The Glitches That Made Halo 2

In this video, Persia talks about iconic glitches in Halo 2 that added to the skill-ceiling of competitive multiplayer with former Halo pro, Eli the Ninja. From BXR to BXB and more, these unintentional glitches lead to combos that are used far and wide by many Halo 2 players and pros to this day.

With Halo having many different titles within the franchise, Halo 2 stands out due to these glitches and you can still perform them in the Master Chief: Collection’s Halo 2: Classic playlist.

Halo: Infinite is right around the corner after its release date of December 8th, 2021 was confirmed by Microsoft at Gamescom Opening Night Live and is now available for pre-order. You can check out our pre-order guide on gamespot.com.

Succession Season 3’s Full Trailer Features A Family At War

The full trailer for Succession Season 3 has been released. The latest season of HBO’s darkly funny family drama premieres on October 17.

The trailer dives straight into the chaos and conflict created by Kendall Roy’s decision to turn against his father Logan and bring his business empire crashing down. It looks like the rest of the family are nowhere to be seen, and Logan is in desperate need of backup as important shareholder meetings about the future of the company loom. Succession is one of HBO’s most compelling and discussed shows, and Season 3 will be a must-watch when it arrives next month. Check out the trailer below:

This trailer follows the first teaser, which was released back in July. All the main cast are set to return, including Brian Cox as Logan, Jeremy Strong as Kendall, Kieran Culkin as Roman, Sarah Snook as Siobhan, Matthew Macfadyen as Tom, Hiam Abbass as Marcia, Nicholas Braun as Greg, and Alan Ruck as Connor. New cast members for this season include Adrien Brody (Peaky Blinders)–who can be seen briefly in the trailer–Alexander Skarsgård (Godzilla vs. Kong) and Hope Davis (Captain America: Civil War).

Succession Season 2 aired in 2019 and subsequently won seven Emmys, including Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Lead Actor In a Drama Series for Cox. Production on Season 3 was set to begin in April last year but was delayed due to the pandemic. The show was created by British comedy writer Jesse Armstrong (In the Loop, Peep Show).

For more, check out GameSpot’s guide to the biggest upcoming TV shows of 2021.

Daily Deals: 50% Off 6 Months of HBO Max, Asus ROG STRIX RTX 2060 SUPER Gaming PC for $999, 30% Off Apple AirPods Pro

Today you can save 50% off ad-free HBO Max, easily one of the best streaming services around. Catch up on recently released movies like Malignant, Suicide Squad 2, Godzilla vs Kong, and more. In other deal news, Walmart has an ASUS ROG Strix gaming PC equipped with the very capable RTX 2060 SUPER video card for $999.99. You’d be hard pressed to find a more powerful gaming rig for the same price. The best PS5 SSD upgrade – the WD SN850 1TB with preinstalled heatsink – is also back in stock at the WD Store. These deals and more.

ASUS ROG Strix RTX 2060 SUPER Gaming PC for $999

This gaming desktop packs a lot of punch for a rig that costs just under $1000. The RTX 2060 SUPER is a very capable video card; it’s pretty much on par with the RTX 2070 and can easily handle games at up to 1440p resolution. It’s paired with an AMD Ryzen 7 processor, 16GB of memory, and dual SSD and HDD storage.

50% Off 6 Months of Ad-Free HBO Max

HBO Max is taking 50% off your first 6 months of its ad-free streaming service. That drops the price to only $7.49/mo. HBO Max hosts some of the biggest recent releases like Malignant, Suicide Squad 2, Mortal Kombat, Godzilla vs Kong, Zack Snyder’s Justice League, Tenet, and more. You’ll look forward to watching Dune on October 22 and Matrix 4 on December 22 with your HBO Max subscription as well. You also have access to some great TV shows like Lovecraft Country, Friends, Rick & Morty, and South Park. This is one of the best streaming services around and at this price it’s a steal.

2021 75″ Hisense U7G 4K QLED Smart TV

Pick up the new 2021 75″ Hisense 4K TV featuring Quantum Dot technology for the lowest price ever. This ULED TV supports Dolby Vision HDR thanks to a ULED panel that’s rated for up to 1,000nits of maximum brightness and boasts a native 120Hz refresh rate and full-array dimming with 90 local dimming zones. It’s actually one of the highest rated TVs around, especially for its price range.

Apple AirPods Pro Noise-Cancelling Earbuds

If you regret not picking the Airpods Pro up on Amazon Prime Day, here’s your chance to get it today for an even lower price. Today the price of the AirPods Pro has dropped $70, or 28% off. This is the lowest price we’ve seen for a brand new pair of these highly rated earbuds. The AirPods Pro is considered by many to be the best truly wireless noise-cancelling in-ear headphones you can get, and a very big step up in quality from the standard AirPods.

30% Off the Official Apple Magsafe Charger

This is the lowest price we’ve seen for the official Apple MagSafe charger. It’s compatible with both the iPhone and the AirPods. For iPhone 12 and 13 users, the magnets on the charger align perfectly with the iPhone so there’s no finesse fidgeting required for optimal charging.

Back in Stock (Including 1TB Model): WD Black SN850 M.2 SSD with Heatsink

The Western Digital official storefront has all models of the SN850 SSD with heatsink in stock right now, and that includes the extremely hard to find 1TB model. This is currently the most popular (and probably the best) SSD to get for your PS5 storage upgrade. It’s blazing fast drive with transfer speeds rated at up to 7,000 MB/s and a PCIe Gen4 interface and it comes preinstalled with a heatsink. It’s also confirmed by Western Digital themselves to be compatible with the PS5.

$2,600 Off Lenovo ThinkPad 15″ 4K RTX 3080 Laptop

Update: The ship date listed on Lenovo’s site shows 4+ months, and that seems to be exaggerated. Some buyers have reported receiving their laptops in about 2-3 weeks.

Lenovo ThinkPad laptops are known for their best-in-class ruggedness and reliability, and even if it ever breaks down, Lenovo offers the best customer service in the business. Usually there’s a steep price premium for this. Today, however, this $5000 MSRP laptop is discounted by $2600 thanks to a combination of an instant discount and a new coupon code that popped up today. If you’re looking to purchase a ThinkPad that’s got the power to do some serious gaming, you won’t find a price like this anytime soon.

