Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone Season 5 launches August 7

In Season 5, the Rogue Black Ops team tracks down the final Pantheon moles to finish what they’ve started. Battle across new Multiplayer maps plus check out the thrilling conclusion of the Black Ops 6 Zombies storyline. In Verdansk, the Stadium is blown wide open, with high-tech secrets hiding within. The new content goes live in Black Ops 6 and Warzone starting August 7.

Multiplayer Overview

New Maps

Runway (Launch): Following a destructive pursuit in the Arzak Provincial Airport, wreckage and chaos have engulfed the terminal and the surrounding area.

Exchange (Launch): Set in a vibrant Avalon marketplace, crash the party and unleash havoc on this small-sized three-lane map centered around the Deli.

World Motor Dynasty (W.M.D.) (Launch), Remaster: First introduced in the original Call of Duty: Black Ops, W.M.D. is back as the reimagined World Motor Dynasty luxury Italian car manufacturer in Avalon.

Jackpot (Mid-Season), Inspired by Black Ops 4: Using elements from the original Casino map from Black Ops 4 and partially inspired by the Heist mission from the Black Ops 6 campaign, this extensively reworked map takes place on the Casino Luttazzi floor.

New and Returning Multiplayer Modes

Aim High (New, Launch): Across a variety of game modes headshots land instant eliminations while full body armor minimizes damage dealt anywhere below the neck. Eliminate enemies and receive brief speed and health regeneration boosts.

Snipers Only (Returning, In-Season):  Operators spawn with only a Sniper Rifle in hand – Equipment, Secondary Weapons, and your Dedicated Melee Weapon are restricted.

Cranked Moshpit (Returning, In-Season): Eliminations give you speed Perks and activate a bomb countdown on your Operator. Refresh the bomb timer with chain eliminations and earn twice the score for your team.


Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone Season 5 launches August 7

Zombies Overview

New Round-Based Zombies Map: Reckoning (Launch)

The massive Janus Towers that dominate the Project Janus Headquarters are teetering on the verge of collapse. Face the final chapter of the Black Ops 6 Zombies story as the crew and Richtofen face off against S.A.M. in a race against time.

New Elite Enemy and Other Entities

The greatest new Project Janus threat is the Uber Klaus – a hulking robot encased in a tough, bulky exoskeleton, packed with lethal efficiency and super strength. Once the outer protection is shattered, a second form known as Uber Klaus Core appears.

Keep an eye out for waves of daunting Kommando Klaus units, robot enforcers heralded by a mysterious red mist. These machines are programmed to seek and destroy, self-destructing upon contact.

New Wonder Weapon: Gorgofex

Buried deep within the Janus Towers is the Gorgofex, a grotesque new Wonder Weapon. This bio-aetheric weapon pulses with fungal, insectile, and floral traits and supports multiple variants for those willing to discover them.

Additional Field Upgrade: Mister Peeks

Summon the deadly and distracting bunny to bust out the moves and bash undead brains to a disco beat.

Call of Duty: Warzone Overview

Abyss Protocol Activated: Stadium Compromised

Recon teams have uncovered the existence of a covert military base hidden inside the National Acropolis Arena, tied to the highly secretive Abyss Protocol. A looming threat may be buried within – Operators are advised to prepare for an imminent Stadium breach.

New Contract: Satellite Hijack (Launch Window, Week One)

Explode your way into the stadium with the multi-step Satellite Hijack Contract, available only during the first full week of the season.

New LTMs

Stadium Resurgence LTM (In-Season, Week Two): Operators will be able to access the Stadium via new rooftop entry points and participate in a fast-paced Resurgence mode with a seven-circle collapse

General Overview

New Weapons: In the Battle Pass, unlock two new free base weapons: the PML 5.56 LMG and ABR A1 Assault Rifle. Plus, earn additional new weapons via seasonal events.

New Attachments: Bring the power to your favorite pistol with the 9mm PM Skull Splitter attachment available in the Battle Pass. And unlock an additional attachment at mid-season.

Season 5 Battle Pass, Store Content

Purchase the Battle Pass to immediately unlock rewards including a seasonal 10% Battle Pass XP Boost, the Stogie Sims Operator, the Infernous Legendary Blueprint for the Kilo 141 Assault Rifle, and more, providing access to over 110 pieces of unlockable content. Plus, Purchase BlackCell for the premiere Battle Pass Upgrade.

