip or a giant yellow dome to throw you off-course. The variety of tiles and obstacles is decent, although the hydraulic press is a nightmare. While it appears as if you just need to skirt around it, as it slams down it seems to send out a powerful shockwave that knocks trucks from the track without touching them. It was funny at first to watch my teammates struggle to survive it, but ultimately it became regularly irritating.

If You Build It, They’ll Have Fun

Assembling the track in Can’t Drive This is ultimately like trying to piece together a slot car set on the dining table before your little sister drives your favourite car off the end of it. There’s really no time to think it through. The driver can’t simply park and wait for their partner to carefully or artfully string a track together because if the truck stops too long it’ll explode, so reacting to the pieces as they arrive and plonking them down quickly is the only way to succeed as a team.

There are certainly times where it feels like you’re getting shafted with combinations of tiles that are extremely difficult for a driver to deal with – like a series of boost pads into a jump that a driver may find themselves committed to before the builder has even had time to set down a landing area – but with a couch full of players laughing at this predicament it’s generally more funny than aggravating.

However, there were a lot of occasions where I or one of my teammates found ourselves stuck clipping through a guardrail or bogged in a track tile that blinked into existence a fraction too late to let us continue, but a fraction too soon to allow the truck to actually plummet from the sky. It’s an annoying purgatory to be trapped in, particularly when the truck refuses to explode and manually restarting your run from the pause menu is the only solution. This is at its most frustrating with three drivers. Fallen trucks can be resurrected if another player drives through the beacon marking the point on track they perished, but we had a couple of instances where our last surviving driver was fused halfway inside a track tile, unable to revive teammates or proceed.

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Monster Truck Madness

The monster trucks in Can’t Drive This may look toy-like in scale but they handle with a good sense of heft and inertia. The trucks have a decent feeling of mass without being cumbersome, and they’re responsive without feeling overly twitchy or sticky.

There’s also a huge amount of truck customisation on offer but I haven’t really found myself drawn to it. A monster truck with a beard and a cowboy hat is objectively brilliant, I admit, but I can’t help but wonder if Can’t Drive This would’ve been better served with a few more modes or ways to play it than such an extensive range of cosmetics.

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As it stands, there are three different multiplayer modes: Yardage, where up to three drivers and one builder attempt to simply go the furthest distance they can before all trucks either careen off the track or explode; Game of Drones, where two drivers and two builders partner up to collect an increasing number of floating cubes randomly scattered around an initial hub zone; and Capture the Egg, where two teams – each featuring a driver and a builder – square off in a capture the flag scenario.

The frantic and unforgiving Yardage feels like the core Can’t Drive This experience, but I think I actually prefer Game of Drones; tracking down all the cubes requires building in all four compass directions rather than relentlessly trying to power forwards, and there’s slightly more time to rebuild around errors – you just need to avoid the EMP mines dropped by the drone that will disable trucks and potentially send them spearing off the track or into an obstacle to become stuck and blow up.

That’s it, though, and once we’d dabbled in each mode for a while sessions of Can’t Drive This would begin to lose a bit of momentum. There’s a fourth mode purely for solo players where you need to both build the road and drive it yourself as it subsequently assembles in front of you, but if this is the only way you’d be planning to play Can’t Drive This I’d recommend against picking it up. Lone Racer really loses a lot of steam after a dozen or so attempts.

Amanda Seyfried Replaces Kate McKinnon To Play Disgraced Theranos Founder Elizabeth Holmes

Hulu’s upcoming series The Dropout has found its new face for Elizabeth Holmes in Amanda Seyfried. The actress will replace Kate McKinnon, who dropped out of the role last month, Entertainment Weekly reports.

The Dropout is based on the ABC News podcast of the same name, which follows Holmes’ meteoric rise as the founder of biotech startup Theranos, and how her fame and riches unraveled once it was revealed the firm’s supposedly ground-breaking technology didn’t actually work. The company claimed that its technology could carry out any blood test with just a single drop of blood, but its devices failed to stand up to scientific scrutiny.

Holmes has been charged with multiple counts of fraud to which she has pleaded not guilty. The trial has been postponed multiple times due to COVID-19, and is currently set to take place on July 13, 2021. If found guilty, Holmes could face up to 20 years in prison and over $2 million in fines.

