Smash Bros. Ultimate Adding Cuphead Mii Fighter Costume And More

Byleth from Fire Emblem: Three Houses is the next DLC fighter for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, but that’s not the only new addition coming to the game this month. During the Smash DLC reveal stream, game director Masahiro Sakurai showcased another wave of Mii Fighter costumes, and there are some surprising choices, including Cuphead.

Like the Sans costume that released alongside Banjo and Kazooie last September, the Cuphead costume is for Mii Gunners and looks like the actual character it’s based on. The costume also comes with its own music track: Floral Fury.

In addition to Cuphead, the next wave of Mii Fighter costumes includes Assassin’s Creed’s Altair (Swordfighter), a Rabbids hat, and Mega Man X and MegaMan.exe (Gunner). You can take a look at the new costumes below.

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The next wave of Mii Fighter costumes launches on January 28, the same day that the Byleth character pack arrives. Each costume can be purchased for $0.75 USD. The Byleth pack, meanwhile, is included as part of Smash’s $25 Fighters Pass and comes with a new stage–Garreg Mach Monastery–and 11 tracks taken from Fire Emblem: Three Houses. If you don’t have the Fighters Pass, you can also pick up the Byleth character pack individually for $6 USD.

While Byleth is the fifth and final Fighters Pass character, there’s still more DLC on the way. During the stream, Sakurai confirmed that six additional fighters are in development for the game. Sakurai says all six have already been chosen, but hasn’t dropped any hints as to who they’ll be. All six of the characters will be included as part of the Fighters Pass Vol. 2. You can pre-purchase the pass starting January 28, and if you do pick it up, you’ll get a bonus Mii Fighter costume based on the Ancient Armor from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.

Now Playing: Super Smash Bros. Ultimate – Byleth Reveal Trailer

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Watch The Joker Use Dirty Tricks In The New MK11 DLC Trailer

Netherrealm Studios has revealed gameplay for Mortal Kombat 11‘s next guest character, The Joker. First shown last year, along with five other characters including The Terminator, The Joker is the second guest fighter to make his way into Mortal Kombat 11’s in the current Kombat Pack. The character’s debut marks the first time a DC Comics villain has appeared in Mortal Kombat, and he’ll be available to play in early access on January 28 for current owners of the DLC bundle.

In the new gameplay trailer, we see how The Joker’s combat style fits into MK11. His look is unlike any of his other appearances in other games, which makes for a less jarring interpretation of the character’s debut in the ultra-violent Mortal Kombat. For anyone who’s played the Injustice games, also developed by Netherrealm Studios, you’ll see many similarities with how the character fights in MK11. With that said, the Clown Prince of Crime won’t be tethered to Injustice’s teen-rating, and his skills and tricks are far more brutal. In addition to using his cane to bludgeon his foes during his Fatal Blow–recalling his infamous killing of Jason Todd from the comics–he can also use Batman dummy, which conceals a gun.

There’s a lot of regular call outs to DC Comics lore with The Joker’s appearance in MK11, and there are even some jokes made at the expense of the game. For instance, Joker’s fatality brings back the series’ famous Friendship finisher–a non-violent way to conclude a match from classic Mortal Kombat. However, it quickly turns violent when the cake that Joker hands to his opponent are packed with explosives, turning the friendship into a proper fatality.

Much like previous roster updates for MK11, new costumes will also be added to the game. Available on January 28, the new outfits take inspiration from DC’s Elseworlds line–which focuses on alternate-history storylines. Revealed in the trailer, Kitana has a Catwoman inspired costume, Baraka gets a Killer Crock skin and a Darkseid outfit for Garras. However, the one that’s most exciting of all is Noob Saibot’s new costume that turns him into The Batman Who Laughs, an evil alternate universe Batman who takes on the mantle of the Joker.

With the upcoming release of The Joker, there’s only one character that remains in MK11’s Kombat Pack, Image Comics’ Spawn. Set for release in March, Spawn’s debut will mark the end of the first slate of bonus characters coming to MK11. However, there could be the possibility of other characters making an appearance in a future fighter pack. There’s been supposed leaks of Ash from Evil Dead possibly making an appearance, but we’ve yet to see any official word of that at this time.

Now Playing: Mortal Kombat 11 – Official Joker Gameplay Trailer

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Super Smash Bros. Ultimate – Official Byleth Gameplay Walkthrough & Reveal Trailer

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Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Announces Byleth As Fifth Fighters Pass Character

Nintendo has announced the final Super Smash Bros. Ultimate character as part of the first Fighter Pass. In a special presentation by game director Masahiro Sakurai showed a short trailer announcing the new character: Byleth, from Fire Emblem: Three Houses.

