IGN UK Podcast 730: Flo Rida’s Christmas Catch-Up

Christmas has come late. A new IGN UK Podcast episode has arrived as Cardy, Dale, and Mat have a big ol’ catch-up and chat about all the games, movies, and TV shows that were enjoyed (and some not so much) over the festive break. We’ve got everything from God of War Ragnarok: Valhalla to Cobalt Core. Big blockbuster hits like Godzilla Minus One to French new wave noir. A bit of something for everyone innit.

What are you most excited about watching or playing in 2024? Get in touch at ign_ukfeedback@ign.com.

IGN UK Podcast 730: Flo Rida’s Christmas Catch-Up

New JAWS Pinball Machine from Stern Has Original Movie Footage, Shark Toys, and Lots of Blood

The next game from Stern Pinball Inc. will be JAWS, a machine based on the 1975 Steven Spielberg film and featuring many sights and sounds from the horror flick. JAWS pinball also features the original John Williams score, new callouts from original JAWS star Richard Dreyfuss, and seemingly lots of movie footage incorporated into its HD screen. Shockingly, aside from a goofy ’70s knockoff machine and Zen Pinball’s virtual JAWS games, there’s never been an official JAWS pinball machine.

JAWS is designed by Keith Elwin, who was also behind the well-received Stern games, Godzilla and Iron Maiden. Its main features on the playfield include a chum bucket you can bash to “release blood” onto the playfield, represented by LED lights, which then raises a moving shark fin target to shoot. The fancier Premium and Limited Edition versions of JAWS feature a great white toy that pops out of the playfield from beneath a tiny boat that you can target, and a small replica of the Orca boat as a single-flipper mini playfield in the upper left.

There are three versions of JAWS, like many recent Stern releases, the Limited Edition and Premium Edition share similar playfield features and toys, but the Limited Edition has unique art and side armor. The Pro version has simpler playfield – it’s missing the upper Orca boat playfield and replaces the transforming shark bash toy with a simpler shark mechanism with a captive ball.

Stern has also teased a mode where you can play as the Great White, and a 3D video mode to discover.

Stern games now feature a QR reader and are connected to the Stern Insider Connected system via your phone to register high scores, tackle achievements, and, for JAWS, there are some unique features like “Shark Teeth” to collect for unlockables, and a “Career System” that allows for some sort of progression system via the Insider Connected setup.

JAWS is available now with the Pro Edition MSRP set at $6,999, Premium Edition set at $9,699 and Limited Edition set at $12,999. We hope to playtest it soon at our local pinball joint!

Samuel Claiborn is IGN’s managing editor and a fixes/breaks ancient arcade and pinball machines in his garage. TCELES B HSUP to follow him @Samuel_IGN on Twitter.

MapleStory Developer Nexon Fined Nearly $9 Million for Deceptive Loot Box Practices by Korean FTC

MapleStory developer Nexon is being hit with a sizable fine by the Korean Fair Trade Commission over what the body says are deceptive loot box practices.

As reported by the Korean Times and Business Korea, Nexon is being fined some $8.85 million (about 11.6 billion won) for allegedly lowering the probabilities of some loot box items capable of upgrading player equipment,, known as Cubes, without telling players According to the Korean Times, it is the largest fine of this type levied to date.

The judgment claims that Nexon engaged in these practices for more than 10 years in a period dating back to 2010, including secretly lowering the loot box odds for some items to near zero. The findings were reportedly based on internal documents obtained from Nexon.

“Nexon made announcements about changes to the games hundreds of times from 2010-21, but it omitted the information about the probability adjustment,” the KTFC said in a statement. It added, “Our judgment is that the company had aimed to lure customers by giving them false information and used deceptive means.”

Loot boxes have become less popular in recent years owing to the intense backlash from fans. Instead, developers are more likely to favor the battle pass model pioneered by the likes of Dota 2 and Fortnite. However, loot boxes remain prevalent in mobile games and sports games, and they are a hot button issue for regulators.

Nexon in particular has become known for its aggressive monetization practices. Last year, IGN reported on MapleStory’s controversial “New Age” update, which made it more difficult for players in certain regions to farm a key currency while the price of some items were inflated. The update led to large-scale protests throughout the community.

Our judgment is that [Nexon] had aimed to lure customers by giving them false information and used deceptive means

MapleStory is a free-to-play 2D MMO that first launched back in 2003. It has purportedly raked in some $418 million [550 billion won] in sales from its loot boxes in the period between 2010 and 2021.

The Korean Times reports that Nexon apologized in its statement but that it will appeal the decision. IGN has reached out to Nexon representatives for a full statement.

