If the KOTOR Rumors Are True, Who’s Making It?

We finally get a look at the back of the Xbox Series X – for real, this time – and discuss why someone might be in biiiiiiig trouble. Plus: a new rumor about a sort-of remake of Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic has us hyped – but also wondering who would be given the assignment.

Subscribe on any of your favorite podcast feeds, or grab an MP3 download of this week’s episode. For more awesome content, check out the latest episode of IGN Unfiltered from our new barcade set, featuring an interview with Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order director Stig Asmussen. It’s an open bar; come and join us!

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It’s going to be an incredibly fun year of Xbox coverage. Join us!

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Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s Executive Editor of Previews. Follow him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan, catch him on Unlocked, and drop-ship him Taylor Ham sandwiches from New Jersey whenever possible.

Untitled Goose Game Devs Commit 1% Of All Future Earnings To Australian Indigenous Groups

January 26 in Australia is officially called Australia Day, a public holiday meant to celebrate the arrival of the British First Fleet in 1788. It’s the date that British sovereignty was declared, and as such it’s also a day of mourning for many indigenous Australians, as it marks the beginning of British rule and a period of history where numerous atrocities were committed. Reparations have never been provided, and land rights were never ceded.

In the wake of January 26, 2020, one Australian developer has pledged to take part in the “Pay The Rent” initiative, which asks people to pledge a portion of their income to indigenous groups on a regular basis. House House, the developer of Untitled Goose Game and Push Me, Pull You, will give “at least 1%” of all their earnings going forward to indigenous groups.

“Our videogames are made on stolen Wurundjeri land,” their announcement acknowledges. The land of the Wurundjeri tribe covers what is now known as the northern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria. Prior to colonization, there were around 300 unique Indigenous nations.

To date, Untitled Goose Game has sold over one million copies–if it continues to sell well in 2020, 1% a month could be a substantial contribution. The goose terrorized the Game Awards in 2019, and might get its own Lego set.

Now Playing: Acting Like A Jerk In Untitled Goose Game

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Arrow: Series Finale – “Fadeout” Review

Warning: this review contains full spoilers for the series finale of Arrow! If you need a refresher on where we left off, here’s our review for Season 8, Episode 9 and our full review of the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover.

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It’s a strange experience writing the final review for a series that’s been a part of my personal and professional life for eight years. Before Arrow existed, Smallville was the closest thing to a fully realized, live-action superhero universe on TV. Now we have a whole Arrowverse, one that keeps getting bigger and crazier and comic book-ier with each passing year. Oliver Queen changed a lot over the course of eight years, as did world around him. It’s fitting that the series takes its final bow not by putting Ollie in the spotlight, but by examining how his crusade affected the lives of everyone around him.

To be frank, Arrow didn’t even necessarily need a series finale in the wake of Crisis on Infinite Earths. Ollie already made his grand, heroic sacrifice and finally achieved his goal of saving Star City. What more even needs to be said at this point? But in a way, that works to the benefit of “Fadeout.” The hardest part is already over. There’s really no way to unstick the landing, so the finale is less an epic climax to the series than it is a quiet epilogue and an opportunity to spend one last hour with old friends.

Quite a few old friends, as it turns out. “Fadeout” shows us Lex Luthor wasn’t the only one to manipulate reality and create a new Earth more to his liking. Ollie apparently tweaked Earth-Prime so that doppelgangers of nearly all the loved ones who died over the course of the series are now living in the reborn Star City. It’s a clever twist that allows the series to end on a very upbeat and hopeful note despite, you know, everyone grieving for the dead main character. It says a lot about Ollie that he went through the trouble of giving all these people – his mother, Tommy, even poor, twisted Emiko – a second chance without trying to reclaim his own life. And perhaps most importantly, the method behind these “resurrections” dances around any concerns about cheapening their original deaths. Those deaths still happened, just in a universe that no longer exists.

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It’s great seeing so many familiar cast members back, including Susanna Thompson’s Moira Queen, Colin Donnell’s Tommy Merlyn, Katrina Law’s Nyssa al Ghul and even Joe Dinicol’s Rory Regan. The complaint with nearly all these returning characters is that we didn’t get to see enough of them, but there’s really only so much that can be expected of one episode.

