More Super Mario Galaxy And Super Mario Galaxy 2 Tracks Join Nintendo Music

Celebrating the Switch release.

Super Mario Galaxy + Super Mario Galaxy 2 is now available for the Switch, and to celebrate this launch, Nintendo has added some new tracks to its Nintendo Music mobile app for Switch Online subscribers.

This includes the Super Mario Galaxy ‘Good Night’ track and Super Mario Galaxy 2 tracks ‘Twins’ and ‘Special Someone’.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

This Xbox Generation Will Be Remembered for One Thing: Greed

Phil Spencer has been the head of Xbox (now officially the CEO of Microsoft Gaming) for over a decade now. And up until very recently, I’d argue that under his watch, the brand really did put players first, even if Xbox has continued to lose market share to PlayStation. As a reminder: Phil immediately unbundled the Kinect from the Xbox One, removing the $100 albatross weighing the console down. His first big initiative as boss was championing backwards compatibility, which is inarguably a huge success. FPS Boost on Xbox Series later made many of those old games run even better. He dragged Sony kicking and screaming into normalizing cross-play. The Xbox One X one-upped the PS4 Pro by offering true, native 4K. And Xbox gaming has undeniably become more inclusive in the Phil Spencer Era thanks to the Xbox Adaptive Controller as well as laudable ASL features in multiple first-party games. Finally, there’s Xbox Game Pass, whose mystery economics continue to make it controversial amongst both gamers and developers alike, but has nevertheless been a tremendous value for subscribers.

Until now, at least. On IGN’s Unlocked podcast, I (far too) often make reference to that Simpsons gif where Sideshow Bob keeps stepping on the rakes he’s surrounded by. And the reason I do that is because Xbox always seems to find a way to ruin any momentum it builds up, typically through no fault of anyone but itself. Take the month of October, for instance. Microsoft is shipping not one or two but three really exciting new games in the next 30 days: the veryawesome-so-far Ninja Gaiden 4, which revives the beloved fast-action franchise after a dormant decade; Double Fine’s promising Keeper, the studio’s next project after its Game Awards Game of the Year-nominated Psychonauts 2; and ever-reliable Obsidian Entertainment’s RPG/shooter sequel The Outer Worlds 2, which we’ve loved every time we’ve seen or played it. That’s a potentially huge month for Xbox – particularly when so many Xbox fans remember how it wasn’t long ago when we’d be lucky to get three ultra-promising first-party releases in an entire year, let alone a single month.

All three will drop onto Xbox Game Pass on day one – but this is the part where Xbox starts stepping on all those rakes. Effective immediately, you’ll need to pay a whopping 50% more for that privilege. Microsoft has raised Game Pass prices for the third year in a row, with the give-me-all-the-day-one-releases tier now setting players back $30 per month. Fourteen months ago, by the way, Game Pass Ultimate was $17. That’s how high and how fast the price has risen.

Fourteen months ago, Game Pass Ultimate was $17. Now it’s $30. That’s how high and how fast the price has risen. 

In fairness to Microsoft, the company has added more to Ultimate: Ubisoft+ Classics, Fortnite Crew, and higher-resolution cloud gaming. It’s also worth mentioning that multiple likely Game of the Year candidates hit Game Pass Ultimate on day one this year: Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, Hollow Knight: Silksong, and Blue Prince. But we all know that the biggest appeal of Game Pass are those day-one benefits for Xbox-published games, and this price increase feels directly targeted at that. (For the record, PC Game Pass is going from $12 to $16.49 per month.)

This comes immediately on the heels of the company jacking up Xbox console prices for the second time in the past four months, with the top-end Xbox Series X now carrying an eye-watering price tag of $800. But that $800 almost sounds like a damn bargain next to the much-hyped ROG Xbox Ally X handheld gaming PC, which weighs in at NINE-HUNDRED AND NINETY-NINE U.S. DOLLARS. Sure, there’s a less powerful, more affordable version for $599, but nobody knows if that one’s worth a damn, because Microsoft has only ever let media and influencers get their hands on the more powerful Ally X. Hopefully it proves useful, as the Series S has for the non-hardcore gamer part of the market.

