• DC League of Super-Pets Soars to a $23 Million Domestic Weekend Box Office Victory Over Nope

    DC League of Super-Pets has soared to a domestic weekend box office victory over Jordan Peele's Nope by earning $23 million in ticket sales.

    As reported by Variety, DC League of Super-Pets, which stars Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as Superman's dog Krypto who works with Kevin Hart's Ace and other pets to rescupe superheroes that were captured by Lex Luthor, brought in another $18.4 million internationally on its way to a global tally of $41.4 million.

    The animated adventure still has a ways to go to recoup its $90 million price tag and places in line behind the openings of other animated titles like Lightyear's $51 million and Minions: The Rise of Gru's $107 million. It did, however, perform on a similar level to The Bad Guys' $23.9 million, Sing 2's $22.3 million, and Encanto's $27 million.

    In our DC League of Super-Pets review, we said that it "may have thoughtful filmmaking on its side, but what it doesn’t have is a voice cast that can lend life and personality to its characters. The superpowered pets end up with the short end of the stick; neither are their stories as rich as the movie hopes, nor are they ever truly funny beyond a few fleeting comic references."

    Nope, in its second weekend in theaters, saw a 58% decline from its opening weekend by bringing in $18.5 million. Nope has earned $80.5 million at the domestic box office and has yet to open internationally.

    Thor: Love and Thunder placed third with $13.1 million in its fourth weekend and helped push the latest MCU film to $300 million in North America and $662 million globally.

    Minions: The Rise of Gru took fourth place by racking up $10.8 million. In its fifth weekend, the latest Minions movie has earned $320 million domestically and $710 million worldwide.

    Rounding out the top five was Top Gun: Maverick with $8.2 million in its 10th weekend in theaters. The high-flying adventure continues to dominate the box office and has brought in over $650 million domestically and $1.3 billion globally.

    Elsewhere in box office news, Everything Everywhere All At Once has officially crossed $100 million worldwide and marks the first time an A24 film has reached that milestone.

    Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

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

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    Daily Deals: Final Day to Buy Meta Quest 2 VR Headset Before the Price Increase

    The Meta Quest 2 is the most popular VR headset, and it's getting a surprise price hike starting tomorrow. So, now is the time to pick up the VR headset if you are interested. And, PlayStation is having a nice sale that includes discounts on franchises like Horizon, Ghost of Tsushima, The Last of Us, and more. And, if you missed out on the Prime Day deal on Amazon's Echo Dot, that 50% discount is back today. Plus, the Xbox Series X is in stock at Walmart today for those of you looking to upgrade.

    Last Day to Grab a Meta Quest VR Headset Before the Price Hike

    We recently learned that the Meta Quest 2 is getting a pretty hefty price increase starting tomorrow, August 1. So, if you've been on the fence about picking up the most popular VR headset on the market, today is the best time to strike. Right now, both the 128 and 256 GB models are in stock at Best Buy for $299 and $399, respectively. Starting on August 1, those prices will increase to $399.99 and $499.99. Act now if you don't want to spend an extra $100 later down the line.

    PlayStation Summer Sale Includes Horizon, Ghost of Tsushima, Returnal, and More

    There are some great discounts today on some of the best games the PS5 and PS4 have to offer. From discounts on 2022 releases like Horizon Forbidden West, to classic PlayStation titles like The Last of Us Part II and Ghost of Tsushima, there's something for every PlayStation owner today. We haven't been seeing prices in the PS5 generation drop as quickly as they did in the PS4 generation, so you need to take advantage of these sales while they're here.

    Xbox Series X In Stock at Walmart

    The Xbox Series X is becoming more and more common, but it's still not always available. If you want to jump in on Xbox's next-gen console, it's in stock today at Walmart. With a Game Pass subscription, you can play games like Tunic, Halo Infinite, and Forza Horizon 5 at no extra cost. Plus, there's plenty coming to Xbox Game Pass in the next year, including the highly-anticipated Starfield.

