• Game Scoop! 682: Game of the Year Watch Continues

    Welcome back to IGN Game Scoop!, the ONLY video game podcast! This week your Omega Cops — Daemon Hatfield, Justin Davis, Mark Medina, and Colin Stevens — are continuing the Game of the Year Watch discussion. That means Elden Ring, Tunic, Horizon Forbidden West, and a look ahead at God of War Ragnarok. There's also that Lollipop Chainsaw remake to discuss and Forspoken's delay. And, of course, they play Video Game 20 Questions.

    Watch the video above or hit the link below to your favorite podcast service.

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    Find previous episodes here!

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    Destiny 2: Where Is Xur Today? Location and Exotic Items for July 8-12

    The man with zeal for a deal, Xûr, is now live in Destiny 2 for the weekend until next week's reset. If you're looking to get your some shiny new Exotic armor or weapons for your Guardian, look no further.

    Each week, Xûr has a random assortment of Exotic armor, one for each Guardian class, as well as a random Exotic Weapon and an Exotic Engram available for purchase. In addition to his Exotic wares, he's got a random collection of Legendary weapons and armor to deck out your Guardians.

    We've rounded up all the info on Xûr for the week including where to find Xûr, which Exotic weapons and armor are available, as well as which Legendary weapons you should pick up, either for PvE or PvP.

    Where Is Xûr Today?

    Xûr's location can be found at Winding Cove in the EDZ on July 8 through July 12. To reach him, travel to the landing point at Winding Cove. When you arrive, make for the rock cliffs at the far end of the cove and look for a cave winding up to a platform next to some Fallen. There you'll find the freakish salesman we all adore.

    What's Xûr Selling Today?

    Exotic Engram

    The Queensbreaker – Exotic Linear Fusion Rifle

    Wormhusk Crown– Exotic Hunter Helmet

    • 14 Mobility
    • 15 Resilience
    • 3 Recovery
    • 16 Discipline
    • 13 Intellect
    • 2 Strength
    • Total: 63

    Stronghold – Exotic Titan Gauntlets

    • 2 Mobility
    • 12 Resilience
    • 22 Recovery
    • 10 Discipline
    • 14 Intellect
    • 6 Strength
    • Total: 66

    Felwinter's Helm – Exotic Warlock Helmet

    • 12 Mobility
    • 2 Resilience
    • 16 Recovery
    • 7 Discipline
    • 16 Intellect
    • 9 Strength
    • Total: 62

    The only must-have exotic this week is the Titan gauntlets, Stronghold, which have a spectacularly high stat roll with beautifully low mobility and stats in all the right places. Skip the rest!

    Exotic Weapons

    Hawkmoon – Exotic Hand Cannon

    • Paracausal Shot
    • Plygonal Rifling
    • Alloy Magazine
    • Eye of the Storm
    • Textured Grip

    Dead Man's Tale – Exotic Scout Rifle

    • Cranial Spike
    • Corkscrew Rifling
    • Light Mag
    • Snapshot Sights
    • Composite Stock

    Hawkmoon and Dead Man's Tale are both great weapons, but neither of this week's rolls are especially stellar — especially compared to some really great ones we've seen in recent weeks. Buy them if you need them, but otherwise I'd wait.

    Legendary Weapons

    Bite of the Fox – Sniper Rifle

    • Full Bore/Smallbore
    • Accurized Rounds/Flared Magwell
    • Snapshot Sights
    • Explosive Payload
    • Reload Speed Masterwork

    Seventh Seraph Carbine – Auto Rifle

    • Extended Barrel/Fluted Barrel
    • Alloy Magazine/Appended Mag
    • Slideshot
    • Swashbuckler
    • Handling Masterwork

    Enigma's Draw – Sidearm

    • Shortspec SAS/Tactic SAS
    • Extended Mag/High-Caliber Rounds
    • Zen Moment
    • Demolitionist
    • Handling Masterwork

    Temptation's Hook – Sword

    • Hungry Edge/Enduring Blade/Jagged Edge
    • Burst Guard/Swordmaster's Guard
    • Tireless Blade
    • Surrounded
    • Impact Masterwork

    Deafening Whisper – Grenade Launcher

    • Confined Launch/Hard Launch
    • High-Velocity Rounds/Implosion Rounds
    • Killing Wind
    • Rampage
    • Blast Radius Masterwork

    Extraordinary Rendition – Submachine Gun

    • Fluted Barrel/Hammer-Forged Rifling
    • Appended Mag/Extended Mag
    • Surplus
    • Tap The Trigger
    • Stability Masterwork

    Sorrow's Verse – Auto Rifle

    • Corkscrew Rifling/Smallbore
    • Accurized Rounds/Appended Mag
    • Dynamic Sway Reduction
    • One For All
    • One Quiet Moment/Suros energy
    • Reload Speed Masterwork

    There's a decent sniper rifle in Bite of the Fox this week and a Sorrow's Verse that's pretty darn good as auto rifles go, but nothing this week really screams "buy me," unfortunately.