Dell XPS Intel Core i7 RTX 3060 Ti PC for $1369

Enjoy high end PC gaming on a budget. There is one of the best deals we’ve seen for an RTX 3060 Ti equipped PC and handily beats out a similar deal we saw on Labor Day by over $100. The RTX 3060 Ti is a very powerful video card; it’s better than the previous generation’s RTX 2080! It’s a big upgrade from the 3060 non-Ti model and the one to get if you’re going to play games at resolutions of 1440p or higher. This particular deal is found on the Dell Small Business site, but anyone can purchase there just like on Dell’s regular site; you can treat Dell Small Business as exactly the same as Dell Home.

Video Game Deals

More Daily Deals for September 17

Play Age of Empires 4 Early in a Technical Stress Test Today

Age of Empires 4 is holding a Technical Stress Test starting today, and it will be open to everyone through Steam and the Xbox Insider Hub in Microsoft Store. The test will go from Friday, September 17 at 10 a.m. PT through Monday, September 20 at 10 a.m. PT, according to a news post on the Age of Empires website.

The four civilizations available in the beta are the English, the Chinese, the Holy Roman Empire, and the Abbasid Dynasty. Five different maps will be available with the developers stressing this test is “focused on the multiplayer experience.” Single-player options available in the test include playing against AI in the Multiplayer Custom Lobby and playing the game’s tutorial, Mission Zero.

A closed beta was held for Age of Empires 4 earlier this year. The developers made some changes since then including an increased camera distance option, “balance work” with the English and Chinese civilizations, and various bug fixes.

Age of Empires 4 is set to launch on October 28. It will be available on PC through Steam and Windows Store. Xbox Game Pass for PC members will be able to access the game on launch day.

It was recently found out that an hour of medieval history documentary material is included in Age of Empires 4.

PC players can get excited for the Steam Deck by checking out Steam Deck’s specs and IGN’s hands-on with Steam Deck. Anybody looking for the best PC games to play on it should check IGN’s recently updated list of the best modern PC games.

Petey Oneto is a freelance writer for IGN.

Lugosi: The Rise and Fall of Hollywood’s Dracula – Exclusive Graphic Novel Preview

Comic book fans can’t throw a a wooden stake without hitting another story featuring Dracula. But how many comics focus on the artists who helped make Dracula such an iconic villain in the first place? That’s where Lugosi: The Rise and Fall of Hollywood’s Dracula comes in.

IGN can exclusively offer a new preview of this upcoming Humanoids release, which chronicles the fascinating and ultimately tragic life of actor Bela Lugosi. Check it out in the slideshow gallery below:

Lugosi is written and drawn by cartoonist Koren Shadmi, who previously published The Twilight Man: Rod Serling and the Birth of Television through Humanoids. The book follows Lugosi’s life, from his early struggles in Hungary to his move to the US and starring role in 1931’s Dracula to his personal and financial hardships late in life. Humanoids’ press release teases:

LUGOSI, the tragic life story of one of horror’s most iconic film stars, tells of a young Hungarian activist forced to flee his homeland after the failed Communist revolution in 1919. Reinventing himself in the U.S., first on stage and then in movies, he landed the unforgettable role of Count Dracula in what would become a series of classic feature films. From that point forward, Lugosi’s stardom would be assured… but with international fame came setbacks and addictions that gradually whittled his reputation from icon to has-been. LUGOSI details the actor’s fall from grace and an enduring legacy that continues to this day.

Lugosi: The Rise and Fall of Hollywood’s Dracula will be released on Tuesday, September 28, with a cover price of $24.99 for the trade paperback and $14.99 for the digital edition. The book is available to preorder on Amazon and through various other bookstores and comic shops.

Lugosi isn’t the only 2021 release to put a fresh spin on the Dracula formula. The illustrated novel Dracula of Transylvania abandons the more tragic elements of the character, instead reimagining Dracula as “a complete horror.”

Elsewhere in the comics industry, Marvel is gearing up for the release of Devil’s reign, and writer Chip Zdarsky explains why Kingpin is now an Avengers-level threat.

Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.

Doom Patrol Season 3 Premiere Review: “Possibilities Patrol,” “Vacation Patrol,” and “Dead Patrol”

Doom Patrol Season 3 premieres with three episodes on Thursday, Sept. 23. Below is a spoiler-free review.

No matter what WandaVision or Loki would have you believe, Doom Patrol is the most bonkers, cuckoo-bananas superhero TV show that’s also a complex, layered, and poignant character-driven exploration of grief and trauma. This is a series that can go from a muscled man accidentally giving everyone standing on a street an orgasm by flexing a muscle, or actual butts with teeth attacking people, to one of the characters being shunned out of a party for his own son because he’s considered a monster. Season 3 continues this trend, with hilariously weird moments seamlessly giving way to internalized therapy sessions you can’t find anywhere else in the genre.

The second season ended on a huge cliffhanger, with the Doom Patrol losing the fight against the Candlemaker, an apocalyptic entity residing inside the mind of young Dorothy Spinner (Abigail Monterey). Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the last episode of Season 2 was not finished in time, being pushed into becoming the Season 3 premiere, “Possibilities Patrol.” This is by far the weakest of the three-episode premiere, with the long wait working against it. For one, we pick up exactly where the previous episode left off as if there had just been a week between seasons rather than a full year. Likewise, even if this show has never really relied on big superhero fights or long action sequences, the Candlemaker ends up as an anticlimactic villain that is dispatched just as quickly as he is introduced. The rest of the episode, then, is all about tying up loose ends for the characters. Worse yet, the episode over-relies on big, CGI monsters for spectacle, with the digital effects looking like something out of network TV.

Thankfully, the next two episodes are much better, as they get the ball rolling on the story for the rest of the season as well as manage a nice balance between hilarious weirdness and complex character stories. Episode 2, “Vacation Patrol,” introduces the Brotherhood of Evil, who are as nefarious as they seem foolishly incompetent, sending an alien conqueror to a mountain resort on a mission and forgetting about it for decades. The second and third episodes serve as a single cohesive story about trauma and how you can’t just overcome it in one fell swoop; it’s something you have to continue to work through and improve on bit by bit. As opposed to doing a hard reset like many shows do with new seasons, Doom Patrol dresses the same character beats with wildly different and unique plots, making it feel fresh and exciting.