Heck, the only thing the Xbox folks haven’t raised prices on are first-party games. Oh, they tried with The Outer Worlds 2, to be clear – and they inevitably will next year when Fable, Gears of War: E-Day, Forza Horizon 6, etc. drop – but the Xbox community wasn’t having any of that, and Microsoft relented.

I realize we live in crazy times, and that Sony and Nintendo are not exactly blameless here either after each of them raised prices on their own aging hardware in the past year (with Nintendo also aggressively raising software prices for the Switch 2 generation as well). Blame the Trump tariffs if you want to (heck, Microsoft does), but I’m sorry: at the end of the day, the buck stops with Microsoft. This is a company with a market cap of nearly $4 trillion, who has done layoff after layoff, after spending upwards of $80 million on studio and publisher acquisitions. And it’s fair to wonder if those naysayers who question the sustainability of Game Pass and its business model are being proven right with this latest, deepest round of price hikes.

We’ve reached a sad point where gaming is becoming less accessible to new players rather than more.

What’s worse is that, in the bigger picture, we’ve reached a sad point where gaming is becoming less accessible to new players rather than more. Historically, console prices go down and the size and quality of the game library goes up over the course of a generation, leading to more units sold and a healthier ecosystem for everyone inside it. And while again, the blame for the absence of that this generation does not rest squarely on Microsoft’s shoulders, the actions of Team Xbox are of a company that isn’t showing a lot of empathy towards its customers as the cost of groceries, gas, and other bare essentials keeps going up. Again, these larger economic issues aren’t Microsoft’s fault, and it has to contend with rising development costs too, but they are choosing profit over players.

As such, while I recognize that this Xbox console generation isn’t over yet, it’s almost certainly going to be remembered first and foremost for Microsoft’s greed: two hardware price increases (and counting), three Xbox Game Pass price increases (and counting), one software price increase (so far), and tens of thousands of layoffs as well as multiple studio closures.

It’s kind of a monkey’s paw situation, really: all Xbox gamers have wanted since the start of the catastrophic Xbox One generation was a steady supply of great first-party games. Well, in 2025 we’re finally getting that – and as I’ve already mentioned, 2026 is shaping up to be a banger too – but it’s coming at the cost of, well…practically everything else. But it’s not our fault. Instead, Microsoft’s greed is to blame.

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s executive editor of previews and host of both IGN’s weekly Xbox show, Podcast Unlocked, as well as our monthly(-ish) interview show, IGN Unfiltered. He’s a North Jersey guy, so it’s “Taylor ham,” not “pork roll.” Debate it with him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan.

New Hell Clock Guides, Builds, and Database on Maxroll

Hell Clock is a Roguelike Action RPG developed by the Brazilian indie studio Rogue Snail and published by Mad Mushroom. Drawing inspiration from the ARPG greats like Diablo, Path of Exile, and Grim Dawn while packaging everything in a highly replayable roguelike formula, Gell Clock provides a great middle ground for people who want to experience the power fantasy of an ARPG without having to grind for hundreds of hours every season.

Patch 1.1, the Clockmaker’s Tools, is Hell Clock’s largest update yet. This patch brings crafting to Hell Clock, allowing you to modify the affixes on your Relics, craft powerful new Imbuements and corrupt Relics (the ultimate risk and reward).

  • Tool of Tinkering randomizes 1 primary or secondary affix on the Relic. Use this to reroll unwanted modifiers.
  • Tool of Enhancement upgrades a Common Relic to Magic.
  • Tool of Greater Enhancement upgrades a Magic Relic to Rare adding a new Rare Affix.
  • Tool of Locksmithing locks a primary or secondary affix, preventing other tools from modifying it
  • Imbued Tool of Fury adds an imbued implicit. Fury implicits include bonuses for Melee damage, Fire damage, physical damage, and Life.
  • Imbued Tool of Faith adds an imbued implicit. Faith implicits bolster Lightning damage, Mana, and Spellcasting.
  • Imbued Tool of Discipline adds an imbued implicit. Discipline implicits include bonuses to Plague damage, Marksman skills, and Projectiles.
    • Items can only have 1 imbued implicit at a time.
  • The Divine Tool randomizes the numerical values of your modifiers with the potential to push them beyond their normal maximum.
  • A Corrupted Tool unpredictably changes your Relic, it could randomize primary or secondary affixes, add a powerful corrupted implicit, or do nothing at all.

