Splatoon 3 Physical Release Bundled With Expansion Pass DLC Announced

3-month NSO subscription also included.

Update: Nintendo of Australia has just confirmed a western release – announcing the same physical bundle will be released locally on 25th July 2024 at select retailers.


Original: Nintendo has announced it is releasing a new physical version of Splatoon 3 in Japan next month on 18th July 2024.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Splatoon 3 Physical Release Bundled With Expansion Pass DLC Announced (Japan)

3 month NSO subscription also included.

Nintendo has announced it is releasing a new physical version of Splatoon 3 in Japan next month on 18th July 2024.

This new package will come bundle with a copy of the game, the Expansion Pass (including Inkopolis Plaza and Side Order) as well as a three-month Switch Online subscription.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Luigi’s Mansion 2 HD Pre-Orders Are Now Being Cancelled (US)

Following Paper Mario pre-order cancellations.

Ahead of the launch of Luigi’s Mansion 2 HD for the Nintendo Switch next week, Walmart in the US has reportedly been cancelling customers physical pre-orders.

As highlighted by GoNintendo, the “exact same situation” that played out with pre-orders for Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door last month is now happening with Luigi’s new release. The retailer is once again offering a discount code of $25 on the next purchase over $45 as an apology.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Fine, let’s write about the stupid Banana game

You might have noticed that the second most played game on Steam right now is Banana, which released back in April, but has seen an explosion of popularity over the past couple of weeks. What is Banana? It’s a free idle clicker in which you click on a picture of a banana to make numbers go up. If the number goes up enough, the game drops additional pictures of bananas into your Steam inventory. Actually, it’s not even an idle clicker – simply leaving the game open all day is enough to generate a slow but steady supply of these banana pictures.

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Feature: 25 Things You Might Have Missed In The Zelda: Echoes Of Wisdom Reveal Trailer

From familiar faces to creative controls.

Our initial reaction to The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom reveal at the June Nintendo Direct was something along the lines of “Ahhhh-WHHHAAAAAAAAA”.

If you had asked us for some of the game’s distinguishing features after that first watch, we’d probably be able to mutter, “Hero Zelda, er, magic rod,” and, after a long pause, “… beds“.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Diamond Select’s Fearsome Venom Statue Completes the Spider-Man 2 Trinity

Diamond Select Toys has been hard at work immortalizing the epic showdown between Peter Parker, Miles Morales and Venom as seen in 2023’s Spider-Man 2 game. IGN previously debuted DST’s Peter Parker statue and Miles Morales statue, and now we can cap off the trinity with the exclusive reveal of Venom himself.

Check out the slideshow gallery below for a closer look at DST’s Marvel Gamerverse Gallery Diorama Spider-Man 2 Venom PVC Statue:

The Marvel Gamerverse Gallery Diorama Spider-Man 2 Venom PVC Statue measures 13 inches tall and 12 inches wide, featuring the iconic villain in all his oozy, slimy glory. The statue is designed to form a larger diorama display with the aforementioned Spider-Man statues.

This statue was designed by Nelson X. Asencio and sculpted by John Cleary.

The Marvel Gamerverse Gallery Diorama Spider-Man 2 Venom PVC Statue is priced at $85.00 and is slated for release in Q1 2025. Preorders will open on the Diamond Select website and other retailers on Friday, June 21.

You’ll also be able to preorder this epic piece through the IGN Store when it becomes available. For now, why not check out the other Marvel collectibles available on the IGN Store?

Jesse is a mild-mannered staff writer for IGN. Allow him to lend a machete to your intellectual thicket by following @jschedeen on Twitter.

Save 50% Off the Xbox Elite Controller Complete Component Pack

Microsoft Store is discounting its official Xbox Complete Component Pack for 2nd gen Xbox Elite Series 2 Core wireless controllers. Right now you can get it for only $30, 50% off the $60 MSRP. At this price point, they’re even less expensive than the 3rd party knockoff models you’ll find on Amazon.

Xbox Elite Controller Complete Component Pack for $30

The main difference between the 2nd generation Xbox Elite Core controller and the original Xbox Elite controller (besides the color scheme) is the accessories included. The original controller comes with the component pack, which includes extra sets of paddles, thumbsticks, and D-pad for more customizability, as well as a travel case. The newer gen Xbox controller doesn’t include these, which is why it is sold at an MSRP of $140 instead of $190. By getting this component pack, you’re basically upgrading your 2nd gen controller to 1st gen, and saving quite a bit of money to get there.

Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2 for $95.99

If you don’t yet have a Xbox Elite controller, this is the best deal available right now. Target recently dropped the price of the professional-grade 2nd gen Xbox Series X Elite Series 2 Core Wireless Controller in Red/Black to $95.99. Note that Target RedCard members get an extra 5% discount. Signing up is free.

The Xbox Elite Series 2 Core wireless controller is physically the same controller as the older generation Xbox Elite Series 2 controller, which retails for a much higher $190 MSRP. The Elite Series 2 Core controller retains all the integrated pro gaming features like adjustable-tension thumbsticks, wrap-around rubberized grip, and shorter hair trigger locks. It’s a much superior option to the standard Xbox Core controller that the current gen consoles come with.

