Here’s Everything Coming To Call Of Duty: Black Ops Cold War This Week

A new week means Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War is getting new playlists, store bundles, and more. Perhaps the most notable new addition this week is the new 12v12 moshpit mode that’s coming to Black Ops Cold War. Activision detailed this week’s upcoming update in a Call of Duty blog post on May 10, and we’re highlighting some of the details here.

Black Ops Cold War New Playlists

Players can go for a more hectic experience as 12v12 matches will be playable on the standard 6v6 maps in Black Ops Cold War. This 24-player mode will become available in a moshpit of respawn game modes on Thursday, May 13.

A new Gunfight tournament will also start on May 13 with new exclusive rewards. As announced previously, the rewards from the previous tournaments will still be available to earn, you just need to replay and win the tournament bracket again to unlock the past rewards.

And the Party Games playlist will continue this week for those wanting to enjoy more Prop Hunt, Gun Game, and Sticks and Stones.

Black Ops Cold War And Warzone Store Bundles

If you’re looking to drop some cash on new cosmetics, the Tracer Pack: Antonov Operator bundle hits the store this week. The main feature of this bundle is the Legendary Meltdown Operator Skin. It will also include two Legendary Weapon Blueprints that boast nuclear tracer fire and dismemberment effects, a wrist accessory, weapon charm, animated emblem, animated calling card, and a vehicle skin.

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Another new bundle, the Tracer Pack: Tropical, will come packed with three Legendary Weapon Blueprints. It also includes a tropical-themed finishing move, weapon charm, the calling card, and sticker.

The Drifter is a western-themed bundle of four items. It includes a tactical rifle blueprint, new reticle, Stone’s High Plains Operator Skin, and a calling card.

Finally, the Music Legend Mastercraft bundle is a pack of right items. This features Wolf’s Legendary Rockstar Operator Skin, the heavy metal-themed Ultra Shredder assault rifle Mastercraft, the Amped Up pistol blueprint, a weapon charm, vehicle skin, watch, and a calling card.

In other news, Activision is teasing the arrival of ’80s action heroes to Call of Duty: Warzone.

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Call Of Duty: Warzone May Be Coming To Mobile Devices Per Activision Mobile Job Listings

Activision’s Call of Duty: Warzone may soon be claiming your cell phone, as a recent job posting from the company on LinkedIn may have inadvertently revealed Call of Duty’s battle royale is coming to mobile devices.

The post–which has since been edited–originally mentioned both Call of Duty Mobile and Warzone as separate focuses for prospective applicants. “Teams are focused on Live Operations and content expansion across CoD Mobile and Warzone,” the post explained. “Our dev teams are dedicated to mobile and comprised of all major disciplines.”

An image of the original screenshot as posted by Charlie Intel is below:

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The same post has been edited to say “teams are focused on Live Operations and content expansion across Call of Duty” instead of naming CoD Mobile or Warzone directly.

Call of Duty Mobile, the current mobile Call of Duty experience, does offer a battle royale mode in addition to other traditional multiplayer modes. The app just surpassed 500 million downloads and $1 billion in revenue for Activision since its October 2019 launch. Call of Duty: Warzone, meanwhile, has according to Activision “transformed” the Call of Duty franchise.

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Capcom Has Broken Its Profit Records for the Fourth Year in a Row

Capcom has revealed that it has hit record-high profits for the fourth consecutive year, with much of that success coming down to Monster Hunter Rise and Resident Evil 3 sales.

In a press release regarding its last fiscal year, Capcom announced net sales were up 16.8%, operating income was up 51.6%, ordinary income was up 51.8%, and net income to the parent company was up 56.3%.

The developer of franchises such as Devil May Cry, Monster Hunter, and Resident Evil attributed much of the success to new entries in core franchises like Monster Hunter Rise (which shipped 4 million copies in its first weekend alone) and the remake of Resident Evil 3. However, it also recognised the continued success of previously released games and expansions like Monster Hunter World: Iceborne, which have seen gamers jumping in retroactively, no doubt down to new entries in the franchise bringing in new players. It also cites strong sales for next-gen versions of games like Devil May Cry 5 Special Edition.