In addition, there has been a complete balance rework with the goal of providing smoother progression and greater overall game viability. Take a look at IGN’s post on the Hell Clock 1.1 Update for more information.

Maxroll Hell Clock Beginner’s Guide

Maxroll’s comprehensive Hell Clock Beginner’s Guide gets into the details of Hell Clock’s core systems and mechanics with links to more detailed guides where you can learn more. Start by exploring the campaign, progressing through each act, and challenging bosses. Next, learn more about the game’s progression and metaprogression systems. These include Skills, Blessings, Gear, Passives, Relics, and Constellations, all of which combine to make a variety of builds. Then learn about what awaits you in the endgame with Abyss, Oblivion, and Ascension.

Getting Started in Hell Clock

After getting started with the Beginner’s Guide, continue your journey with Maxroll’s new player resources. First up, the Campaign Guide has information on all of the Survival Encounters and Bosses you find when progressing through Hell Clock’s 3 Act story.

Note: As part of the endgame, you fight the Campaign bosses again. When you do, keep an eye out for enhanced move sets and new mechanics!

Skills

Skills are the core of your build in Hell Clock. Some Skills, like Split Shot, are easy to spam and often act as your primary damage. Others, such as Spectral Knives, have a longer cooldown and often take a secondary role. As you progress through the Acts and defeat bosses, you can access new skills (via the Skill Book), but you must spend 100 Soul Stones to unlock them. Check out Maxroll’s Skills Guide to learn more or browse all of the game’s Skills in the database.

Blessings

Check out Maxroll’s Hell Clock Blessing Guide to learn about the progression (and metaprogression) systems you interact with throughout a run. Blessing of Proficiency enhances your skills, Blessing of Foundation gives global character buffs, whereas Blessings of the Future and Legacy give you new Gear or Relics.

Gear

You can find gear within your run or purchase it from the Blessed Corner. The items you have equipped are carried over between runs, and you can only equip 1 item at a time within each slot (you can store the spares in your Blessed stash or recycle them into Soul Stones). Maxroll’s Gear Guide covers everything you need to know about Blessed Gear in Hell Clock. Alternatively, you can also browse all of them individually:

Relics

Last but not least are Relics. This is the most impactful metaprogression system as Rare Relics offer a lot of power, and Unique Relics completely transform skills. Relics in Hell Clock function a lot like gear in ARPGs like Path of Exile or Diablo, giving you tools to build around and make something that feels unique. In addition, Relics can be crafted with the Clockmaker’s Tools giving you more control over the affixes that you have available. Check out Maxroll’s Relic Guide to learn more about Relics in Hell Clock or browse the database for a complete list of Unique Relics.

More Maxroll Hell Clock Guides

In addition to the getting started resources, Maxroll has a variety of guides that provide a deeper dive into the game’s mechanics. This includes guides on the endgame activities, including Abyss & Oblivion and Ascension. Last but not least, learn the nuances of progressing the Blessings of Foundation to obtain the best Epic Blessings.

Maxroll Hell Clock Builds

Maxroll’s development team has been working on a Hell Clock planner where you can theorycraft builds and share loadouts. This is currently a work in progress and likely to get updates in the future.