    Warlock Legendary Armor

    For Warlocks, Xûr is selling the Illicit Invader set which includes:

    Illicit Invader Gauntlets

    • 2 Mobility
    • 26 Resilience
    • 2 Recovery
    • 8 Discipline
    • 19 Intellect
    • 2 Strength
    • Total: 59

    Illicit Invader Chest Armor

    • 2 Mobility
    • 13 Resilience
    • 14 Recovery
    • 16 Discipline
    • 7 Intellect
    • 8 Strength
    • Total: 60

    Illicit Invader Helmet

    • 19 Mobility
    • 9 Resilience
    • 2 Recovery
    • 15 Discipline
    • 2 Intellect
    • 14 Strength
    • Total: 61

    Illicit Invader Leg Armor

    • 18 Mobility
    • 2 Resilience
    • 10 Recovery
    • 10 Discipline
    • 21 Intellect
    • 2 Strength
    • Total: 63

    Illicit Invader Bond

    The best thing Warlocks have to offer this week are the boots, but even those are pretty meh. Honestly, unless you want those super resilience-focused gauntlets (which aren't amazing overall), you should probably hold off on buying any of these.

    Titan Legendary Armor

    For Titans, Xûr is selling the Illicit Invader set which includes:

    Illicit Invader Gauntlets

    • 2 Mobility
    • 30 Resilience
    • 2 Recovery
    • 9 Discipline
    • 15 Intellect
    • 6 Strength
    • Total: 64

    Illicit Invader Chest Armor

    • 2 Mobility
    • 13 Resilience
    • 14 Recovery
    • 12 Discipline
    • 9 Intellect
    • 8 Strength
    • Total: 58

    Illicit Invader Helmet

    • 2 Mobility
    • 17 Resilience
    • 10 Recovery
    • 8 Discipline
    • 9 Intellect
    • 13 Strength
    • Total: 59

    Illicit Invader Leg Armor

    • 9 Mobility
    • 9 Resilience
    • 12 Recovery
    • 2 Discipline
    • 17 Intellect
    • 9 Strength
    • Total: 58

    Illicit Invader Mark

    Those gauntlets are absolutely to die for, with decently high overall stats and super-focused resilience that's as spiky as it comes. Pick this up as resilience is too important on Titans to ignore.

    Hunter Legendary Armor

    For Hunters, Xûr is selling the Illicit Invader set which includes:

    Illicit Invader Gauntlets

    • 10 Mobility
    • 2 Resilience
    • 18 Recovery
    • 19 Discipline
    • 10 Intellect
    • 2 Strength
    • Total: 61

    Illicit Invader Chest Armor

    • 7 Mobility
    • 19 Resilience
    • 6 Recovery
    • 17 Discipline
    • 10 Intellect
    • 2 Strength
    • Total: 61

    Illicit Invader Helmet

    • 12 Mobility
    • 6 Resilience
    • 9 Recovery
    • 2 Discipline
    • 17 Intellect
    • 12 Strength
    • Total: 58

    Illicit Invader Leg Armor

    • 10 Mobility
    • 16 Resilience
    • 2 Recovery
    • 10 Discipline
    • 10 Intellect
    • 10 Strength
    • Total: 58

    Illicit Invader Cloak

    Hunters drew the short end of the stick this week with very few options to get excited about, unfortunately. Pass!

    That's a wrap on Xûr for this week, Guardians! What did you think of the dramatic conclusion to the Season of the Haunted's story this week? Let us know in the comments! For more on Destiny, check out some of the new weapons and gear you can find in The Witch Queen and read about how Sony's purchase of Bungie fits into its larger plans.

    Travis Northup is a writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @TieGuyTravis and read his games coverage here.