    Surface Pro X for $300 Off at the Microsoft Store

    Microsoft's Surface Pro X is one of the best tablet-laptop hybrids for creatives, and you can save a few hundred bucks on one today at the Microsoft Store. The kickstand adjusts to nearly 180 degrees to suit your needs, and the lightweight form factor makes it easy to toss in your backpack and take on the go. It also has up to 15 hours of battery life, with fast charging as well.

    Amazon Echo Dot (4th Gen) Smart speaker with Alexa

    If you missed this deal on Amazon Prime Day, the price is back! You can get a 4th Gen Amazon Echo Dot for just 20 bucks. This is Amazon's most popular Smart Speaker with Alexa, which you can use to steam music from Amazon Music, Apple Music, Spotify, Sirius XM, and more. Plus, listen to audiobooks and podcasts throughout your entire room with multi-room listening. And, Alexa can also control your smarthome, controlling lights, thermostats, and the doors with other smart devices.

    LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga

    LEGO Star Wars is a joy for Star Wars fans, retelling the tale from The Phantom Menace through The Rise of Skywalker in hilarious LEGO form. But this time, LEGO games have grown up, as the gameplay has evolved into a more traditional third-person action-adventure game. The Nintendo Switch version is on sale today for a great discount, so don't miss out on this classic spacefaring adventure.

    Switch Lite Tom Nook Carrying Case

    If you need a carrying case for your Nintendo Switch Lite, this case is as cheap as they come. It comes with room for five Nintendo Switch cartridges as well, so you can take your favorite games on the go. Plus, it has fan-favorite Animal Crossing character Tom Nook across the front of it.

    Hisense 75" LED 4K UHD Smart TV Is 52% Off

    If you want a massive 4K TV for your entertainment room, you won't find a better deal than this 75-inch option from Hisense. Usually selling for $1,299.99, you can grab this today for $619.99. The TV comes with all the smart features you need, as well as a Game Mode Plus that includes a low latency mode to give you the optimum gaming experience.

    New Release: 48" LG UltraGear 48GP900-B 4K HDR OLED Gaming Monitor for $1298.87

    For those of you who love LG OLED TVs (for good reason) but don't like the idea of using a TV for a computer monitor, there's now an answer. LG has released its first UltraGear OLED gaming monitor. At first glance, the 48GP900 with its 48" LG WOLED 10-bit color HDR display seems very similar to the 48" LG C1 OLED TV. The panel is very similar, but there are some key differences. Instead of the semi glossy coating found on the OLED TV, the 48GP900 features an anti-glare low reflective coating that is undoubtedly a better fit for close up monitor usage. It also has DisplayPort connectivity and lacks the built-in Smart TV interface. It does carry over the HDMI 2.1 ports with 4K @ 120Hz compatiblity for PS5 and Xbox Series X owners, as well as VRR and G-SYNC support, but the 120Hz refresh rate can be overclocked to 138Hz when used as a PC monitor. Last and certainly least important of all, there is subtle RGB backlighting on the rear of the monitor that isn't present on the OLED TVs. This is one of the best gaming monitors you'll find on the market right now.

    Newest Apple TV 4K for $129.99

    This isn't exactly as cheap as Amazon Prime Day of $109, but it's still $50 cheaper than MSRP and the best price you'll probably see for a while. The newest Apple TV features two major upgrades. It boasts an A12 Bionic processor that boosts graphics performance, video decoding, and audio processing and delivers high frame rate HDR with Dolby Vision. It also includes a new Apple TV remote. The overall build quality is better than before, but the biggest enhancements are a 5-way clickpad, mute button, and dedicated power button that works for your TV, receiver, and Apple TV.