Planner Features

  • First, select the mode between Campaign, Endgame, and Ascension.
    • If you select Campaign, the Bell Tree transforms into The Old Bell.
    • Endgame covers Abyss, Oblivion, and Void, giving you access to the Oblivion Bell tree.
    • Ascension transforms your Bell tree to the Infernal Bell and allows you to select Penances in the Ascension Tree.
  • Next, start building your loadout by selecting Skills. If you want to set the build Public later, put your primary skill in the left-most slot to make it easier for people to identify your build.
  • After that, work on filling out Gear, Relics, and Constellations.
    • Both your Constellation and Passive Trees track the order in which you allocate nodes.
  • When it comes to Relics, you can select size, Rare Affix, Imbuement, Corrupted Implicit, and Prefix(es)/Suffix(es).
    • Common, Magic, Rare, and Unique Relics are supported.
    • Use the fields at the top to adjust Tier and Rank.
  • Use Variants to create step-by-step progression for Gear, Relics, Constellations, and Passive Trees.

Coming Soon

There are a few features that haven’t quite made it into the planner yet:

  • Blessing Recommendations – The ability to recommend (or banish) specific blessings for each skill
  • Relic Stats adjusting as you change a Relic’s Rank/Tier
  • Displaying Resistances to make it easier to tell when you’re going to be capped
  • Save importing
  • And more

Community Builds

Use the Community Builds section to share your build with other Hell Clock players. You can also browse for something new to play. Use the Skill filter at the top or look for builds based on game mode (Campaign, Endgame, Ascension) and tag.Here are a few examples of what you can do with the planner:

Planners can be more casual too, if you’re doing an Ascension run you can upload a snapshot of your character.

Maxroll Hell Clock Database

Dive into the mechanics with Maxroll’s Hell Clock database. Here are a few of the things you can find:

The Battle Continues

Patch 1.1 may be huge, but it isn’t the end of Rogue Snail’s content development plans. Rogue Snail has a detailed roadmap which includes two more major updates. Of course, like with all road maps the content and delivery date are subject to change. The next major patch is Movement 2.0, which will allow you to use all of your skills while moving. This is going to be particularly impactful for channeled skills like Repeaters. In addition the patch will bring a new character animation system and all 52 Constellations. The plan is to release this in November 2025.

After that the next major update is the Cursed War, slated for Q1 of 2026. This includes a free update with a full version of the Ascension endgame activity, 12 new biomes for endgame and improved random dungeon generation. This could include the Endless Nightmares system that has been teased in recent updates.

Along side the free update is a paid expansion, Hell Clock: The Cursed War, where Pajeu travels to a new location to fight the forces of hell. The expansion will add a 4th Act to the campaign, new biomes, new monsters, new bosses, Skills, Relics, and a “Cube Crafting System” which sounds suspiciously like the Kanai’s Cube mechanic from Diablo 3.

Written by IGN Staff with help from Tenkiei.

Chess meets roguelike dungeon crawler Below the Crown gets an early access launch date and a demo that’s smarter than me

Am I good at chess? I’ll take no for $1500, Alex. But do I love a funky twist on games that are older than time itself? You bet your bottom dollar I do! Enter Below the Crown, a chess video game that is also a roguelike, ,and is also a turn-based strategy game, and is also a dungeon crawler on top of that. It’s a lot! It also works very well, and in a demo that just came out today (alongside an early access release date), there’s a suggestion of something a touch more… unsettling… going on under the hood.

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Ananta producer says every character could have their own game and perhaps unwisely compares it to the Avengers

Ananta, whether it ends up being a good game or not, is clearly a confident one. You have to be brave to so blatantly, we’ll say, borrow from so many different games. Like many anime-esque games of its ilk, it will live and die by its characters (which, by the way, you won’t have to gacha roll for), of which it seems to have in spades judging from that first gameplay trailer. These characters will all play differently too, and according to Ananta’s producer Ash Qi, the dev team wants you to think of them like Avengers members. Comparing your new thing to an older, widely loved thing is always a safe move!

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Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault isn’t closing up shop, but it has received a small delay out of a busy October

There just doesn’t seem to be a good time to release a game right now, does there? We all saw the way that Hollow Knight: Silksong scared away plenty of games, even games with completely different genres. And sometimes it’s just a case of a particular month being stacked – just this month alone there’s Ghost of Yotei, Battlefield 6, Pokemon Legends Z-A, Ninja Gaiden 4, Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2, Dispatch, Arc Raiders, the list truly goes on. So, I really can’t blame developer Digital Sun, who’ve announced that Moonlighter 2: The Endless Vault has been delayed.

