Editor’s note: Despite IGN being in the business of reviews for more than a decade, theme park ride reviews are still new for us – but we know that they’re of interest to a portion of our audience, especially when they’re based on franchises we care about. We want to offer an honest assessment of whether we believe a theme park attraction is worth your time, just as we do with games, movies, and TV shows, with the caveat that your own experience will undoubtedly be colored by what you enjoy most about theme park rides, so we encourage you to visit the park and experience it for yourself if you can, and share your thoughts on how we can make these reviews more useful to you in the comments!
The Expanse Season 4 Review: Back And Better Than Ever
To those who have enjoyed its first three seasons, The Expanse has always felt like something special. It stood out among the shows on Syfy, of which there are many, but only a handful throughout history that have really deserved to break through to the collective pop culture consciousness (shows like Battlestar Galactica, Stargate, and Channel Zero). The Expanse is one of those shows, and now that it’s streaming on Amazon, it seems poised to gain the recognition it deserves.
With the greater visibility that being on Amazon brings, this show might live or die based on its upcoming fourth season, the first to debut on its new home. Luckily, The Expanse Season 4 continues the series’ upward trajectory toward the highest orbit of sci-fi television.
Season 4 sees the Rocinante’s crew on a mission to a new world. Holden (Steven Strait), Naomi (Dominique Tipper), Amos (Wes Chatham), and Alex (Cas Anvar) are taking commands from UN Secretary-General Chrisjen Avasarala (Shohreh Aghdashloo), who sends them into the thorny situation developing on one of the unknown planets accessible through the “ring gates” that opened at the end of Season 3. The planet–called Ilus or New Terra, depending who you ask–was settled first by Belter refugees, but a team of researchers from an Earth-based corporation, led by security chief Adolphus Murtry (Burn Gorman), also assert a claim.
Meanwhile, on Mars, the now-disgraced Bobbie contends with civilian life in a dead-end job that eventually leads her down a dark path. Oh, and there are protomolecule structures–seemingly ancient ruins that occasionally come to life by spewing swarms of tiny, flying robots–on that new planet. And that’s all in the first episode.
If it sounds like a lot to you, well, you probably haven’t watched The Expanse’s first three seasons. This is not the type of show you can pop into halfway through after watching some recaps or getting a friend to catch you up. The Expanse takes place in a complex world of shifting alliances and realistic characters. Fantastical, alien forces mix with the mundanity of humanity’s everyday struggles–struggles that are the same in the slums of a space station in a distant asteroid belt, or on a refugee spaceship with nowhere left to turn, as they are anywhere. This is hard science fiction down to every little detail, from the specifics of space flight to the physics of low gravity warfare. The Expanse demands attention, and rewards it.
Season 4 begins to pay off storylines that started in the show’s early episodes, ranging from entire character arcs to small hints dropped in casual lines of dialogue. Readers of the books on which the series is based may already know some of what’s coming, but the show tends to diverge enough that even fans of the novels can’t guess everything that will take place. It seems like Miller’s (Thomas Jane) throughline is finally leading toward some kind of finale, though, which is a long time coming. And at least one crucial character who’s been mentioned before, but not yet introduced, will debut this season–along with a handful of new ones, mainly in the settlement on Ilus/New Terra, whose ultimate importance we won’t know until the season has run its course.
It’s unknown whether the migration to Amazon has added to the show’s budget, but the effects look as respectable as ever, which is not to say they’re outstanding. The visuals are impressive at best and serviceable at their worst–which could be much, much worse–whether you’re looking at spaceships hurtling through giant planet-sized portals or protomolecule technology reshaping alien landscapes. This season touches on themes of expansionism and manifest destiny, which are also reflected in the overall aesthetic and look. The show switches aspect ratios depending on the setting, getting significantly wider when the characters are on firm land, showcasing Ilus’s wide, natural landscapes. Much of Season 4 was shot in a quarry near Toronto, Canada, but it truly looks like another planet.
The western themes are expressed stylistically as well. Holden arrives on Ilus like a sheriff sent to mediate between unruly farmers and the oil company executives who want to take their land; the way certain scenes are shot, it’s not difficult to imagine tumbleweeds skittering by in the background. There’s even a high-noon-style showdown in one episode–although The Expanse never loses its futuristic, science fiction vibe. This isn’t The Mandalorian, which is a good thing–The Expanse remains faithful to its own look and feel, and there’s really only room for one actual space-western in this town–err, crowded TV landscape.