As in Three Houses, you can play as male or female Byleth, and you have access to the powerful Heroes Relics from the game as weapons. Those will change depending on your stick direction, and they serve different purposes. The sword is good for dash attacks, while the whip is a flurry attack, and the axe lends itself to launch power. The bow is used for neutral attacks. Byleth has low mobility, which Sakurai said is slightly better than Robin’s.

Byleth’s Final Smash is called “Progenitor God Ruptured Heaven,” and lets you join forces with Sothis. Byleth also has alternate colors based on Sothis and the House leaders.

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Naturally, Byleth will come alongside a new map, the Garreg Mach Monastery. It features different parts of the iconic location, with representatives from each of the houses hanging out together. The Marketplace has members of Blue Lion House (Dimitri, Dedue, and Ingrid), and if you destroy the market booths the stage expands. The Reception Hall houses Black Eagles House members Edelgard, Dorothea, and Petra. The Bridge has Golden Deer House members Claude, Hilda, and Lorenz. The Cathedral includes Seteth, Rhea, and Flayn. Locations cycle about every 2.5 minutes.

Byleth will be available on January 28 for $5.99 individually, or as part of the Fighters Pass. This is the fifth and final character as part of the Fighters Pass, which costs $25 USD / $37 AUD / £20 GBP. The other four have included Joker (Persona 5), Hero (Dragon Quest), Banjo and Kazooie (Banjo Kazooie), and Terry Bogard (Fatal Fury). This marks the end of this pass, but Nintendo has already promised that more characters are coming.

Now Playing: Every Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Final Smash Move (So Far)

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Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot’s Launch Trailer Spoils The Ending If You Never Watched The Anime

The final trailer for Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot has arrived ahead of the game’s January 17 launch, and it’s a good reminder that this is a game made with the fans in mind–so much so that it goes ahead and spoils how the game will likely end.

Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot covers the events of Dragon Ball Z from the Saiyan Saga through to the Buu Saga, as portrayed in the anime series (as well as the manga and the abbreviated Dragon Ball Z Kai). The opening cinematic pays tribute to the original anime’s opening, and now this launch trailer–which is set to We Were Angels, the second outro theme of the original Japanese release–reminds us how it all ended.

The trailer focuses on both the defeat of Kid Buu and Vegeta’s iconic monologue, during which he recognizes Goku’s superiority as a warrior. While there’s a few episodes of the series left after this, it is, essentially, the big final conclusion where the last villain is defeated (assuming Kakarot does not delve into the events of either Super or GT).

The trailer’s willingness to spoil the ending is a solid indicator that the game is assuming some existing investment on the player’s part–DBZ Kakarot might not be a great introduction to the series for newcomers.

It’s not too late to preorder the game, if you want to nab any pre-order bonuses. If you want a taste of the game first, we have gameplay footage of the first 90 minutes.

Now Playing: Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot – Piccolo Vs. Radditz Gameplay

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Friends TV Show Reunion: Here’s The Latest

Friends, the iconic NBC TV show from the ’90s and early 2000s, is reportedly coming back for a one-off reunion special. NBC executive Kevin Reilly has now provided a status update on the project, and it’s not the best of news for Friends fans.

Speaking at a Television Critics Association event this week, Reilly confirmed that discussions are underway with the cast and creators to bring back Friends for a special. However, nothing is locked in yet. The possibility of the reunion special continues to be a “maybe,” as the network struggles to find a way to get the project off the ground.

“There’s interest all the way around, and yet we can’t seem to quite get that interest all aligned to push the button on it,” he said, according to The Hollywood Reporter. “Today, unfortunately, it’s still a maybe.”

Friends features Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, David Schwimmer, and Matthew Perry in the career-defining roles of six friends from New York.

The original Friends was produced by Warner Bros. TV and aired on NBC. The new reunion show, if it happens, would be made for the Warner-supported HBO Max. That platform launches later in 2020, and it plans to charge $15 USD/month for access to a catalog of old shows and movies, as well as new, original content.

Friends left Netflix at the end of 2019, and it will move to HBO Max when it launches. WarnerMedia reportedly paid $85 million per year to get Friends for a period of five years.

Series creators Marta Kauffman and David Crane have said for a long time that they don’t want to reboot Friends, but this new program seems to be a one-off special. In October 2019, Aniston told Ellen Degeneres that something new for Friends was in the works. “We’re working on something,” Aniston said.