Season 5 Launches August 7

Black Ops 6 is available now on PlayStation 5 and PlayStation 4. Experience the spy action thriller Campaign, the in-depth tactical chaos of Multiplayer, and soak in the gory glory of round-based Zombies!

Parrying has never seemed more whimsical than in dollhouse soulslike Memoria Wake

There are at least two ways to write about parrying mechanics. On the one hand, you have people like me who compose farking ridiculous intros such as “a good parry mechanic is a kind of redemption”, then spend hundreds of words overegging the pudding. On the other, you have Nic, who sums parrying up far more elegantly as “a pleasingly low-effort method to make your opponent look very silly”. I hope that both Nic and I will be at home in Memoria Wake, a new isometric action-RPG in which you can parry giant black cats with an umbrella. There’s now a demo on Steam.

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Itch.io are seeking out new payment processors who are more comfortable with adult material

Itch.io have announced that they are seeking out new payment processing partners who are more willing to handle the purchase of NSFW games, after delisting or removing a vast swathe of games in accordance with the content restrictions of companies such as Paypal and Stripe. They’ve also offered an explanation for why they’ve recently delisted so many more “infringing” games than Steam, which has carried out its own cull of sexually explicit games under pressure from finance firms. Finally, Itch have acknowledged that their recently posted list of newly prohibited adult material is far too vague to be useful.

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DSiWare Game ‘Handy Hockey’ Makes A Return On Switch 2

With mouse controls and 120fps, too!

Japanese developer ITL is returning to one of its DSiWare titles, Handy Hockey, and bringing it to the Switch 2 in just two days — on 31st July 2025 — for the bargain price of £5.00 / $7.00.

The original game launched as a DSiWare title back in 2010 and is a simple, neon-coloured air hockey game. However, it was exclusive to Japan. This version looks to be a polished-up version of the original, making it the first time it’s available in the West.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

How sound can save or doom you in I Hate This Place

Hi there, I’m Miki Majka, Game Producer at Rock Square Thunder. Today, I want to give you a first look at the official gameplay trailer for our upcoming game, I Hate This Place, which is coming to PlayStation 5 later this year. It’s a craft-based, isometric survival horror experience all wrapped in bold comic-style visuals and soaked in a gritty 1980s horror atmosphere.

I also want to take you a little deeper into how we’re using sound as more than just atmosphere. In I Hate This Place, silence isn’t simply golden — it can mean the difference between life and death.

But first, let’s take a look at the gameplay trailer:


How sound can save or doom you in I Hate This Place

These creatures hunt by sound

As you probably noticed in the video, the world of I Hate This Place is filled with a lot of nightmarish, otherworldly creatures from a rather eerie and distorted world. But what might not be so clear is that many of these hulking monstrosities can barely see. Instead, they stalk their prey (you) by sound, so all your actions and movements need to be thought out. Every footstep, every gunshot, every clang of metal can give off your location.

So whether you’re creeping through overgrown woods or navigating decrepit facilities, the surface beneath your sneakers matters. A slow, crouched shuffle across grass will likely be ignored. A careless stomp on broken glass, not so much.

Making visual noise

To take this system further and make it more clever to players, we also made sound into a visual language, where noise is color-coded. It’s a unique visual system inspired to tie in with the game’s comic book art style. For example:

Green footsteps mean you’re quiet, crouched, moving slowly, minimizing risk
Yellow signals you’re walking at a normal pace and making moderate noise
Red means you’re running or being loud, and you’re a beacon for danger

This color-coded feedback system doesn’t just apply to footsteps, though. Gunfire, thrown objects, even the howls and attacks of enemies all follow the same noise-visibility rules, helping you judge just how much noise all of your actions are creating.

Sound as a weapon

Just as sound can get you killed, it can also be used to your advantage and become your most useful weapon.

With a bit of strategy and planning, you can lure monsters away from key areas or into your cleverly laid traps. Tossing an empty can down a hallway or into the underbrush might attract a nearby creature, giving you the opening you need to escape.

With a bit more planning and thought, you can try to herd enemies together into the perfect spot to then toss that grenade or molatov cocktail you happened to scrounge.