Xbox Core Controllers for $46.95

If you’re looking for something more stock, Walmart has dropped the prices on official Microsoft Xbox Series X Wireless Controllers to under $50. This includes the Arctic Camo White color released last year as well as Carbon Black, Robot White, Shock Blue, and Pulse Red.

Check out the best Xbox deals today for more discounts on Xbox accessories.

Call of Duty follows Fortnite in adding Fallout skins, out this week

Look, who knows when we’ll see Fallout 5 – there’s an increasingly less-than-zero chance we’ll all be living in a real post-apocalyptic nuclear wasteland by the time Bethesda get around to revealing anything, if their deliberately slow approach to The Elder Scrolls 6 (it’s been nearly THIRTEEN years since Skyrim) is much to go by. Still, even without a full sequel, Fallout is all around us – in multiple seasons of a television show, in Fortnite, and now in Call of Duty.

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Banana Clicking Game Not a Scam, Developer Insists

The developers of Banana, a game about clicking a Banana which has usurped Baldur’s Gate 3 and Hogwarts Legacy on Steam’s most-popular games of all time list, have insisted it’s not a scam.

A post on Discord from one of the three listed developers and co-owner of Banana, aestheticspartan, said the team had parted ways with one of its members after it emerged they were accused of being involved in a Steam scam previously. This team member has denied any involvement in a scam, saying instead an influx of money obtained through the Steam marketplace was the result of a bug.

Despite their involvement, “there is no scamming or scam going on,” aestheticspartan insisted. Banana’s gameplay literally involves clicking a banana repeatedly, but its main draw is in its dropping of Steam items which can be sold on the official marketplace. Banana gives out different bananas as its item, and clicking on the game once in a while nets players a couple per day.

Most of these items are listed for just a few cents each, meaning the players of Banana are often spending and gaining very little at a time, but this likely doesn’t matter to Steam owner Valve or the development team.

That’s because both get a cut of every marketplace sale. Valve takes 5%, to a minimum of $0.01, and the developer takes another small percentage, the exact total of which is unclear in this case, but likely follows the same conventions as Valve’s to a minimum of $0.01.

Buyers and sellers don’t see the same numbers on Steam’s community marketplace, as the seller chooses the amount and the buyer sees the total of that number plus fees. This would explain why no banana item is available for less than $0.03 — they’re likely listed at $0.01, but another $0.01 for Valve and $0.01 for the developer adds up to the $0.03 total.

These tiny numbers add up though. Using the most basic example, the plain Banana item (compared to the banana that looks like a Panda or any other obscure design), we can see how much the developer and Valve potentially make from Banana.

Steam itself features an hour-by-hour breakdown of how many of these items are sold. Using the latest full day example, June 18, 2024, an eye-watering total of 1,993,669 of this single item were sold.

Valve therefore potentially earned a total of $19,936.69 from this single Banana’s sales over a 24-hour period, a number more than likely earned by the developer, too. This standard drop is one of 81 items being sold on Banana’s community marketplace.

This is the most common item, however, so it’s being sold in larger quantities than other items. The Rainbow Banana, for example, is currently listed for around $0.75 but generally sells for less than 50 per hour instead of the thousands of the most common Banana. The most expensive item, the Crypticnana, of which only 25 exist, has been sold four times for values of more than $1,000 since June 17.

While this is a colossal price compared to the most basic Banana for the buyer and seller, Valve’s 5% means it only nets $50 per $1,000 sold on these. It’s therefore the $0.01 minimum policy affecting large quantities of low-selling items that make Valve and the developer the most money. A total of 14 items are listed at the minimum $0.03 amount, and each one sells thousands per hour.

Developer aestheticspartan’s insistence Banana isn’t a scam is therefore likely legitimate, but it’s also almost certainly earning the development team tens of thousands of dollars a day, if not more. As for why it’s so popular, developer team member Hery told Polygon Banana is a real-life “infinite money glitch.” “I do believe that the reason why it mostly caught on is because it’s a legal infinite money glitch,” Hery said. “Users make money out of a free game while selling free virtual items.”

They also admitted Banana had a bot problem early on, with only around one third of all concurrents being actual players. Whether or not that figure has changed since Banana blew up remains to be seen, though Hery said the developement team has contacted Valve for help with the issue.

Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelance reporter. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.

Marvel vs Capcom collection brings a fighting game GOAT, plus six more arcade classics, to PC with rollback netcode

When it comes to the ultimate showdown of all-time great fighting games, Marvel vs Capcom 2 might well take my personal bet for being the best of the best. I spent countless hours throwing down with housemates, friends and random passers-by who looked like they were up for a brawl during my teenage years. Yet the arcade classic has – as far as I can tell – never been given a proper PC release before the recent announcement of a new bundle of the comic-book crossover series headed to Steam this year.

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