Amazon sent us six of The Expanse Season 4’s ten episodes, all of which will arrive on the streaming service at once on December 13. Until then, when we can watch the final four, we won’t know exactly how Season 4 will shake out–or whether we can fully embrace the show’s trajectory on its new home. But from this vantage, things are looking very, very good for The Expanse.
Apex Legends: New Patch With Level Cap Increase Live On PC Now, But Console Players Have To Wait
Apex Legends was due to receive a big update today, December 3, and it’s now arrived on PC. This means that once you’ve downloaded the update, you’ll experience a level cap increase from 100 to 500, giving you many more levels to climb through. Console owners will have to wait a little bit longer, though, with a delay pushing the update back to an unknown date. Moments before the update was due, the official Apex Legends Twitter account let everyone know that it would now arrive later.
Heads up, Legends. Due to a last minute, unforeseen issue, the patch that was originally set to go live today has been postponed to a later date.
Once we have more information and an ETA on what that new date is, we’ll be sure to update everyone here.
— Apex Legends (@PlayApex) December 3, 2019
About an hour later, the account announced that the patch was actually now available, but only for the PC version. The console version is still delayed, and hopefully we’ll know soon when it will be made available.
Huddle up, Legends. The patch we originally communicated to be delayed ended up going live shortly after on PC only. We’re still working on an ETA for console and will continue to update everyone here as information comes.
We apologize for the confusion. pic.twitter.com/8M7kojW1y4— Apex Legends (@PlayApex) December 3, 2019
The patch notes list a lot of changes, but the big one is the level cap increase. It now takes 5% less XP to hit level 100, and if you manage to hit level 500 you’ll hit a total of 199 Apex Packs along the way. From levels 2-20 you get one pack per level, one every two level from 22-300, then one pack every five levels from 305-500. You’ll still get 600 Legend Tokens for every time you level up, and Apex Pack rewards will be handed out retroactively. You’ll also unlock Level Gun Charms every 100 levels.
36 new Gun Charms are being added into Apex Packs, and will also now appear in the Rotating Shop so that you can buy them directly. It will also add friendly fire to the new firing range, which is a fun addition. PC players will be able to experience this right now, but console Apex Legends fans will need to wait just a bit longer.
Apex Legends is currently in its third season. Developer Respawn Entertainment also recently launched Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, the first Star Wars action game of this console generation.
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Vaping Politician Pleads Guilty To Stealing Campaign Funds For Video Games, Plane Tickets For Rabbits
United States congressman Duncan Hunter, a Republican representative from California known for vaping on the job, has pleaded guilty to charges of using campaign funds to pay for things like video games and plane tickets for his pet rabbits. The Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California announced that Hunter admitted to the fact that he “knowingly and wilfully stole hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds that he and his wife used to maintain their lifestyle.”
Along with his wife, Hunter is said to have used more than $150,000 in campaign funds between 2010 and 2016 on things that benefitted his family’s “personal use and enjoyment.” Hunter is said to have partaken in “30 or more illegal transactions” related to this money.
The Hunters are said to have spent the stolen money on things like video games, Lego sets, fast food, movie tickets, shoes, and groceries. Beyond that, the attorney’s office said the Hunters also used the funds on international vacations and even plane tickets for their pet rabbits, whose names are Eggburt and Cadbury.
In 2016, it was reported that Hunter spent more than $1,000 on Steam video games. At the time, Hunter said his son made the charges and that the politician was trying to reverse them.
“This was a deliberate, years-long violation of the law,” assistant US attorney David Leshner said. “Congressman Hunter used the power of his position to fund a lifestyle out of his reach, unwittingly financed by those who put him there. His guilty plea entered today acknowledges and accepts responsibility for his conduct.”
Hunter was officially charged with conspiracy to steal campaign funds, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing has been set for March 17, 2020.
Hunter is known popularly as the politician who vapes during congressional sessions.
Half-Life: Alyx And Dota Underlords Work Mean Firewatch Dev’s Next Game Is On Hold
Half-Life: Alyx, the recently announced Half-Life VR game, is being worked on by several former members of Firewatch developer Campo Santo. The developer became a part of Valve last year, bringing their newly announced project, In the Valley of Gods, with them. While the game was initially announced for a 2019 release, it’s been over two years since anything was shown off, and shortly before the next Half-Life was shown off, people started to notice that several developers were removing references to In the Valley of Gods from their Twitter profiles. Fans feared that the game has been cancelled outright.
Now, in a statement to Polygon, Campo Santo co-founder Jake Rodkin has confirmed that the game is “on hold” while the team works on other projects. While this means that the game could be returned to, it’s not currently in active development, and still might be cancelled in the future.