    Lenovo Legion 5 Pro 16" Intel Core i7-12700H Alder Lake RTX 3070 Gaming Laptop for $1599

    Walmart is offering an outstanding deal on the new Lenovo Legion 5 Pro laptop that is also equipped with the 12th generation Intel Core i7 Alder Lake CPU and RTX 3070 GPU. The RTX 3070 GPU in this gaming laptop also has a TGP rating of 140W, and it performs as well as the MSI Crosshair on paper. In real world benchmarks, the Legion 5 Pro is one of the best performing gaming laptops on the market. It also looks more like a standard laptop, so you might want to pick this over the Crosshair if you're not into the gamer aesthetic.

    XPG S70 1TB M.2 SSD with Heatsink for $109.99

    The XPG Gammix S70 Blade is the least expensive 1TB PS5 compatible SSD available right now. Just because it's the cheapest doesn't mean it's the slowest. In fact, the S70 is actually one of the fastest SSDs available with transfer rates up to 7,400 MB/s. It's on par with the likes of the WD Black SN850, the Samsung 980 Pro, or the Seagate Firecude 530. This is a PCIe Gen4 SSD that was pretty much released specifically for PS5 gamers in order to double or triple the storage capacity of their PS5 without limiting the speed. To make this deal even sweeter, it already comes with a very low-profile heatsink.

    ASUS ROG STRIX GTX 1660 Ti Gaming PC

    Walmart is offering this AMD Ryzen 5 3600X GTX 1660 Ti equipped gaming PC for only $799. The GTX 1660 Ti is still a very capable video card that can handle just about any game at 1080p resolution. You certainly won't find a more powerful video card for this price.

    New Apple AirPods Pro for $179.99

    The current generation Apple AirPods Pro is one of the best sounding "truly wireless" earbuds you'll find, especially at this price point. "Truly wireless" earbuds have no wires whatsoever; even the earbuds aren't hardwired to each other. In addition to the excellent sound quality, the AirPods Pro is the only AirPods with active noise cancelling technology. That, combined with the inherent nature of in-ear earbuds, means that the AirPods Pro will provide better noise isolation than over-ear headphones like the Bose QuietComfort or the Sony WH1000XM5. If you're thinking of getting a pair of new AirPods, we highly recommend jumping on this particular model.

    Dell S2721DGF 27" 1440p GSYNC Gaming Monitor

    This excellent monitor has hit a new price low for Black Friday. It's one of the best 27" gaming monitors you can buy for under $500. The S2721DGF boasts a high quality IPS panel (better than the VA panel found on the popular S3220DGF model). It features wide viewing angles and excellent color rendition including 98% DCI-P3 color coverage, a super fast 1ms response time and up to 165Hz refresh rate through the DisplayPort. It's also FreeSync Premium Pro and G-SYNC compatible.

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    The Bear Makes You Taste the Tension | IGN Staff Picks

    Check out last month's IGN Pix, too!

    It’s possible you may not have noticed but, uh… there are so many things to watch. Whether it’s streaming, on cable (dozens of us still have it. DOZENS!), or in theaters, there is an absolute waterfall of art being dropped on us all at any given second. It can feel pretty impossible to navigate that sometimes, but the IGN team is here to help make sense of it all.

    …Ok, so the IGN team is here to talk about our favorite stuff! But maybe you like the same stuff we like. That’s helping, right?

    This isn’t a roundup of the website’s top rated film and television, or any other kind of aggregate. We just love entertainment, and we want to chill out and chat about the art we loved this month. Some of it will be mainstream! Other times? Maybe you haven’t even heard of it! The world is our oyster. Also? Sometimes we get to shows and movies late, too! So you may even catch a couple older favorites on the list as you dig in!

    The Rehearsal

    Watch on HBO Max
    Clint Gage, Managing Features Producer, CineFix & IGN.

    Over-thinking movies and TV since 1982, endlessly fascinated by sad things made funny and vice versa.

    Nathan Fielder’s undeniable knack for hyper dry and hilariously awkward reality television made his Nathan For You directly the smartest, cringiest series in years. Remarkably though, he never punched down, and most of the time Nathan cast himself as the butt of the jokes. With his new show on HBO Max, The Rehearsal, he’s in the middle of his own experiments once again.