This season seems to be about acknowledging when you need help and learning to ask for it, whether it’s Victor (Joivan Wade) struggling with the fact that he can’t control his remote-controlled body, Jane (Diane Guerrero) reeling from her experience in the Underground, or even Cliff (Brendan Fraser) realizing that a robot form doesn’t necessarily make you invincible. After beginning to accept their powers and fates — then the origin of their powers — this season is about acknowledging that they won’t be able to fully heal on their own, but that they need each other before becoming a proper team or even a family. The cast continues to give great performances, with Guerrero being a standout in the premiere, showing vulnerability and strength with nuance.

The third episode, “Dead Patrol,” sends our don’t-call-them-heroes heroes down a fun trip to hell with the assistance of the Dead Boy Detectives, in what is essentially a backdoor pilot for the potential spin-off based on the characters created by Neil Gaiman. Still, this works much better than the time the Doom Patrol was clunkily introduced in Titans Season 1. The boys are a fun, gloomy addition to the patrol, with their own emotional baggage, fun dynamics, and scary villains that they don’t give a s**t about, since they have better things to do than play superhero. Like usual, the episode gives us a few wild moments, like Cliff’s dad hunting down pegasi in the afterlife, and a cool horror moment with a spider-mouth lady that tortures dead souls. By the end of this episode, it’s clear what the goals are for the rest of the season, setting the table for the characters’ individual stories and motivations for the future. It’s a testament to the show’s commitment to intimate character stories that the premiere ends before we learn who the Big Bad or the overarching plot for the season is, but we do know what each of the characters wants for their own self betterment.

In fact, these first three episodes give only glimpses of the villains for the season. We get the briefest of introductions to the enigmatic time-traveling Madame Rouge (Michelle Gomez), but spend more time with the evil duo of Garguax, the alien conqueror that has spent 70 years hiding in a mountain resort, and his faithful assistant, an alien completely covered in red body paint played hilariously by Billy Boyd. Like our patrol, the alien duo is also struggling with their own sense of purpose, and whether their lives have been building up to something or if they’ve spent decades waiting in vain.

Despite production problems murking the first episode, Doom Patrol Season 3 is off to a promising start, having tied up loose ends and setting up some emotionally devastating stories for the main characters, and also some time-traveling shenanigans that will hopefully pay off this season rather than in the next one. By the time “Dead Patrol” ends, Doom Patrol has fully reintroduced itself as the most imaginative and nuanced superhero show currently on TV.

Titanfall 2 Was Abandoned By EA, And Then Things Got Weird

The 32nd page of an exhaustive PDF document called “Operation Red Tape” is christened with the headline, “Discussing throwing ‘leads’ about Jeanue to an IGN journalist.” It was uploaded by the team behind the website SaveTitanfall.com on August 6 as the definitive conclusion on one of the strangest stories in video games. Who was killing Titanfall? Who is Jeanue? Why hasn’t Respawn done anything to stop it? I had been trying to answer those questions for months. Now, it appeared that all of my work had been capsized.

“Should throw him the original leads about jean,” read the screenshot of a Discord transcript, just below that brutal headline. I felt a twinge in the bottom of my stomach. The “him” here apparently referred to me. Had I really been hoodwinked this badly? Was I trusting the wrong people?

“Would be nice at the very least to get the people who still think that’s his real identity to shut up kek,” reads the screenshot.

I closed my laptop, delirious, confused, and wounded. The story had been blown to smithereens, and if the report was to be believed, multiple sources were taking me for a ride. All that was left was a slew of exasperating unknowables, but after spending my summer in the strange waters of Titanfall fandom, none of that was a surprise.

Let’s wind the timeline back to the very beginning. Titanfall 2 was released in 2016 to glowing reviews. The game never quite crested the heights of other multiplayer shooters, but it established itself as something of an underground classic; frequently endorsed by both FPS scholars, and a devout, fervent fanbase. But hopes that Respawn would continue to cultivate the Titanfall franchise started to wane with the insurgent success of Apex Legends in 2018, and today, the game receives limited, skeletal support from the developer. This is often a recipe for disaster — Team Fortress 2 has been infamously overrun by bots as Valve has stepped away from active development — and unfortunately, the same fate came for Titanfall.

So, in early 2021, reports started to proliferate about a hacker, or a team of hackers, who had made it their mission to sabotage Titanfall 2. The game’s small, dedicated streaming community suffered from frequent DDOS attacks, usually from the moment they loaded into a match. The alleged culprit? A figure known only as “Jeanue.”

Much is unknown about Jeanue, but there are a few things that most everyone agreed upon. Jeanue had managed to secure unprecedented control over the Titanfall multiplayer apparatus — utilizing something the community refers to as the “Blacklist.” When Jeanue added your name to the “Blacklist,” you would be automatically disconnected from any Titanfall 2 match you attempted to join, rendering the game effectively unplayable. Oftentimes Jeanue would appear in the Twitch chat of his targets, bragging about another successful hack with a smattering of awful, toxic language. The motivations were ambiguous. Was Jeanue looking for internet stardom? Did they get off on the power? Did they carry some bizarre vendetta against Titanfall as a brand? These are the questions that the community has continued to ask itself, hoping for an answer.

“I’ve had a bunch of conversations with this person through Twitch messages. We ask like, ‘Why are you doing this?’ and they say a bunch of racist and homophobic things that I’m not going to repeat,” says MoDen31, a Titanfall streamer who’s had repeated contact with Jeanue. “I don’t know if it’s infamy or notoriety. I genuinely wonder if they just hate the game. It feels like I’m talking to someone from the movie Split. They’re just very strange conversations. None of it is coherent.”

The hacking tools that Jeanue used seem to have profound, mind-boggling reach, able to DDOS players with impunity. Streamers would attempt to circumvent the Blacklist by switching accounts, or running their games through a VPN, all to no avail. Mechanically speaking, every attack seemed to unfold the same way: Players would queue up for a Titanfall 2 match, the countdown on screen would reach zero, and the combatants would burst through the spawn point. Suddenly, the screen would hitch up; titans and pilots alike would be stuck in stasis. An error message would pop up reading, “ReadPacketEntries: Failed,” and the denizens of the match would be kicked back out to the lobby. Whatever Jeanue was doing, they could manipulate the very fabric of Titanfall 2’s matchmaking infrastructure. That’s why the indiscretions were so disconcerting. This seemed to be more than a routine breach.

“The issues they’ve exploited are deeply baked into the game,” adds MoDen31. “It’s not like a DDOS in Halo 2 where you get some lag.”