The Hulu series has New Girl’s Elizabeth Meriwether attached as showrunner and executive producer, with Seyfried also set to produce. Seyfried is nominated for Best Supporting Actress in the upcoming Academy Awards for her role as classic Hollywood actress Marion Davies in Netflix’s Mank.

San Diego Comic-Con Organizers Defend Thanksgiving Con Dates

San Diego Comic Con International announced this weekend the dates for its first in-person convention since the COVID-19 pandemic began, with Comic-Con Special Edition set to run over the Thanksgiving weekend from November 26 to November 28. Now, organizers are having to defend those dates to fans disappointed that they have to choose between family and a convention this fall.

Comic-Con Special Edition is a three-day event, one day shorter than a full-size Comic-Con, and quite a bit later than its usual July dates. Fans decried the announcement on social media, and convention organizers have now released a statement in hopes of appeasing those conflicted con-goers.

“As conventions and events have had to cancel their in-person shows or have converted to virtual formats during the pandemic, some have been postponed to later years while others have been rescheduled to the later part of 2021, resulting in a very packed Convention Center calendar,” said convention organizers in an official statement. “When reviewing dates for an in-person event, it was clear that available meeting and exhibit space would limit our options. Of the dates presented with the fewest restrictions, Friday through Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend seemed to be the best balance of available space and our envisioned event. As longtime fans ourselves, we have attended many conventions over that holiday weekend, opting to spend Thanksgiving day with family and the rest of the weekend with friends and our families of choice. While this is not unusual in the convention trade, we understand this choice is not optimal for everyone.”

Countless events reaching all the way back to March 2020 were canceled as a precaution for COVID-19, including huge events like San Diego Comic-Con and E3, as well as many smaller conventions across the country. The second half of 2021 will mark the first chance fans have to go back to these gathering places, but is also going to be the first time many will see families they may not have seen since Christmas 2019.

Comic-Con Special Edition, organizers say, “was never intended to be the large gathering reflective of the summer event,” but rather “a shorter event” meant to “slowly and cautiously” allow fans to gather. It’s also a matter of money, as usual, with Comic-Con organizers stating that the event will “generate much needed revenue not only for the organization, but also for local businesses and the community.”

“The loss of revenue has had an acute impact on the organization as it has with many small businesses, necessitating reduced work schedules and reduction in pay for employees, among other issues,” said Comic-Con spokesperson David Glanzer. “Hopefully this event will shore up our financial reserves and mark a slow return to larger in-person gatherings in 2022.”

Now Playing: Best Comic-Con Cosplay Of Years Past 2016-2019

New Assassin’s Creed Valhalla Update Doubles Reda’s Shop Inventory, Goes Live March 30

Following player feedback, Ubisoft is changing Reda’s Shop in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla. The update for the shop will go live on March 30 and will make it easier to buy new items without spending all the opals you’ve discovered.

In Valhalla, Reda joins your settlement upon the completion of securing an alliance with Ledecestrescire. For opals, an in-game currency you can find by exploring the world, Reda will sell you unique weapons, armor, and cosmetics that rotate out of his shop on a weekly basis. Up till now, he’d sell you three new items each week. The March 30 update will increase that number to six.

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This update also corresponds to a change in Reda’s stock. So starting March 30, you’ll have a limited window to purchase six new items. They’re listed below:

  • Black Raven (Back Tattoo)
  • Helhest (Horse)
  • Niflheim Helmet
  • Unicorn Figurehead
  • Blood Eagle Totem
  • Ukonvasara (Hammer)

Additionally, the update changes how many opals you need to buy certain items from Reda. The price of longship items, settlement items, and tattoos will all be decreased to 35 opals starting March 30.

“We will continue to monitor discussions about Reda’s shop and will implement potential further changes based on your feedback,” Ubisoft writes in a blog post.

Assassin’s Creed Valhalla is available for Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, PS5, PS4, PC, and Stadia. The game is scheduled to get its first major post-launch DLC expansion, Wrath of the Druids, on April 29.

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Amazon Prime Free Games For April Revealed: The Escapists, Moving Out, and More

There’s still some time to grab the free Amazon Prime games for March–including the huge library of SNK classics–but if you’ve already done that, you can check out what’s next. Amazon has revealed April’s free Amazon Prime games, which are available through April 30 and include five excellent titles: The Escapists, Moving Out, Move or Die: Couch Party Edition, Aces of the Luftwaffe: Squadron, and Before I Forget.