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Go Fast With Puma’s Brand New Sonic The Hedgehog Collection

“We’re so back”.

Sega and Athletic apparel brand Puma have announced a brand new limited edition Sonic the Hedgehog collaboration, which launches on 30th October 2025, all to celebrate the release of Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds.

This collection doesn’t just include the Blue Blur, either — both his sidekick Tails and Shadow the Hedgehog will be featured on much of the apparel landing in-store and online later this month.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 — hands-on report

For the first time ever, Call of Duty fans are getting back-to-back Black Ops games with the release of Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 this year. Leaping ahead to the future of 2035, the game is a direct sequel to the story told in Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 — but what’s really interesting is the way it builds on the foundation set by Black Ops 6, with its introduction of systems like Omnimovement and the return of round-based Zombies.

At Call of Duty: Next, I got a chance to jump into the combat boots of David Mason and a few other operators. I played on six new Multiplayer maps, tried out the updated Omnimovement, cleared Zombies off the new Wonder Vehicle, and picked a few dropzones on Warzone’s new Resurgence map and updated Verdansk.

Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 — hands-on report

You can check out just about everything we saw (and a few more things) in Black Ops 7’s open beta, which launches on October 5 if you pre-ordered the game, and on October 7 for all players.

Without further ado, let’s get to all the juicy hands-on action.

Gameplay Evolution

Even Omni-er Omnimovement: Treyarch is building on the foundation it established with Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 last year, making a few tweaks and adjustments to the Omnimovement system that allows you to run, slide, and dive in any direction. The big one is wall-jumping—you can now fling yourself into the air with a wall jump to bounce around corners, cross gaps, and confuse opponents. You can chain up to three jumps together, but each jump will cost you some momentum. Other additions include moving while mounted and a new finisher that lets you attach a grenade to another player and kick them toward their friends.

Movement as a loadout option: While Omnimovement still offers a lot of agility to every player, Treyarch has made some adjustments to the system by turning a few elements into Perks. The double-time Tac Sprint, for instance, now requires a specific Perk and comes with the trade-off that your normal sprint is slower when you equip it. But other Perks boost movement too, like Lightweight, which increases your movement speed and lets you slide and dive farther, and Dexterity, which lets you reload faster and aim down sights during dives and slides.

Overclock your stuff: Getting good at nailing enemies with frag grenades while they’re flocking to the hard point? In Black Ops 7, successfully using items like equipment, Scorestreaks, and Field Upgrades builds up progress that allows you to Overclock those items, unlocking an upgrade that makes them more powerful. You can choose your Overclocks when you select your loadout, with each Scorestreak, Field Upgrade, and piece of equipment offering two possibilities, allowing you to tailor your preferred playstyle.

Become a Hybrid Combat Specialist: In Black Ops 6, choosing three Perks of the same type unlocked a Combat Specialist bonus that amped up a specific playstyle. Black Ops 7 gives you a little more freedom; you can now mix two of one type of Perk with one of another to unlock a Hybrid Combat Specialist bonus, so you can mix and match a little more and still get useful benefits.

Near-future technology: Black Ops 7’s setting in the 2030s brings some new robotic and drone threats that you can deploy in battle as Scorestreaks. The D.A.W.G. is a dog-like combat robot; the Rhino is Treyarch’s take on the Juggernaut, a robot wielding a minigun you pilot into battle; HKVs are Hunter-Killer Drones that are deployed from aircraft and seek out targets once they hit the ground; and the VOTL Warship returns from Black Ops 2 with some new upgrades to terrorize from the skies.

Share the load(out): Ever wonder what weapon and Perks the person who just took you out was using? You can see the loadouts of opponents on the Kill Cam, and in the launch version of the game, you’ll actually be able to nab their Gunsmith customizations for yourself. Gunsmith codes will let you share your weapon builds with friends or online, so if you ever see a gun you wish you were taking into battle, you can have it.

