Magic: The Gathering Dungeons & Dragons Crossover – 2 More New Cards Exclusively Revealed

IGN is delighted to exclusively reveal two more cards from the Magic: The Gathering and Dungeons & Dragons crossover set, Adventures in the Forgotten Realms – say hello to Find the Path and Hunter’s Mark.

Both new cards are Green spells, but have very different uses. Find the Path is perhaps the more interesting to those looking for Adventures in the Forgotten Realms’ brand new mechanics. While this land-based enchantment is a nice way to ramp mana for a high-cost green deck, it also comes with another use – when played, it allows you to Venture.

As explained in a DailyMTG tutorial video, Venture is half of an extremely Dungeons & Dragons-inspired mechanic built around a brand new card type, appropriately called Dungeons. The new set includes three Dungeons, each of which present a map that can be followed, with each ‘room’ on that map including an effect on the game. Each time you play a card or ability with a Venture activation – as Find the Path has – you can move forward one room in your chosen dungeon and activate its effect. You can find out much more about the new mechanic in our exclusive interview with one of the set’s designers.

Hunter’s Mark is a more familiar kind of card, but a potentially very effective one. Although it comes with a relatively high base cost, Hunter’s Mark can be used extremely cheaply against opponents playing Blue cards (ignoring their inevitable counter-spells, too), and to potentially devastating effect against Blue planeswalkers – it’s a tempting sideboard card.

Yesterday, we revealed a card themed after one of D&D’s most iconic monsters, the Gelatinous Cube. It’s a 4/3 Black creature card, and comes with two brand new ability words for the set. Between the Oozes and the Dungeons, it seems we’ll have a lot of D&D flavour in Adventures in the Forgotten Realms.

Dungeons & Dragons: Adventures in the Forgotten Realms will release within MTG Arena on July 8 and physically on July 23.

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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].

America: The Motion Picture Review

lightning-quickAmerica: The Motion Picture premieres Wednesday, June 30 on Netflix.

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From Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, The LEGO Movie) and Archer’s Adam Reed comes a raunchy and riotous retelling of the Revolutionary War that feels like Drunk History had a one night stand with The Naked Gun and then gave birth to a history report by Bill and Ted if they never had a time machine. This animated adventure, from first-time feature director Matt Thompson (also Archer), can, at times, exhaust with its over-the-top antics and unabashed insanity, but overall it’s a worthwhile watch featuring a fun voice cast and awesomely nutty anachronisms.

To its hilarious benefit, America: The Motion Picture is presented without context. There’s no bookend letting us know that this is a dumb person’s account of the founding of our nation or even, like, Princess Bride-style interludes showing a grandfather reading uproariously wrong information off the internet to his grandkid. We just get the story as-is. Out of the gate, it’s just a bonkers chronicle of 1776 that features a werewolf Benedict Arnold blowing up most of the founding fathers and then killing Abe Lincoln in front of Abe’s BFF George Washington. Just about every aspect of American political history, including quotes from presidents 200 years later, is jammed into a blender and minced up into a deranged action movie.

Channing Tatum, who also serves as executive producer here, provides pure Golden Retriever meathead joy as George Washington, once again reminding us how freakin’ funny he is. In fact, if it helps, just imagine that this movie is the result of a homework assignment by Tatum’s 21 Jump Street character, Jenko. It’s that blissfully boneheaded.

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Backed up by Jason Mantzoukas as Sam Adams, Raoul Trujillo as Geronimo, Bobby Moynihan as Paul Revere, and Olivia Munn as a gender-flipped electro-gauntleted Thomas Edison, Washington must thwart an evil plot by Andy Samberg’s Benedict Arnold and Simon Pegg’s King James (which some may not even realize is a just plain wrong) to turn all the colonists British by steeping them in tea. This formidable cast, which also includes Judy Greer and Run the Jewels’ Killer Mike, all wonderfully understand the rapid-fire pace and the satirical tone.

Stretching this type of lightning quick humor out to 90 minutes is a challenge though, and there are times when jokes don’t land well, or at all, simply because they’re not given time to breathe. It’s why most of the time this format is relegated to 22-minute episodes. It’s just better in small batches. This is the main thing that holds America: The Motion Picture back a bit. Despite it being, more or less, supersonic Mel Brooks, the style doesn’t easily lend itself to feature-length projects. That being said, there are so many jokes here, and they move so fast, that it’s easy enough to glaze over and dip out every so often and then pop back in refreshed.