As of 2015, the show was bringing in $1 billion every year from syndication, with all the main stars making $20 million a year from that based on their 2 percent share of syndication revenue, according to USA Today.

Does Sony Even Need E3 Anymore?

Beloved host Jonathon is on a rodent-themed vacation in the lush, verdant hamlet of Anaheim, CA and fan-favorite elderly Irish woman Lucy has taken a trip to News Island, but in their stead, join Max Scoville, Brian Altano, Matt Kim, and Janet Garcia as they discuss the thrilling delays of Square Enix’s most anticipated games, our 2019 PlayStation Wrap-Up stats, and what color the PlayStation 5 should be.

Download Podcast Beyond Episode 626 RIGHT HERE or go snag it on your Podcast service of choice.

Toss a coin to your Witcher and toss an email to your podcasters at [email protected]!

What wacky color schemes do YOU want to see the PlayStation 5 come in? To spark your imagination, take a gander at these silly Xbox Photoshops Max and Brian did. Even if you’re a PlayStation fan, they’re fun pictures! Look at ’em go!

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[poilib element=”accentDivider”]Max Scoville is a host, producer, and frazzled substitute teacher on Beyond for IGN, you can find him on Twitter @MaxScoville.

Rocky Johnson, Father of Dwayne Johnson, Passes Away at 75

Wrestling legend Rocky Johnson, father to Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, has passed away at age 75. WWE announced the news Johnson’s death in a statement on Wednesday.

“WWE is saddened to learn that Rocky “Soul Man” Johnson (born Wayde Douglas Bowles), a WWE Hall of Famer, former World Tag Team Champion, and father of Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, has passed away at age 75,” the WWE statement reads, also adding, “WWE extends its condolences to Johnson’s family, friends and fans.”

The WWE recognized Johnson, known to his fans as “The Soul Man Rocky Johnson,” as a Hall of Famer in 2008. He was renowned as a tag team specialist and made history with his partner Tony Atlas, together known as the tag team Soul Patrol, when they became the first-ever black tag team to win the WWF Tag Team titles.

Rocky Johnson. Photo credit: WWE
Rocky Johnson. Photo credit: WWE

Johnson began his wrestling career in 1964 as part of the National Wrestling Alliance, joined the WWF (now WWE) in 1982, and retired in 1991. After retiring, he trained his son Dwayne to be a wrestler. Dwayne’s wrestling name was originally “Rocky Mavia,” which was a combination of his father’s name (Rocky Johnson) and his grandfather’s name (Peter Maivia). Eventually he changed it to “The Rock,” a name that now endures as a tribute to his family’s wrestling heritage.

Many in the wrestling community have taken to social media to express their condolences and remember Johnson as a wrestling icon.

“I am so sorry to hear of the passing of the great Rocky Johnson. Always a gentleman, I always enjoyed talking with him. My deepest condolences to his family, friends, and the fans who loved him. A very sad day for wrestling,” tweeted Mick Foley.

“One of the men I looked up to and one of the best to ever do it. God rest his soul,” tweeted Booker T. Huffman aka Booker T.

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Joshua is Senior Features Editor at IGN. If Pokemon, Green Lantern, or Game of Thrones are frequently used words in your vocabulary, you’ll want to follow him on Twitter @JoshuaYehl and IGN.

The Haunting of Hill House Star on Becoming The Invisible Man

How do you play an invisible man? That’s one of the questions that immediately come to mind when you think of the classic Universal Monster and the men who have brought him to life. Leigh Whannell’s vision is a far cry from the 1933 Claude Rains version, and we have seen Kevin Bacon’s take on the evil and invisible antagonist in Paul Verheoven’s Hollow Man. This time it’s up to The Haunting of Hill House‘s Oliver Jackson-Cohen to take on the mantle. Alongside his director, the young British star is excited to do something completely different. The film’s big twist is that here Jackson-Cohen’s character is the villain, an abusive and powerful man who is desperate to destroy the life of the woman who dared to leave him. According to the actor who’ll be bringing the terrifying vision to life, it was the only way the story could be told.

“It’s an amazing space and amazing script, it’s such a genius kind of story. I think it’s the only way to do it. It completely turns the story on its head and Lee’s written such an incredibly solid script. I just think to go in by telling it from this woman’s point of view of something we’ve all experienced, you know, these relationships that are incredibly dangerous and toxic. To kind of look at it from that point of view and base it, in reality, is a genius way of handling the property.”

