Hades Wins Game of the Year at 2021 Game Developers Choice Awards

Hades has won the Game of the Year award at the 2021 Game Developer Choice Awards.

The awards ceremony, which is part of the Game Developers Conference (GDC), honoured Supergiant Games’ Greek myth-inspired roguelike with its top award. Additionally, Hades was also awarded Best Audio and Best Design.

While Hades took the GOTY award, Ghost of Tsushima took home the Audience Award, as well as Best Visual Art award. With two or more awards each, they were the most decorated games of the show.

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Other awards were handed to Phasmophobia dev Kinetic Games, Naughty Dog, Valve, and Media Molecule. You can see the full list of awards and winners below.

  • Best Audio: Hades (Supergiant Games)
  • Best Debut: Phasmophobia (Kinetic Games)
  • Best Design: Hades (Supergiant Games)
  • Best Mobile Game: Genshin Impact (miHoYo)
  • Innovation Award: Dreams (Media Molecule / Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Best Narrative: The Last of Us Part II (Naughty Dog / Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Best Technology: Microsoft Flight Simulator (Asobo Studio / Xbox Game Studios)
  • Best Visual Art: Ghost of Tsushima (Sucker Punch Productions / Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Best VR/AR Game: Half-Life: Alyx (Valve)
  • Audience Award: Ghost of Tsushima (Sucker Punch Productions / Sony Interactive Entertainment)
  • Game of the Year: Hades (Supergiant Games)
  • Pioneer Award: Tom Fulp (creator of Newgrounds)
  • Lifetime Achievement Award: Laralyn McWilliams (28 year industry veteran, creative director of MMO Free Realms)

Hades has swept award ceremonies since its full release in 2020. We awarded it our own Game of the Year 2020 award, and it has since won game of the year at the Gayming Awards, SXSW 2021, BAFTA, and D.I.C.E Awards. If you’ve yet to play it, it’s available on PC and Switch, and is coming to PlayStation 4/5 and Xbox Series X|S and Xbox One on August 13. It will be on Game Pass for anyone playing on Xbox consoles.

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Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Entertainment Writer.

What’s New On Netflix In August 2021? Witcher Anime, Monster Hunter, And More

The heat is on, and not just for singer Glenn Frey. It’s also on for streaming service Netflix, which is dropping plenty of new movies, TV shows, and originals for the month of August. This includes the new animated movie The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf and Monster Hunter: Legends of the Guild. Check out everything coming to Netflix below, along with some recommendations.

Arriving on August 23 is the latest installment in Netflix’s growing Witcher universe. The animated movie The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf arrives that day. The film follows a young Vesemir as he makes some serious cash hunting down monsters. Of course, that’s not the whole story, as Vesemir has to face demons from his past. Check out the trailer for yourself below.

On August 12, the animated movie Monster Hunter: Legends of the Guild arrives. A young hunter named Aiden has to protect his village from being destroyed as it’s in the path of an elder dragon who is rampaging across the world. Aiden teams up with other hunters in order to stop this menace. The 3D animated film feels a bit more geared towards an all-ages audience–as The Witcher movie and show are strictly for adults.

Throughout the rest of the month, there are plenty of movies and TV shows you can check out. On August 1, seven seasons of the hit comedy series 30 Rock arrive, along with classic comedies like Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Team America: World Police, and Pineapple Express. If you’re looking for something a bit more serious, The Machinist and Inception both arrive on August 1 as well.

Below, you’ll find the full list for everything coming to Netflix for the month of August, and if you’re looking for more streaming service additions, check out what’s coming to Hulu, Disney+, and Shudder for August.

