Mortal Kombat 11’s Best Fatalities, Ranked (And How To Do Them)

Mortal Kombat 11 features the series’ best and most brutal fatalities ever. But with so many to choose from we decided to narrow them down to our top 15 favorites.

You’ll find them here in order from 15 all the way down to our favorite. The only ground rule we set, no character could appear twice on the list. Additionally, we’ve included the combos for each of them in case you want to try them out for yourself.

 

Here’s a key for the controls on each platform:

Attack 1:

  • PS4: Square
  • Xbox: X button

Attack 2:

Ubisoft Open to Adjusting The Division 2 Raid Difficulty

The Division 2 raid Operation Dark Hours has proven to be exceptionally hard to beat, especially for console players, but it appears Ubisoft is open to adjusting its difficulty.

Reddit user Inkist posted yesterday that his team (which includes players Bloodshy, Inkist, Tico79, Jaqev, Hansome Lancer, AZPrimeminister, I’m Bats, and H2K Predator) was the first to beat the eight-player raid on console – three days after it went live.

Johan from Ubisoft took to the thread to congratulate the team on beating the raid, to which a Reddit user criticized the raid’s difficulty. To this, Johan responded “The raid is very much designed to be the toughest challenge yet in the history of the franchise. It is built around the idea of a well-coordinated team with good communications. That said, raid difficulty is certainly feedback that we have been looking at since the release of Dark Hours, and it is not outside the realm of possibility that tweaks will be made moving forward.”

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Game of Thrones: How Jon’s Snow’s Fate Brings the Series Full Circle

Full spoilers for Game of Thrones’ series finale follow below. For more on Game of Thrones, be sure to vote in our poll for your finale reactions and let us know what you thought of the episode our “The Iron Throne” review.

Like many great sagas, the ending of Game of Thrones mirrors the beginning in various key ways. Once again, a mad Targaryen monarch has been killed, preventing the deaths of countless thousands. Another new ruler has been crowned in King’s Landing. One Stark sibling maintains peace and order in the north, while another wanders the land in search of adventure.

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PS5 Loading Time Demo Reportedly Revealed

A new video posted by Wall Street Journal’s Takashi Mochizuki may have given us our first look at the potential power of the PlayStation 5.

Mochizuki Tweeted out the video, saying this was “Sony’s official video comparing performance of PS4 Pro vs next-gen PlayStation.”

The video compares the loading times and performance of Marvel’s Spider-Man between a PS4 Pro and the potentially named PS5, and it is nearly identical to the description given in Wired’s interview with PS5 lead architect Mark Cerny that revealed the first details of the next-generation PlayStation.

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Please Don’t Spoil Once Upon A Time In Hollywood, Tarantino Says

Quentin Tarantino’s ninth movie, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, is premiering this week at the Cannes Film Festival in France. Tarantino is now speaking up to urge those fortunate enough to see it early to keep their lips shut so as to preserve the “journey of discovering a story for the first time.” The movie doesn’t have its public premiere until July.

In a note posted on Twitter, Tarantino said, “I love cinema. You love cinema. It’s the journey of discovering a story for the first time. I’m thrilled to be here in Cannes to share ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” with the festival audience. The cast and crew have worked so hard to create something original, and I only ask that everyone avoids revealing anything that would prevent later audiences from experiencing the film in the same way. Thank you.”

The Cannes Film Festival is a special place for Tarantino. One of his earlier movies, Pulp Fiction, won the show’s Palme d’Or award years ago that helped make Tarantino a big name.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood tells a Pulp Fiction-style story that features intersecting stories set in Los Angeles during 1969. Leonardo DiCaprio plays Rick Dalton, who is the struggling former star of a Western TV show, while Brad Pitt plays his stunt double Cliff Booth. Rick’s neighbour is Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), who was murdered by the family of Charles Manson (Damon Herriman).