I started to dig around this story in the spring, and secured an invitation to a Discord channel populated exclusively by Titanfall content creators who were doggedly gathering evidence about the hacks. The amount of details they had collected was awe-inspiring. There was a database that documented all of the sobriquets that Jeanue had used on Twitch, another for their names on EA Origin. There was a landing page called “Latest Reports,” where the contingent shared screenshots of their Twitch logs whenever Jeanue appeared in them. Grimmest of all was a section dedicated to official missives from Respawn, who hadn’t been able to root out the hacker running roughshod over what was once their most popular game. On April 5, 2021, Respawn tweeted that the company “is aware of DDOS attacks afflicting” Titanfall 2, and that “help is on the way.” That help failed to manifest, and Jeanue kept up the assault.

It was on that server where I first met a Polish Titanfall fan who plays under the name p0358, or more colloquially, “p0.” He seemed young, maybe about 21 or 22, and he introduced himself to me as a white-hat hacker — someone who was working tirelessly to uncover the precise amalgam of exploits Jeanue was using to disrupt the game. All of that blood, sweat and tears made him a minor celebrity within the community. I’ve seen p0 consecrated in memes before, and he penned an in-depth Medium post about Titanfall server exploits that went briefly viral.

So, on June 15, p0 pulled me into a group call alongside a handful of his comrades, where he presented a wild origin story about Jeanue’s radicalization. Supposedly, claimed p0, Jeanue was active in the Titanfall scene for years and wasn’t very good. This led to them experimenting with some minor cheat bots — speed boosts, aim-assists, things of that nature — but Jeanue still couldn’t succeed in the deathmatches. “They were getting owned by the good players despite cheating, and that was pretty funny to watch,” said p0. “Then they slowly started to discover more vulnerabilities.”

Yes, that was the alleged modus operandi, the Jokerfication, of Jeanue — nothing more than an intense dislike of the Titanfall franchise, which caused them to push deeper and deeper into murky exploits until they were mighty enough to operate a Blacklist under Respawn’s noses. One of the users in the call dropped in a few videos from 2018 of a Titan zooming around a multiplayer map. This was allegedly Jeanue in their nascent form, well before they had grown truly infamous.

I had my misgivings about all this. The idea that someone made it their life’s mission to grief Titanfall players solely because they didn’t like their K/D ratio was difficult to imagine, and I had no reason to believe that the videos I was shown actually featured Jeanue. (I mean, there are plenty of people out there who can download a speedhack, right?) Mostly though, I was struck by how strident p0 was in his belief that he could fix the exploits in an instant — if only the powers that be at Respawn would seek out his expertise.

“Respawn is incompetent. They removed a lot of the protections from the software engine. Most of this stuff is really easy to fix and incredibly easy to exploit,” he told me. Later he added, “I made a Twitter reply to Respawn saying that I knew a lot about this stuff, and they could contact me and I could help. Many people gave likes and retweets. Someone from Respawn reached out to me, I told them that I knew the game really well, and they left me on read.” This attitude is also present in his Medium treatise, which contains the headline, “How to fix Titanfall. A guide for Respawn.”

But there was a more convincing piece of evidence I received from p0’s camp – a dense, deeply reported dossier, all of which painted a believable narrative about Jeanue’s identity. The information in that document remains unconfirmed, so I will not be revealing its specifics here but, through some intensive internet spelunking, the members of that group call were left to believe that “Jeanue” was a man operating by himself in the southern United States — avouched by a series of uncanny matches in metadata.

Armed with a name and location, I tried to call the suspect on his phone a number of times to no avail. If I could just get him to talk, I thought, maybe we could finally arrive at some closure for this very, very strange saga. With no help from the alleged hacker, I went to the hackee – I reached out to EA directly, and the company passed along a list of questions to Respawn that I hoped would clarify exactly what was going on with Titanfall. Those answers never materialized, and I found myself quickly running out of leads.

Armed with a name and location, I tried to call the suspect on his phone a number of times to no avail. If I could just get him to talk, I thought, maybe we could finally arrive at some closure for this very, very strange saga.

That brings us up to August, where I was laying in bed, reading Operation Red Tape, which contended that p0358 and his accomplices were much more involved in the Titanfall sabotage than they were letting on. In fact, the document claimed that his camp was misleading everyone, and I too had been caught in their snare.

Operation Red Tape

The narrative presented in Operation Red Tape is immense and arcane; if you want an in-depth summary of the findings, I recommend watching Upper Echelon Gamers’ coverage on YouTube, who has been chasing down this story from the start. But I’ll sum up its thesis the best I can. On July 4, Apex Legends — Respawn’s new marquee shooter — was hacked. Players couldn’t get into a match, and were instead greeted by a message that included a link to the URL, “SaveTitanfall.com,” a website that advocates for better custodial management around its namesake game. It appeared to be an odd bit of wildcat activism.

The owners of SaveTitanfall denied responsibility for the breach, as did a Discord administrator named RedShield, who operates a popular Titanfall-centric server called the TF Remnant Fleet alongside p0. Given Apex Legends’ popularity, the hack caused an uproar, and suddenly the debilitated state of old, forgotten Titanfall 2 was international news across the gaming press.

Still with me? Great. Operation Red Tape appeared to blow the lid off those denials. It contained screenshots that seem to show that RedShield was lying about his involvement. He, and a small cabal of hackers, were apparently preparing the Apex Legends security breach for months. Here’s the money quote in the document, from February 6: “Perhaps we don’t hold Titanfall 2/Apex ransom, instead we do it as a publicity stunt,” wrote RedShield. “We lockdown the servers for 48 hours to raise awareness of the issue.”

On July 3, a day before the attack, one of RedShield’s alleged associates wrote, “Are you ready for operation SaveTitanfall.com?”

This is important because within the Operation Red Tape archive, there is evidence that an associate of RedShield launched a DDOS attack against a Titanfall 2 streamer in a way that looks consistent with Jeanue’s manner of working. We’d spent months trying to identify a hacker who seemed to wield outsized power over Respawn servers. Maybe the call was coming from inside the house?

RedShield was interviewed about these attacks by a wide variety of publications — including IGN — and he used the platform he received from the controversy to petition EA to hand over the original Titanfall’s source code so it could be cultivated by the community’s own hand. Why? Well, the report claims that RedShield, along with p0 and others, have been attempting to revive a whole other game – the cancelled, little-known free-to-play Titanfall Online – for their own means. This brought me back to my first conversation with p0, where he mentioned that he had an upcoming project involving Titanfall Online that was “secret for now.”