Guns—lots of guns: Black Ops 7 will bring 30 new weapons compared to Black Ops 6, and thanks to its near-future setting, that’ll include 16 that are all-new to the franchise.

Multiplayer

Black Ops 7 will launch with 18 multiplayer maps—15 new 6-on-6 maps, plus three remastered maps from previous games, and two large-scale 20-vs.-20. I fought across six of the new maps, which will appear in Black Ops 7’s multiplayer beta.

Maps

Blackheart — Round and floating, Blackheart is a lot like a small oil rig, laid out like a wheel. At the center is a room where teams converge for big fights, while the outer edges have longer sight lines for sniping and setting ambushes.

Toshin — A Japanese cityscape with lots of small interiors, tight corners, and crashed cars and trains that can be useful for cover, or might explode at the wrong moment. There are numerous ways to slip between locations in Toshin, provided you can find the right vent or elevator shaft.

The Forge — The paramilitary organization known as The Guild also appears to be a corporate entity that enjoys showcasing and selling its robotics and drone technology. The Forge is a facility that serves as a testing ground on the outside and a sleek showroom on the inside.

Exposure — Set near a series of solar panels, Exposure is something of a prefabricated industrial site where you can clamber over buildings and slip between structures for ambushes.

Cortex — Cortex gives off heavy supervillain lab vibes, with lots of spooky-looking tubes and panels to use as cover. It’s a map with exteriors that loop around a series of interior pathways, providing multiple ways to approach a given objective.

Imprint — A snowy mountain fortress, Imprint combines open exterior spaces with sparse cover, and tighter interior corridors and vertical areas where it pays to be aware of your surroundings..

Modes

In addition to a few classic Call of Duty modes—Team Deathmatch, Domination, and Hardpoint—I also tried the new Overload mode at Connect. In the beta, you can also expect to play Kill Confirmed and Search and Destroy.

Overload — A new 6-vs.-6 mode, Overload, creates some frantic dashes, big team fights, and huge momentum swings. Two teams attempt to grab an overload device, and once one team has it, their goal is to reach one of two designated locations on the opposing team’s side of the map. If they can carry the device to one of the designated spots, they score a point; however, if the device is dropped, the other team can pick it up. As soon as a point is scored, the device respawns somewhere in the middle of the map, triggering another mad dash to grab it.

Skirmish — We didn’t play it, but at launch, Black Ops 7 also offers a massive new 20-vs.-20 mode that has its own dedicated maps to give you plenty of room to mix it up.

Zombies

In Black Ops 7, Treyarch builds on last year’s return of round-based Zombies with new maps and modes, along with new monsters to threaten you along the way.

Ashes of the Damned The new map available at launch is the biggest Call of Duty has ever seen. It’s comprised of multiple locations to navigate and explore. They’re all linked together by roads, but between each of the main areas is a dense, deadly fog you’ll need to cross.

Meet Ol’ Tessie — To get around in Ashes of the Damned, you’ll need a ride, and that’s the new “Wonder Vehicle,” Ol’ Tessie. The truck starts as a bit of a clunker, but you can repair and upgrade it to turn it into a proper zombie-smashing crew transport—and even install a Pack-a-Punch Machine in the truck bed. You’ll need Ol’ Tessie to be tough, since the fog is home to unkillable zombies, as well as gremlin-like Ravagers that will attack your vehicle.

New ways to play — Zombies adds two new modes in Black Ops 7 that we didn’t play at Connect: Survival and Cursed. Survival mode takes place on smaller maps—in the beta, you’ll see locations taken from Ashes of the Damned—to provide a quicker, more frantic Zombies experience that still includes uncovering secrets while you fight for your life. And for the really hardcore Zombies fans, Cursed mode will offer an even steeper challenge.

Warzone

Haven’s Hollow: A new Resurgence map, Haven’s Hollow is set in Appalachia and draws inspiration from the Zombies maps Shattered Veil and Liberty Falls—before the undead ravaged the latter. The map features nine Points of Interest, including open fields at one end and a small but densely populated town at the other, with numerous buildings to hide in and rooftops to snipe from.