    Helping people “Rehearse” for trying, real life situations through elaborately staged simulations, The Rehearsal begins by plumbing the depths of the subjects life. Like a man ashamed to let his friends believe he has a master’s degree who finally wants to come clean. And while you may think a seemingly simple dilemma doesn’t deserve the absurd lengths Nathan goes to help (including building an exact replica of an entire bar on a soundstage) what it reveals is that nothing in actuality is THAT simple.

    And by the time you think to be impressed by the respect and care he shows for The Reheasal’s willingly vulnerable participants you start to realize what ELSE the show can be. The true brilliance of it lies in Fielder’s willingness to put himself on equal footing with the people he’s Rehearsing. One second he’s deadpanning a joke about his bowel movements and the next, he’s questioning his own motives and insecurities about the process. It’s shaping up to be a long form treatise on empathy that’s all at once hilariously absurd and warmly genuine.

    Check out our review of The Rehearsal.

    Uncle From Another World

    Watch on Netflix
    Akeem, Host

    Entertainment and pop culture enthusiast who geeks out on the weirdest things across the Internet.

    Based on the manga of the same name, Uncle from Another World is a new Netflix Anime that airs new episodes weekly. I’ve never read the manga, but the overall premise of the anime was intriguing enough for me to give it a watch. The story focuses on a man who was in a coma for 17 years, where he awakens speaking an unworldly language and possessing magical powers. While comatose, he was apparently transported to another world where he served as a heroic guardian. His love of video games is apparent, as his first question to his nephew (Takafumi) is where does SEGA stand currently in the console wars.

    We now follow the adventures of Takafumi and his magical uncle as he learns about the modern world and we find out more about his experiences in the fantasy world of Granbahamal. What makes this Isekai anime series so interesting and unique is the fact that it shrugs off the notion of taking place in a fantasy world, placing our hero back in their own reality. Most Isekai in this genre tend to have the hero within the fantasy world, with the goal of finding their way back home, but oftentimes that goal takes a back seat to the trials found in their current realm.

    Uncle From Another World is refreshing in that it’s a new take on the tried and true Isekai formula, and one I’ll be following weekly on Netflix. And if you’re a fan of SEGA, Sonic, and RPGs, there’s a handful of references thrown into the mix thanks to Takafumi’s uncle’s video game obsession.

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

    Watch on Paramount+
    Tyler Robertson, Social Media Coordinator/Producer

    Sci-Fi and Superhero addict with a penchant for getting hung up on the little details.

    As the “movie guy” in many of my social circles, I love helping people find a new thing to watch. It’s really hard though, when something I’m trying to recommend is on Paramount+, just because I know it’s immediately going to be a hard sell. Paramount+ is one of the smaller services in today’s streaming-heavy world, but if I can get you past that barrier, I cannot recommend Star Trek: Strange New Worlds enough.

    I didn’t necessarily grow up watching Star Trek, but it was more that Star Trek was on in the evenings while I was doing things. What I remember most about my time in the Final Frontier is that Star Trek stories are always supposed to be two things: hopeful and inspiring. It’s these two tenants of the series that make it different from other sci-fi, and it’s what Strange New Worlds captures perfectly. And not only is it a hopeful and inspiring show, but it also captures the charm, aesthetics, and overall vibe of the classic series.

    Strange New Worlds really feels like a modern show with classic sensibilities. It looks amazing, has great CGI for what it is, and an incredible cast. At the same time, the story structure feels very reminiscent of the Original Series, with new problems to solve each week, and the crew of the Enterprise there to solve them. And it’s probably the only show on the air that will make you feel good about the future of humanity, rather than completely helpless, which is nice.

    Check out our Season 1 review of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds.

    In The Mouth of Madness

    Watch on Shudder
    Tom Jorgensen, Senior Video Producer

    I make IGN videos a lot and I like horror a lot. I work on horror movies whenever I get the chance.

