Kojima’s OD ‘Still in Development’ Despite Xbox Game Cancellations

Hideo Kojima’s Xbox game project, OD, is still in development, despite Xbox’s recent cancellations of a number of projects both internal and external.

This comes from Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier, who posted on BlueSky that OD was ‘still in development’ as confirmed to him by a Microsoft spokesperson. He shared this on the heels of reporting that Xbox was stopping development on Avalanche Studios’ Contraband, a collaboration that was announced four years ago.

While OD’s status specifically wasn’t particularly in question, Xbox’s recent string of cancellations have led many to concern over any game we haven’t seen for more than a year or two. After a mass layoff last month that saw 9,100 jobs eliminated Microsoft-wide, we learned that multiple games had been canceled, including Everwild and Perfect Dark. A collaboration with Romero Games was also pulled.

Kojima’s admittedly been a bit quiet about OD lately, in a move that wouldn’t be taken as anything other than focused game development if the circumstances weren’t so concerning. He first announced an Xbox collaboration in November of 2022, then officially revealed OD along with several of its star cast members at The Game Awards 2023. We learned at the time Kojima was working with filmmaker Jordan Peele to create some sort of horror experience “no one has seen before.”

Since then, we haven’t heard much more about the status of OD, though Kojima did reassuringly give an interview late last month in which he mentioned he was still working on it.

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.

BioShock 4 Is ‘Going to Come Out,’ Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick Promises: ‘That I Can Say Hand on Heart, Without Question’

BioShock 4 has reportedly been in development for more than a decade at various studios under the 2K Games banner. But it has suffered yet another overhaul after it reportedly failed a review by executives and the head of its developer, Cloud Chamber, was ousted. Now, the fourth BioShock feels further away than ever. So, what’s going on?

In an interview with Strauss Zelnick, the boss of 2K parent company Take-Two, I asked the CEO flat out if BioShock 4 was in danger of being canceled. Zelnick was clear in his response: “It’s going to come out,” he promised. “That I can say hand on heart, without question.”

Zelnick sounds pretty confident, then. But it’s hard to get away from BioShock’s tumultuous — and lengthy — development. On this, Zelnick held his hands up, admitting BioShock 4 has had its troubles. But he also explained why it’s proving such a hard nut to crack.

“We don’t talk about how long our development cycles are,” Zelnick began. “We have had some ups and downs along the way. That is accurate. And we have had changes in studio leadership. That said, we have very big shoes to fill on BioShock because of the legacy of Ken Levine, the legacy of what has gone before, which has been so successful. And we need to make sure that this experience is true to the BioShock DNA on the one hand, and a massive step forward on the other hand. That’s always challenging. We think we’re up to the challenge, but it has not been seamless.”

This week, Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier broke the news of BioShock 4’s overhaul, and offered some insight into its troubles. “The game’s narrative was identified as an area that was particularly in need of improvement and will be revamped in the coming months,” Schreier reported.

“In a recent all-hands meeting, Cloud Chamber staff were told that the company needs to become more agile and efficient, leading to worries that layoffs may follow,” Schreier continued.

There hasn’t been a new BioShock game since 2013’s BioShock Infinite (Ken Levine is still working under the 2K banner on Judas). But BioShock 4 is not alone in having a lengthy development cycle, and we’ve seen — very recently — some publishers cancel games that were in development for six, seven, or even eight years. Sony’s live service flop Concord, for example, was in the works for years before its disastrous release. Microsoft just canceled Rare’s Everwild, which was revealed six years ago.

It is clear from the outside looking in that triple-A video game development is getting longer, which is something Zelnick not only agrees with, but offered an explanation for.

“I think it’s a reflection of the fact that as entertainment businesses mature, consumers seek quality and everyone realizes that the consumer is highly demanding and properly so,” he said.

“The strategy of this company has always been to make the best entertainment, not necessarily the most entertainment. Of course, sometimes we’ve fallen short, but frankly a precious few times.

“And I think some of our competitors have realized maybe a little late in the day that consumers are not okay with okay. Good is the new bad, great is the new great. And our goal here is to make everything exceptional.”