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Not only did this lead to the fourth consecutive year of record profits, but also the eighth consecutive year of operating income growth. Despite receiving the pandemic-related boost that many video game companies have shown in the past year, Capcom’s forecasting that it will beat its income and profit records again next year. That will clearly rely on the continuation of the company’s strategy of releasing a combination of new titles and providing post-launch support for existing games.

Capcom has clearly noticed the popularity of its games in Western markets, stating it saw “growth in overseas revenue due to realizing both expansion of its regional markets and longer product lives for its titles”. It also experienced strong results from digital promotion: “Capcom’s core Digital Contents business drove results with continued success in promoting digital sales”. This is likely a combination of the trend towards gamers purchasing more on digital storefronts, and also COVID-19 closing physical retail sites for much of the year.

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None of this is particularly surprising as Capcom’s games and franchises have been growing from strength to strength over the past few years. With Resident Evil Village launching last week, and upcoming games like The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles and Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin coming later this summer, the train shows no sign of slowing down just yet.

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Liam Wiseman is a Freelance News Writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @liamthewiseman

Activision No Longer Working With Call of Duty Actor After Sexist Comments

Activision has said that it will no longer work with Call of Duty voice actor Jeff Leach after a series of sexist comments Leach has made surfaced on social media.

Leach was responsible for the voice of Simon ‘Ghost’ Riley in 2019’s Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and Call of Duty Mobile. As part of a Twitter thread from YouTuber NitroLukeDX, a video featuring some of Leach’s past remarks has been circulating on social media. The video includes clips from Leach, across multiple streams, making explicit, sexual, and hateful remarks about women.

The video below includes offensive language:

Activision provided a statement to CharlieIntel on May 8 condemning the actor’s remarks, and cutting professional ties with him. “Sexism has no place in our industry, our games or in society,” Activision said. “Activision is no longer working with Jeff Leach. We strongly condemn these remarks. We are committed to delivering a fun and safe experience for all players.”

Leach was previously banned from Twitch for comments made about streamer TheZombiUnicorn in 2017, and has since become a streamer on Facebook Gaming. Facebook has not commented at time of writing. TheZombiUnicorn has since posted a response to the new video of Leach, calling on platforms and sponsors supporting Leach to take action.

Leach has not outwardly commented on the video, or Activision’s decision to cut ties with him, but (seemingly due to fan backlash over the decision) tweeted to say that “anyone who sends threatening messages is not representative of me or my community and I do not condone this is [sic] any way.” In replies on Twitter, Leach has been defending his actions on stream, saying that the later clips are responses to trolls in his chat and he was using his experience “as a professional comic” to “destroy them.”

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Jordan Oloman is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Twitter.

SpaceX to Launch a Dogecoin-Funded Satellite to the Moon Next Year

Elon Musk has announced that SpaceX will launch a satellite to the moon next year, which will be funded entirely by the cryptocurrency dogecoin.

Geometric Energy Corporation shared news of the “DOGE-1 Mission to the Moon” on Sunday, with the SpaceX boss confirming in a follow-up tweet that he had accepted the meme-inspired cryptocurrency as full payment for the lunar mission. DOGE-1 is planned to launch in the first quarter of 2022, and will be responsible for delivering the “first crypto in space” and the “first meme in space,” says Musk.

The mission itself will see the SpaceX team attach a 40kg CubeSat to a Falcon 9 rocket, specifically designed to transport people and payloads into Earth orbit and beyond. According to the GEC, the miniaturized satellite will then proceed with its mission to “obtain lunar-spatial intelligence from sensors and cameras on-board with integrated communications and computational systems.”