    Maybe it’s the recent passing of one of its stars, David Warner, or the fact that I just got to see a prop from the movie on the show floor at SDCC, but dang, I’ve had In The Mouth of Madness on my mind. Directed by John Carpenter and arguably his last great theatrically-released movie, In the Mouth of Madness is a love letter to Lovecraft and sees the horror master taking huge swings in depicting the mental breakdown of its lead character, John Trent (played with enthusiasm by Sam Neill.)

    Trent’s on the trail of Sutter Cane (Jürgen Prochnow), a popular horror author who’s gone missing just before the release of his rabidly-anticipated new book. Trent tracks the author to Hobb’s End, New Hampshire, a Castle Rock-esque fictional town which Cane has somehow willed into existence, and there discovers that Cane may just be a puppet for powers far beyond anyone’s comprehension. Carpenter pulls out every trick in his bag to channel the abject unknowability of cosmic horror, and the result is a movie with a unique focus on toying with the viewer’s perception of reality, full of stark imagery and spooky sound design. In the Mouth of Madness also completes Carpenter’s “Apocalypse Trilogy” (it’s preceded by The Thing and Prince of Darkness): three films which deal with world-ending stakes using very different vehicles for that destruction.

    And hey, being a born Granite Stater, I’ve gotta take the New Hampshire horror representation wherever I can get it.

    The Old Man

    Watch on Hulu
    Scott Collura, Executive Editor, Entertainment Features

    I used to watch Star Trek on a three-inch by three-inch black & white screen. Things haven’t changed that much.

    At a glance, you might think you know what The Old Man is all about. A retired special-ops one-man-killing-machine is pulled back into the action to put his lethal skills to work once again, only this time it’s personal! And you’d be partially right. But the Jeff Bridges starrer is so much more than that.

    What The Old Man is really about, and where it excels, is in its examination of parenthood and legacy. As Bridges’ Dan Chase is stalked by his former employer, the CIA, an old colleague/nemesis emerges in John Lithgow’s Harold Harper, who has reasons of his own for why he needs to find his former friend. Complementing this cat and mouse game are flashbacks to the pair’s younger days in Afghanistan, where the root of the present day’s problems are slowly revealed.

    The twists and turns of what happened then, and how it will affect the now, engage throughout the seven-episode season, while players like Amy Brenneman, Alia Shawkat and Joel Grey all bring further (spoilery) complications. By the penultimate episode of the season, The Old Man even enters a globetrotting, James Bond-esque mindset for a stretch. The show has already been renewed for a second season, and there is plenty of intrigue left to explore.

    The Bear

    Watch on Hulu
    Rebekah Valentine, Reporter

    When I’m not geeking out over expertly-crafted plot twists, I am cooking food, thinking about cooking food, or reading about cooking food.

    Watching The Bear, even from the comfort of a soft couch and a warm blanket on a weekend night, is a mental ordeal. Set in the kitchen of a fictional Chicago sandwich shop thrown into even more disarray than it was already in when its owner commits suicide and leaves the shop to his award-winning chef of a brother, The Bear’s frantic, fast-paced kitchen will immediately stress you the hell out; even moreso if you have kitchen experience yourself. It is not a calm show to wind-down to, nor is it one to dive into without checking on multiple content warnings for discussion of suicide, drug abuse, and abusive behaviors.

    With those caveats, though, The Bear is beautifully done. It’s a very effective eight-episode examination of family, grief, and legacy, with multiple emotional character arcs that more than justify the almost-too-perfect resolution of its final episode. By keeping its cast and primary set – ‘The Beef’ – small, The Bear feels deeply intimate and almost ensemble, though the cast is expertly led by Jeremy Allen White as the lost and struggling business inheritor Carmy.