Zelnick added that he didn’t mean to be critical of other video game companies “because this is really hard stuff, and you don’t want to criticize someone for sticking with their creative talent, supporting them and trying to get a great result.” But he did say that Take-Two “would like to fail fast if we’re going to fail.”

“And we have made some hard decisions relatively early on. But we too have occasionally canceled titles well into their development. So it’s hard. What we’re all doing is hard.”

2K Games issued the following statement to Bloomberg on BioShock 4:

We are working hard to set BioShock up for the best possible future. Right now, we have a good game, but we are committed to delivering a great one. We are working closely with leadership at the studio to define this path.

The question now is, when might we see BioShock 4 actually come out?

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Xbox Stops Development on Contraband, Four Years After Initial E3 Announcement

Xbox has stopped development of Contrabrand to “evaluate the project’s future,” with a Bloomberg report saying the game is canceled entirely four years after its initial E3 announcement.

Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier first broke the news on Bluesky today, saying that “Xbox is canceling Contraband, announced in 2021 from Avalanche Studios (Just Cause), after four years of radio silence, sources tell Bloomberg News.”

This was followed by an official confirmation from Avalanche on its website, which reads as follows:

Over the past several years, Avalanche Studios Group and Xbox Game Studios Publishing have collaborated on Contraband. Active development has now stopped while we evaluate the project’s future. We’re thankful for the excitement we’ve seen fro mthe community since we announced and will give an update on what’s next as soon as we can.

Contraband was originally announced for Xbox and PC at E3 2021 with a teaser trailer. At the time, we knew it would be set in a 1970s smuggler’s paradise called Bayan, but we didn’t see any gameplay. Since then, we’ve seen nothing further of the game, nor heard any progress on its development. However, we did report that in 2022, management and employees clashed over a controversial hire and a lack of subsequent communication, a dispute that later inspired the studio to form an official union club and pressure the company toward signing a collective bargaining agreement.

Xbox, meanwhile, has been canceling projects left and right amid a mass layoff last month that saw 9,100 jobs eliminated Microsoft-wide, including hundreds in gaming. In the aftermath, we learned that games including Everwild and Perfect Dark had been canceled.

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.

Elden Ring Nightreign Has an Ultra-Rare Item You’ve Probably Never Seen, and Players Still Are Puzzling Over What It’s Really For

Elden Ring Nightreign has been out for over two months now, which means players have had ample time to puzzle over and tease out every morsel of its lore. But there’s still one ultra-rare item in the game that most players have probably never seen before, but which some in the community believe still holds an enormous secret: the Cord End.

If you play Nightreign and, like me, had no idea what this even was until just now, here’s the rundown: the Cord End is a legendary consumable item that only appears in big and small churches in Nightreign from breaking boxes. Its drop percentage is ridiculously low – just 0.035% – meaning most players will likely never even run into it. Its listed use is cryptic: “Gain entry somewhere.” If you don’t know where that somewhere is, the item is totally useless to you.

But for those in the know (or those following our handy guide), it’s not too hard to find the secret door it opens. Hidden in a cliff wall in a ravine at the center of the map, there’s a sealed entrance that only opens if you have the Cord End on hand. Inside is a strange statue of a girl, and three Sacrificial Twigs, talismans that allow the wielder to die exactly one time without losing runes or levels. It’s an interesting reward, to be sure, but admittedly a little underwhelming given the ridiculous rarity of the Cord End required to get them.

Now, granted, it’s likely at least part of the Cord End’s mystery is in adding lore details to Elden Ring Nightreign via its description and the statue of the girl in the chamber it opens. We won’t cover that here, as the meaning behind it is pretty deep into endgame spoiler territory for Nightreign, but lore YouTuber VaatiVidya has a great breakdown of what the Cord End is from a lore perspective and why it matters.

But that all said, the lack of real mechanical payoff for such a rare find has players speculating that there’s something more to this secret door. For the last two months, the community has been testing out theories around the Cord End and the Sacrificial Twigs. With a lack of any new or recent clues, the secret hunting had largely slowed down, but a cryptic post on the Nightreign subreddit recently fired up everyone’s curiosity again, inspiring people to float new theories about how to do… something… with those twigs.