“Developers from the former Campo Santo team have joined other projects at Valve, including Half-Life: Alyx,” Rodkin’s statement reads. “You hear a lot about how at Valve you can work on what you want. It turns out that’s true, and there’s a lot of work available. As we integrated ourselves into Valve it became clear there was a lot of valuable work to be done on Half-Life: Alyx. Some of us starting lending a hand, and have since become full-time on the project as it approaches launch.”
It’s not just Half-Life that the team are working on: several have moved over to Dota Underlords, while others are working on Steam itself. “So to answer your question as of today,” Rodkin continues, “In the Valley of Gods development is on hold—but it certainly feels like a project people can and may return to.”
In the Valley of the Gods sounded ambitious. If it ever happens, it will cast players as Rashida, an explorer and filmmaker in 1920s Egypt, seeking to document the first unveiling of the tomb of Queen Nefertiti alongside their partner Zora. Half-Life: Alyx, meanwhile, will release in March 2020.
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Star Wars: The Rise Of Skywalker Stars Shoot Down A Romance Between Their Characters
Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker releases in cinemas on December 20, and more information is coming out as the cast and crew give interviews about the upcoming sci-fi blockbuster. In a discussion with Variety, stars Oscar Issac (Poe Dameron) and John Boyega (Finn) have confirmed that, despite what many fans might want or expect, the two do not share an on-screen romance in the trilogy’s final film.
“Personally, I kind of hoped and wished that maybe that would’ve been taken further in the other films, but I don’t have control,”, Issac told the site during a press junket. “It seemed like a natural progression, but sadly enough it’s a time when people are too afraid, I think, of…I don’t know what.” He says that he enjoys the ambiguity of the characters, “but if they would’ve been boyfriends, that would have been fun.” Boyega said that the pair were “platonic,” but also that they “always had a quite loving and open relationship in which it wouldn’t be too weird if it went beyond it.”
Oscar Issac has a history of discussing the potential for romance between the two characters, but Disney has very few canonically queer characters across its slate of cinematic blockbuster franchises–the first gay character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe was a side-character in Avengers: Endgame, although Tessa Thompson has confirmed that Valkyrie will be pursuing a queen in Thor: Love & Thunder. The Star Wars film series is yet to feature an openly queer character, although Orka and Flix from Star Wars: Resistance have been confirmed as a gay couple.
However, this could still change with The Rise of Skywalker, with Abrams hinting that there would be some LGBTQ representation in the movie. “In the case of the LGBTQ community, it was important to me that people who go to see this movie feel that they’re being represented in the film,” Abrams told Variety. Asked to elaborate, he replied, “I’m giving away nothing about what happens in the movie…but I did just say what I just said.”
We’re starting to get some idea of what happens in The Rise of Skywalker, but so many details about the film are still a mystery to us. The return of Palpatine is intended to tie the whole series together, and viewers of The Mandalorian will get another sneak peek before the movie releases.
Arrow: Season 8, Episode 7 Review
Warning: this review contains full spoilers for Arrow: Season 8, Episode 7! If you need a refresher on where we left off, here’s our review for Season 8, Episode 6.
“Purgatory” probably shouldn’t work as well as it does. Arrow already made its grand return to Lian Yu once before. The Season 5 finale dragged Ollie and his friends back to the island for a final battle with Adrian Chase. The result was (and still is), Arrow’s single best episode. “Purgatory” doesn’t quite reach that level, but it’s close enough. And in the process, Arrow proves Oliver Queen can still go home again.
Nintendo Switch Launching In China Next Week, Get All The Details Here
Nintendo has officially announced plans to release the Switch in one of the world’s most populous and gamer-rich countries, China. The hybrid console is launching on December 10 in China through a partnership with Chinese internet giant Tencent. The console is officially called the Tencent Nintendo Switch in China, according to analyst Daniel Ahmad who attended the news briefing today.
The console will carry a cost of RMB 2,099 ($300 USD) when it launches, and it comes bundled with a trial/demo version of New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe and a one-year warranty. Individual games are priced around RMB 299 ($42 USD).
Nintendo and Tencent are working with Chinese indie developers to launch their games on the platform. Check out the image below to see a rundown of partners.
The Tencent Nintendo Switch (Official Mainland China Ver.) will launch on December 10th 2019 for RMB 2,099 ($300).
It will come bundled with New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe and a 1 year warranty. pic.twitter.com/lcpWNfPUPC— Daniel Ahmad (@ZhugeEX) December 4, 2019
China is a massive country. It has a population of more than 1.3 billion, and its audience for gamer is bigger than the entire United States population.