And certainly, writers Marc Guggenheim and Beth Schwartz knew their biggest priority had to be Emily Bett Rickards’ Felicity. Season 8 has been able to coast by without Felicity up to now, but it would have been unthinkable to wrap up without bringing her back. Rickards delivers an emotionally charged performance to cap off her Arrowverse tenure, with Felicity juggling her grief over Ollie, her fear at losing William too and the profoundly strange sensation of meeting an adult version of her infant daughter. And fittingly, it all culminates in a sequence that finally reveals what became of 2040’s Felicity at the end of Season 7. This episode is somewhat vague (intentionally, no doubt) as to whether Ollie still exists in Spectre form or is truly and completely dead, but all that really matters is he and Felicity finally get that happy ending they failed to achieve at the end of Seasons 3 and 7.

If “Fadeout” does anything right, it’s in passing the torch from Ollie to Diggle. David Ramsey really shines here as a man mourning his brother and struggling to decide what his purpose is in a world that no longer needs Team Arrow. The flashbacks help highlight that brotherly dynamic and show just how far the two have come since 2012. And happily, this episode implies we’ll be seeing a lot more of the Diggle family beyond Ramsey’s guest role in next week’s The Flash. Their move to Metropolis suggests John and/or Lyla might be part of the supporting cast on Superman & Lois. And it sure seems like that John Diggle: Green Lantern fan theory has well and truly come to pass.

The actual conflict in the finale is nothing terribly remarkable. Post-Prometheus, the idea of an old enemy from Season 1 returning to strike at Oliver Queen where he’s most vulnerable seems a little redundant. But that subplot and the flashback scenes get the job done in terms of adding a little variety to the mix. You don’t want to devote an entire hour to people crying in front of tombstones and statues, especially when James Bamford is directing. And there’s something highly amusing about the very last villain in Arrow being named after the influential and infamously cantankerous comic creator John Byrne.

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While emotionally stirring in all the right ways, “Fadeout” does fall short in a few key ways. Anyone who’s followed my Arrow reviews over the years probably knows what I’m going to say next. It’s hugely disappointing that Manu Bennett’s Slade Wilson never made a significant return appearance in Season 8. Slade is easily the best villain Arrow ever produced, and he only Reverse-Flash rivals him as the best Arrowverse villain of them all. The series will always feel irritatingly incomplete in that regard. We do get that early rehash of the pivotal Slade/Moira scene from Season 2 early on, but one has to assume Bamford and his team fudged the end result using archival footage rather than actually flying Bennett out to film a couple quick shots of being punched in the face. Otherwise, why not give Slade a meatier role and actually provide the character with the closure Season 6 never quite achieved?

There are several possible reasons why Bennett never returned for Season 8 when nearly every other fan-favorite actor did. Maybe the scheduling never worked out. Maybe, as with Michael Rosenbaum’s refusal to take part in Crisis, The CW was never able to provide Bennett with the compensation he felt he deserved. Or maybe Slade is just another casualty of WB’s strange dislike of having multiple simultaneous versions of the same character. With Deathstroke playing such a huge role in Titans: Season 2, it could be that Bennett’s return was never going to be an option. Whatever the explanation, the almost complete lack of Slade Wilson in the finale causes the series to end on a needlessly sour note.

It’s also strange how much the events of “Fadeout” seem to clash with last week’s “Green Arrow and the Canaries.” That episode revealed Dinah fled to the year 2040 after discovering no trace of her existence remains in 2020. How exactly does that gel with what we see here? There’s also little sense of how and why Laurel comes to be in 2040. These glaring inconsistencies stand out all the more because this episode does reference William’s kidnapping in “Green Arrow and the Canaries,” so it’s not as if the two hands aren’t talking to each other.

For these and other reasons, Arrow’s final episode does stumble a bit as it crosses the finish line. There are a few too many loose ends that will probably have to be wrapped up in other Arrowverse series. But at least the core trinity of Ollie, Felicity and Diggle are given the sendoffs they deserve. Much as it has throughout its tumultuous existence, Arrow succeeds where it matters most.