The biggest barrier to finding anything is the sheer rarity of the Cord End. Some players are reporting seeing their first one after hundreds of hours of play. So anyone who wants to test theories has to get extremely lucky in actually getting a Cord End to begin with, and then also getting the exact perfect other circumstances they’re looking for (specific bosses, certain locations appearing, certain characters in the party, and so forth) to test out whatever it is they want to test. So while it’s unlikely that there’s anything new to discover regarding the Cord End at this stage, there’s at least a whisper of possibility in the fact that so few people are in a position to make that discovery to begin with.

Is it a secret? Is it merely lore? Is it something we’ll be able to unlock in a future DLC, as some have theorized? Who knows! But what’s genuinely cool here is that an ultra rare item is still sparking this level of curiosity and discussion and mystery in the community months after the game’s release. Whether there’s anything deeper to the Cord End or not, its enticing rarity is sufficient to get me, at least, fired up… if I can ever get one to drop.

We gave Elden Ring Nightreign a 7/10, saying that “when Elden Ring Nightreign is played exactly as it was designed to be played, it’s one of the finest examples of a three-player co-op game around – but that’s harder to do than it should be, and playing solo is poorly balanced.” Nightreign recently saw the addition of a duos mode, and the game had sold five million copies as of July.

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.

Eminem Doesn’t Seem to Mind When People Call Him ‘The Guy From Fortnite’

Marshall Mathers III is no stranger to other names. You probably know him as Eminem, or Slim Shady, or as the latter half of hip-hop super duo Bad Meet Evil. Or, perhaps if you’re a little younger, you might know him as… ‘The Guy From Fortnite.’

Eminem’s involvement with Fortnite goes back several years, with a guest turn in 2023’s The Big Bang live event that saw him rapping over a post-apocalyptic skyline, before popping up in the game’s in-game shop as a skin.

Next, Eminem returned for the conclusion of 2024’s Chapter 2 Remix, this time holding a rap battle version of the battle royale’s memorable monster versus mech fight — one of the funniest things the game has done in some time. (That mini-season included Eminem’s hideout as an in-game location, and also featured an exotic minigun that rapped Eminem lyrics as you fired.)

Popular stars who have made appearances in Epic’s battle royale subsequently being referred to “as that guy from Fortnite” is not a new meme, but someone has now taken the (brave) step of referring to Eminem as such in front of his face.

Thankfully, judging by the video of this moment, the rapper took it humorously and laughed along.

Fortnite’s new season kicked off today with more characters from Halo, plus the Power Rangers battling a fresh insect invasion of the game’s beloved battle royale Island. No word on a fresh appearance by Eminem just yet — though his skin is rarely out of the item shop.

Earlier this week, Epic Games boss Tim Sweeney refuted a report that suggested the game’s mysterious upcoming Disney offering had been hampered by slow decision-making.

Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social

Mafia: The Old Country Review

Since its debut, the Mafia series has steadily marched forward through the decades – the original is set in the 1930s, its sequel spans the ’40s and ’50s, and Mafia III unfolds during the late ’60s. If the next step was going to be the ’70s, or the ’80s – or both – I was certainly ready. Casino intrigue, shine boxes, borrowing huge kitchen knives from Martin Scorcese’s mother in the middle of the night – whatever it was, I was up for it. However, instead of moving closer to the end of the 20th century, Mafia: The Old Country takes us back to the beginning. And not just the beginning of the century, but to the formative era of the Mafia itself. Part mob drama and part Western, The Old Country may be a safe and conventional third-person action adventure on the surface, but it’s a moody and engaging one that makes great use of its uncommon setting and is brimming with old school atmosphere so heady you can practically smell the sun-dried tomatoes.

After experimenting with a more freeform open world structure in the divisive Mafia III, Mafia: The Old Country returns to the format of the original Mafia and Mafia II. That is, it’s linear and tightly story-driven, and the open world is largely just a vivid backdrop to move through between objectives, and during some missions. This has always worked well for the Mafia series, and The Old Country is no exception.