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    Creating Gorr the God Butcher for the MCU – Thor: Love and Thunder’s Faith-less Adaptation

    In Thor: Love and Thunder, not only is Thor trying to find himself, but he also has to deal with finding closure with his ex, Jane Foster, as well as stopping Gorr the God Butcher from well, butchering all the gods. As the relatively new Marvel character makes the leap from page to screen, albeit, with a different look, Gorr actor Christian Bale and director Taika Waititi filled us in on how Gorr was brought to life in the MCU.

    Bale, of course, is no stranger to comic book movies as he played Batman in Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy. It’s also definitely not the first time that Bale has played a “bad guy." However, it was more than just his previous work that convinced him to dip his toe into the shadowy role of Gorr.

    The actor explained to IGN that, alongside Gorr being a "hell of a good character," his reasons for taking the job were various: Working with Waititi and co-stars Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, and Tessa Thompson were up there, but he was also impressed by the previous film in the series, Thor: Ragnarok, as well as Waititi's Oscar-winning Jojo Rabbit.

    It also probably didn't hurt that Bale was Waititi's top choice to bring the villain to life.

    "We always want good actors in these roles and, for Marvel, they've gone through all the actors. There's hardly anyone left," Waititi laughed. "[Bale] was one of the last people on Earth who hadn't worked with Marvel. I've always loved Christian. I've always wanted to work with him. I've admired his work for many, many years, right from Empire of the Sun. He was actually at the top of our list right from the beginning, and we didn't ask anyone else."

    For those uninitiated with Gorr’s backstory, the devout believer and his family lived on a desolate planet forsaken by the gods, yet they still depended on their faith to save them. As Gorr’s prayers go unanswered and his family dies, he doubts the existence of gods – only to have that doubt replaced by vengeance when he discovers that they are real and are not the benevolent beings he believed them to be.

    For Waititi, bringing Gorr’s backstory and motives were the most important element he wanted to translate from the comics.

    "We wanted them to try and create a sort of… sympathetic villain who the audience could understand, and they could not side with, but they could really understand what he was going through," Waititi said.

    "He's dealing with a great amount of pain," Bale added. "He is a monster. He is a butcher, as his name suggests. He is a villain. He's a bad guy. He's taken his pain and directed it in absolutely the wrong direction. But then we get in a wonderful conflict, in that case, between Gorr and Thor."

    As for Gorr’s physical appearance, it is definitely a departure from the Jason Aaron and Esad Ribic creation. But there are practical and thematic reasons for it.

    "I was coming off of another film, I had zero muscles, and you can't compete with Chris in that department anyway," Bale said. "So we decided to go with a different approach of his powers as they're more supernatural. Losing that g-string as well was a choice. People might want to see Chris' ass. They don't want to see mine. And then, yeah, just lots of conversations between myself and Taika about Nosferatu, "Come to Daddy," the Aphex Twin video."

    People might want to see Chris' ass. They don't want to see mine.

    And those influences are clear, as Nosferatu and the music video feature skin and bone, bald, pale beings who creep in the shadows.

    "In the comics, he obviously looks a certain way, and he's basically got a mankini on," Waititi said. "A thought very early on that his face in the comics unfortunately does kind of resemble Voldemort. People are just automatically going to make that connection. So we decided just to depart from that design a bit more, and still keep elements of the tone, and the fact that he had the sword. Really it was about his story. That was the most important thing for us."

    These choices to keep Gorr more human-looking grounds his appearance in the idea of a devout follower practicing religious fasting in order to feel closer to a higher being. The addition of the tattoos and subsequent scars on Gorr’s face help reinforce that idea.

    "He's a highly religious character at the beginning with tattoos displaying his piousness, and then he becomes disillusioned with that, and then literally just mutilates himself to get rid of that," Bale said. "We did shoot that. It was perhaps a little bit too extreme to be included in the film, but there was a lot of wonderful stuff that we shot."

    He literally just mutilates himself to get rid of that. … It was perhaps a little bit too extreme to be included in the film.

    "We didn't show it or over-explain it, but you know even the scars on his head and stuff like that, you get the idea that the tattoos that they have are all in reverence, and in honor of their gods, and that he carved those out, and stuff like that," Waititi added. "And then with the robe and everything, I really liked that it was like a holy man who had lost his faith."

    The argument for faithful adaptation will always rage on, but in Thor: Love and Thunder, Gorr’s pain and betrayal are conveyed much more clearly when the story is told through a man who has twice forever scarred his skin and has wasted away spending energy praying to selfish gods, rather than one who is a chiseled space-Voldemort.