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Bryan Cranston Stars In Absurd Mountain Dew Super Bowl Ad That Remakes The Shining

Super Bowl 54 is coming up soon. There is a football game, of course, but another big draw for the event are all the commercials. We’ve now seen another one, as Mountain Dew has released its big game commercial hyping its new zero sugar version.

Mountain Dew recruited Breaking Bad’s Bryan Cranston for the ad, which sees the actor remake the “Here’s Johnny!” scene from The Shining, basically. Cranston plays Jack Torrance in that horrible scene where he’s trying to kill his wife. Except in this version, Cranston offers his wife a Mountain Dew Zero, and she accepts and everything is just fine. Phew.

Be sure to stick through until the end for a special surprise that is quite unnerving. Here’s the video:

Mountain Dew is not the first company to release its Super Bowl ad early–check out GameSpot’s roundup of all the commercials revealed so far. Super Bowl broadcaster Fox is charging $5.6 million for 30 seconds of airtime during the Super Bowl, so this new Mountain Dew ad and the rest did not come cheap.

Super Bowl 54 takes place on Sunday, February 2 from the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. The San Francisco 49ers are facing off against the Kansas City Chiefs in what’s expected to be high-scoring, action-packed game.

Every year EA Sports releases the results of its Super Bowl simulation, but that hasn’t happened yet. The simulation has a spotty track record, so even when the results do come, there is a good reason to doubt them.