This approach gives The Old Country an effective sense of place and scale – immersing you in a rich and evocative Sicilian countryside – but without bloat. It’s a very detailed, varied, and convincing map, but there are no towers to scale or arbitrary icons to visit and clear. Your attention is simply required on the story, and the story alone. As a single-player sucker who inhales this kind of thing for its story, setting, and style, I was quickly hooked. If you’re the kind of person who might be tempted to use the Sicilian language option alongside subtitles in the language of your choice, you’re in the right place. If you’re the kind of person who pounds through cutscenes craving their next chance to slap the citizens of Steelport with a giant purple dildo, it’s possible the Mafia series may not be your speed.

Family Splatters

Beginning in 1904, The Old Country charts a chronicle in the life of young Sicilian Enzo Favara, who escapes a life of slavery in the region’s dangerous sulphur mines – run by the ruthless Spadaro crime family – to find himself working for their local adversaries, the Torrisi family. The story hits a lot of standard beats, and all the usual suspects are here. The fair and kindly mentor, and the loyal best friend with a habit of testing the patience of others around him. The stern and powerful Don and his cynical consigliere. The slimy and treacherous rival boss, and the forbidden love. There are some neat connections to the existing games in the series too, for fans who pay close attention.

So yes, it’s a fairly familiar and predictable 13-hour saga for anyone with a basic level of gangster movie literacy, but the writing is strong and the voice performances are stronger. The highlight is arguably Don Torrisi himself, whose English voice actor Johnny Santiago injects with a quiet, husky intensity that is as credibly intimidating as a man in his position would need to be. He stalks the screen as the kind of guy that men who kill for a living would actually take orders from.

It’s a fairly familiar and predictable 13-hour saga for anyone with a basic level of gangster movie literacy, but the writing is strong.

Familiar too is the third-person action, as The Old Country plays like any typical cover shooter from the last decade or so. This was the case in 2020’s Mafia: Definitive Edition, and it’s the same again here, albeit with a wild west flavour thanks to the era-specific arsenal (like revolvers, repeaters, and various shotguns) and the fact that shootouts sometimes occur on horseback, and/or against fellas who look like they’ve just stumbled home off the set of a Sergio Leone picture after a full day of making Clint Eastwood look cool.

Even without engaging much with its rosary bead system of minor combat buffs (which I did regularly forget about), it’s not a massive challenge with the default, soft-locking aiming controls. However, I don’t play these sorts of games to be relentlessly punished. Some enemies will hunker down behind large objects and walls, and others will stoically stride towards you to be blown out of their boots. The AI isn’t always sharp (and it’s definitely a little janky to find yourself completely flanked but still have the time to stand up and clumsily blast a bloke who had you dead to rights at point blank range) but the shootouts are nonetheless serviceable.

The Old Country’s stealth doesn’t rewrite the rule book either, but it does strengthen the action overall. Stealth is sometimes required by the design of the mission at hand, but on other occasions it’s available as an option. There are a number of encounters throughout with environments that have been laid out for us to be able to sneak around and pick off all the enemies one by one, but also seamlessly pivot to hosting an out-and-out gunfight should you flub it and be spotted.

You can toss coins and bottles for distraction, but unfortunately only some bottles (that is, the ones arbitrarily marked). It’s always a bit of an immersion breaker when levels are decorated with inconsistent props. I’d vastly prefer to just be able to pick up any bottle. Failing that, just delete the bottles we can’t pick up during missions. Crucially, you can pick up and move bodies, and there are boxes to stash them in. The stealth is pretty standard, but with distractions and body hiding it does feel like a proper stealth system and not a tacked on afterthought.

The stealth is pretty standard, but with distractions and body hiding it does feel like a proper stealth system and not a tacked on afterthought.