The movie is due in theatres on July 26. It also features Al Pacino, Kurt Russell, James Marsden, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Timothy Olyphant, Lena Dunham, Emile Hirsch, and Dakota Fanning. Bruce Dern came aboard the movie last year to play a part meant for Burt Reynolds who died in September 2018. Luke Perry filmed scenes for Once Upon A Time In Hollywood before his death in March.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood might be one of Tarantino’s final movies. In 2016 he said that he would quit directing after his tenth movie, but it remains to be the seen if this is still the case.

Game Of Thrones Series Finale “The Iron Throne” Breakdown!

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PS5 Will Offer “Transformative” Gaming Experiences; Faster Load Times Shown Off In New Video

Sony has again provided some new details on its next-generation console. As part of Sony’s Corporate Strategy Meeting today, the company discussed at a high level what it hopes to achieve in the future across its various business units, including PlayStation.

The two keywords for PlayStation going forward are “immersive” and “seamless,” Sony said. Concerning hardware, Sony said its next-generation console, the PlayStation 5, will offer an “immersive experience created by dramatically increased graphics rendering speeds.”

This will be made possible through the “employment of further improved computational power and a customized ultra-fast, broadband SSD,” Sony said.

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Overall, the PlayStation 5–or whatever Sony ends up calling its new console–will offer experiences that “greatly exceed” what is possible on PS4 and PS4 Pro. Sony said people can expect “completely transformative and immersive gaming experiences” on the PS5.

One of the features that PlayStation system architect Mark Cerny talked about for the PS5 is how its use of solid-state drives will reduce loading screen times.

Cerny pointed out that the fast travel loading screen in Spider-Man on PS4 took roughly 15 seconds on a PS4 Pro, but less than one second on a dev kit for the PS5. Given that the new hardware will be backwards compatible with older games, that means your load times will likely be reduced across the board when you upgrade. Check out the video below from The Wall Street Journal report Takashi Mochizuki who is attending the Sony event today to see the faster load times in action.

Cerny also talked about how the PS5 will allow for faster rendering, which means more environmental objects and textures will populate at a faster rate. In the presentation today, Sony said the PS5 will offer “many new features” beyond these advancements to loading and rendering, though none were mentioned.

Also during the presentation, Sony said it expects the PS4 to reach sales of 100 million units by the end of the 2019 calendar year. PS4 sales currently stand at 96.8 million systems sold. PlayStation Network has 94 million monthly active users, the company said.

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Additionally, Sony management talked about how streaming will play a big role in the PlayStation brand going forward. The PS5 will support Remote Play functionality, Sony confirmed, while management also said it’s looking to its new deal with Microsoft for cloud-gaming solutions to play a role in the company’s future success in that area. Sony of course already operates the PlayStation Now streaming service (which has 700,000 subscribers by Sony’s latest count), but it appears the company has bigger and bolder plans in the future.

Sony is not attending E3 2019 next month, so the company presumably won’t be announcing the PlayStation 5 there. The PlayStation 5 will have an “appealing” price point given its specs, according to Cerny, but there is no ballpark estimate yet regarding what the price may be.

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As for the release date of the PlayStation 5, Sony has said it will not release in the next fiscal year, which means it won’t launch April 2020 at the soonest.

Bran’s Ending In Game Of Thrones’ Finale Might Make More Sense In The Books

Game of Thrones Season 8 is over, for better or worse. The finale made some pretty unexpected moves, perhaps most of all placing Bran on the throne (well, a throne, not the Throne). How the show reached that point, and what it all means, is a topic we could (and honestly will) debate for years to come. But the big question looming over all of this is: Will the ending be the same in the books, once author George R.R. Martin actually finishes writing them?

Bran ascending to rule Westeros (six of the seven kingdoms, at least) makes a certain amount of sense in the show. In communing with the Three-Eyed Raven beyond the Wall, Bran gained powers that allowed him to view events from throughout history, past and present, anywhere in the world. Once every character in the show accepted that Bran has these powers and thus has more knowledge than anyone else could ever hope to gain, the lords of Westeros all agreeing to crown him king is a logical move. It’s not totally clear why Bran did many of the things that he did (or didn’t do) over the last few seasons, besides a vague sense that everything happened for a reason.