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America: The Motion picture also takes no prisoners, topic-wise. It both embraces the innate earnestness and innocent idiocy of American jingoism while also never letting our heroes off the hook for being racist and misogynistic. Even as some of our heroes learn valuable lessons — usually because they’re educated by Geronimo, Edison, or Killer Mike’s Blacksmith (aka “Black Smith”) — the film never presents the country as anything other than a noble experiment on the precipice of implosion. Even if, going by action movies, America is the rogue cop who doesn’t play by the rules the story is hyper-aware that there’s something deeply wrong with that type of heroics.

Skewering everything from Star Wars to Fast and Furious to even Harry and the Hendersons, the film is great at lassoing different blips from pop culture in a way where the larger story still makes sense, in its own goofy way. Sure, Big Ben turns into a giant mech and people openly use machine guns and holograms but it’s all in service of calling out, and laughing at, the U.S.’s societal and cultural issues and ills. This movie and 2004’s Team America: World Police would make for an excellent double feature on any given Independence Day.

What’s New On Peacock In July – The 2021 Summer Olympic Games and Dr. Death

The 2021 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo are fast approaching, and NBC is looking to turn Peacock into a major destination for Olympic coverage. While Peacock has the usual glut of movies coming, the service will focus on the Olympic Games for the back half of the month.

With that said, you’ll still find a host of shows to check out. The month starts strong with Peacock Original Smother, a BBC-produced thriller set in Ireland, which tells the story of a woman delving into her family’s secrets after her husband’s sudden death. The six-episode mini-series will be available in its entirety on July 1.

Another Peacock Original arrives on July 15: Dr. Death. This mini-series is a fictional retelling of the story of Dr. Christopher Duntsch, nicknamed Dr. Death. Duntsch, played by Joshua Jackson, was a rising neurosurgeon. A growing trail of dead or maimed patients began to alarm two other doctors, played by Alec Baldwin and Christian Slater, who feared that even revoking Duntsch’s medical license wouldn’t stop him from practicing elsewhere. Duntsch was eventually convicted and imprisoned in what is now considered a precedent-setting case in medical law.

Along with these standout shows, you can look forward to everything from anime classic Samurai Pizza Cats to movies like Darkman, Conan the Destroyer, and what looks like the entire Leprechaun series of horror films.

Here’s the full list of what you can look forward to on Peacock in July.