The narrative presented by Red Tape metastasized across the gaming press. Had we finally answered the Jeanue mystery? Could we lay everything at the feet of a group of hackers launching a fabulously successful false flag campaign to… drive players into an ancient version of Titanfall 1? There was no true smoking gun in the files, but the circumstances were certainly conspicuous and couldn’t be ignored. What was I to make of that Jeanue dossier, which originated from these same implicated characters? I kept reading one screenshot aloud, the one I mentioned at the top of the story about “throwing leads about jean” to an IGN journalist: “Would be nice at the very least to get the people who still think that’s his real identity to shut up kek.”

Someone owed me an explanation and, luckily, p0 picked up on the first ring.

His voice was wavering from the second he started talking. I almost felt bad for him. Here was a talented hacker who was always so cocksure about his abilities — who was openly promoting himself for a job at Respawn — now firmly on the defensive. From the moment we first encountered each other, I always suspected p0 was likely just some kid who’d bitten off way more than he could chew. Now, that reality seemed perfectly clear.

“The SaveTitanfall team betrayed us. They stabbed us in our back. They’re saying that I’m Jeanue, that I attacked Titanfall. It’s false,” says p0, digging his heels in from the second we connected on a Discord call. “And it hurts that they did this because I’ve done the most to fix the game. All they did was whine on social media. I was reverse engineering this game trying to find solutions.”

He defended himself on all fronts. That “jean” mentioned in the screenshot? That’s not in reference to Jeanue, says p0, that’s about a “Jean Onion” who was apparently active on some Titanfall Facebook group. The image that seems to show a streamer getting knocked offline by a RedShield associate? That was probably a test to figure out how Jeanue uses their exploits — nothing malicious, you must know thy enemy.

I wasn’t sure what to believe. It seemed pretty likely that RedShield, and quite possibly p0, were involved in the Apex Legends hack (though he categorically denies it), but I wasn’t convinced that they were the ones tormenting Titanfall 2 streamers for months. Jeanue possessed a single-mindedness that couldn’t be easily replicated, and I frankly didn’t trust a handful of ambitious kids to construct a misdirection crusade that was so disciplined and robust. I mulled over the facts, more confused than ever. Naturally, like clockwork, another twist in the narrative surfaced a few days later, as the veracity of Operation Red Tape was thrown into question.

Not even a week after the document was posted on SaveTitanfall.com, Upper Echelon Gamers obtained Discord transcripts that appear to show one of the perpetrators of the Apex Legends hack, named Dogecore, in collaborative communication with an author of the document, named Wanty. In the transcript, Dogecore appears to ask Wanty if he’d like him to change the message left on the Apex servers by the hackers to something more specific. These messages were sent on July 4, the same day as the breach, and a month before Red Tape was made public.

“Pointing to SaveTitanfall is a good thing though,” replies Wanty, again referring to the calling card left by those who broke into Apex Legends. “We get all the attention in one place.”

This disclosure totally disrupted the narrative. If the voices behind Red Tape, a document which aims to lay the tumult in the Titanfall community at the feet of a handful of duplicitous hackers, are also in active partnership with those same hackers then, well… then nobody knows what to believe anymore. Maybe p0 is right. Maybe he did get railroaded.

Whatever the case, the servers went quiet for a few weeks after all of this uproar. Titanfall 2 was miraculously playable again. The Blacklist was down; Jeanue was nowhere to be seen. Everything was back to normal. For one shining moment, it really didn’t matter who was behind the attacks, because all of that laid in the past. But of course it couldn’t last.

As of press time, players are again reporting sporadic DDOS attacks, although “Jeanue” — whatever that name actually means — hasn’t shown up in any Twitch channels to gloat. After all of the twists and turns, the double-crossings and triple-crossings, we are somehow back at square one. It’s honestly anticlimactic. All anyone wants is to play Titanfall 2 in peace. Why can’t it be that simple?

Unfortunately, this is the inevitability when video game communities are left to their own devices, without active management, support, or curation from a caring group of developers. The servers quickly deteriorate into this bizarre wild west, full of very different kinds of black hats and white hats, and where only the hackers wield true power. In another timeline, where Titanfall 2 remained a top priority for EA and Respawn, all of these bad actors would’ve likely been ousted from the jump. But unfortunately that is not the video game industry we have. The servers of ancient multiplayer servers wither and rot with each passing year, providing cover for a nation of grifters, scammers, and malcontents. Everyone else is caught in the crossfire.

Luke Winkie is a contributing writer to IGN. Follow him on Twitter at @luke_winkie.

Fortnite: How to Find Carnage and Venom Symbiotes

Fortnite Chapter 2, Season 8 brings with it another alien menace in the form of Marvel’s Carnage and Venom. These two symbiotes have recently crashed landed on the island and are ripe for the pickings.

What Are Symbiotes?

The Symbiotes (called Klyntar on their home planet) are extraterrestrial lifeforms that are able to bond to individuals, regardless of species, in order to form a new shared entity. They are parasitic in nature, though they don’t always harm their hosts; they often improve upon a host’s natural attributes while also granting powers like superhuman strength, healing, and the ability to form tendrils or tentacles out of their arms. For more about these parasitic creatures, check out how we ranked Marvel’s most powerful symbiotes and learn more about Venom 2’s Shriek.

In Fortnite, the symbiotes that formed Marvel’s most famous symbiotic characters, Venom and Carnage, were made into wearable Mythic weapons. Once found, the Venom and Carnage Mythic weapons will take up a slot in your inventory, allowing you to glide through the air and jump higher than normal. Activating the weapon sends out a tendril that attacks and pulls enemies, dealing 60 damage in the process. A seven-second cool down prevents constant use.

How to Find Symbiotes in Fortnite

Venom and Carnage’s symbiotes randomly spawn at various places on the island. Only two seem to spawn per match and once they are picked up by a player, they’re gone. At that point, the only way to get your hands on one is to take out whoever is currently using it. Because of this, it can be hard to find the symbiotes during a given match. Thankfully, the guide below will help your chances of bonding with one.

To successfully snag one of these symbiotes, you’ll need to wait for them to spawn during the match. Keep in mind that they don’t spawn at the start of the match. Instead, Venom and Carnage only appear after the first storm circle is revealed. At that point, symbiote/spider-like symbols will show up on the in-game map. This is your cue to head over to those locations as quickly as possible.