Super Smash Bros Ultimate Patch Notes–Every Fighter Adjustment In Update 7.0

Donkey Kong Other Increased shield size.
Made the head briefly invincible after deactivating shield. Link Other Increased shield size. Samus Dash Attack Increased the power of the beginning of the attack. Samus Up Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Samus Down Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Samus Up Throw Extended launch distance. Samus Other Increased power of midair grab.
Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts for midair grab.
Increased shield size. Dark Samus Dash Attack Increased the power of the beginning of the attack. Dark Samus Up Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Dark Samus Down Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Dark Samus Up Throw Extended launch distance. Dark Samus Other Increased power of midair grab.
Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts for midair grab.
Increased shield size.
Made the right arm briefly invincible after activating shield. Yoshi Other Increased shield size.
Made the head and both legs briefly invincible after activating shield. Kirby Other Increased shield size. Fox Other Changed the animation when receiving attacks from opponents while shielding. Pikachu Other Increased shield size. Captain Falcon Neutral Attack 1 Made it easier to hit multiple times. Captain Falcon Other Increased shield size. Bowser Other Increased shield size. Ice Climbers Other Increased shield size. Sheik Down Smash Attack Increased attack speed.
Made it easier to hit multiple times. Sheik Grab Increased grab range of stationary grab. Sheik Neutral Special Reduced vulnerability when landing after using the move in the air. Sheik Side Special Reduced vulnerability after using the move on the ground and in the air.
Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts for the explosion.
The explosion will no longer get negated. Sheik Up Special Extended launch distance for the explosion. Sheik Other Increased shield size. Zelda Side Tilt Attack Increased power.
Extended launch distance. Zelda Neutral Air Attack Reduced vulnerability when landing after using the move.
Made it easier to hit multiple times. Zelda Up Air Attack Increased attack range.
Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts.
Decreased power for the latter half of the time hit detection lasts.
Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Zelda Side Special Increased the high-damage range.
Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts. Zelda Down Special Increased power.
Extended launch distance. Zelda Other Increased shield size. Dr. Mario Side Tilt Attack Increased power.
Extended launch distance. Dr. Mario Down Tilt Attack Increased the amount of time opponents will be in the damage animation.
Shortened launch distance. Dr. Mario Neutral Air Attack Increased the power of the attack in the high-damage range.
Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Dr. Mario Down Air Attack Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts. Dr. Mario Up Special Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Pichu Other Increased shield size. Falco Other Increased shield size. Young Link Neutral Attack 1 Increased attack speed. Young Link Up Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Young Link Up Air Attack Extended launch distance. Young Link Forward Throw Extended launch distance. Young Link Other Increased attack speed for midair grab.
Adjusted launch angle for midair grab.
Increased the amount of time opponents will be in the damage animation.
Increased shield size. Ganondorf Other Increased shield size. Mewtwo Other Changed posture while shielding to reduce vulnerability to a shield stab.
Increased shield size. Mr. Game & Watch Other Increased shield size. Meta Knight Other Increased shield size. Pit Other Increased shield size. Dark Pit Other Increased shield size. Zero Suit Samus Down Special Shortened the time opponents are buried when stomped on. Zero Suit Samus Other Increased shield size. Snake Other Increased shield size.
Made the head briefly invincible after activating shield. Squirtle Other Increased shield size. Charizard Other Increased shield size. Diddy Kong Other Made the arm briefly invincible after deactivating shield. Sonic Other Increased shield size. King Dedede Other Increased shield size. Olimar Other Increased shield size. Lucario Other Increased shield size. Toon Link Dash Attack Reduced vulnerability. Toon Link Down Smash Attack Extended launch distance. Toon Link Back Air Attack Increased attack speed. Toon Link Down Air Attack Increased the power of the attack in the low-damage range.
Extended launch distance when hit in the low-damage range. Toon Link Other Increased the amount of time hit detection lasts for midair grab. Wolf Other Increased shield size. Villager Other Increased shield size. Wii Fit Trainer Other Increased shield size. Rosalina & Luma Other Increased shield size. Little Mac Other Increased shield size. Greninja Other Increased shield size. Mii Brawler Side Special 3 Made it easier to grab opponents. Mii Swordfighter Other Increased shield size. Palutena Up Tilt Attack Increased power of the last attack.
Extended launch distance for the last attack. Palutena Down Smash Attack Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Palutena Neutral Air Attack Shortened launch distance.
Reduced the range of the last attack against opponents in the air. Palutena Downward Throw Extended launch distance. Palutena Other Increased shield size. PAC-MAN Other Increased shield size. Bowser Jr. Other Increased shield size. Duck Hunt Flurry Attack Increased the amount of time opponents will be in the damage animation. Duck Hunt Other Increased shield size. Ryu Down Tilt Attack (Heavy) Adjusted launch angle. Ryu Down Smash Attack Now possible on hit to cancel the attack animation into a special move.
Reduced the power against shields. Ryu Neutral Special Increased the opponent’s downtime when shielding against Hadoken.
Made it easier for Shakunetsu Hadoken to hit multiple times. Ryu Side Special Made the pivoting leg invincible while rotating when used on the ground.
Increased power.
Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Ryu Other Increased shield size. Ken Down Tilt Attack (Heavy) Adjusted launch angle. Ken Down Smash Attack Now possible on hit to cancel the attack animation into a special move.
Reduced the power against shields. Ken Side Special Made the pivoting leg invincible while rotating when used on the ground.
Made it easier to hit multiple times. Ken Other Increased shield size. Cloud Dash Attack Extended launch distance when hit in the high-damage range. Cloud Side Smash Attack Made it easier to hit multiple times. Cloud Up Smash Attack Extended launch distance when hit with the sword tip.
Increased attack speed. Cloud Up Special Increased the speed of the edge-grab timing. Cloud Down Special Increased the speed at which the gauge fills up with Limit Charge. Cloud Other Increased shield size. Corrin Other Increased shield size. Bayonetta Other Increased shield size. Ridley Other Made one part of the wing briefly invincible after activating or deactivating shield.
Changed posture while shielding to reduce vulnerability to a shield stab. King K. Rool Other Adjusted the shield’s center and center of the posture during shielding to match.
Increased shield size. Incineroar Side Special Extended launch distance when opponents that are not grabbed with a side special are caught up in the lariat or back body drop. Piranha Plant Other Made the lips briefly invincible after deactivating shield. Joker Neutral Special Reduced the range when shooting downward in the air. Joker Other Reduced the amount of time Arsene is summoned for when receiving damage while Arsene is summoned in battles with two or fewer opponents.

Arrow’s Finale Sets Up Huge Things for One Key Character

This interview contains full spoilers for Arrow’s series finale, “Fadeout” (read our review here).