The Escapists is one of the biggest Prime Gaming offerings available during April. A prison-escape simulator, you’ll take the role of a prisoner with one goal in mind: get the heck out. There are a lot of different ways you can go about breaking out, but you’ll have to avoid the stringent eyes of the guards as you plan out and execute your escape.

In The Escapists, you’re on your own, but you’ll be joined by your friends in the moving-out simulator, Moving Out. You and up to three friends tackle various moving jobs around the neighborhood, working together to transport bigger items out of the house and into the truck. You’ll want to finish jobs as fast as you can as your score is dependent on your speed.

For more multiplayer action, Move or Die has you covered. Fast-paced and absolutely absurd, Move or Die pits you against your friends in a competitive match that changes its mechanics every 20 seconds. If you love your friends, you’ll likely hate them after everything is said and done–like any good party game. Those who like tense gameplay like that will also find it in bullet-hell shooter, Aces of the Luftwaffe: Squadron, while those who prefer a slower, story-based experience will find a lot to enjoy in Before I Forget.

While the free games are great, there is also quite a bit of free in-game loot for a variety of games. Prime subscribers can expect free loot, including a costume and 6,500 Kudos for Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout. Ubisoft games Rainbow Six Siege and For Honor also get some loot, and you can expect the next drop for battle-royale shooter Apex Legends as well.

April 2021 free Prime Gaming titles

Available throughout April

  • The Escapists
  • Moving Out
  • Move or Die: Couch Party Edition
  • Aces of the Luftwaffe: Squadron
  • Before I Forget

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Pokemon Go Spring Event Starts April 4, Adds Shiny Bunnelby And Mega Lopunny

Niantic is kicking off a spring celebration in Pokemon Go on April 4. The event runs for four days and features various spring-themed Pokemon, including Shiny Bunnelby and Mega Lopunny, the latter of which will be available for the first time in the game as a Mega Raid boss.

Throughout the spring event, flower crown-wearing versions of Pikachu and Chansey will appear in the wild, as will the following Pokemon:

  • Exeggcute
  • Marill
  • Plusle
  • Minun
  • Bunneary
  • Bunnelby

You’ll also be able to find some Shiny Pokemon during the event. In addition to the aforementioned Shiny Bunnelby, you’ll have a chance to catch Shiny Chansey in the wild. You may also hatch a Shiny version of Chansey’s pre-evolved form, Happiny.

That’s not the only special Pokemon you’ll be able to hatch. You’ll also have a chance to hatch flower crown-wearing Happiny, Pichu, and Eevee from 2 km eggs during the event. Meanwhile, you’ll be more likely to encounter Shadow Exeggcute when battling Team Go Rocket grunts, and completing event-exclusive Field Research tasks will lead to encounters with Azumarill, Rufflet, and other Pokemon.

As previously mentioned, Mega Lopunny is also making its Pokemon Go debut as part of the event. The Mega-Evolved Pokemon will appear as a potential Mega Raid boss. Defeating it will net you Lopunny Mega Energy, which you’ll need to Mega Evolve your own Lopunny.

In addition to the new Pokemon, there will be various bonuses during the spring event. Eggs will hatch at half the distance they normally require, and you’ll receive twice the usual amount of Candy when you hatch Pokemon. Lucky Eggs you use will also remain active for an hour.

Pokemon Go’s spring event runs until 8 PM local time on April 8. You can read more about the event on the official Pokemon Go blog. Niantic has a few other April events already lined up as well, including April’s Community Day, which takes place April 11 and features the Gen 5 starter Pokemon Snivy.

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Pokemon Go Developer May Be Making Smart Glasses With AR Tech

Niantic, the studio behind Pokemon Go, has teased that it’s making a new kind of device. Based on the image, it looks to be a new brand of smart glasses.

“Exciting to see the progress we’re making to enable new kinds of devices that leverage our platform,” founder and CEO John Hanke tweeted.

In a quote tweet response, Wired senior writer Lauren Goode wrote, “Last time we spoke, Hanke said it will still be a couple of years before we see a truly consumer-friendly AR glasses experience.” So we may still be months (or even years) away from getting official confirmation on what this new tech is.

Granted, given the games that Niantic has developed, like the aforementioned Pokemon Go, something like smart glasses with augmented reality (AR) tech makes sense. The creation of smart glasses would also fall in line with the studio’s recent deal with Nintendo to make more games that utilize Niantic’s real-world AR technology–the first of which has been revealed to be a Pikmin mobile game coming later this year.

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