Enzo can temporarily highlight nearby enemies in the environment, which is essentially a superpower that’s handwaved away as his impeccable instincts (it probably could’ve been more logically introduced during the underground intro as some kind of innate ability he honed after spending the bulk of his childhood in a dark sulfur mine, but no matter). At any rate, once you have a feel for where your enemies are and which way they’re headed, all that’s left is to sneak around, grab them, and either button-bash to strangle them or tap your knife attack to speed up the process. That said, I actually rarely used the latter. Not because I was feeling merciful, but because stabbing your victims costs you a block of “durability” off your knife (which needs to be sharpened with a whetstone if and when it “runs out” of… stabs). It’s not a gamebreaker, but I’m not really into the idea of not being able to stab a bloke simply because my knife is immediately no longer pointy enough to do so after slaying a few of his mates (and whetstones were a consumable I didn’t always have).

I mainly just strangled my enemies to avoid this issue, but it feels like a slightly unnecessary system – particularly when durability concerns disappear during The Old Country’s new one-on-one knife fights.

These knife fights are essentially boss encounters, presented as a one-on-one showdown with another man. They occur outside regular third-person action gameplay, and you’re locked into these battles until there’s a result (or your opponent is scripted to scarper). The attacks, parries, and dodges in knife fights are bespoke to this mode alone. They’re flashy and bloody, but a lot of the time I did just feel I was simply dodging and slashing my way to a cutscene, where a further complication or a switch in momentum will occur. Sometimes you’ll trigger an animation that makes you a passenger for a while, then Enzo’s health bar recharges while your enemy’s does not. I’m not sure what the thought was there. The knife fights look cool, and they’re not like anything in the series to date, but they do feel a little low stakes at times.

Red Dead Redenzione

As a linear adventure, The Old Country admittedly doesn’t share the same scope of Rockstar’s genre-defining Westerns – but it’s certainly adjacent to them in tone and atmosphere. There’s a certain undeniable swagger that comes with riding into town on horseback (and on the wrong side of the law), and The Old County captures this with similar effectiveness to the Red Dead series.

The early 1900s setting doesn’t just shine a spotlight on the early days of the Sicilian Mafia, it’s also a window back to the Edwardian era of automobiles – when cars began competing with horses as the primary method of transportation. Developer Hangar 13 has done an exceptional job in this department, especially with the sound.

These 120-year-old cars have primitive engines, whining chain drives, and open cabins with no sound deadening, and The Old Country has captured their raw and lumpy burbles immaculately. It definitely can’t be understated how much richness this adds to driving around the map. It’s not just engine sounds, either. When a gramophone is brought on a drunken car trip, be sure to listen as it misbehaves when you bounce around off road. There’s a lot of consideration here, and I respect that.

Yes, there’s a race mission – but it’s not been shoehorned in here to taunt those who are still haunted by the infamously tricky racing event in the original Mafia. Sicily was the home of the Targa Florio – established in 1906 and one of the oldest motor racing events in the world – so it makes perfect sense in context.

The Old Country’s riff on this race is sadly all too brief – it’s over in less than seven minutes – but it is one of the most memorable and thrilling missions. It certainly made me wish Enzo could’ve cut ties with the Cosa Nostra and raced around Europe full time. I don’t know what’s more dangerous: betraying your oath to the family or trying to tame an aircraft engine that’s had four tyres and a steering wheel strapped to it.

On the topic of engines, however, it should be noted that The Old Country shifts the Mafia series off its previous proprietary one and onto Unreal Engine 5. From my perspective, the impact isn’t a dramatically profound one – 2020’s Mafia: Definitive Edition remains a handsome looking game, and so is The Old Country. What I can say is that I haven’t experienced any of the minor bugs that occurred during my first playthrough of Mafia: Definitive Edition, and that I haven’t had to restart checkpoints to overcome unexpected jankiness (or fallen through the map) – at least on PC, as we weren’t provided access to the console versions ahead of launch, so we’ll have to wait and see how those run. But outside of the occasional framerate flutter and some light pop-in, my time with The Old Country has been quite robust.

Although, perhaps not quite as robust as the incredible array of food and produce on display throughout. Games rarely make me this hungry. A game may have never made me this hungry. I’m craving cannolis and cake. I’m wading through arancini ball recipes. I’m considering a vegetable garden to grow tomato varieties I can’t find.