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Oliver Queen may have died during the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover, but as Arrow’s series finale proves, the Emerald Archer’s story will continue to have ripple effects throughout the DC TV multiverse for years to come. Dead characters like Moira Queen, Quentin Lance, and Tommy Merlyn are now alive again thanks to Oliver’s sacrifice; Team Arrow members John Diggle, Dinah Drake, Laurel Lance, and Rene Ramirez have new jobs and missions ahead of them; Roy and Thea are finally getting married; Mia Queen is safely back in the future and all teed up to star in a potential Green Arrow and the Canaries spinoff; and Oliver and Felicity can look forward to an eternity together.

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And even though Oliver’s story is technically at an end, it doesn’t necessarily guarantee that we’ve seen the last of him – he is the Spectre, after all.

Below, Arrow executive producer Marc Guggenheim, showrunner Beth Schwartz, and star David Ramsey break down some of the biggest moments from the finale and the repercussions we might see in other Arrowverse shows like The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, Supergirl, Batwoman, and the upcoming Superman and Lois spinoff.

Will John Diggle Become a Green Lantern?

In the final minutes of Arrow’s series finale, the show finally paid off a fan theory that has been years in the making. As John Diggle (David Ramsey) prepared to pack up his life in Star City and move his family to Metropolis following Oliver Queen’s funeral, he had a close encounter with some burning space debris, discovering a mysterious box in the wreckage that, when opened, emitted a bright green light…

We didn’t get to see exactly what was in the box, but DC fans probably have their suspicions, especially since Arrow has been teasing a connection between Diggle and the Green Lantern mythology for multiple seasons now.

Talking to reporters following a screening of the Arrow finale, Ramsey was coy about what the moment might mean for Diggle moving forward.

“So he did get a green box and it was very exciting. I don’t know what that means, but he does go to Metropolis and he got a green box, and we’ll see… we’ll find out [what that means].”

Arrow co-creator and executive producer Marc Guggenheim said they had to be purposefully vague about a potential Green Lantern connection because of an agreement the Arrow producers made with DC: “This was something that was worked out over a year ahead with DC Entertainment. We very specifically negotiated and discussed the parameters and I feel like to say anything beyond what we have shown you would violate our agreement with DC.”

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Ramsey admitted that it felt very exciting to be able to pay off the long-held fan theory that John Diggle is connected to Green Lantern John Stewart in some small way: “I think there’s been a bit of a payoff, but we’ll see what all that means. But I’m with Marc; anything [we say] beyond that I think is kind of violating these parameters that we’ve been given by DC that we have to honor. But I think we’ve done some justice to the six-year tease that we’ve had so far.”

“David and I have actually talked a lot about Diggle’s and David’s post-Arrow future,” Guggenheim teased. “We’ve got some really good ideas and I’m going to stand pat on that. I will also say David has become a remarkable director. So we’re as interested in him behind the cameras we are in front.”

Fans will remember that back in April 2019, Arrow introduced Diggle’s estranged stepfather, General Stewart, while 2018’s Elseworlds crossover saw The Flash from Earth-90 (played by John Wesley Shipp) pointing out that it was odd that “John” wasn’t wearing his ring when he met Diggle, implying that the Diggle of Earth-90 was indeed a Green Lantern.

For now, all we know is that Diggle and his family are headed to Metropolis, where The CW’s upcoming Superman and Lois spinoff will be set – so chances are good we might get a hint about Diggle’s destiny when the new Arrowverse series hits our screens next season.

And don’t forget that HBO Max has greenlit (no pun intended) a new Green Lantern series that is also being produced by Arrow executive producer Greg Berlanti. In the meantime, Diggle will also appear in the February 4 episode of The Flash, although Ramsey told reporters that his presence in Central City won’t be tied to that mysterious scene at the end of Arrow.

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“There’s a whole cast over there on the Flash that they’re still recovering from Oliver’s death. And part of the connection to Oliver is Diggle, obviously. And so Diggle’s presence there serves as kind of that conduit, a way to grieve,” Ramsey said. “But there’s also a case, there’s something to solve that’s going on over there in Flash’s world that Diggle’s a part of. But in terms of what happened at the end of Arrow, following that over there on Flash, no, that doesn’t happen. It is John Diggle over there as John Diggle and we’re working on a case.”

