Marvel Studios Head on Why Withholding Avengers 4 Title ‘Backfired’

Marvel Studios’ decision to withhold the official title of Avengers 4 was done in an attempt to keep the spotlight focused on Infinity War, but it hasn’t quite worked out like the studio had planned.

Speaking to IGN at the Avengers: Infinity War press day, Marvel Studios president and producer Kevin Feige said he’s “not sure” when the official title of Avengers 4 will be revealed, as they “haven’t decided exactly” when to announce it to the public. A few weeks ago, directors Anthony and Joe Russo teased that fans should be scared by Avengers 4’s title.

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The Technomancer and the Rise of B-Grade Games

The lifecycle of something B-grade usually goes like so: Critics get the first whiff. It smells bad enough to stain their tongues, which they use to crow about said badness. In gaming, this can be an especially cruel time for ‘mid-tier’ games, because unlike cinema there is still little precedent for them. Mixed to middling reviews ensue. Deadlines and first impressions are, together, incapable of finding the blood diamond in what is sometimes overtly dismissed. Time passes, though, and some people wonder: “Why and how am I enjoying this?”

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Avengers: Infinity War Takes Place Only Half On Earth

Avengers: Infinity War is the first movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe that will finally marry the Earthbound and cosmic sides of the MCU. That means the Guardians of the Galaxy are finally joining forces with the Avengers, all to fight against Thanos and his quest for the Infinity Stones.

Most of the action we’ve seen in Infinity War trailers so far seems to take place on Earth. And that makes sense; as the movie’s writers pointed out during a recent interview with GameSpot, half the characters in the movie live on Earth, and several of the Infinity Stones happen to be here.

But Infinity War won’t be as Earth-centric as you might suspect, it turns out.

“I will say we tried very hard to make it not 100% Earth, to make it pretty–I would say it’s 50/50,” Infinity War co-writer Chris Markus told GameSpot.

“Thanos is a cosmic character,” said Joe Russo, one of Infinity War‘s co-directors. “I think there’s a lot of really exotic locations in the movie, throughout the universe. It paints on a wide canvas.”

“I think if you saw [the 22 minutes of Infinity War that’s been screened], it’s more balanced between Earth and the cosmic,” added Anthony Russo, the movie’s other co-director. “I think when you see the movie, you’ll see the balance even more.”

Markus continued that they Earth in Infinity War to be “representative of the universe, not ‘the most special planet ever.’ You don’t want Earth to be, you know, America first.”

That of course brings up Wakanda, the fictional African nation we finally got to know in this year’s well-loved Black Panther. Based on what we’ve seen in Infinity War trailers so far, it seems much of the movie takes place in Wakanda.

It’s easy to forget, though, that with Black Panther and Infinity War coming out mere months apart, they couldn’t have possibly known that Wakanda would become such a popular place–or how it would be received at all.

“It’s lucky that [fans] liked that movie!” said Stephen McFeely, Infinity War’s other co-writer. McFeely and Markus wrote all three Captain America movies, plus Thor: The Dark World, but had nothing to do with Black Panther.

“You just have to have confidence,” Markus said.

“In charting out the story, [Wakanda] was the best place for this part of the movie to go,” McFeely explained. “We all sat around, and Marvel said, ‘Well, they’ll have just been there three months ago, is that a good idea? Let’s talk about that,’ And we tried to find some other way, and we’re like ‘No, this is what’s best for the story.’ And Marvel said, ‘If it’s best for the story, leave it in–and fingers crossed that it’s not boring that we go there again.'”

“And we consulted with them, to see what their battle looked like, what they were doing, so that we weren’t serving the exact same dish,” Markus added.

McFeely said test audiences responded much differently to Infinity War before and after Black Panther hit theaters earlier this year.

“The week before Black Panther came out, we get to Wakanda and people go, ‘Oh, that’s interesting,'” he said. “The week after, people go, ‘Holy crap! Oh my god!’ It’s just free character, it’s free delight, that we didn’t have to work for, you know. It’s very satisfying.”

Avengers: Infinity War hits theaters this Friday, April 27.

God Of War PS4 To Get Photo Mode In Free Update

With an increase of beautiful games come more and more beautiful screenshots. Sony Santa Monica has confirmed God of War will have its own photo mode to catch every god-slaying moment in action.

God of War’s photo mode hasn’t exactly been a secret. The title’s director Corey Barlog told Daily Star back in March that is was something the team was looking at doing. A tweet on Thursday gave us a sneak peek of the mode with Kratos cheesing next to a seagull. Sony Santa Monica confirmed the mode soon after, giving us a first look at the mode via livestream.

While we’re not sure when the mode will come to the game, we do know it won’t just be about capturing the heat of the battle. The mode will include options to manipulate Kratos’ and Arteus’ faces–so even the angriest of fellows can take a moment to be the prime Dad of War.

For everything God of War, make sure to check out all of our coverage in our hub. Corey Barlog answered all of your questions in this Q&A, and check out how turning off the HUD transforms the game.

James Cameron Yearns for Avengers Fatigue

James Cameron recently commented on the superhero genre once more, saying that he hopes Avengers fatigue sets in soon.

According to IndieWire, Cameron openly critiqued the Avengers series when speaking to reporters this weekend, saying, “I’m hoping we’ll start getting Avenger fatigue here pretty soon. Not that I don’t love the movies. It’s just, come on guys, there are other stories to tell besides hyper-gonadal males without families doing death-defying things for two hours and wrecking cities in the process.”

With a saga of his own coming to fruition in the next four instalments of the Avatar movies, Cameron has a different take on how stories of such a magnitude can be handled.

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