Kat Bailey is IGN’s News Director as well as co-host of Nintendo Voice Chat. Have a tip? Send her a DM at @the_katbot.

Hideo Kojima Compares OD to Boktai, Says It Will be Just as ‘Different’

What is OD? We don’t know much save that it’s being made in collaboration with Jordan Peele, and that it will feature a lot of familiar Hollywood celebs screaming silently into the screen. Probably.

Predictably, creator Hideo Kojima is calling it a game, a movie, and a “new form of media.” He’s also comparing it to Boktai: The Sun Is in Your Hand, a cult favorite series on GBA and Nintendo DS that was a big departure at the time for Kojima, who is best-known for his work on Metal Gear Solid.

In Boktai, you play a vampire hunter named Django (no, not that Django) who battles the undead with the help of a solar gun powered by real-life sunlight. The cartridge famously included a solar sensor that charged up the in-game weapons needed to defeat Boktai’s vampires. Writing on X/Twitter, Kojima recalled the “fierce opposition” he received when he first pitched Boktai.

“It seems I have been acknowledged by creating games that go against the current of the times, such as ‘hide-and-seek’ games where you sneak into a building without being detected by the enemy, or ‘delivery games’ where you enjoy moving around in an open world,” Kojima wrote. “For me, the most experimental game was ‘defeating vampires outside your house’ using actual sunlight around you. It was met with fierce opposition from the staff and even within the company. In that sense, OD is just as different.”

It’s just one more teaser for OD, which remains as mysterious as Death Stranding when it was first revealed. Peele, meanwhile, has claimed that OD will be “immersive” and “utterly terrifying.” We don’t know much else about OD, save that it’s being developed on Unreal Engine 5 and that will feature Sophia Lillis, Hunter Schafer, and Udo Kier. It will apparently “explore the concept of testing your fear threshold.”

As for Boktai, the series hasn’t been seen since 2007, but it did manage to get two sequels on GBA and a DS release titled Lunar Knights. The final game notably dropped the sun sensor that made the original so unique.

OD does not yet have a release date. For more, check out all the biggest games of 2024, which will apparently include Metal Gear Solid Delta.

Kat Bailey is IGN’s News Director as well as co-host of Nintendo Voice Chat. Have a tip? Send her a DM at @the_katbot.

GTA 5’s Michael Voice Actor Praises Introduction of GTA 6’s Lucia as ‘Huge’

The actor behind Michael in Grand Theft Auto V, Ned Luke, openly endorsed Lucia, the playable female protagonist, in the highly anticipated GTA 6.

As part of our IGN’s GTFM video series, Luke was seen chatting with my colleague Akeem Lawanson. During the interview, Luke described the significance of Lucia as one of the two playable protagonists in GTA 6 while also addressing the claims that Rockstar has gone “woke” for adding her as one of the playable characters.

“Lucia’s hard, man. In the trailer, she looked good. You get a lot of these clowns out here going, ‘Rockstar’s going woke, they’re caving into the wokeness of the world,'” Luke said. “First of all, there’s been other female protagonists in the past, but not in something as huge as this.”

As Luke points out, it is a well-documented fact that a few games in the Grand Theft Auto series offered a female protagonist. Outside of the obvious one being the female custom character you can make in GTA Online, both Grand Theft Auto and the Game Boy Color (GBC) version of Grand Theft Auto II had at least one female protagonist in each game you could play as.

Yet, Luke’s point of mentioning the significance of Lucia in the next installment is still significant. Beyond what has already been pointed out, since jumping into the third dimension, the Grand Theft Auto series has been a critical and commercial hit for Rockstar, with GTA 5 being a major success since its release in 2013.

GTA 6 is currently in development with a 2025 release window. Beyond the name of our two protagonists and the confirmation that it will be set in a fictionalized version of Florida called Leonida, Rockstar has yet to share more in-depth details. Until then, check out 99 details we discovered in the first GTA 6 trailer.

Taylor is a Reporter at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Baldur’s Gate 3 Includes a Moving Tribute to a Fan’s Father Who Has Alzheimer’s

With countless different endings and around 100 hours per playthrough, Baldur’s Gate 3 is jam-packed with rooms, lines of dialogue, and characters that players might miss. However, one player has shared their especially meaningful experience with one of the game’s lesser-known NPCs, and their story is now resurfacing thanks to a recent post from a developer.

In 2020, Larian forums user Solfalia shared a post thanking Larian Studios for releasing Act I of Baldur’s Gate 3 in early access — the game’s early release enabled them to play with their father, who played previous Larian games with them but had recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

“This Early Access means that this Xmas I’ll be able to go on an adventure with him one last time, and I know he’ll enjoy it,” Solfalia wrote in the original post.