July 1

  • 3 Bears Christmas, 2019
  • 47 Ronin, 2013
  • A Single Shot, 2013
  • Abigail, 2019
  • After the Wizard, 2011
  • Albion the Enchanted Stallion, 2017
  • All Eyez on Me, 2017
  • And While We Were Here, 2012
  • Antz, 2017
  • Bad Teacher, 2011
  • Baked in Brooklyn 2016
  • Balls of Fury, 2007
  • Because I Said So, 2007
  • Bermuda Tentacles, 2014
  • Better Watch Out, 2016
  • Born on the Fourth of July, 1989
  • Boyz N The Hood, 1991
  • Cardboard Boxer, 2016
  • CarGo, 2017
  • Cavemen, 2013
  • Conan the Destroyer, 1984
  • Daredevil, 2003
  • Darkman, 1990
  • Dead Snow 2: Red vs Dead, 2014
  • Death Becomes Her, 1992
  • Deep Impact, 1998
  • Dino King, 2012
  • Do the Right Thing, 1989
  • Doomsday, 2008
  • End of Days, 1999
  • Erin Brockovich, 2000
  • Far From Heaven, 2002
  • Fast & Furious, 2009
  • Fast Five, 2011
  • Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, 1998
  • Finding Fish, 2017
  • Flashdance, 1983
  • Ghost Squad, 2014
  • Grown Ups, 2010
  • Grown Ups 2, 2013
  • Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, 2001
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, 2002
  • Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, 2004
  • Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, 2005
  • Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, 2007
  • Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2009
  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1, 2010
  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, 2011
  • Hatched, 2015
  • Hellboy II: The Golden Army, 2008
  • I am Bolt, 2016
  • I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, 2007
  • In the Doghouse, 2014
  • Inception, 2010
  • Izzie’s Way Home, 2016
  • Jaws, 1975
  • Jaws 2, 1978
  • Jaws 3-D, 1983
  • Jaws: The Revenge, 1987
  • Jetsons: The Movie, 1990
  • Jonah: A Veggietales Movie, 2002
  • Junior, 1994
  • Jungle Bunch, 2017
  • Killing Escobar, 2021
  • King Kong, 2005
  • Knock Knock, 2015
  • Kung Fu Panda, 2008
  • Kung Fu Panda 2, 2011
  • Leprechaun, 1993
  • Leprechaun II, 1994
  • Leprechaun III, 1995
  • Leprechaun 4: Lost in Space, 1997
  • Leprechaun Origins, 2014
  • Leprechaun V: In The Hood, 2000
  • Leprechaun VI: Back 2 Tha Hood, 2003
  • Mamma Mia!, 2008
  • Megamind, 2021
  • Moon Man, 2013
  • Monsters vs. Aliens 2009
  • Mummy: The Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, 2008
  • Non-Stop, 2014
  • Olympic Pride, American Prejudice, 2016
  • Paper Soldiers, 2002
  • Princess and the Pony, 2011
  • Psycho, 1960
  • Queens & Cowboys: A Straight Year on the Gay Rodeo
  • Rain Man, 1988
  • Robin Hood, 2010
  • Role Models, 2008
  • The Adventure Club, 2017
  • The Best Man Holiday, 2013
  • The Birds, 1963
  • The Boss Baby: Family Business, 2021
  • The Godfather I, 1972
  • The Godfather II, 1974
  • The Godfather III, 1990
  • The Hulk, 2003
  • The Hunger Games, 2012
  • The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, 2013
  • The Hunger Games: The Mockingjay – Part 1, 2014
  • The Hunger Games: The Mockingjay – Part 2, 2015
  • The Fast and the Fierce, 2017
  • The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift, 2006
  • The League of the Extraordinary Gentlemen, 2003
  • The Little Witch, 2018
  • The Magnificent Seven, 2016
  • The Preacher’s Wife, 1996
  • The Rundown, 2003
  • The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, 2005
  • The Skulls, 2000
  • The Wedding Planner, 2001
  • Sky Blossom: Diaries of the Next Greatest Generation, 2021
  • Smokey and the Bandit, 1977
  • Smokey and the Bandit II, 1988
  • Smokey and the Bandit III, 1983
  • Snowtime, 2015
  • Spawn, 1997
  • Twins, 1988
  • Van Helsing, 2004
  • Walking Tall, 2004
  • Wanted, 2008
  • XXX: Return of Xander Cage, 2017
  • Lost Speedways, Season 2 (Peacock Original)
  • Smother, Season 1 (Peacock Original)
  • Baby Einstein Classics, Season 1-7
  • Bad Girls Club, Season 8-12
  • Family Karma, Season 1
  • Magic City, Season 1-2
  • Married to Medicine Atlanta, Season 7
  • Mighty Ones, Season 2
  • Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles, Season 12
  • PINKFONG! Songs and Stories, Season 1
  • Samurai Pizza Cats, Season 1
  • Shah’s of Sunset, Season 8
  • Very Cavallari, Season 3
  • Women Behind Bars, Seasons 1-4
  • World’s Most Evil Killers, Season 1-2

July 3

  • The Cabin in the Woods, 2012

July 4

  • WWE Icons: Lex Luger
  • WWE Icons: Revisited

July 7

  • The Journey of USA’s Elite Gymnasts, Episode 4 (Peacock Original)
  • Arpo, Season 1
  • Gecko’s Garage, Season 1
  • Go Buster, Season 1
  • Little Baby Bum, Season 1
  • Morphie, Season 2
  • Playtime with Twinkle, Season 1
  • Supa Strikas, Season 1-3
  • T-Rex Ranch, Season 1
  • The Ring-A-Tangs, Season 1
  • Snowtime, 2015
  • The Saddle Club, Season 1-3