I’ve officially turned into my dad, and The Old Country is the game that did it.

Battlefield 6 Devs Working on ‘Substantial’ Increase in Server Capacity as Open Beta Launches to Huge Concurrents and Equally Huge Queues

Battlefield 6 developer DICE has said it’s working on a “substantial” increase in server capacity for the Battlefield 6 Open Beta, after the early access launch was met with huge Steam concurrents and equally huge queues.

At time of this article’s publication, the Battlefield 6 open beta had over 300,000 concurrent players on Steam alone, making it the third most-played game on Valve’s platform behind only Counter-Strike 2 and Dota 2. We don’t have concurrent player figures from Sony or Microsoft, so the open beta’s true concurrent figure will be much higher.

But not all those players are actually playing. Those with early access were met with huge queues (we’ve seen 250,000 in screenshots posted to social media) as the servers hit max capacity. In response, DICE issued a statement to say it was working to improve matters:

“The team is now working on a substantial increase in server capacity, which will reduce your time in the queue,” DICE said. “Thank you for your continued patience as we work to get as many of you into the game as soon as possible.

“We’re looking forward to seeing you experience Battlefield 6, and we appreciate your patience!”

That statement followed a message in which DICE explained why it was using queues in the first place.

“We will use queues to protect the player experience but expect this impact to be minimal,” DICE insisted.

“You may encounter this during high peak moments, such as the start of servers going live. The team is working constantly to reduce any queue that takes place.”

The suggestion here is that the open beta is peaking now as the early access kicks off, but the queues will ease. Given the open beta has gone live in early access form ahead of the U.S. waking up, it seems likely the player count will grow in the coming hours, and again when the open beta goes live for all this weekend.

We’ve got plenty more on Battlefield 6, including how it requires PC gamers to enable Secure Boot, how it was inspired by the much-loved Battlefield: Bad Company 2, and much more.

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Battlefield 6 Open Beta Forces PC Gamers to Mess About With Their BIOS to Enable Secure Boot — and Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Is Next

If you’re trying to play the Battlefield 6 Open Beta on PC, you might have run into a problem: ‘Secure Boot is not enabled.’

You are not alone. PC gamers hoping to play DICE’s latest now open beta early access is live have no choice but to enable Secure Boot on their PC. And a cursory glance at social media, subreddits and IGN’s own comments suggest some are having trouble with it.

To be clear, EA has published a user guide for how to enable Secure Boot on PC, and promoted that guide across social media. It’s a guide I myself had to use to boot the Battlefield 6 Open Beta. But it certainly requires a degree of confidence, as it involves tinkering with a part of a computer not all PC gamers will be instantly familiar with: the BIOS.

There are things like TPM 2.0 (which must be turned on) to deal with, and you need to make sure your Windows disk is GPT and not MBR (not everyone will know what these are). All this before you can even enable Secure Boot — and then you may not be able to enable it anyway, which then means you need to refer to your manufacturer for guidance (gulp!).

Yes, this won’t be a problem for more experienced PC gamers, but it will be an intimidating process for many others. And if you think this is something isolated to Battlefield 6, you’d be wrong. Just yesterday, Activision announced the upcoming Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 will require the exact same thing: Secure Boot enabled.

So, what’s all this in aid of? Strengthening game security using built-in Windows PC features. It’s no secret that cheating in competitive multiplayer games is a huge problem for publishers. Activision has spent millions trying to reverse the narrative for Call of Duty. EA will be mindful of Battlefield 6 getting overrun at launch. It seems TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot are the new reality for PC gamers.

Here’s Activision’s explanation, from a blog post published yesterday:

TPM 2.0 (Trusted Platform Module) is an industry-standard, hardware-based security feature built onto CPUs or motherboards that verifies the PC’s boot process has not been tampered with. Secure Boot makes sure a PC can only load trusted software when Windows starts.

When Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 releases later this year, TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot will be required to play on PC. “These hardware-level protections are a key part of our anti-cheat efforts, and we’re asking all players to get compliant now,” Activision warned.