Oliver and Felicity’s Happy Ending (and Why Felicity Wasn’t in the Flashback Storyline)

The Arrow Season 7 finale set up a long-awaited reunion between Oliver and Felicity, although at the time we didn’t know the context for why they had been separated.

Schwartz revealed that they had known the vague plan for Oliver and Felicity’s reunion since Season 7, but had figured out the exact beats of that emotional final scene between them in June 2019, when Guggenheim wrote it after meditating.

“I meditate every morning and this one morning I came out – this has never happened to me before or since – I came out of the meditation with the entire scene in my head. Literally, word for word,” Guggenheim said. “It just felt so right. And I very excitedly texted Beth, I’m like, ‘I wrote the final scene, I’ve got to send it to you,’ and of course, the big question was ‘is Emily [Bett Rickards] coming back to be in it?’ I’m like, ‘well now she really has to because I really love this scene.'”

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“We didn’t even think of another ending,” Schwartz admitted. “We didn’t have a backup plan at all. We were just like, ‘Emily needs to do this.’ And luckily she did.”

Guggenheim did reveal that they had initially hoped that Rickards might be able to return for long enough to take part in the finale’s flashback storyline, but the scheduling didn’t work out.

“The original plan was for it to be something with Oliver, Felicity, and Diggle, probably circa… right after episode 114 when Felicity was brought into the circle of trust. The problem was that Emily was only available to us for two days. And that meant basically if we had a third day with her we would have been able to tell that story,” Guggenheim said. “Once that didn’t materialize, we were like, ‘okay, well our backup plan is do something post-105 after Oliver and Diggle have started working together, and just tell a piece of the story you didn’t see, which is really the start of their relationship.’ And I think … as partners and, as Diggle says later, as brothers you see, as Oliver says, the proof of concept of what that relationship could be. And I think what was very nice and rewarding for us to see was how that and the eulogy speak to each other. And you really do see how much things have changed [between them].”

Why did Earth-2 Laurel Survive the Crisis Instead of Earth-1 Laurel?

Another emotional moment in “Fadeout” came from Earth-2 Laurel’s reunion with a resurrected Quentin Lance, with the former Black Siren wondering why she still existed when the aftermath of the Crisis had brought back many of the people who were most important to Oliver, but not his version of Laurel.

“We went back and forth on that a great deal. Truth be told, that was really driven by the spinoff. I think if we weren’t doing a spinoff we probably would’ve gone a different way,” Guggenheim said. “We had a lot of conversations … basically which version of Laurel did we want on the spinoff? We’ve really fallen in love over the years with the Earth-2 version of Laurel. We love Katie’s take on that character. We love writing for that character. We love the complexities of that character’s moral seesaw. She’s just always been a more interesting character to us.

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“In Seasons 7 and 8, she was really able to redeem herself,” Schwartz added. “And we felt that that was such an important story for her character. She’s come such a long way from murdering people all the time to becoming the hero she was at the end of Season 8 and will continue to be in the spinoff hopefully. So it just felt like we would shortchange her if we didn’t really honor the growth that her character went through.”

But, Schwartz added, just because they established the rules of the resurrections, in that it’s “the people who were important to Oliver that have come back, that doesn’t mean we won’t surprise you, if the spinoff goes, or on the other shows, if there’s another character that might come back.”

Will Stephen Amell Return to the Arrowverse as the Spectre?

Although Oliver sacrificed himself during Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover, that doesn’t rule out a return at some point – as he says in the finale’s opening voiceover, he’s become something else. 

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“The whole point of making him the Spectre was just to give us story opportunities because who knows what’s going to happen in the future?” Guggenheim said. “And the one thing I always say, every time a character dies on any of these shows, it’s like, we’ve got alternate realities; we’ve got time travel; we’ve got flashbacks, you name it. We have all these different devices – no one’s ever really gone … So, while I would always love to see Stephen back … I think it would be how we brought him back and when? If we brought him back in the seventh season premiere of Flash, it would probably diminish this a bit. Fortunately we have some sway with those folks.”

“There’s always an opportunity to cut to him and Felicity in the afterlife,” Schwartz quipped. “Just hanging out.”

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What did you think of the Arrow series finale? Share your thoughts below.