Image credit: Flickr/SpaceX - CRS-21 Mission
Image credit: Flickr/SpaceX – CRS-21 Mission

“This mission will demonstrate the application of cryptocurrency beyond Earth orbit and set the foundation for interplanetary commerce”, SpaceX Vice President of Commercial Sales Tom Ochinero was quoted as saying in the statement released by Canada’s Geometric Energy Corporation this past weekend. “We’re excited to launch DOGE-1 to the Moon!”

The announcement of the DOGE-1 mission marks another major step towards cryptocurrency being accepted into mainstream business, as SpaceX’s latest pursuit emerges as the first-ever commercial lunar payload in history to be financed entirely by dogecoin, which could potentially set a new precedent for future missions in outer space.

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“Having officially transacted with DOGE for a deal of this magnitude, Geometric Energy Corporation and SpaceX have solidified DOGE as a unit of account for lunar business in the space sector,” Geometric Energy’s Chief Executive Officer Samuel Reid said in a statement alongside the official announcement of the company’s collaboration.

The mission is also clearly inspired, at least in part, by the viral dogecoin meme that popularized the idea of taking the cryptocurrency to the moon. Musk previously adopted the “to the moon” mantra in a tweet that seemingly revealed the company’s plans, albeit on April Fool’s Day. “SpaceX is going to put a literal Dogecoin on the literal moon,” he wrote.

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For more about SpaceX, take a look at the company’s plans to race remote-controlled cars on the Moon this year and then read about how SpaceX is building NASA’s new Lunar Lander. Also check out this story about SpaceX’s successful launch of 60 Starlink satellites into orbit and then find out about the SpaceX mission that used a Baby Yoda doll as a zero-gravity indicator last November.

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Adele Ankers is a Freelance Entertainment Journalist. You can reach her on Twitter.

Is 2021 the Right Time to Start Going Back to Cons?

Kerry Dixon hasn’t had a free summer in a decade. He runs the San Diego Comic-Con Unofficial Blog, and he usually spends May, June, and July, chasing down every rumor, booking, and itinerary he can find for the thousands of travelers who pass through the convention center each year. But in 2020, the world ground to a sudden halt. Conventions, concerts, festivals, and pretty much every other major public event simply couldn’t exist under the shadow of a global pandemic, and Dixon had a lot of time on his hands that he was never burdened with before.

“I was mostly concerned about the artists and small vendors,” says Dixon, over email, when asked to describe the fallout of last year. “While attendees might be sad that they can’t go, and I certainly missed seeing my friends, for artists and small vendors San Diego Comic-Con is where many of them make a large portion of their income for the year.”

But now, Dixon is preparing to come out of hibernation. San Diego Comic-Con is mounting a return for Thanksgiving weekend — with the hope that by then, COVID will finally be behind us. Dixon notes that currently, nobody knows much about what the proceedings will look like. Is Comic-Con going to be much smaller? Will it only be open to domestic travelers?

Hell, will it be restricted to California residents only? All of that is up in the air, as Dixon calculates what it’s going to feel like to be out on the floor, surrounded by strangers.

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Can live events work in 2021?

“I think everyone’s comfort level will depend on how things look closer to November,” says Dixon. “If case counts are low, if it seems like we’ve mostly got this thing beat, if we’ve all had months of being vaccinated and feeling ‘normal,’ whatever that means now — I think it’s going to be a really nice reunion event for many of us.”

It’s a familiar feeling for many, across the world, who are grappling with the idea of returning to packed events after more than a year away. Events everywhere have already announced their 2021 return. Bonnaroo is planning an October return, and artists everywhere are releasing belated tour dates that will carve up the back half of the year.

Fans and promoters are hoping for a normal 2021, as vaccine campaigns slowly chip away at the tide of the pandemic. Some people are chomping at the bit to finally have their regular schedules back, and others are gun shy about making their way back to the fold. But after a year indoors, those who’d want to actually attend those events are processing the future of social contact in their own way.