    The Bear seems especially interested in being beloved to Chicagoans (which I am not, but the loving depiction of the city has made me want to visit immediately) and food lovers (which I definitely am). Chaotic as its episodes can feel, The Bear contrasts the wildness of its kitchen with slow, deliberate shots of beautiful dishes, interspersed with plot-relevant, thoughtful discussion of sauce making, donut frying, and image after image of delectably sloppy beef sandwiches. Come for the food imagery; stay to watch every character involved slowly become better versions of themselves.

    One last note – Episode 7: Review is especially incredible. It’s shorter than any of the other episodes, and most of its action takes place over a very small handful of long, uncut shots in the restaurant that perfectly encapsulate the escalating chaos of the season’s dramatic climax.

    The Way of the Househusband

    Watch on Netflix
    Jacob Kienlen, SEO Specialist

    I spend too much time looking at search trends and even more time watching cartoons.

    Although I do watch quite a bit of anime, one genre that I’ve always had trouble getting into is comedy anime. I love a good fight scene or giant robot, but when it comes to jokes, I think a lot of it gets lost in translation for me. So I was pleasantly surprised when I started watching The Way of the Househusband on Netflix and it immediately drew out the laughter buried inside of me. The story is centered primarily around Tatsu, an ex-Yakuza boss who has given up his crime gig to devote his life to the art of being a househusband. He brings the same level of intensity to food preparation and household chores as he did to a being the head of a drug trafficking organization, causing a number of comedic misunderstandings.

    All-in-all, it’s a fun slice-of-life show with an interesting art style that I highly recommend watching. The episodes themselves are fairly short and broken up into 3 separate scenarios that are about 5 minutes apiece.

    Doctor Who

    Watch on HBO Max
    Jonathon Dornbush, Senior Features Editor

    Love movies and TV that try to tackle big questions with plenty of heart, especially if they make time for some silly and scary case-of-the-week episodes.

    You ever start getting into a franchise long after it’s started and thought “How did I miss out on this thing all this time!?” Well, that’s exactly what I’ve felt while watching Doctor Who, starting with its first Modern Doctor (Christopher Eccleston), while working my way through David Tennant and Matt Smith’s tenures, and am currently on Peter Capaldi’s years. I have blazed through the series like I have very few shows because of how precisely tuned to what I look for in storytelling it is. Doctor Who wears its heart so earnestly on its sleeve, a show tackling big-picture questions about life, death, and the meaning of being human through some of the wackiest and scariest alien stories its creators can think up. It’s got plenty of cheesy effects, especially early on, and sure not every story lands. But it so brilliantly touches on the human condition, and runs through story with reckless abandon, that I’ve loved that blend of the unknown with the very, very human.

    Not every Doctor may work for you, though, so don’t be afraid to jump ahead to the start of each iteration’s stories. I’m so grateful to have gone through it from the jump, for all the layers built into its story, but, no spoilers.

    Dig into all of IGN's Doctor Who reviews.

    Westworld

    Watch on HBO Max
    John Davison, Publisher

    Has been thinking, writing, and talking about games and sci-fi for a very long time. Used to run the games magazines you grew up with, like EGM and the Official PlayStation Magazine.

    It’s been two years since Westworld’s tightly-packed and confusing third season, and in the intervening time the way we all watch television has changed completely. HBO Max launched a couple of weeks after the season finale, and the ensuing change in behavior has had old-fashioned entertainment pundits squabbling about the apparent crash in the show’s ratings. Of course fewer people are watching it on cable, if there was every a show in HBO’s line-up designed for streaming and rewatching – Westworld is it.

    While the first season stuck to the basic premise of the 1973 movie – robots in a futuristic Western-style theme park get pissed-off at being shot-at and (literally) fucked by puny humans, so decide to kill them all – subsequent storylines have had limited success with showing what comes next. While seasons two and three struggled with how to show hostile, sentient robots integrating with a future society, season four has a “you wanna get nuts? Let's get nuts” quality to it. You want angry androids and aloof, human-hating AI? Season four borrows familiar and sinister concepts from both Terminator and The Matrix, turns them inside out, and presents them in a manner that’s both cerebral and oddly beautiful.