New on Netflix in August 2021:

August 1

  • 30 Rock: Seasons 1-7
  • Beethoven
  • Beethoven 2
  • Catch Me if you Can
  • Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
  • Five Feet Apart
  • Friday Night Lights: Seasons 1-5
  • Inception
  • Magnolia
  • Major Payne
  • My Girl
  • My Girl 2
  • Pineapple Express
  • Poms
  • Seabiscuit
  • Team America: World Police
  • The Edge of Seventeen
  • The Losers
  • The Machinist
  • The New
  • The Original Kings of Comedy

August 3

  • Pray Away
  • Shiny_Flakes: The Teenage Drug Lord
  • Top Secret UFO Projects: Declassified

August 4

  • Aftermath
  • Cocaine Cowboys: The Kings of Miami
  • Control Z: Season 2
  • Cooking With Paris

August 6

  • Hit & Run
  • The Swarm
  • Vivo

August 9

  • Shaman King

August 10

  • Phil Wang: Philly Philly Wang Wang
  • Untold (New Films Weekly)

August 11

  • Bake Squad
  • The Kissing Booth 3

August 12

  • Lokillo: Nothing’s The Same
  • Monster Hunter: Legends of the Guild

August 13

  • Beckett
  • Brand New Cherry Flavor
  • Fast & Furious Spy Racers: Season 5: South Pacific
  • Gone For Good
  • Valeria: Season 2

August 15

  • Winx Club: Season 6

August 16

  • Walk of Shame

August 18

  • The Defeated
  • Memories of a Murderer: The Nilsen Tapes
  • The Secret Diary of an Exchange Student

August 19

  • Like Crazy

August 20

  • The Chair
  • Everything Will Be Fine
  • The Loud House Movie
  • Sweet Girl

August 23

  • The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf

August 24

August 25

  • Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed
  • John of God: The Crimes of a Spiritual Healer
  • Clickbait
  • The Old Ways
  • Open Your Eyes
  • Motel Makeover
  • The November Man
  • Post Mortem: No One Dies in Skarnes
  • Really Love

August 26

  • Edens Zero
  • Family Reunion: Part 4

August 27

  • He’s All That
  • I Heart Arlo

August 28

  • Titletown High

August 31

  • Sparking Joy

Mark Hamill Has Secretly Voiced Cameos In Every Star Wars Movie

Mark Hamill, a veritable font of primary-source Star Wars trivia, has shared on Twitter that he has “voiced multiple secret voice-cameos in every Star Wars movie released since 2015.” As many folks on Twitter have pointed out in response–well, those cameos aren’t so secret anymore.

Hamill was confirming a tweet by another account sharing the related trivia that the actor voiced the female droid EV-9D9 in the Mandalorian, though in his response didn’t drill down into what roles he’s taken on in Rogue One, Solo, etc. It’s also possible he has further secrets up his sleeves about the Star Wars franchise–as we know by now, Hamill is very good at keeping secrets: His CG cameo in the Mandolarian Season 2 finale as a much younger Luke Skywalker came as a huge and thrilling shock to fans.

As always, there’s a ton going on in the Star Wars world. There’s a manga inspired by the prequel novel Guardians of the Whills hitting this summer, Star Wars: The Bad Batch will wrap up its first season in late July, and there are 10th anniversary plans for the Star Wars: The Old Republic video game. Both Daisy Ridley and John Boyega have let it be known they’d be open to revisiting their roles in the future.

It was also recently announced that Hamill will star in a movie about comedian Bert Kreischer’s viral story about getting kidnapped by Russian gangsters. It’s of course, a bananas story–Kreischer was studying abroad in Russia, and wound up helping the Russian mob rob a train. In the movie, Hamill will play Kreischer’s father, as the pair deal with the fictional consequences of these real events.

Hamill also recently shared that George Lucas demanded a certain Daffy Duck cartoon precede every original Star Wars screening.

Fall Guys Gets Ratchet & Clank Crossover Event With New Outfits Up For Grabs

With Fall Guys Season 5, the battle royale game is adding limited time events–and one of these will be focused on PlayStation’s Ratchet & Clank series.

Sony said there will be two limited-time events, as well as a “whole new way to earn points” by completing themed challenges, which are also new in Season 5. You can see a trailer for the Fall Guys/Ratchet & Clank crossover below, which reveals that new Ratchet & Clank skins are coming to Fall Guys.