If you’re a glass-half-full type of viewer, you might choose to believe that Bran spent several years playing puppet master with the goal of becoming king because he’s ultimately benevolent. Bran has seen every possible future, and he knows that, despite the horrors that have occurred along the way, this was the best path in the end, because he’ll be a good ruler and avoid even more bloodshed in the future. It’s the fantasy version of Doctor Strange’s “one in 14 million” path forward in Avengers: Infinity War.

There’s one key difference, though: Doctor Strange didn’t peer into 14 million possible futures and then pick the one where he becomes emperor of the galaxy. Did Bran manipulate events throughout Game of Thrones to achieve the best possible ending for everyone–least lives lost, most wars averted, etc.–or was the purpose of his machinations simply to put himself in power, no matter the cost?

If Bran was meant to be evil in the end, the show did a pretty bad job explaining how he got that way. I don’t believe that’s the case, but things might turn out very differently in the next book, The Winds of Winter–even if on the surface, they appear to turn out the same. It all has to do with the Three-Eyed Raven’s real identity, Bran’s warging/skinchanging abilities, and another possible meaning of the “song of ice and fire.”

Who Is The Three-Eyed Raven?

The entire storyline around the Three-Eyed Raven is one area in which Game of Thrones simply missed its mark. If you only watch the show, you probably know roughly three things about this character: He was played by two different actors across two seasons (Struan Rodger and Max von Sydow), he lived in a cave north of the Wall, and he didn’t much care for the Night King.

His story is so much better in the books, where he’s known as the Three-Eyed Crow–and where he has an actual identity beyond teaching Bran how to do magic and be weird. In the books, the Three-Eyed Crow is actually Brynden Rivers, or Lord Bloodraven–a Targaryen bastard who served as Hand to multiple Targaryen kings, remained loyal to the Targaryens through several rebellions of a splinter faction called the Blackfyres, and was eventually arrested and sent off to the Night’s Watch. There, he rose through the ranks to become Lord Commander, but disappeared while ranging north of the Wall (not unlike Ned Stark’s brother Benjen).

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When Bran meets Bloodraven in that cave in the far north, the Targaryen bastard is around 125 years old. Obviously, that’s far beyond a normal human’s lifespan; the sorcerer is essentially a living corpse, with a weirwood tree growing around and through him, roots snaking in and out of the empty socket where he lost an eye in a duel with his half-brother Aegor “Bittersteel” Rivers over 100 years earlier. (There’s a saying that Bloodraven, a spymaster and skinchanger, had “a thousand eyes, and one.”) He also has a distinctive winestain birthmark on one cheek–the source of his name, as it apparently resembles a bird.

(I should stop here to note that, technically, the Three-Eyed Crow and Bloodraven being the same person isn’t 100% confirmed yet in the books, although the amount of evidence and clues that point to this theory being fact is overwhelmingly convincing.)

Why does any of this matter?

It’s been established that author George R.R. Martin gave Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and Dan Weiss, at the very minimum, the basic gist of his story outline, so that they could work toward the same ending even as the show passed the books. But “Bran is king in the end” might not be the exact same ending George has in mind.

In the books, Bran was still chilling in that cave with the Three-Eyed Crow the last we saw. The show passed the books when Bran escaped the Night King’s attack there, was rescued by Benjen, and headed back down South. Afterward, Bran was clearly changed: He no longer seemed like himself, and even made cryptic statements about how he wasn’t really Bran anymore.

Read next: Game Of Thrones Season 8 Makes A Lot More Sense If Bran Is Evil

If we assume that some or all of these details came directly from the original author’s still-unpublished book material, then there are some logical leaps we can make. I’ll shout-out here to Twitter user T.J. Hafer, who started me thinking about this theory.