Note: The general censuses online is that the symbiotes always spawn after the first storm circle. In my testing, this sometimes didn’t occur. Sometimes they wouldn’t spawn until the second or third storm cycle.

Venom and Carnage Symbiote Spawn Locations

While Venom and Carnage can spawn seemingly anywhere on the map, the two locations they appear in most frequently are the fields just southeast of Boney Burbs and north west of Corny Crops. The symbiotes will be floating in a canister. Just interact with it to grab either Venom or Carnage’s symbiote.

And that’s how you can get your very own symbiote in Fortnite. At least, until the Carnage skin is released with Season 8’s battle pass!

Kenneth Seward Jr. is a freelance writer, editor, and illustrator who covers games, movies, and more. Follow him @kennyufg and on Twitch.

Best Pokemon Games, Ranked From Worst To Best

Pokemon almost immediately took the world by storm. The multimedia juggernaut has become known for a wealth of anime cartoons, blockbuster movies, toys, a trading card game, clothing, collectibles, and of course, video games. That’s not bad for a humble little Japanese RPG about catching wild creatures. The core of Pokemon has always been the main RPG series, which has attracted a passionate fanbase and even spawned a vibrant tournament scene. Those RPGs have each added new elements and features to the long-running franchise, but some were certainly more influential than others. We took a hard look at every mainline Pokemon game and determined which ones are just a cut above. Here are all of the best Pokemon games, ranked from not very effective to super effective.

10. Pokemon Black and White 2

Pokemon Black and White 2
Pokemon Black and White 2

All of the Pokemon games loosely take place within a shared universe, but Black and White 2 is the series’ only actual, canonical sequel. Set two years after Pokemon Black and White, these sequels revolve around the reemergence of Team Plasma. Though it took place in the same region, it featured new towns and areas that hadn’t been accessible in the first game, and a handful of new mechanics. Those included a Pokemon World Tournament that featured famous trainers from the series’ history and a new PokeStar Studio side-game. But while it was an enjoyable follow-up to an already solid Pokemon game, it was a little less novel and didn’t represent the usual degree of change that we see in a whole new Pokemon generation.

See our Pokemon Black and White 2 review.


9. Pokemon: Let’s Go

Pokemon: Let's Go
Pokemon: Let’s Go

This Switch game was something of a warmup while fans eagerly awaited the entirely new generation of Sword and Shield. Pokemon: Let’s Go took a cue from the classic Pokemon Yellow, featuring a similar perspective and buddy system. This time your buddy could be Pikachu or Eevee, depending on which version you played. The structure was essentially a remake of the original Pokemon Yellow, so it featured the same original collection of 151 monsters newly rendered in the Switch’s high-fidelity style. Let’s Go was a cute throwback and a nice way to stay occupied while waiting for the new generation to arrive. It also introduced Pokemon roaming around in the open–a feature that remained in Sword and Shield–and had a streamlined capture system that was pretty similar to Pokemon Go.

See our Pokemon: Let’s Go review.


8. Pokemon Black and White

Pokemon Black and White

Pokemon Black and White was the second new entry on the Nintendo DS, following Diamond and Pearl, and included new features like a changing of the seasons that would open up new areas and impact the looks of a couple of Pokemon themselves. You could also take part in Triple Battles with a team of three Pokemon, allowing for some more complex combat tactics like combination moves. Still, this was the fifth generation of a series widely known as very iterative, and the DS had already gotten its new entries, so some players and critics were starting to tire of the formula.

See our Pokemon Black and White review.


7. Pokemon Diamond and Pearl

Pokemon Diamond and Pearl

Pokemon Diamond and Pearl were the other DS entries, and made a bigger splash on the platform due to taking advantage of the new hardware. The core gameplay changes from the rest of the series were minimal, consisting of fine-tuning like adjustments to attack types and the addition of a Pokemon Contests mini-game. But Diamond and Pearl are most notable for the first appearance of the Global Trade Station, or GTS. By taking advantage of the DS’ WiFi connection, players from all over the world could connect and trade their captured monsters. Trading has been core to the series’ identity from the very beginning, and this was a major innovation that helped realize the concept’s full potential. Though the early online steps were clunky and awkward by modern standards, they helped pave the way for Nintendo to continue to iterate with its online trading features. These games are also set to get remakes, titled Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl, on the Nintendo Switch later this year.

See our Pokemon Diamond and Pearl review.


6. Pokemon Sun and Moon

Pokemon Sun and Moon

The second Nintendo 3DS Pokemon entries felt notably different from a lot of their predecessors. Perhaps in part because of the new tropical setting based loosely on Hawaii, called Alola, the environment and the look of the characters was vastly different than anything that came before. The game included a few new features as well, like an increased level of character customization. It also brought about new Alolan forms of Pokemon, regional variants of classic faves that, according to the lore, evolved differently based on their environment. That idea would be carried forward in the subsequent Sword and Shield, and it’s a popular-enough feature that we’d expect it to continue even further. Sun and Moon were also unique for having been followed up with a pair of enhanced editions, Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon, only a year after their original release.

See our Pokemon Sun and Moon review.


5. Pokemon Sword and Shield

Pokemon Sword and Shield

The most recent games in the Pokemon canon for Nintendo Switch made some significant changes, some more popular than others. The most controversial change came before the game was even released with the announcement that The Pokemon Company would break with tradition and no longer have support for all prior Pokemon, as the Pokedex had ballooned to massive size. It did add a total of 81 new monsters, as well as 13 regional variants, though.

Sword and Shield traded the previous two games’ Mega Evolutions for a new element of growing your Pokemon to kaiju-size using Gigantimaxing–which went hand-in-hand with a new giant raid boss mechanic. The games also introduced the Wild Area, special zones within the game world teeming with visible wild Pokemon roaming free. In the Wild Area, you had free control over the camera to scope out Pokemon and engage them at will for battles and captures.

Pokemon Sword and Shield are also the first Pokemon to introduce large-scale post-launch expansions. The Isle of Armor and The Crown Tundra DLC packs came in the summer and fall after release, respectively, and reintroduced some of the Pokemon that had been removed from the initial game, along with new Pokemon and variants.

See our Pokemon Sword and Shield review.