Back to Battlefield 6, and the open beta Secure Boot process has certainly caused some people to panic, and others to find themselves with additional problems they didn’t have before. Early indications suggest there’s huge interest in the Battlefield 6 open beta, so it will be interesting to see how this one develops over the course of the weekend.

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Grow a Garden Plushies Are Already Available to Buy on Amazon

Grow a Garden has quickly become one of the biggest games of 2025. The Roblox farming simulator first launched back in March and has seen rapid success thanks to various updates and events since then. The overwhelming interest in this Roblox game has shown no signs of slowing down, and the latest cooking-themed event has only fueled it further.

Now that the game has entered further into the mainstream, we’re already starting to see unofficial merch become available. A third-party seller on Amazon called VatanFari has a variety of Grow a Garden plushies for sale based on the pets from the game. The product pages for these plushies claim to be “drawing inspiration” from the Grow a Garden universe.

Grow a Garden Plushies at Amazon

There are a ton of pets available in Grow a Garden, but only a select few are available in plushie form so far. There’s the more traditional animals like a Chicken and a Racoon as well as rarer options such as the Disco Bee. Despite the lack of choices, however, the Chicken Zombie that was part of a limited-time giveaway is included here as well.

All of the Grow a Garden-inspired plushies are available in a 10-inch size and cost around $18. The exception is the Chicken Zombie one that sits at 12-inches thanks to the little jockey. It’s also quite a bit more expensive at $30.

As far as I can tell, there isn’t any “official” merch yet available for Grow a Garden. For now third-party sellers on sites like Amazon or Etsy appear to be ramping up offerings as the latest Roblox sensation continues to take root.

Is VatanFari a trustworthy seller?

One of the dangers of buying from third-party sellers on Amazon is that the products might not end up being of the highest quality. That being said, VatanFari appears to have a decent track record of reviews on some of its other offerings. And plushies are a pretty low-risk item to order from Amazon. All of the options available from this brand offer Amazon’s 30-day refund/replacement window that you can take advantage of.

Guilty Gear Strive Producer On Lucy, Upcoming Balance Changes, and Strive 2.00 | Evo 2025

More than four years after it’s release, Guilty Gear Strive is still going strong, with perhaps its most prolific DLC character yet, Lucy from Cyberpunk, releasing on August 21 as the final part of Character Pass 4. But that’s not the only exciting thing going on in the world of Guilty Gear. During the finals of Strive at Evo, there was a trailer announcing a mysterious new chapter called Guilty Gear Strive 2.00, with two silhouhettes of characters that clearly indicate that longtime favorites Robo-Ky and Jam Kuradoberi are going to be making their way into Strive’s ever growing roster.

To get some details on Strive’s future, I caught up with Ken Miyauchi at the show so I could pick his brain on all of these points and more.

So at finals for EVO 2025, you guys revealed Guilty Gear Strive 2.00. Can you tell us a little bit about what’s going to be in that version?

Ken Miyauchi, Producer on Guilty Gear Strive: Yes, we just announced a teaser trailer of something showing the version 2.00. We are not really particularly explaining what’s in 2.00, but there’s a reason behind why we show the number 2.00. We want to provide new, more exciting content toward Guilty Gear Strive and I’m expecting to show more details in the near future.

We also saw two silhouettes of characters that are going to be coming to Guilty Gear Strive 2.00. It seems like it’s going to be Jam and Robo-Ky. Can you talk a little bit about those two characters?

Miyauchi: So yeah, we are showing that we are still working on developing more additional characters. Of course, Lucy is coming out in August 21st, but we are still continuing developing more character updates and those are going to be the two characters that we are currently working on. So please stay tuned.

What can you tell us about Lucy and what her play style is going to be? Obviously she uses strings from Cyberpunk, but can you give us a little taste of what she is going to be like in Strive?