    What do you think about the live-action adaptation of Gorr the God Butcher in Thor: Love and Thunder? Let us know in the comments. And for more, be sure to check out our Thor: Love and Thunder review, our explainer of the ending, and the film's stars on acting in the MCU and the mighty return of Natalie Portman's Jane Foster.

    Francesca Rivera is Video Producer at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @fbrivera.

    Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

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    Thor Movie Character Face-Off: The Winner Revealed

    Last week, in celebration of Thor: Love and Thunder’s arrival in theaters (it’s out now!), we asked you to help us decide which character featured in the first three Thor movies was the best of them all and is just as worthy as Thor himself to wield Mjolnir (well, metaphorically at least!). Now, after thousands and thousands of battles with matchups like Thor vs. Loki and Valkyrie vs. Jane Foster, the ultimate Thor movie character has been chosen.

    So, who claimed the top spot for the best Thor movie character? Was anyone able to take down Thor in his own face-off? Drumroll please…

    Unsurprisingly, the answer was no. Thor Odinson, the God of Thunder and once and future King of Asgard, took down all his other challengers with ease and won 91.5% of his matchups. Since 2011, Chris Hemsworth has embodied the legendary Avenger and has helped save our universe alongside Iron Man, Captain America, Black Widow, and many more in his own films and others.

    Loki Prime – not to be confused with the Loki Variant that starred in Disney+’s Loki series – placed second just behind his big brother. The God of Mischief also first appeared in 2011’s Thor and has gone from a villain who invaded New York with the Chitauri to an anti-hero who tried to take Thanos out in Avengers: Endgame before meeting an untimely end.

    Everyone’s favorite angry green Avenger placed third, as The Hulk won 82.3% of his battles. We just had to include him as he played such a big part in Thor: Ragnarok. Just behind him was the lovable Korg, who is voiced by director Taika Waititi, and Thor’s best friend Heimdall rounded out the top five.

    Disney+’s Loki placed sixth and was joined by Hela, Odin, Valkyrie, and The Grandmaster in the top 10. Jane Foster only managed to make 13th place, but we have a feeling her return as Mighty Thor will do wonders for her popularity.

    On the other side of the Rainbow Bridge was Ian Boothby, who only managed to win 16.1% of his battles. The unpaid intern and love interest of Darcy Lewis placed last in our face-off, and fell just behind the “I’ve Fought Bigger” guy from the original Thor to secure that unfortunate placing.

    Eir, Richard Madison, Hugin & Munin, Bor Burison, the Kronan Marauder, Kurse, Topaz, and Malekith filled out the bottom 10. Eight of these challengers were either introduced or featured in Thor: The Dark World, the MCU film we ranked 21/23 in our list of the Infinity Saga films.

    Are you wondering where your favorite Thor movie character landed, like maybe Korg’s dear friend Miek? (He took spot #20!) For all the rankings you can check out the full list of where all 41 characters who competed in this Face-Off ended up.

    For more, check out our Thor: Love and Thunder review, our look at the strange journey of Thor on the big screen, our explainer of the film’s ending and post-credits scenes, and why the film’s big change from the comics has consequences.

    Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

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    Final Fantasy 7 Remake: Leviathan Summon Was Included as a Reference to the Original Game’s Demo

    The Leviathan summon in Final Fantasy 7 Remake was included specifically as a reference to the original game's demo.

    In a Square Enix blog post, Remake's co-director Naoki Hamaguchi explained the logic behind why each specific summon made an appearance in the game.

    "At an early stage of development we looked over the line-up of summons in the original FFVII and decided to go with Ifrit, Chocobo and Moogle, Shiva, Fat Chocobo, Leviathan and Bahamut, for a roster of six," Hamaguchi said. "The reason Leviathan was included is because he was featured in the original FFVII demo, so I personally wanted him in the first Remake too."

    Hamaguchi went on to explain that the developers had to be pretty certain before development began which summons they were going to include, as it takes a lot of work to even create one.

    "It costs a lot of development resources to create a summon, so there weren't any that we planned for but discarded. We strived to be as accurate as possible in the planning and then stuck to that plan until the final version," he said.

    Final Fantasy 7 Remake includes some pretty big story changes (and we're yet to see the ramifications of these) but stays pretty faithful to the original game with a number of other Easter Eggs, with this Leviathan one now added to the list. The second game in the series, Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, is expected to be released in winter 2023.

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