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What Arrow’s Green Lantern Tease Means For The Future Of The Arrow-Verse

Just like that, Arrow, the series that launched a universe of superhero shows on The CW, has come to a close. The series finale gave closure to nearly every character on the show. However, it also teased something that could come in the future.

Warning: The following contains spoilers for the Arrow series finally, titled “Fadeout.” If you haven’t watched yet and don’t want to be spoiled, walk away now.

In the final minutes of the series finale, Arrow finally paid off a fan theory that’s stretched over multiple seasons. As he was packing up his family to move to Metropolis, John Diggle (David Ramsey) was knocked off his feet by a meteor crashing to the Earth. Upon inspecting the crater, he found a box that contained something glowing and green.

While it’s not confirmed, this seems to point to Diggle’s future as a Green Lantern, which was teased on the show during the Elseworlds crossover. As for what this means for the larger Arrow-verse, that’s a bit more complicated.

“This was something that was worked out over a year ahead with DC Entertainment,” executive producer Marc Guggenheim revealed during a post-screening Q&A. “We very specifically negotiated and discussed the parameters and I feel like, to say anything beyond, you know, what we have showed you would violate our agreement with DC.”

However, for those keeping up with what’s coming to The CW, it was recently announced that Superman & Lois, a Metropolis-set series about the Man of Steel and the ace reporter, was ordered to series.

With Diggle and his family moving to Metropolis, does that mean we’ll see him again? While Guggenheim wouldn’t confirm that one way or the other, he explained, “We’ve actually talked a lot about Diggle’s and David’s post-Arrow future. We’ve got some really good ideas. And I’m going to stand pat on that. I will also say David has become a remarkable director. And so we’re as interested in him behind the camera as we are in front.”

That certainly is not a confirmation, but it’s also definitely not a denial. There’s also that Green Lantern series being developed by Arrow executive producer Greg Berlanti for HBO Max, though it has not been revealed whether or not that particular series is set in the Arrow-verse. Whatever the case, there’s hopefully plenty more Diggle (and by extension, Green Lantern) in the future of these shows for years to come.

Now Playing: Elseworlds: Every DC Easter Egg In The Arrowverse Crossover

Destiny 2–The Rollback Is Complete And The Game’s Coming Back Online

Destiny 2 players had a bit of a scare earlier, as servers were taken down after the latest patch saw players lose currency and materials. The game has not been playable, and Bungie has assured affected players that their goods would be returned to them.

Bungie has now confirmed, via Twitter, that the promised rollback is complete. The game is due to return online around 7PM PST on January 28, so there’s not long at all to wait if you need to get your Destiny 2 fix.

Players who were playing the game between 8:30-10AM PST were impacted. Here’s all the information that might affect you:

  • Players may have to redo any progress or quests they completed between 8:30 – 10 AM PST.
  • Purchases made between 8:30 – 10 AM PST will need to be redone. Silver spent during that time will be restored.
  • Destiny 2 Silver purchases from the platform store will be added back to player accounts.
  • ‘The Pidgeon and the Phoenix’ Lore being removed is a separate issue and will be resolved in a future update”

The good news is that the bug has been squashed, and players do not need to worry about their materials being lost. Freebies are coming to the game on January 29 for Twitch Prime subscribers, too, and the latest Exotic weapon, Bastion, is now up for grabs.

Now Playing: Destiny 2: Shadowkeep Video Review

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The Division 2’s Third Episode Takes Players To Coney Island–Check Out The Trailer

Fans of The Division 2 can gear up for the game’s third free episode next month. The episode will take players to a new location in search of a cure for the virus that kicked everything off. Episode 3 of The Division 2 will open up Coney Island, and will make use of the island’s amusement parks.

As is standard for the game now, the island has been seized by Black Tusk–but you’ll be able to take them out by equipping a flamethrower.

Episode 2 of The Division 2 released in October 2019. The game has received several major additions since launch, but this one–which looks like it could move the series’ plot forward in a meaningful way–is particularly exciting.

Ubisoft also released some screenshots from the episode, which are below.

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You can currently nab The Division 2 on PC for just $12, but act fast, because that deal won’t last long. A movie based on the game series is being planned, with David Leitch attached to direct it for Netflix.

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