4. Pokemon Ruby and Sapphire

Pokemon Ruby and Sapphire

The Game Boy Advance brought the third generation of Pokemon games, Ruby and Sapphire. By this point, the template had been set for what a new Pokemon game would be: another truckload of monsters to collect, a new story, and some new features. This time, the games got a graphical upgrade from the Game Boy versions, along with Double Battles that use two Pokemon at a time. These versions also brought about Pokemon abilities for further strategic customization. Plus, you could link with up to four players at a time instead of only two. At the same time, some players felt the series was already starting to become rote, and the difficulty importing Pokemon from the previous Game Boy generations caused some stir among fans.

See our Pokemon Omega Ruby and Omega Sapphire review.


3. Pokemon X and Y

Pokemon X and Y

The first entries on the 3DS, Pokemon X and Y, were released in 2013 but remained popular for a long time afterward, due to their sheer quality, game balance, and wealth of features. These entries were the first to use a fully 3D presentation, and introduced the new Fairy Pokemon type to help counterbalance the powerful Dragon type. This generation also introduced the new Mega Evolutions, which would let fully evolved Pokemon temporarily take on a special new form. And on top of all that, the games still peppered in new content and quality-of-life features, like sky battles, horde battles, and a Tamagotchi-like mode called Pokemon-Amie. While they stuck to tradition like many other Pokemon games of its era, X and Y were just well-crafted enough that fans didn’t mind too much.

See our Pokemon X and Y review.


2. Pokemon Red, Blue, and Yellow

Pokemon Blue, Red, and Yellow

The original games that started a global phenomenon. These Game Boy classics lack some of the fit and finish that would come in later iterations of the franchise, but they still hold up incredibly well. All of the major pieces that make a Pokemon game great are present here, including a lengthy monster-catching story, charming chiptune music, a rival character nipping at your heels, and of course, the existence of rare and hard-to-find legendary pokemon. These games set the template for all that was to follow, and included some of the most all-time iconic Pokemon designs, like Charizard, Pikachu, and Gengar.

Pokemon Red and Blue were released first, encouraging the cross-game trading aspect that continues to to be a staple of the series. Pokemon Yellow followed just a year later in America, capitalizing on the massive breakout popularity of Pokemon with an enhanced version that paid direct homage to the popular anime cartoon series. In Yellow, instead of picking your starter Pokemon, you’re given a Pikachu just like Ash on TV (though you can obtain the three starters later). Just like in the anime, your starter Pikachu remains his cute little self and never evolves into Raichu. Some of the trainers were also either added or had their appearances changed to more closely resemble the anime series.

See our Pokemon Red/Blue/Yellow review.


1. Pokemon Gold, Silver, and Crystal

Pokemon Gold and Silver

Nestled between the series’ humble beginnings and a feeling of deja vu that set in for many of its sequels, Pokemon Gold and Silver were the sophomore effort that hit the sweet spot for many fans. Released on the Game Boy Color, these sequels brought back all of the original Pokemon from Red and Blue with new enhanced looks, while adding another 100 new pocket monsters to collect. Like Red and Blue, it was heavily reliant on a trading mechanic, with Gold and Silver offering slightly different collections to encourage eager trainers to engage with their community and friends.

But far from a simple retread, Pokemon Gold and Silver introduced almost as many new mechanics and features to the series as the original. Those included a day-night cycle and weekly calendar, so certain Pokemon would only appear at certain times of day or on specific days of the week. Pokemon gained the ability to hold items that would restore health or improve passive stats. Gold and Silver introduced new “Shiny” Pokemon, extremely rare variants with special coloring and enhanced stats. They also added not one but two new pokemon types: Steel and Dark, to counter Poison and Psychic Pokemon, respectively. And they introduced Pokemon breeding, which let players pair their favorite monsters to produce a new egg that would hatch into a Pokemon that inherited stat bonuses from its parents.

Pokemon Gold and Silver remains one of the most content rich iterations in the franchise. In addition to the eight gyms in the Johto region, Gold and Silver took players back to the original Kanto setting for a second set of badges, effectively making the experience feel like two games in one.

Pokemon Gold and Silver are still considered by many fans to be a high-water mark for the series. Like Red and Blue, Gold and Silver received an enhanced version called Pokemon Crystal. This was mostly similar to Gold and Silver, though it had a few notable additions. It let players pick their character’s gender for the first time, it added new start-of-battle animations, and it introduced the Battle Tower for a gauntlet of Pokemon bouts. Gold and Silver also received critically acclaimed remakes, Heartgold and Soulsilver, on the Nintendo DS in 2009.

See our Pokemon HeartGold and SoulSilver review.

Iron Banter – This Week In Destiny 2: Ager’s Scepter, All About Uldren, Season 16

Just about every week brings something new to Destiny 2, whether it’s story beats, new activities, or interesting new combinations of elements that let players devastate each other in the Crucible. Iron Banter is our weekly look at what’s going on in the world of Destiny and a rundown of what’s drawing our attention across the solar system.

Let’s all take a moment this week and celebrate the fact that, thanks to the excellent new Trials of Osiris changes, I got my first Flawless run and trip to the Lighthouse this week, with the help of GameSpot’s own David Ahmadi. Everything Bungie has done for Trials with this revamp is excellent, and while it still needs one more big tweak, the developer said in this week’s TWAB that it’s already working to address my concerns. Truly nice work here, Bungie.

Now Playing: Destiny 2 Players NEED To Play Trials of Osiris

I’m itching to dig back into Trials today, so let’s hurry up and take a look at all the other, non-Trials stuff going on in Destiny 2 this week. Before we move on, though, you should know that Xur has some amazing Legendary guns this week. He’s in the Tower. Go clean him out.

I’m Going To Become The Joker Mr. Freeze

After a few weeks of seeking out whatever Atlas Skews are in the Dreaming City, we’ve finally seen the culmination of this season’s Exotic quest and claimed its reward: Ager’s Scepter. If you’re still hunting the new Exotic trace rifle, check out our Ager’s Scepter guide to speed you along. Meanwhile, let’s talk about why this is the best Stasis weapon we’ve yet seen.

Ager’s Scepter is, effectively, a freeze ray–in fact, it’s almost exactly Mr. Freeze’s gun from Batman: The Animated Series, where he just zaps people with it and encases them in ice. Ager’s Scepter does something similar, dishing out damage to enemies while slowing and eventually freezing them solid.