July 9

  • Chrisley Knows Best, Season 8
  • Growing Up Chrisley, Season 1-2
  • Snapped, Season 26-27

July 14-16

  • Golden: The Journey of USA’s Elite Gymnasts, Episode 5 (Peacock Original)
  • Signs, 2002
  • The Sixth Sense, 1999
  • The Happening, 2008
  • The Village, 2004
  • Unbreakable, 2000
  • Dr. Death, Season 1 (Peacock Original)
  • Archibald’s Next Big Thing is Here!, Season 3 (Peacock Original)
  • Ming’s Dynasty, Season 1
  • The Hollywood Puppet Set, Season 1-2
  • The Read with Kid Fury and Crissle, Season 1
  • The Sisters of ’96; The 1996 USA Women’s Olympic Soccer Team (Peacock Original)
  • ’96 Olympic Women’s Soccer Final, 2021
  • Ray, 2004
  • The Adjustment Bureau, 2011

July 21-23

  • Peacock Original Golden: The Journey of USA’s Elite Gymnasts, Episode 5
  • Olympic Dreams Featuring the Jonas Brothers (NBC)
  • Snapped, Season 9

Coverage of the Tokyo Games goes into full effect on July 24, when the service will offer four live studio shows each day:

TOKYO LIVE 6 a.m. – 11 a.m. ET daily

TOKYO GOLD 11 a.m. – noon ET daily

ON HER TURF AT THE OLYMPICS

  • Monday – Saturday 7 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Sunday 6 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. ET

TOKYO TONIGHT

  • Monday – Saturday 7:30 p.m. – midnight ET
  • Sunday 6:30 p.m. – 11 p.m. ET

July 29

  • The Croods, 2013
Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

Tarantino Confirms Whether Or Not Cliff Booth Killed His Wife In Once Upon A Time In Hollywood

One of the mysteries in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is whether or not Brad Pitt’s character, Cliff Booth, killed his wife. The novelization of the film is now available, and it confirms what really happened. Read on if you’d like to know.

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According to Collider, the book confirms that Booth did in fact shoot and kill his wife, Billie, with the shark gun as it was alluded to in the movie in a flashback scene on a boat. The book confirms in grisly detail how it happened. The spear “hit her a little below the belly button, tearing her in half, both pieces hitting the deck of the boat with a splash.”

In the movie, we see Booth pointing the spear gun at Billie but the scene ends before anything happens, leaving it up to the imagination of the viewer as to what really went down. But the book makes it clear that Booth is a cold-blooded murderer.

After Booth murdered his wife, he had a revelation. “The moment he saw her ripped in two…years of ill will and resentment evaporated in an instant,” reads a line from the book.

Booth then attempts to save his wife by holding the two fractured parts of her body together, and it works for seven hours as they chat and hash out their differences. A rescue team finally makes it to the boat, and this is when the woman dies.

Booth covers his tracks and gets away with the murder, but the book explains how he “felt really bad about what he did to Billie.”

“As much regret and remorse as he felt, it never occurred to him not to try to get away with murder,” according to the book.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: The Novel is available now. In other news, Tarantino recently revealed that he considered remaking Reservoir Dogs as his final film before retirement but ultimately decided against it.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

Pokemon Go July 2021 Events: Deoxys Raids, Rufflet Research Breakthrough, And More

July is only a few days away, and Niantic has now outlined some of the big events it’s holding in Pokemon Go next month. In addition to Pokemon Go Fest 2021, there are a number of activities to look forward to in the game over the next few weeks, including the return of Mewtwo and Deoxys, new Research Breakthrough rewards, and more.

July 2021 Research Breakthrough Encounter: Rufflet

Niantic is rolling out a new batch of Field Research tasks and rewards beginning July 1, including a new Research Breakthrough encounter. Each time you achieve a Research Breakthrough in July, you’ll earn a chance to catch the Flying-type Pokemon Rufflet. On top of that, you’ll also receive double XP and a free Remote Raid Pass each time you achieve a Research Breakthrough in July.