The Ratchet in-game event runs July 26-August 1, while the Clank event takes place August 6-15. You can participate in both for a chance to unlock the new Ratchet and Clank outfits.

In addition to limited-time events and a new adventure jungle theme, Season 5 adds Squads in the form of limited-time Duos and Trios modes where you play in groups of two and three. Additionally, six new rounds have been added in Season 5, which is out now.

Mediatonic recently delayed the game’s Nintendo Switch and Xbox versions to an unspecified date in the future. Alongside that news, the studio said it is working on cross-play for Fall Guys to connect the player base in a new way.

Fortnite studio Epic Games acquired Mediatonic earlier this year as part of its ambition to create a so-called metaverse.

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

Jordan Peele’s Next Movie Is Titled Nope, Spooky First Poster Revealed

The title and poster for Jordan Peele’s next horror movie have been revealed. The film is titled Nope, and it will hit theaters in exactly one year’s time, on July 22, 2022.

The Nope poster was released by Peele on Twitter, who accompanied it with a cloud emoji. The poster itself shows an ominous cloud hovering above a town with what looks like a line of flags hanging out of it. It also includes the names of the three stars–Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out, Judas and the Black Messiah), Keke Palmer (Hustlers, Scream Queens), and Steven Yuen (Minari, The Walking Dead). Check the Nope poster out below:

As with Peele’s previous movies as director–Get Out and Us–Nope is shrouded in mystery. In fact, we know nothing else about it–Peele has not hinted at what it could be about, and no synopsis has been released yet. Details are sure to emerge at some point but until then we’ll just have to speculate about whether it’s a film about the weather, an evil cloud, or something very bad that lurks inside it.

Peele has also co-written and produced the upcoming sequel/reboot to the ’90s classic Candyman, which releases on August 21. The movie is directed by Nia DaCosta and was delayed from the original date of September 2020. Check out the latest Candyman trailer here.

For more, read GameSpot’s guide to the biggest upcoming horror movies of 2021.

Roccat Gaming Keyboards See Lowest Price Ever In Best Buy Deal Of The Day

Best Buy’s Deals of the Day for Thursday include a particularly nice couple of deals on Roccat gaming keyboards, with both the Vulcan 120 and the Vulcan 121 mechanical keyboards on sale for $105 each. That marks their lowest price ever, though we’ll note that Amazon is price-matching this deal as well. The Deals of the Day are available only through the rest of today; after that, they’ll return to their $160 list price.

The Vulcan 120 and 121 keyboards are basically the same in terms of build and features. The 120 is silver, while the 121 comes in a darker black; both feature AIMO illumination for RGB backlighting and LED effects. The 120 comes with Roccat’s tactile and crisp Titan switches, while the 121 has linear switches for extremely fast keystrokes and consistency. Both include wrist rests that are magnetically detachable along with programmable macro keys and full n-key rollover so every keystroke is registered.

If you’d rather pick one up from Amazon, you can check out the deals on the Vulcan 120 and Vulcan 121 available there, with both brown and red switches available for the Vulcan 121 deal.

Roccat Vulcan 120 mechanical gaming keyboard
Roccat Vulcan 120 mechanical gaming keyboard

In other Deals of the Day, Best Buy is slashing prices on the Logitech GMX518 optical gaming mouse ($20), the MSI GF63 15.6-inch gaming laptop ($630), and a very sturdy-looking Walker Edison computer desk ($363).

Blizzard Reportedly Took Warcraft 3: Reforged Pre-Orders While Knowing It Wouldn’t Be Ready for Release

Blizzard reportedly took pre-orders and refused to delay Warcraft 3: Reforged, despite knowing that the game wouldn’t be sufficiently ready for release.

In a new report from Bloomberg, sources claim that Blizzard chose to release Reforged – which launched to widespread fan complaints about low quality and false advertising – because it had already accepted pre-orders, and didn’t want to risk those sales by delaying.

Bloomberg also reports that it has seen an internal Blizzard postmortem document saying, “We took pre-orders when we knew the game wasn’t ready yet” and that the company should, in future, “resist the urge to ship an unfinished product because of financial pressure.”