China’s 13-year ban on game consoles ended in 2013, after which Sony and Microsoft brought their current-generation consoles to the country.
While China is now allowing game consoles to be sold, the country still has stringent rules pertaining to game content. Every title released in the country must be approved by the Ministry of Culture. The country does not allow any content that promotes or incites obscenity, drug use, violence, or gambling; games also can’t harm public ethics or China’s culture and traditions.
In addition to games developed by Nintendo, third party titles developed by overseas studios are currently being localised for the China market. Pending approval.
The exclusive Rabbids Party game from Ubisoft is listed here. pic.twitter.com/lcetsuSSB6— Daniel Ahmad (@ZhugeEX) December 4, 2019
Overseas game developers and Chinese game developers are working to create official versions of their games to be localised for the China market. Pending approval. pic.twitter.com/H2PXdb8Arq
— Daniel Ahmad (@ZhugeEX) December 4, 2019
China enacted the console ban in 2000, blocking the sale of systems over concerns about potential harm to the physical and mental development of children. Touch-enabled devices and smartphones, like the iPhone and iPad, were allowed because they are not deemed gaming devices.
Nintendo has sold 41.67 million units worldwide and 246 million games thus far without China, so it will be interesting to see how these figures grow once the console launches there.
Here is the official advert / trailer for the Tencent Nintendo Switch (Official Mainland China ver.)that is launching Dec 10th for RMB 2,099. pic.twitter.com/gObv4HweSW
— Daniel Ahmad (@ZhugeEX) December 4, 2019
Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare’s Microtransaction Store Launches, Here’s What You Can Buy
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare expanded in a big way with the new Season One update that added a lot of new things, including a new map, Crash, as well as the new mode called Reinforce. Also new for Modern Warfare today is a suite of microtransaction offerings.
The in-game Store has now opened, and it offers up a number of microtransactions. In the Store tab of the multiplayer menu you’ll find a variety of things to buy, including Operator skins, charms, calling cards, stickers, and finishing moves. There are also new Blueprints available to purchase. Similar to Fortnite, these items are only available for a limited time.
All of the extra content, which is cosmetic only, can be purchased with Call of Duty Points. These are available in allotments from 200 Points ($2 USD) to 13,000 Points ($100 USD). Check out the images below to get a closer look at Modern Warfare’s microtransaction offerings.
Another form of microtransaction now available in Modern Warfare is the first Battle Pass, which costs 1,000 Call of Duty Points ($10 USD). All 100 tiers in the Battle Pass can be earned through gameplay (it’s estimated to take about 1 hour for each tier) or you can buy the Pass outright to unlock all the content right away. The tiers include all manner of different cosmetics and extras, along with two weapons. There is also a brand-new Operator, Mara, who is unlocked at Tier 100.
Modern Warfare launched on October 25, and up until this point there was no in-game store or Battle Pass.
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Super Monkey Ball Director Says There Might Be More Games If Banana Blitz HD Does Well
Super Monkey Ball Banana Blitz HD recently returned the long-dormant series to modern consoles, albeit with a remaster of a Wii launch title rather than a brand new game. In an interview with Crunchyroll, director and producer Masao Shirosaki has said that this was the best option for the “limited time and budget” that they had, but that he’s hoping it will do well enough to ensure a future for the series.
“The Monkey Ball series is a very important IP for our studio,” Shirosaki says. He previously worked testing Super Monkey Ball: Banana Splitz for the PlayStation Vita, and has seen a lot of support for the series from fans since then. “Of course, I am aware that the most favored titles are the first two games,” he admits. “If there is enough support for Banana Blitz HD, this will open up doors for remaking the first two games or even a whole new title to the series. But for now, I’d be happy if everyone has fun playing Banana Blitz HD.” Super Monkey Ball and Super Monkey Ball 2 remain the pinnacle of the series for many players.
Shirosaki directly says that he hopes that next title he works on will be another Monkey Ball, once they’re done porting Banana Blitz HD to Steam. “As for my next project, I have many ideas in mind but my hope is to create a new Monkey Ball title,” he says. Shirosaki also worked on the Yakuza series, and when asked if those games could ever cross over into Monkey Ball, he says “if there’s an opportunity to create an all-new Monkey Ball title, I wouldn’t mind featuring Kiryu or Majima as guest characters.”
We gave Super Monkey Ball Banana Blitz HD a 5/10 in our review, writing that “a glimmer of what made the series great remains, and it’s enough to make us hope that someday we get a new entry that properly returns the series to its roots.”
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