Raid Schedule

Legendary Raids

Immediately after the Bidoof Day event, which will see Bidoof appearing more frequently in the wild and in all Raid tiers, Defense Forme Deoxys will arrive in five-star Raids until July 16. Following its departure, Mewtwo will make its return until July 23. Not only does this mark another rare opportunity to catch Mewtwo outside of EX Raids, but you’ll also have a chance to find a Shiny Mewtwo. An as-yet unannounced Pokemon is scheduled to replace Mewtwo later in the month. You can see July’s full Legendary Raid schedule below.

  • July 1-16: Defense Forme Deoxys
  • July 16-23: Mewtwo
  • July 23: TBA

Mega Raids

As before, Niantic will feature only one Mega-Evolved Pokemon at a time in Mega Raid Battles throughout July. Mega Houndoom is kicking off the month until July 16, when it will be replaced by Mega Gengar until July 23. Capping off the month will be Mega Charizard X. You can see July’s Mega Raid schedule below.

  • July 1-16: Mega Houndoom
  • July 16-23: Mega Gengar
  • July 23-August 6: Mega Charizard X

July Pokemon Spotlight Hours

Every Tuesday evening in July, Niantic is spotlighting a different Pokemon and bonus for one hour from 6-7 PM local time. You can see July’s full Spotlight Hour schedule below.

Date Spotlight Pokemon Special Bonus
July 6 Bulbasaur 2x catch XP
July 13 Charmander 2x catch Candy
July 20 Squirtle 2x transfer Candy
July 27 Natu 2x evolution XP

July Community Day

July's featured Pokemon, Tepig
July’s featured Pokemon, Tepig

July’s Community Day is set for Saturday, July 3. This month’s featured Pokemon is Tepig, the Fire-type starter from Pokemon Black and White. Not only will Tepig appear more frequently in the wild throughout the event, but any that you evolve all the way into its final form, Emboar, during the event will automatically know the Fire-type Charged attack Blast Burn.

Pokemon Go Anniversary Event

This summer marks Pokemon Go’s fifth anniversary, and Niantic is celebrating the milestone with a special anniversary event from July 6-15. Niantic says that additional details about the event will be announced in early July.

Go Battle Night

The second Go Battle Night of the season is set for Sunday, July 11. The event runs from 6-11:59 PM local time and will offer triple Stardust rewards winning battles, completing sets of battles, and ranking up.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

Star Fox Programmer Says He Would Bring the Series Back to Its Roots With No ‘Gimmicks’

Giles Goddard, one of the programmers on SNES’ Star Fox, has said that he would love to work on another game in the franchise and would love to see it without any “gimmicks.”

As reported by VGC, Goddard was speaking to GameXplain and was asked if there was a Nintendo IP he would be interested in working on.

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“It would be interesting to do a Star Fox, I think,” he replied. “But not how the other ones were done. I think I would just dial it back a lot and not in gimmicks like, you know, the stuff Star Fox Zero had, and maybe not even put in the free roaming aspects and stuff like that.

“I would just bring it back, pull it back into what made the original Star Fox fun, and just make one based on that. I don’t know how popular it would be, but it would be cool to try.”

He was then asked if he’d like to see Star Fox to return to its retro roots and come back with the more basic, polygonal look of the original.

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“Yeah, a sort of retro Star Fox thing? Um, no,” he replied. “I think if we did it, it would have to be either an extremely stylised retro look, or just very updated and modern-looking. But I wouldn’t try to replicate the polygons from the Super FX chip because I don’t see the point. You don’t go back that far, you know. We’ve fixed that problem, you don’t want to go back to it.”

A potential new Star Fox would be the first new entry since 2016’s Star Fox Zero on the Wii U. In our review of Star Fox Zero, we said that it “reimagines a classic Nintendo 64 game, but mastering its awkward control takes some time.”

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Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

Aussie Deals: Cheap AAAs and Up to 21% Off Controllers!

There’s never been a better time to take control, because peripherals are going cheap today! Be it a premium mouse, a Pro controller or a DualSense, we’ve got you sorted for incredibly priced input devices. Also, we’ve sprinkled in our usual daily picks of the best game bargains out there. Get scrolling to get saving!

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A Long-Running Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Mystery Has Been Solved

Quentin Tarantino’s novelization of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood has officially hit store shelve and readers are discovering how the director expands the world of 1960’s Tinseltown beyond the events of the movie. The novel provides a bit of clarity on a certain ambiguity that featured heavily in the original film.