Stealth is your friend

Combat in I Hate This Place is about choosing your battles wisely. Many of the creatures you’ll encounter are brutal, and even more so when night falls. Going in guns blazing is doable, but maybe not always the right move. Ammo is scarce, noise is dangerous, and enemies are unforgiving.

So the next time you feel tempted to sprint across an open field or you think firing off a shotgun blast in a tight corridor is a good idea, think twice. In I Hate This Place, it is not just what you do, it is how loud you are when you do it. Instead, you can rely on stealth, movement, and manipulation. Using the terrain, sound cues, and enemy behavior against them becomes second nature as you learn to navigate the environment and survive it.

That’s it for today’s deep dive about our combat and potentially sound-induced paranoia!

Thank you so much for reading.

The Biggest Magic: The Gathering Crashers and Climbers This Week – July 29

The Magic: The Gathering Final Fantasy Universes Beyond set is drawing to a close (at least until Spider-Man’s arrival), with Edge of Eternities debuting in just a few days.

The new sci-fi set will take us to space, and there are new synergies emerging already. This week’s movers and shakers include cards with spaceships and aliens in mind, thanks to data from TCGPlayer.

Climbers: Return of The Gaffer

Players have already spotted a lot of potential in The Gaffer, a three-cost white card who turns lifegain into card advantage.

This card from The Lord of the Rings is seeing a climb ahead of Edge of Eternities, reaching $9 and up, thanks to synergies with Ragost, Deft Gastronaut. It was just $2 not long ago.

Next up, we mentioned Thrumming Hivepool last week, and Hatchery Sliver is another shoo-in for Sliver decks with Edge of Eternities. It’s slithered its way to over $10 pretty quickly.

Sticking with Slivers, The First Sliver from Modern Horizons saw a steep drop but has now started to pick up. Giving your Sliver spells Cascade, and offering a 7/7 body in its own right, it’s likely to be a nuisance to play against, and it’s now $30.

The last Edge of Eternities synergy this week is Sylvan Safekeeper, which plays on the land sacrificing theme of the World Shaper Commander precon. It’s up to $8 and climbing.

Finally, it wouldn’t be a Crashers and Climbers without something to do with the Tidus deck, and this week it’s Wave Goodbye, which sends a board’s worth of cards back to an owner’s hand if their cards don’t have a counter on them.

Crashers: Big Beasts and Baddies

This week’s crashers are well worth a look for just about anyone. First up, Summon: Primal Odin from Final Fantasy is now under $2. Given you can manipulate his lore counters with the right setup, you can keep Zantetsuken primed to deal game-ending damage to players.

One more Final Fantasy one, and it’s Ultima, Origin of Oblivion. This 4/4 could be an ideal inclusion in colorless decks since it gets you double colorless mana, but it also ‘blights’ an opponent’s land. It’s just a dollar.

Next up, we switch our focus to Dragons. Tarkir: Dragonstorm remains one of my favorite sets of this year, and Betor, Kin to All was arguably a better inclusion in the Abzan Armor deck than Betor, Ancestor’s Voice. Now you can right that wrong for under $4.

Sticking with alternative versions of Commanders from the set’s precons, Ureni, the Song Unending is down to under $3 and could be devastating if you can pull enough lands before introducing it.

Finally, Craterhoof Behemoth’s Showcase Halo Foil version is one of the priciest cards in the set, but you can get this big bad beast for around $12-$15 in its standard printing.

Lloyd Coombes is an experienced freelancer in tech, gaming and fitness seen at Polygon, Eurogamer, Macworld, TechRadar and many more. He’s a big fan of Magic: The Gathering and other collectible card games, much to his wife’s dismay.

Monster Hunter Wilds is getting an endgame expansion “ahead of schedule”, as Capcom keep hunting player approval

Monster Hunter Wilds is now set to get an endgame revamp earlier than originally advertised, with Capcom having opted to chuck their established update plans for the next few months out of a window. Well, I say that, all they’ve really done is move around some bits.

While performance issues have proven to be the main achilles heel of the action game about hunning mons, the stuff you’re left to do once you’ve slapped up Arkveld has been another source of player ire.