Bringing the character to life in a way that felt authentic and grounded was a challenge for Jackson-Cohen who sat down with IGN and a small group of press during a visit to the Sydney set of the Blumhouse film. However, the hook of invisible man Adrian Griffin being a sociopathic billionaire who can charm as easily as he can terrorize inspired the actor to find his footing.

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“We’ve seen the villain so many times, so I think as an actor, you always want to try and think of the most interesting way. To me, it was a sort of a no-brainer when I read [the script] that I wanted to — these people who are narcissists and are so controlling in relationships, they are incredibly intelligent — make Adrian so good at performing, and pretending to be so charismatic and to fool people into a false sense of security. That’s the direction we’ve gone with him, which I personally think is the right way to do it. It’s been really good fun because we kind of want to mess with an audience as well, and mess with them going, ‘Wait, but he’s not… he didn’t seem to be a bad guy. He seemed nice.’ But then he does these horrific things.”

The setup for the new Invisible Man relaunch is a timely one that has echoes of the Me Too movement and emotionally driven horrors like Midsommar that dare to lift the lid on emotionally abusive relationships. Finding an antagonist worthy and fitting of the story was vital and that’s where the concept of a San Francisco tech billionaire came from, someone whose wealth, unquestioned power, and absolute arrogance becomes the ultimate weapon.

“[That aspect] is hugely important. I think that Leigh said when we first having conversations, ‘It’s the ultimate power: to be invisible.’ I mean, we all stay in these apartments in Sydney. And the other day, I was sort of doing that weird thing when you’re on your own and you’re like having a conversation to the air. When you don’t think anyone is watching, or you’ll be playing music, and you’ll really be hitting a note that no one should ever hear. And I did think what if someone was sitting in that chair? There’s something sort of inherently terrifying about that. I think for someone like Adrian, it’s the ultimate power, but it’s also the decline of his grip on reality and his grip on any kind of humanity and I think it is because of that wealth and power.”

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That realism and dedication to doing something entirely new led to their tech-heavy take on the character. Though Jackson-Cohen’s lips were (mostly) sealed, he did reveal what separated their take from the H.G. Wells novel and classic Universal film that inspired it.

“I think where Leigh is very smart is that our film is not potions and magic. It’s a very probable story that is quite timely as well. So I think approaching it — and specifically with this abusive relationship and how it isn’t necessarily a physically abusive one, it’s an emotional one — I think that’s something that speaks to so many people, because we’ve all been there or we’ve witnessed friends that are going through it. When someone says something to you and you kind of you can rationalize in a way. It’s about that, it’s about this woman getting out of this relationship that is toxic and then trying to deal with the aftermath of that.”

Fans of Netflix’s hit word of mouth horror series The Haunting of Hill House first discovered the actor as Luke Crain, the drug-addicted son of the clan, whose life has been devastated by the strange happenings he was party to as a child. His empathetic performance and heartbreaking rendering of the damaged young man seems to make him a prime candidate to bring something layered and possibly relatable to the dark role in The Invisible Man, but Jackson-Cohen is quick to explain that the only way we’d see that side of him is if it was a way for Adrian to gain control.

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“I think that the way that Adrian operates he could play on that as a performance, knowing full well, exactly what he’s doing. The whole thing’s about manipulation. I think that that’s very true, again, of these relationships. I watched all these documentaries on women and men that stay in these relationships and why they keep on going back and it was really interesting. There was this woman that was interviewed, and it sounded so horrific what was going on in that particular relationship. But she said, ‘Every time I would go and say I’m done, he would cry. And it would hook me back in because I didn’t want to see him so broken.’ It’s all a tactic, so what’s been interesting with this is playing around with that idea of how much manipulation? How much you can get her to believe?”

With such a lightning rod topic at its center, how does Jackson-Cohen think that the film will resonate with victims of domestic violence and abuse? He’s hopeful that it will be a cathartic experience elevated by a strong central performance from his co-star Elizabeth Moss.

“I hope that the film resonates with people that have had similar situations. And, you know, the way that Cecilia (Elisabeth Moss) was written, She is such a strong woman. And the thing is that a lot of what’s been so interesting in sort of researching this is that so many of the people that are in these relationships, it’s not because they’re weak, it’s because of this sort of mastermind power that’s been sort of hooked on to them, that is still impossible for anyone that’s intelligent [to escape]. And a lot of these people that are stuck in relationships like this are incredibly intelligent, and Celia being one of them. She’s a very smart, strong, intelligent woman.”

The Invisible Man hits screens on Feb. 28 in the US and UK and Feb. 27 in Australia.