Spoilers follow for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, both the film and the novel.

Earlier this month, Tarantino revealed that Once Upon a Time in Hollywood would explore the history of stuntman Cliff Booth, played by Brad Pitt in the film. A question that hangs over Booth’s reputation in the film is whether or not he killed his own wife. A flashback sequence features Cliff handling a harpoon gun while being chewed out by his spouse Billie, played by Rebecca Gayheart. The scene ends with an ambiguous pause before cutting away. While no exact facts are offered in the film, the rumored murder understandably leads to the stuntman having trouble finding work in the entertainment industry. Moreover, later events in the film clearly show that Booth has a penchant for violence.

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Freed from the time constraints of a commercial film, Tarantino provides a definite answer to the question of Cliff Booth’s culpability. The novel confirms that the stuntman did murder his wife.

Not only that, Booth has apparently murdered several other people. Another passage in the book details Cliff’s altercation with another stuntman. The two initially share co-ownership of Brandy, the dog seen in the film. After the other stuntman plans on sending Brandy to die in a rigged dogfighting match, Cliff beats him to death.

Tarantino described Cliff’s act of uxoricide as a product of the stuntman’s rage and the precarious trigger of the harpoon gun. After slicing his wife in half with the spear, Cliff keeps Billie alive for hours before the Coast Guard arrives. Following Billie’s passing, the authorities can’t uncover enough evidence to prove the death was anything more than an accident.

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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: A Novel is now available in paperback and e-book. Additionally, the novel has also been released as an audiobook narrated by Jennifer Jason Leigh, who starred in Tarantino’s 2015 western The Hateful Eight.

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J. Kim Murphy is a freelance entertainment writer.

Telling Studios They Shouldn’t Sell Is ‘Short-Sighted,” Phil Spencer Says After Xbox’s Acquisition Spree

Xbox has gone on quite the spending spree, acquiring studios for its Xbox Game Studios family including teams like Obsidian, Ninja Theory, and Zenimax Media. This has been the source of rampant discussion about the nature of studio acquisitions in the games industry, but Spencer says he thinks it is a healthy part of the business.

Speaking to Unlocked for its 500th episode, Spencer spoke at length about the role of Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) within the games industry, especially since Xbox and Microsoft are big facilitators of them.

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“I know sometimes I see dialogue out in the industry about, well, are acquisitions a good thing or a bad thing,” says Spencer before congratulating Sony on their acquisition of Housemarque announced earlier today.

“One thing I’ll put out there is… starting a new studio — starting any small business, frankly, is a very risky proposition, starting a video game studio even more so. And if a team actually takes the risk of starting a new company, starting a new studio, building that over years, building value in that. To say they shouldn’t sell, I think, is just short-sighted.”

Spencer says that the value of growing a business to become something valuable is part of why creative teams start new studios in the first place. The immense risk it takes to start a new company is the potential reward that comes with it, and Spencer says “M&A is absolutely a part of that.”

Spencer clarified that not every new company has to sell and that there are a lot of studios that can fail. But successful teams growing and potentially getting acquired “is a natural and healthy part of our industry.”

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“It’s such a risk-filled journey for them to get to the point to create real value. I’m always going to congratulate when teams get to the point where they realize that value through acquisition or just massive independent success… many of those leaders will go off and start other things over time. It’s kind of the natural turnover that happens with entrepreneurs and startup businesses. And for us, we’re always out there looking at where we could continue to build our first-party capability and looking at teams that we think would be good fits for us.”

It is certainly true to say that leaders who create successful businesses can go off and try it again. Mike Morhaime, the former Blizzard Entertainment president, recently departed the studio he co-founded to start a new studio, Dreamhaven.

One thing is clear, however, and that is that the games industry like any other industry will have new companies pop up, and if there’s a business opportunity for an M&A, bigger companies like Microsoft, Sony, EA, or others will consider them.

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For more from the 500th episode of Unlocked, check out IGN’s round-up from our Phil Spencer interview, and why it’s the perfect time to bring back Joanna Dark for a new game.

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Matt T.M. Kim is IGN’s News Editor.