One thing is clear: The live events industry needs good news. COVID, and the resulting deluge of shelter-in-place orders, has absolutely devastated the sector. In a survey sent out last July to production companies, rental shops, and design firms by the publication Live Design, three quarters of the respondents said they’ve lost over 75 percent of their total business (and a similar number said they were forced to lay off or furlough staff).

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Mikayla Moyer, a marketing director who worked at Live Nation until May of last year, remembers the fallout well. “I have so many former co-workers who had to run a face-slap gamut: first their salaries were cut, then they were put on furlough, then finally they were let go altogether,” she says. There was no recourse; no chance to pivot, or recoup expenses, or explore other business models. Everyone in the industry just needed to hold on until the world reached the other side.

“There’s a concept in all live event contracts called Force Majeure — it’s a clause that essentially negates any party’s liability in the event of an ‘Act of God.’ A major storm, natural disaster, a coup, and so on,” continues Moyer. “If something major and majorly unplanned happens — that affects all parties negatively and equally — you buckle down and weather it together, rather than finger pointing.

I think once the writing was on the wall, everyone just took a Force Majeure mentality: this huge thing just happened. Let’s try and help where we can, but after a point, you just have to submit to the natural order of the world. And sometimes that means just sitting and waiting.”

The good news is that many health experts predict that concerts, conventions, and trade shows will be able to operate without incident in the relatively near future as more citizens carry shots in their arms. That is the thinking put forth by Dr. Amesh Adalja at Johns Hopkins University, who tells IGN that if an organizer is running an event where the majority of people are going to be vaccinated, it can go on in a “relatively safe manner.”

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“But so long as there are unvaccinated individuals there, and there surely will be unvaccinated people at these types of events, there’s going to need to be mitigation issues. If you’re running a venue, you need to be sure that people are still following the common sense regulations,” he continues. “There are some innovative solutions — at a concert, you could have vaccinated-only sections where people don’t mix — you have more flexibility. But with a mixed audience, it’s going to be more difficult.”

Like so many in-person, sizable events, so much of the planning relies on numbers. New data from the CDC show that cases are decreasing across the country on average, but remain high in specific parts of the States.

On May 5th, the CDC reported that daily cases decreased about 12 percent on average, but some states are still seeing high caseloads. Alongside the medical community, the CDC is recommending people get their full vaccine shots. If cases grow in counties and cities where big festivals are being planned, like San Diego or New York City, it could change how organizers and attendees feel about venturing out.

Dr. Adalja reiterates that the vaccines on the market are highly effective, and speaking for himself as a fully inoculated person, he wouldn’t have any qualms about attending a major event. The United States is on the brink of having half of its population vaccinated, and there’s hope that soon society will re-enter some semblance of normalcy by the summer. Fingers crossed.

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Legally, organizers behind giant festivals and events are covering themselves, too. Bonnarroo’s ticket sale confirmation includes a clause stating that festival goers “voluntarily assume all risks related to exposure to COVID-19,” as reported by Rolling Stone. There’s no denying an inherent risk that comes with being in a large group of bodies, even as vaccinations roll out across the country.

Medical experts are looking at a future where herd immunity doesn’t exist. There’s no way for events to guarantee safety, but as people start reintegrating into the world it’s up to individuals, organizers, and public health officials to set guidelines for the safest way to get back to some form of normalcy.

That thought is echoed by another Comic-Con blogger, who goes by The Swag Collector online, who feels entirely comfortable with his health status. “With the way things are moving, I’m not at all nervous about the idea of attending a crowded indoor event later this year,” they say. “I’m in good health and I’ve been vaccinated. I’m not in one of the high-risk demographics.”

Still, some customers remain a little nervous about the return. 27-year old Sarah Thomas has attended EDM festival, Electric Daisy Carnival, annually for the last seven years. 2020 wasn’t going to be any different. She purchased her ticket when she got home from the festival in 2019, long before COVID was a fixture in any of our vocabularies, and looked forward to keeping the tradition alive. Of course, the pandemic made landfall in the United States in early March, and suddenly the idea of showing up for a massive, springtime rave appeared untenable.