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Donkey Kong Bananza Interactive Maps Are Now Available

IGN’s Donkey Kong Bananza maps are here! Our interactive maps track essential locations across the game’s various layers, including Lagoon Layer, Hilltop Layer, The Divide, and more. If you’re looking for collectibles, such as Banandium Gems and Fossils, or simply want to see all the Challenge locations, you’re in the right place.

Donkey Kong Bananza Interactive Maps

Click on a link below to go to that specific Donkey Kong Bananza interactive map:

The available map filters for our DK Bananza interactive maps include:

  • Locations, including Checkpoints, Transitions, and Shops.
  • Collectibles, such as Banandium Gems, Cranky Kong, Clothing, and Fossils.
  • Challenges, including Battles, Shifty Smashes, and Courses.
  • Other miscellaneous map markers.

Donkey Kong Bananza Guides

While you’re adventuring through the various layers in DK Bananza, make sure to head over to IGN’s Donkey Kong Bananza wiki. We have a whole host of guides to assist you, including:

Meg Koepp is a Guides Editor on the IGN Guides team, with a focus on trends. When she’s not working, you can find her playing an RPG or cuddling her corgi.

Baldur’s Gate 3’s Amelia Tyler voices a cursed boardgame in this original Jumanji adaptation in all but name

There are a number of official Jumanji video games, but they don’t seem very Jumanjish to me. You’ve got a bunch of nineties-to-noughties minigame compilations, a pachinko adaptation, and a few reportedly dismal games based on the recent Dwayne Johnson movies, also feat. Steve off Infiniminer and Amy Pond from Dr Avenger: Endgame.

Ludogram’s just-announced streamerbait co-op horror game Invokyr seems to be cleaving a lot closer to the 1995 movie, which is itself based on Chris Van Allsburg’s book from 1981. The game sees you and up to three others playing a cursed boardgame that transforms the house it’s played in.

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Grounded 2 Early Access Review

Obsidian recently made a lot of hay out of how it’s a studio that’s best known for sequels, and with Grounded 2’s early access version already shaping up to be one of the best survival games I’ve ever played, the marketing team should have plenty of fodder for that bit for years to come. This miniaturized survival game isn’t even half complete, with only one act (which took me around 25 hours to beat), just a handful of regions, and plenty of technical issues to iron out, but it already eclipses the already stellar original in practically every way. Stomping through the park atop an ant or spider simultaneously makes travel faster and more interesting while also solving my long-standing inventory gripes with Grounded 1 by letting you offload your loot to a multi-legged backpack; the RPG mechanics of building into specific specializations like warrior and mage have been seriously leveled up and streamlined; and the story, characters, and pacing are a massive step up compared to its predecessor.

If you missed the first one (and you really shouldn’t have), part of what makes both of these games special is their premise, which realizes a dream that pretty much everybody had as a kid: they’re survival RPGs where you and up to three friends play as a group of teens who have been shrunken down to the size of ants and are made to brave a miniature suburban wilderness, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids-style. You and up to three friends will battle bugs, build bases out of grass and pebbles, face off against an evil corporation obsessed with shrinking kids for some reason, and get lost in a world that feels magical and epic despite taking place in the most mundane places ever, like the inside of a trash can.

Where the original’s excellent story was the best-kept secret in gaming (mostly due to the fact that story bits were separated by dozens of hours of survival gameplay) the sequel keeps its goofy characters and hilarious dialogue front and center. In true Obsidian fashion, this is one of the most laugh-out-loud-funny games I’ve played in a while; each of the four returning protagonists is way too comfortable with the idea of being shrunken this time and are bursting with smarmy one-liners, and your main “ally” and guide, Sloane Beaumont, gives one of my favorite performances with her vaguely evil stepmother routine that never failed to put a smile on my face.

In true Obsidian fashion, this is one of the most laugh-out-loud-funny games I’ve played in a while.