    This is not the kind of show you can half-watch while doom-scrolling on your phone. It demands your attention every moment. It’s so densely-loaded with interconnected ideas that each episode warrants a double-view, just to take it all in. Fortunately the performances from its key players are phenomenal. In season four Ed Harris’ increasingly complex Man-in-Black is a true standout, as is Tessa Thompson’s deliciously-menacing Charlotte Hale – but honestly, there’s not a dud in the mix.

    If you like your sci-fi light and breezy, this is absolutely not for you. But if your taste runs to the weird, thinky stuff that was so prevalent in the 1970s, this is worth the time investment.

    Check out our Season 4 premiere review of Westworld.

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    Someone Already Built P.T. in Halo Infinite’s Forge… Before the Mode Is Even Out

    Halo Infinite's much-anticipated Forge Mode has yet to be released, but that hasn't stopped @DeathTempler from recreating P.T.'s terrifying hallway in an early version of it.

    As reported by PC Gamer, certain players like Death Templer have found a way to access an unfinished version of Halo Infinite's Forge Mode in the latest co-op campaign test flight and it has given these creators some powerful tools to create some impressive pieces of work.

    You can watch a walkthrough of P.T.'s hallway in Halo Infinite's Forge Mode by clicking here, and you can see that the newest iteration of Forge allows for much more customization, better lighting options, more varied sound effects, and more.

    This is only the beginning for Death Templer's mission to recreate P.T., as he has a goal to "make PT so well in Forge one day, it prompts a cease and desist from Konami."

    PC Gamer notes that players should avoid trying to access Forge mode and wait for the Open Beta in September as the process requires third-party tools that very well may get you banned by 343 Industries. The ban hammer has yet to be swung by the Halo developer, but it may just be a matter of time now.

    Forge Mode is one part of the 2022 roadmap for Halo Infinite alongside campaign mission replay, campaign network co-op, season 3, new narrative events, campaign splitscreen co-op, and more.

    P.T., which was a demo for the canceled Silent Hills game from Hideo Kojima and Guillermo del Toro, was set to star Norman Reedus and be the next step forward for the Silent Hill franchise. Unfortunately, Silent Hills was canceled by Konami and P.T. was removed from the PlayStation store for good.

    The rumor mill for a new entry in the Silent Hill series has been pretty busy in recent months, and May 2022 saw an image of a potential new game leak and then get swiftly deleted.

    Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

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

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    CHIPS Act Could Be a Big Step Toward Resolving Semiconductor Crisis Holding Back Next-Gen Consoles

    The $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act has been passed by Congress and very well may be a big step towards resolving the semiconductor crisis holding back next-gen consoles and other devices.

    As reported by The Verge, the CHIPS and Science Act passed in a 243-187 vote on Thursday, July 28, and it includes $52 billion in subsidies to "encourage chip manufacturers to build out semiconductor fabrication plants, or 'fabs,' in the U.S."

    The House and Senate had been debating this issue for months, and its passing is great news for companies like Intel who recently delayed its groundbreaking ceremony for its $20 billion chip-making facilities in Ohio because of a lack of government funding.

    "I congratulate Congress on voting to approve funding for the CHIPS Act," Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said. "This is a critical step to support the entire U.S. semiconductor industry and to help ensure continued American leadership in semiconductor manufacturing and R&D. Congress has done its part, and now we are going to do ours. I'm excited to put shovels in the ground as Intel moves full speed ahead to start building in Ohio."

    Chip shortages have been a huge issue since the COVID-19 pandemic began, and it has impacted the availability of next-gen consoles like the PS5 and Xbox Series X, new desktop GPUs, and more.

    The CHIPS and Science Act also provides the "Commerce Departement with $10 billion to award states and localities grants to build out 'regional technology hubs' across the country." The National Science Foundation will also receive billions in funding to help with semiconductor manufacturing research and workforce development programs.

    Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to [email protected].

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

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