What makes it awesome, though, is the way it chews through lots of enemies very quickly. Every time you land a final blow with Ager’s Scepter, the baddie explodes in a burst of cold energy, slowing everything around them. What’s more, with every Stasis final blow you land, Ager’s Scepter gets reloaded from reserves. So firing the gun into groups of weaker minion enemies in PvE allows you to create a cascading wave of freezing death, annihilating enemies fast. It was great in this week’s Shattered Realm (which has new Ascendant Mysteries, if you missed them–they’re the best secrets we’ve yet seen in the activity).

Here’s the thing, though: With the right build, Ager’s Scepter becomes a Stasis powerhouse. Throw on your Stasis subclass and pair it with something like the Exotic Warlock chest armor, Mantle of Battle Harmony, and suddenly Ager’s Scepter is a generator for your Super. It also synergizes extremely well with various Stasis fragments, like Whisper of Fissures, which expands the explosive impact of Stasis crystals, and Whisper of Bonds, which provides Super energy for defeating frozen targets.

For PvE activities, Ager’s Scepter is pretty excellent; I’ve had less luck with it in PvP, although I want to do more testing. It seems like a gun that could excel in modes like Iron Banner, where lots of Guardians are running around and the cascade Stasis effect of the gun could be more potent. In smaller 3-on-3 matches, though, the gun feels like it runs out of ammo before it can be fully effective, making it less reliable. Still, it seems like Ager’s Scepter provides a ton of build possibilities, and in the right hands and with the right team, it’s already clear that it can be devastating in tough activities.

Plus it’s a lot of fun to just sweep through enemies like you’re a Gotham supervillain.

I Am Tired Of This Family; Their Matters

In broad terms, this whole year has been All About Uldren, but each week, the train with “Crow learns some messed-up things about his past and loses it” written on the side barrels a little closer to flying off a cliff, Back to the Future III-style. This week really gives an indication of how much the future hinges on Crow, in fact. Mara and Petra are working very hard to keep Crow away from Savathun, who, in Crow’s estimation, was the Osiris who befriended him and helped save him from mean Guardians who hated his Uldren Sov face. Eventually, Crow is going to get to Savathun, and who knows what happens then–but it really seems like Crow could find out who murdered him, who betrayed him, who let him become what he is, and get a little…upset about it.

It’s not just Savathun that has plans for Crow, though. In both the Ager’s Scepter quest and in this week’s dialogue and lore drop, we’re seeing more of what Mara has in mind for the man who used to be her brother. Crow doesn’t know his past, but Mara seems to be slowly trying to manipulate him into learning more about who he was. It’s really sounding like her ultimate goal is to bring something of Uldren back in Crow, maybe to hone him into the ally and weapon she always hoped he would be, but as we learned in Tracing the Stars and A Hollow Coronation, that he was never quite capable of being.

I enjoyed this week’s story because it complicates Mara some. She has seemed very cold, callous, and calculating, and a lot of her comments about Uldren made it sound like she thought of him as a weak and easily manipulated fool. That carries forward with the Crow situation–Mara is all about accruing power, and a super-loyal Guardian brother would help her become very powerful. But dialogue on the radio this week, and other lore drops like that in the Ripples book, suggest Mara isn’t quite so heartless as her moves might make her seem. She’s mad about what happened to Uldren, and maybe struggling to come to grips with her role in it. Mara’s got some kind of greater plan going on here, and it sounds like vengeance for Uldren–against the Vanguard, even–might be part of it.

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Oh, and hey–what if that wish Mara is planning on making with her Ahamkara egg is to give Crow his memories of being Uldren?

Speaking of vengeance and family, Savathun sure said some weird and scary things this week, huh. We’re seeing a deepening of the relationship between Savathun and Xivu Arath–provided, of course, we can believe anything Savathun says–and she suggested that everything she’s done has been for family, in some regard or another. She also mentioned that she’s not so different from us, that she would do anything to avenge her family, likening it to our quest for vengeance for Cayde-6 back in the Forsaken campaign. Again, that was a campaign for vengeance against Uldren Sov. We’re headed for a breaking point in this story and who knows what will happen with Crow when everything comes to light.

We killed Oryx way back in the Kingsfall raid in Destiny 1’s expansion, The Taken King, after we also killed his son, Crota, in a different raid. Then Savathun and Riven messed with Uldren’s mind and he killed Cayde-6. Then we hunted down Uldren and killed him. Now Mara’s making plans about what she’s going to do about it. Looking at it this way, we’ve got a huge, intense circle of murder and retribution going on between us, Savathun, and Mara, and it’s not clear how past resentments and anger and grief are coloring the actions and agendas of anyone involved.

There is also a lingering theory in the Destiny community that Savathun (and maybe Xivu Arath) are secretly executing a long-term plan to resurrect their brother, Oryx, the Taken King. Savathun’s comments might give a hint that that theory is on the right track. We know that Savathun lies a lot, but also that she likes to pepper in truth as part of the misdirection. My Name is Byf actually did a great video this week that focused on a lore entry on the Chrysura Melo auto rifle, which points out all the clues Savathun left as part of her deceptions over the last year or more. This discussion of her devotion to family jives with lore entries about Savathun and her feelings of missing her siblings; she might be telling us her real plan right here, daring us to realize it.

Anyway, read the Chrysura Melo lore entry when you have a second, because it also gives us a look at how Savathun’s Song actually works, and that feels like it’ll soon be relevant, too.

Season Of The Witch

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Last week, I mentioned an interview I did with Destiny 2 director Joe Blackburn and general manager Justin Truman. We talked about a lot of stuff in a relatively short time in that interview. I already wrote about what we can expect from The Witch Queen expansion based on that conversation, and this week, I’ve got some insights from the bosses of Destiny about what we can expect from the seasonal model in 2022.

To me, the seasonal content model has been really impressive this year, and it sounds like Bungie is pretty happy with the way it’s been able to lay down bits of story and new activities each week. In Season 16, which will launch alongside The Witch Queen, it we can expect adjustments to how Bungie handles loot and rewards with seasons. Blackburn and Turman said they want to make sure that seasons are just as rewarding as activities like raids, dungeons, and new story campaigns, so you’re not just feeling like you can skip on seasonal content in favor of other things.

It’ll be interesting to see how that shakes out in practical terms, but Bungie has been firing on all cylinders with this year’s seasons–the guns are good, the activities are good, the story is good. I’m very excited to see how things can be improved further in February. So check out the interview about Season 16 and beyond.

As always, there’s a lot I’m glossing over from Destiny 2 this week, so leave your thoughts in the comments below.