The project was allegedly hamstrung by a low budget, and was apparently seen as a low priority by parent company Activision because of its unlikeliness to become a ‘billion-dollar product’. The report says that the game was then rescoped, leading to it launching without features present in the original Warcraft 3, and without reworked cutscenes announced before launch. Altered scripts and re-recordings of dialogue were allegedly also ditched.

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The problems on the project reportedly caused low morale, with the internal postmortem reading: “We have developers who have dealt with exhaustion, anxiety, depression and more for a year now. Many have lost trust in the team and this company. Many players have also lost trust, and the launch certainly didn’t help an already rough year for Blizzard’s image.”

Several sources pin the blame on leadership in both the Reforged team, and within the wider Blizzard organisation. The postmortem reportedly adds: “Senior voices in the department warned leadership about the impending disaster of Warcraft on several occasions over the last year or so, but were ignored.”

Blizzard subsequently changed its refund policy to allow for more returns of the game, but some missing features have not yet materialised, more than a year after release. A Blizzard spokesperson told Bloomberg that despite the closure of the Classic Games team that made it, a new team is, “dedicated to updating Warcraft III: Reforged with improvements. In these efforts, we realize our work and actions will speak louder than our words.”

Earlier this year, we published a special report on the exodus of talent from Blizzard. Yesterday, Activision Blizzard as a whole was sued by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing for an alleged “frat boy” culture in which female employees are allegedly subjected to unequal pay and sexual harassment.

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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].

Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins Review

Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins hits theaters on July 23.

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Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins marks Paramount’s third attempt to spin franchise gold out of Hasbro’s legendary action figure line, and in distancing itself from the overheated, effects-heavy bombast of the prior two attempts (2009’s G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, and 2013’s G.I. Joe: Retaliation), it may be the strongest go yet. Armed with a gritty, street-level aesthetic in service of its world-building, Snake Eyes –– directed by Robert Schwentke and starring Henry Golding in the title role –– feels as indebted to Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins as it does the 1980s G.I. Joe Marvel Comics run written by Larry Hama.

Snake Eyes has been a key part of the “Real American Hero” team since its introduction in 1982. Though he remained an enigmatic figure in the iconic 1980s animated series, Snake Eyes was given an origin in issues #26 and #27 of the Marvel Comics series in 1984, which is what this project uses as a jump-off point, albeit loosely. Yes, Snake Eyes tips its cap to the source material (not so much the animated show, however), but it also freely forges its own path in a way that feels both familiar and fresh. The essential ingredient is an air of encroaching destiny as the various threads intersect with Snake Eyes (Golding), Tommy Arashikage (Andrew Koji), and the other members of the Arashikage clan. By film’s close, friendships have been forged, allegiances have been flipped, and the way forward is clear for further Joe escapades (or even further Origins movies) should the desire arise.

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In terms of the cast, Golding makes a solid entrance as an action leading man in what could have been a thankless part. This is a far cry from when Ray Park played Snake Eyes with his face entirely hidden behind a mask and visor, speaking no dialogue for the duration of his two-movie tenure. Hiding his face clearly wasn’t going to be an option once the Crazy Rich Asians heartthrob was cast, but he does a good job imbuing Snake Eyes with requisite pathos while adding enough of an edge so his true motivations are never entirely clear. It’s a swerve from prior depictions, but it feels like there’s room to grow yet in his journey before becoming the iconic Snake Eyes familiar to longtime fans.

Meanwhile, Koji (who previously impressed on the Cinemax series Warrior) is quite charismatic as the Man Who Will Be Storm Shadow. Like 2011’s X-Men: First Class and its depiction of the early bromance between Professor X and Magneto, Snake Eyes makes us care enough about the forged-in-fire friendship between Snake Eyes and Tommy that there’s a twinge of sadness when the needs of the extant mythology take over, like fate has its own plans no matter what we may wish. Speaking of extant mythology, both Samara Weaving (as Scarlett, representing the elite G.I. Joe task force) and Úrsula Corberó (who’s fronting Cobra as the Baroness) effortlessly embody their alter egos, and although their screen time is limited, their presence offers a tantalizing tease of the unfolding “fight for freedom” happening just outside the frames of this film.