Miyauchi: Yeah, I think people are watching the trailers and trying to find out what she’s doing and one of the biggest core mechanics that a lot of players might be very excited to see is her Quickhack move, which is really directly inspired from the Cyberpunk 2077 game mechanic. So we made it visually look very like the Cyberpunk 2077 Quickhack. And she has very, very unique moves that go along with that Quickhack. So the way she fights is going to be very unique, even compared to the entire Guilty Gear Strive cast. So yeah, I hope everyone enjoys her when she’s out.

Another thing that’s coming to Guilty Gear Strive is going to be the ranked mode. What can you tell us about how the ranked mode will be in Guilty Gear Strive and how it’s going to be different from the regular tower format?

Miyauchi: So yeah, I explained this in our own website column, Developer’s Backyard. So if you want to find out more details about the rules of how you earn points and how you get ranks and what kind of variety of ranks you have, you can check that out. And so it’s pretty much a regular standard rank match system that we’ve been also doing, and I think all other fighting games were also doing. We have battle points that you climb up together whenever you win a match and depending on your battle points, you will have higher ranks, and you get to the top, which is the rank called Vanquisher. You’ll get into a rating match, almost like a master rank kind of, a rating match. So people who are playing really competitively can keep grinding to compete in the rating ranking and try to aim to the top of the ranking. And there is of course rewards to it. So I hope everyone who plays regularly will enjoy playing this mode.

In Ranked Match we also have several features that people would be excited. I mean, I hope they appreciate is that we also have the Wi-Fi indicator and also if there’s a bad ping match-up goals, you will be able to vote a no contest. So those kinds of features will also be included. So I hope you find out how you can use those features.

So you’re also looking to make adjustments to things like RISC, Wild Assault, and I believe Guard Crush is another thing. Can you tell us a little bit about specifically what kind of changes you’re looking to make about those mechanics?

Miyauchi: So yeah, we also announced that we are working on the battle balance patch and that’s also coming out along with the Lucy character update. And so we are kind of trying to see the game balance and trying to incorporate a lot of player’s feedback regarding how Guilty Gear Strive is currently playing. And we think there needs to be some tone downs on several, how do I say… the game mechanics, general game mechanics, the tools that everyone has access to.

We think there needs to be some tone downs on several game mechanics, or tools that everyone has access to.

And so there are lots of toning downs, but at the same time we also want to focus on the character uniqueness and making sure that characters can play how they would like to be played. And I think we had a lot of feedback from players that the current version of Guilty Gear Strive is in favor of those characters who have more access to those game mechanics. So not too much relying into the game mechanics and that’s the direction of how we are balancing out for this patch.

So Arc System Works recently announced Marvel Tokon, and I think a lot of people are wondering, is there anyone from the Strive team that moved over to Marvel Tokon, or what is Strive’s relationship with that game?

Miyauchi: Well, I wish I can say anything about Marvel Tokon, but unfortunately I don’t have a right to, and I honestly don’t know much about Marvel Tokon because that’s really a high-end secure project that’s also internally in Arc System Works.

So no knowledge of Strive developers working on Marvel Tokon then?

Miyauchi: Well, we do have, it’s a small company, so we do have a chat or discussion going on between teams. But yeah, that’s everything that I can say.

Fair enough. So with each new update of Guilty Gear Strive, it feels like you’re kind of going down a list and just kind of knocking off different features from 3v3 to now ranked mode. Are there any other kind of features that you want to add to Strive that are still on the list?

Miyauchi: So we have a lot of things that we would like to do, which is also something that a lot of players has been asking for and I can’t share any details about it for now, but I’m hoping if I will be able to show that off in the next version of 2.00.

Do you ever see Guilty Gear changing direction from being a fighting game series or even just a spin-off to do something other than fighting games? Obviously Guilty Gear 2: Overture was an action adventure. Is there any kind of future for Guilty Gear that’s not a 2D fighter, do you think?

Miyauchi: Well, I don’t have any projected plan or anything that I can share for now, but as a producer I’m always interested to expand Guilty Gear as an IP to open to different genres so that people who are not fighting games would also get into the IP. So yeah, if I have a chance I would like to try on some different kind of genre. But yeah, I don’t have anything to share right now.

Mitchell Saltzman is an editorial producer at IGN. You can find him on twitter @JurassicRabbit