Moving from a backyard to a park allows for some interesting new areas, my favorite of which is an overturned ice cream cart that has transformed the entire region into a frigid wasteland where unprepared travelers will freeze in their tracks. There’s also a giant statue that acts like a foreboding tower which demands to be scaled, and a garden of cobblestone steps that serves as a vast labyrinth. Beyond these examples, though, there are currently too few areas that feel special and unique – you’ll also find a big bush filled with branches to navigate, a fallen grill that serves as a volcanic area, and a picnic table, but all of those ideas are taken straight from the previous game’s backyard setting and don’t mix things up too much. The first Grounded also has a neat koi pond water area, a bug-bombed zone filled with poison, and a desert-like sandbox, but this new map doesn’t currently have that same level of variety yet. Of course, many of those were added during Grounded 1’s own early access development period, and there are still massive parts of the park currently roped off – so assuming something doesn’t go terribly wrong (and in this day and age, that’s not necessarily a guarantee), it’s reasonable to assume that Obsidian has some big ideas to roll out before 1.0.

A lot of the fundamentals from the first Grounded have returned, including enemies like red ants and orb weavers, weapons like the life-draining mosquito needle rapier, and mechanics like the mutation system and weapon upgrades that will all feel pretty familiar as of now. But Grounded 2 also doesn’t shy away from trying new things and making important improvements, like how you no longer need to carry around a shovel, ax, and hammer since it’s all been replaced with a much better omni-tool that you always have on hand and doesn’t require repairing. That’s just handy!

One massive change is the fact that you can now build into specific classes, like rogue or mage, with armor and weapons available to support different playstyles. This was already sort of an unofficial thing in the original, but now you get equipment specially designed with certain functions in mind and stat bonuses to go with them, which is really freakin’ cool. Getting to choose between turning my nerdy teen into a fast-moving rogue with a deadly dagger or a lumbering brute with a two-handed weapon and ladybug shell armor was exactly the kind of thing I didn’t know was missing, and it absolutely rules.

Grounded 2 doesn’t shy away from trying new things and making important improvements.

The biggest addition, though, is that you can now hatch and domesticate insects to use as your own personal exo-stallions, which completely changes how you navigate the wilderness. Instead of building ziplines or trekking everywhere on foot, you can now scramble across the entire map in no time at all and even battle mosquitos and beetles from your mounted beastie. Right now there’s only two mounts available, but they’re both absolutely badass gamechangers: a red soldier ant that can carry a ton of materials and chew through obstructions with its powerful mandibles, and a giant orb weaver that can crawl across spiderwebs and scare lesser bugs away with a mighty spider roar. The ability to dash across the map in less than a minute also means that now when a friend finds themselves in a tight spot, you can summon your warbeast and race to their aid, which wasn’t always a real option in the original.

I love what I’ve seen in those areas, but one place I hope Obsidian will eventually show some more love is base building, which is disappointingly similar to the original right now. Its mechanics are still serviceable enough to get the job done, but too often I’m getting the same old error messages that some object I was trying to place was obstructed when there’s no obstruction in sight, and some building surfaces (like pebble foundation) are so uneven that placing items leaves them so hilariously askew that it’s just unacceptably ugly. It seems like one of the least-improved areas in its current state.

Another thing that could use some love is enemy variety, since the vast majority of baddies you’ll find in Grounded 2 are ripped straight from its predecessor, so I already knew all their moves before I set foot in the park. Occasionally I’ve run into some new creatures, like ice-breathing butterflies that fight with the ferocity and tactics of a dragon, or praying mantises that use their razor-sharp claws to slice me to pieces, but more often than not I was killing the same ants, orb weavers, and larvae I’ve already slain thousands of. For that matter, right now Grounded 2 is even missing lots of the enemies found in the original (or, if they are here, I haven’t looked under the right rock yet), like black ox beetles and wasps – but, again, there’s a pretty good chance Obsidian is saving these monsters (or better yet, revised versions of them) for the later areas that aren’t accessible just yet.

As for how it runs, this is a fairly rough one even as early access games go. Especially since the last one still didn’t perform the best even well after it reached its 1.0 version, I wasn’t expecting it to run flawlessly, but even with those expectations set, this was reliably unreliable. After building a good-sized base and chopping down a bunch of grass, I found that the area near my home regularly had serious framerate issues, my game crashed about once every five or so hours, enemies would occasionally get stuck inside objects, and more. “Unfinished game feels unfinished” is hardly a surprise, I know, but this is still enough of an issue that it’s likely to prove a sticking point for those with a low tolerance for the wrong kind of bugs. I tend to have a fairly short fuse when it comes to this stuff, so it’s a testament to how great everything else is that I’m still so high on Grounded 2 after having to put up with all of it.