Updated Verdansk: Two Points of Interest are coming in Black Ops 7’s first season—the all-new Signal Station, and a remastered version of the Factory.

Try Multiplayer and Zombies in the Black Ops 7 Beta

Players who pre-order Black Ops 7 will get early access to the Black Ops 7 beta, running October 2-5. Activision is also offering an open beta for all players, no pre-order required, from October 5 to 8. 

The beta includes all the multiplayer maps I fought across at Connect: The Forge, Exposure, Blackheart, Imprint, Toshin, and Cortext. It also packs the new Overload mode, as well as classics Team Deathmatch, Domination, Hard Point, Kill Confirmed, and Search and Destroy.

The beta goes beyond multiplayer to include Zombies, as well. Starting on October 3, you’ll be able to try the new Vandorn Farm map and Survival mode.

Black Ops 7 introduces numerous small yet highly targeted and meaningful changes to Black Ops 6’s foundation, while offering a substantial amount of new content across all its modes. 

But you don’t have to wait to see for yourself—check out all Treyarch and Raven have to offer this week in the open beta. The full game launches on November 14.

As good as Silent Hill f might be, don’t expect it to be the norm for the series, says its series producer

When you review a game, if you don’t know anyone else that’s also reviewing it, it can be a bit difficult to guess how it might be received overall. There’s normally some assumptions you can make, but with a series like Silent Hill, a series where the general consensus is all over the place from game to game, it’s certainly not easy to predict. I myself ended up being quite fascinated by Silent Hill f in my review of it, but in a recent interview series producer Motoi Okamoto said that despite an overall positive reception, you shouldn’t expect every consequent game to be just like it.

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Pragmata Developers Say They ‘Couldn’t Predict’ Real-Life AI’s Growth When They First Conceived The Game’s Story

Capcom’s upcoming new IP, Pragmata, features a main antagonist that’s really a rogue AI on the moon making the life of a spaceman and his android buddy difficult. But as much as artificial intelligence is in the news lately, especially in gaming, the developers of Pragmata say they had absolutely no idea it would be such a hot topic when they started developing the game.

Speaking to me at Tokyo Game Show 2025, game director Cho Yonghee and producer Naoto Oyama tell me that the concept for Pragmata simply came from Yonghee thinking about the moon, and asking the team to brainstorm ideas for a game set on the moon. From there, developers pitched a “black and white world” on the moon, and the concept of the enemy being AI came later.

But none of the team, they said, knew they were about to release a game about an enemy AI at a time when real-life AI was such a fraught subject.

“We really couldn’t predict that AI would be this big from where we started from what you see now, but now that we have AI become this huge thing in the real world, we see like, ‘Oh, maybe we should have added this or that from what you see in the AI right now,'” Yonghee tells me. “So we are like, ‘We should have thought of that.'”

However, the pair confirm that the real-world shifts around AI didn’t impact the game’s story or direction. By the time it became a hot topic, the direction was already set.

“We have this sort of the idea of the AI in the game locked down very early in the development back when we released the concept trailer back a few years ago,” Oyama says. “And so we had that as what you see in the game basically. And then we really couldn’t predict that the AI would become this big right now.”

“Yeah,” Yonghee adds. “So the real life AI’s progression or development, it’s been so fast that it’s perhaps overtaken what do we have in the game right now. So what you see in the game might not look as amazing than what’d you compared to real life.”

I laughed a bit at this and remarked that I didn’t think we had Dianas running around in the real world just yet.

“We created to be in the near future, but the future has come closer,” Oyama replies.

“Yeah, just the word AI is getting a bit old right now,” Yonghee says. “So maybe by the time that we reach the age or the time where Pragmata takes place, people are not using the word AI even anymore.”

We recently got another look at Pragmata at Capcom’s Online Program alongside TGS, and we had a hands-on preview of the game at Gamescom earlier this year. We also spoke with Oyama and Yonghee about early ideas for Pragmata, including the possibility that it might feature a talking dog. Pragmata is out sometime next year.

Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.