EDC was pushed to October 2020, and then May 2021, where it is still scheduled to go on today. Thomas has held onto her ticket throughout the ebbs and flows of past year, waiting for the chaos to finally let up. But once again, she’s made the difficult decision to postpone her eventual return to live events to an even later date. Even now, after 13 months of quarantine, it’s still easy for many people to feel a little uncomfortable about partying with strangers.

“EDC is something I look forward to annually and having a ticket throughout the pandemic gave me hope for the future of events once it passed,” says Thomas, in an interview with IGN. “A lot of factors went into my decision to transfer my ticket. I felt very uncertain and anxious about whether or not the event is going to happen based on lack of information from [event organizer] Insomniac, lack of an approved safety plan, and the current status with vaccinations.

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Due to that uncertainty, I had not yet requested PTO from my employer or booked flights and a hotel. With an announcement so close to the event date, the cost of travel has now gone way up.”

Sarah also notes that she hasn’t been able to schedule a vaccine in her state, and did not feel comfortable making her way to rave without the jab.

But EDC hasn’t slowed down. Barring any unforeseen catastrophe, the festival will make landfall in Las Vegas on May 21 to 23 — marking one of the first major formal public gatherings of the COVID Covid era. EDC organizer Pasquale Rotella estimates that 200,000 people will attend, and that EDC is going to institute a “health pass” system, which is planned to verify entrants for vaccine data or recent COVID tests. Considering that the event is held outside, where COVID does not spread nearly as effectively, the risk factors facing EDC are relatively low.

In the meantime, many will be buying concert and con tickets for the months ahead, trusting that we’ll all be out of this hell by the time the date arrives. Alyssa Bereznak, a writer in Los Angeles who recently got her second dose, just booked her calendar for a Japanese Breakfast show in October. She has no idea how she’ll react. “I anticipate that the whole thing will feel like some kind of rebirth,” says Bereznak. “I’m sure I’ll cry.” With luck, we’ll all be having the best nights of our lives, very soon.

“As soon as all my friends are fully vaccinated, we are f**king celebrating. So by the time I arrive at The Regent in October, things won’t feel so foreign, and the trauma of the pandemic will have faded a bit,” she says. “I have a feeling that by the fall, I’ll be less concerned about getting COVID at a concert than I will be with missing my bedtime on a Sunday night. But who knows, maybe everything could go wrong! If 2020 taught me anything, it’s to prepare for the worst.”

Netflix’s Jupiter’s League Gets New Action-Packed Behind-The-Scenes Video

Netflix has released a thrilling behind-the-scenes video offering Jupiter’s Legacy fans insights into how the first episode’s climactic hilltop battle scene featuring the supervillain Blackstar was actually filmed. In a little over three minutes, the actors and crew break down how they filled three months with planning for this scene alone.

“The challenge of this sequence is we have a massive, tone-setting action piece with about nine different characters,” says Philip J. Silvera, the production’s stunt coordinator. “And there’s a lot of story to tell, and a lot of action to show in a very short amount of time.”

As actor Josh Duhamel, who plays The Utopian, says, this short video is a great reminder of how “tedious” huge setpieces can be to produce, but with careful attention to detail, “the cumulative effect of it all [will make it] really intense.”

Jupiter’s Legacy debuted on Netflix on May 7, and its first season has eight episodes. Based on this video, the show is making good on its promise to have a huge cast and massive explosions–and serves as a good reminder that Marvel and DC aren’t the only homes for superheroes. The streaming service’s series is an adaptation of long-running comic from creator Mark Millar (Kick-Ass, Kingsman), which has been going since 2013 and its content spans an impressive timeline featuring one generation of superheroes passing the torch to a younger one.

While you await word on whether there will be a Season 2, you can check out what other goodness is hitting Netflix over the month of May.