What if Bran really isn’t Bran anymore? What if the Three-Eyed Crow isn’t a benevolent being who wants to help Bran fight the White Walkers (the “Others” in the books), but simply another player of the game of thrones vying for power? The books are full of Targaryens and Targaryen loyalists who want to see their dynasty returned to glory, many of whom are not present in the show, and Bloodraven might be simply one more–albeit one playing a very long game.

Bloodraven may have sensed Bran’s latent magical abilities and lured him north of the Wall so that he could get close to the Stark boy–and steal his body. It’s been suggested–and this is how it seemed to work in the show–that “Three-Eyed Raven” is a mantle that can be passed from character to character. But what if becoming the Three-Eyed Crow really means that Bran literally becomes Bloodraven?

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In the books, if Bran is really the Targaryen bastard Brynden Rivers in disguise when he returns southward, his actions throughout the rest of the series–if the novels play out at all like the show did–could make a lot more sense. Brandon Stark wouldn’t sit around doing nothing while tens of thousands of innocent people died, but Bloodraven might, if it meant returning the Targaryens to power. In the book’s history, Bloodraven traveled north to the Wall in the company of a young Maester Aemon–yes, the same Maester Aemon who’s still alive in Jon and Sam’s time. But unlike Aemon, Bloodraven may not have been content to let his family be snuffed out, even if it meant biding his time for decades and concocting a demented, complex plan to maneuver his way back to power in King’s Landing.

And maybe the titular Song of Ice and Fire–although it still applies to Jon and Dany, too–could also symbolize the war between Bloodraven, a firey Targaryen, and the Others, who want to stop him from carrying his plan out for some reason. For book readers who have had a lot of time to speculate in between releases, these theories go deep–there are rabbit holes involving things like the Stark family’s connections to the Others, and that may all play into this as well.

One thing I know for sure is that the ending as presented on the show–that Bran appeared to manipulate the other characters by selectively revealing bits and pieces of information only when it suited him and allowed tens of thousands of people to die horribly so he could be a Good, Just King–doesn’t sit quite right with me. Whether the series’ true ending is something that fans have already predicted, exactly the same as the show or completely different, or even something that no one has yet foreseen, we’ll simply have to wait to find out.

Read next: Game Of Thrones Season 8 Finale: 36 Easter Eggs And References You Might Have Missed

Game of Thrones Series Finale WTF Questions

Warning: full SPOILERS for the series finale of Game of Thrones, “The Iron Throne”!

The last episode of Game of Thrones has finally come and gone (check out our review of “The Iron Throne”), but that doesn’t mean the conversation surrounding the show will ever end, especially when it comes to some key aspects that left us scratching our heads. These are the biggest WTF questions we have that don’t necessarily have easy answers.

Why Did No One Object to Sansa’s Secession From the Seven Kingdoms?

After the heads of the Great Houses of Westeros decided Bran would be the new King, Sansa Stark announced that the North would become an independent kingdom. This bold and politically charged move is met with zero resistance from those present, begging numerous questions. Why would the North want to secede when a Stark is King of Westeros? Why didn’t anyone try to stop the North from breaking away? Why didn’t any other House try to create their own kingdom, too? We know the Northmen swore to never bend the knee again, but surely someone should have objected or at least questioned Sansa’s reasoning.

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Making Sense of Call of Duty’s Development Drama

On this week’s Xbox show, Sony and Microsoft announced a partnership. Yes, you read that right! We talk about their mutual cloud-gaming initiative. Plus: Call of Duty’s development gets thrown into turmoil for next year, so we examine what effect it will have on the future of the franchise. And did Ubisoft just announce Splinter Cell or were they just “joking”? All that and more on this week’s Unlocked!

Subscribe on any of your favorite podcast feeds, or click here to grab an MP3 download of this week’s episode. For more awesome content, check out this month’s episode of IGN Unfiltered, featuring a rare, in-depth interview with Too Human, Eternal Darkness, and Legacy of Kain developer Denis Dyack:

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