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In the previous G.I. Joe movie, Retaliation (directed by Golding’s Crazy Rich Asians filmmaker Jon M. Chu), there’s a scene where the evil Cobra Commander literally bombs London out of existence and it barely elicits a reaction from the characters — or us. By contrast, the stakes are dialed down substantially here: It’s not about saving the world, but saving a family and a friendship (and I say all that as someone who loudly, proudly enjoyed every bonkers minute of G.I. Joe: Retaliation).

Unfortunately, there are some failings in Schwentke’s approach to the action; under-lit and over-reliant on shaky-cam. As a result, instead of luxuriating in spectacular martial arts sequences, the fight scenes have a tendency to be confusing or disorienting. There’s also a narrative leap in the third act into hard fantasy/mysticism that, while it doesn’t pull you out, does feel somewhat incongruous when compared with the relatively grounded first two-thirds. Nonetheless, because of strong character work throughout, these end up as minor qualms. 

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Get a 144Hz Gaming Monitor From LG on Sale Right Now

If you’re in the market for a new gaming monitor, have I got some great news for you. The LG 27GN800 display is on sale right now, and I can personally attest to its quality, since I bought one earlier in the year for full price like an idiot.

144Hz 1440p Gaming Monitor Deal

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I feel like 27″ in the sweet-spot for desktop displays, and 1440p at 144Hz gives you a real nice picture, too. I like mine a lot, although it did require some fiddling with the settings both in Windows and the monitor itself to lock in the best color. If you want to take it a step further and calibrate it, knock yourself out. At this price, it’s a stupendous bargain.

The on-screen menu is pretty slick and there’s a program you can download to run the settings directly from Windows rather than through the OSD. For gaming, I have no complaints. The 1ms response time is nice, since my last monitor had that turbo-mode nonsense that only pretends to be 1ms, and was really smear-y when gaming mode was turned on. Not so with this LG. If it isn’t true 1ms, I couldn’t tell.

For the full breakdown of this display, you can check out our LG UltraGear 27″ monitor review. I didn’t write it, but I agree with pretty much the whole thing.

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Seth Macy is IGN’s Executive Editor, IGN Commerce, and just wants to be your friend.

A New Investment Scheme Lets You Buy Shares of a Nintendo World Championships Cartridge

The Nintendo World Championships 1990 cartridge is viewed as the rarest and most valuable NES games ever released, and now you can own a piece of one of the iconic cartridges.

A new investment scheme has launched via Otis that allows people to buy shares of the 8.5 Wata (a grading score used for video game collecting) Nintendo World Championships Grey Cartridge for $10. The shares will fluctuate in value just like stock, with shareholders waiting for their prices to increase before potentially considering to trade them in, hopefully for a sizeable profit.

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Otis is an investment platform that specializes in cultural assets, and it is the first fractionalized platform to offer the prized Nintendo game, valued at $211,300. The cartridge is considered by many to be the holy grail of video game collecting, and a lower grade Wata 8.0 copy of the game sold for $180,000 earlier this month.

The cartridges were given to winners of the Nintendo World Championships in 1990, a touring event that had players compete in popular games. The cartridge itself was used in competition and features a remix of Rad Racer, Super Mario Bros., and Tetris for a single high score. More copies went to the winners of a Nintendo Power magazine contest.

Given the limited number of Nintendo World Championships cartridges that are out in the wild, collectors and game fans alike are often on the lookout for them. That’s why it was particularly surprising when one turned up in a box of traded-in NES games at a used game store in Seattle, Washington back in 2019.

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The store paid $13,000 for the Nintendo World Championship 1990 cartridge after judging the condition of the item and conducting some research. It was reported at the time that the seller happily accepted the offer, though the resale price and the identity of the second buyer were both kept secret.

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Adele Ankers is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.