Notorious Horror Movie Faces Of Death To be Remade By Cam Filmmakers

Controversial horror movie Faces of Death is getting a remake. The new version of the 1978 film will be written by Isa Mazzei and directed by Daniel Goldhaber. The pair previously made the acclaimed 2018 psychological horror Cam.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the rights to Faces of Death have been picked up by Godzilla vs. Kong producers Legendary Entertainment. The site states that the company hopes to kickstart a new franchise.

The original Faces of Death is part of so-called mondo subgenre, and consisted of gruesome footage of supposedly real-life deaths, presented by pathologist Francis B. Gröss (in fact actor Michael Carr). The footage is a mix of real and fake, from real-life car accidents to staged executions and cannibalism. The original film was a big hit on VHS in the US, and was followed by three sequels. In the UK, the movie was banned as part of the “video nasty” scare of the early ’80s, and footage of real-life animal violence remains cut from the film to this day.

The new movie will reportedly focus on a moderator of a video website who encounters a group that is obsessed with Faces of Death and is recreating the deaths from the movie. But as in the original film, it becomes increasingly unclear if the killings are real or not.

Cam was released by Netflix in November 2018. GameSpot’s review stated that it “works as a gripping, creepy horror thriller and as a topical, provocative satire, but never forgets to put its characters ahead of both aspects.”

Resident Evil Village’s Lady Dimitrescu Was Brought To Life With The Help Of A Very Angry Stick

Standing at 9’6″ there isn’t anyone alive that could properly provide motion capture for Resident Evil Village’s Lady Dimitrescu. To bring the big lady to life, Capcom paired up motion capture actress Maggie Robertson with an extremely unhappy stick.

Since she started posting on Twitter on May 6, Robertson has been interacting with the Lady Dimitrescu fans of the internet. Once the game launched though, she was finally able to share some of the work that went into Resident Evil Village behind-the-scenes. That includes just how the team at Capcom managed to create the scenes with Lady Dimitrescu.

On Twitter, Robertson shared a picture of herself with the stand-in for Lady Dimitrescu, a large pole with a foam topper. To match Lady Dimitrescu’s demeanor, it even has some angry eyes and a frown. The stand-in was used to accurately “mark Lady D’s actual size and eye lines.”

Besides showing off the stand-in for Lady Dimitrescu, Robertson shared another video of behind-the-scenes footage featuring herself and the motion capture artists for Chris Redfield and Village’s protagonist Ethan Winters. It shows the motion-capture footage for multiple scenes, including one where Lady Dimitrescu sucks blood from Ethan’s hand. To be honest, that one looks a little awkward.

While the in-game version of Lady Dimitrescu is tall, ominous, and threatening, her stand-in is just, well, tall. Credit where credit’s due though, the developers at Capcom were able to accurately animate Lady D thanks to her talented mo-cap artist and a stick with some foam.

Resident Evil Village recently claimed the crown for the highest peak player count in the franchise, at least on PC. The game broke 100,000 concurrent players on Steam and even managed to nab more than 620,000 viewers on Twitch at one time. Resident Evil Village is currently available on PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Stadia, and PC.

Now Playing: Resident Evil Village Video Review

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MTG: Modern Horizons 2 Cards Are Up for Preorder

Heads up, Magic: The Gathering players. The upcoming MTG expansion Modern Horizons 2 cards are now available for preorder. The release date on this set is June 18, but you can ensure you’ll get some booster packs on day one by locking in your preorder now.

Preorders are available in a number of varieties, from a 3-booster draft pack and a 15-card collector booster, all the way up to a box of 20 booster packs that gets you a grand total of 360 cards. These are popular items, so you’ll probably want to preorder sooner than later.

Preorder MTG: Modern Horizons 2 Cards

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Just like the original Modern Horizons set, Modern Horizons 2 adds all-new cards to the Modern format (skipping the Standard format), plus it brings reprints of older cards into the Modern fold.

Notably, all five enemy-colored fetch lands are in this set, and can be found as rares in the regular draft boosters.

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Chris Reed is a commerce editor and deals expert at IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @_chrislreed.

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