Nearly three years later, after the full release of Baldur’s Gate 3, Solfalia returned to the Larian forums to thank the team again — this time for a much more personal addition. After seeing their original post, an anonymous writer had offered to add a tribute to Solfalia’s father. Solfalia thought this might be a book or plaque, but the team surprised them by adding an NPC named Golbraith with his own cellar to explore, all inspired by Solfalia’s father.

“Not only did Golbraith look like my father, but he had multiple lines of dialogue,” Solfalia wrote. “Some really touching ones too (for me, at least). The different papers in the house were amazing, the stack of letters between Golbraith and his son put a lump in my throat. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t misty eyed. The secret mindflayer-hunter cellar was awesome.”

“As soon as I finished looking through the whole house, I told my Dad. He’s in a care home now, so can’t play the game, but he listened to my description with a child-like glee I haven’t seen in a while. He loved every moment of it. He loved the idea that his character has a monocle, and was proud his character has a secret cellar with weapons. He still talks about it from time to time during our weekly chats.”

Today, Rachel Quicke, a writer for Larian Studios, shared the original post, saying she had volunteered to write Golbraith (although she wasn’t the anonymous “superwriter” who had originally reached out to Solfalia).

“Really happy we got to honour the mighty mindflayer hunter,” Quicke wrote.

In part thanks to the little details like this, we gave Baldur’s Gate 3 a 10 in our review, calling it “a landmark moment in the genre.” Since then, it’s gone on to win Game of the Year at the Game Awards and a few of IGN’s own awards.

Amelia Zollner is a freelance writer at IGN who loves all things indie and Nintendo. Outside of IGN, they’ve contributed to sites like Polygon and Rock Paper Shotgun. Find them on Twitter: @ameliazollner.

Metal Gear Solid 3 Remake 2024 Release Window Seemingly Confirmed in PlayStation Trailer

PlayStation has listed the Metal Gear Solid 3 remake, officially Metal Gear Solid Δ: Snake Eater (the Δ is pronounced delta), as a 2024 game.

A trailer advertising various PlayStation 5 games coming in 2024 (below) includes lots of entries with established release dates (like The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered and Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth), but also quietly listed the release window for the highly anticipated remake.

Publisher Konami is yet to confirm any sort of release date or window itself, though given it was announced by PlayStation in 2023 and is coming to the PS5, it likely knows it’s stuff. IGN has reached out to Konami for comment.

Not stopping there, the PlayStation trailer also listed the Silent Hill 2 Remake as a 2024 release, seemingly dropping two major release windows in the space of two minutes.

Announced in May 2023 after a series of rumours, Metal Gear Solid Δ: Snake Eater promises to be a faithful retelling of the original game and will implement the original voice acting that featured David Hayter. The exact voice acting situation is unclear though, as Konami reportedly isn’t recording new dialogue for the game.

The publisher has also had to explain why there’s a strange symbol in its name and that it’s not just coming to PlayStation 5 but Xbox Series and PC.

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

Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty Surpasses 5 Million Players

Cyberpunk 2077 developer CD Projekt Red has revealed the game’s Phantom Liberty expansion has sold more than five million copies.

Revealed in a post on X/Twitter (below), the developer confirmed the sales milestone and thanked players for their support. “Over five million agents have infiltrated Dogtown,” it said. “Thank you for all your support, and good luck on your mission.”

Though no exact timeframe was released, CD Projekt Red said the five million copies were sold in 2023, and as Phantom Liberty launched on September 26, it reached the milestone in just over three months.

The expansion surpassed three million units within its first week, with the strong reception, holiday period, and Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition seemingly contributing towards its further success.

Phantom Liberty’s arrival came days after Update 2.0 laid the foundation for the new Cyberpunk 2077 experience. It completely revamped the game with features such as a new perk system and improved AI and also brought closure to an Elon Musk fan theory, a reference to the late racing legend Ken Block, and bizarre additions to the game’s biggest mystery.

In our 9/10 review of the expansion, IGN said: “Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty completes an immense turnaround for CD Projekt Red’s future RPG kickstarted with the anime spin-off, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners and its latest 2.0 Update.”

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

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth – The Final Preview

Kiryu Kazuma and Kasuga Ichiban are two sides of the same Like a Dragon coin. Their personalities could not be more different — Kiryu, a world-weary lone wolf, and Kasuga, a Dragon Quest-loving golden retriever — but they live by a similar code of ethics and share a similar past, both locked up for crimes they didn’t commit to help out their yakuza families. It was a bummer that Kiryu didn’t stick around longer when he came around in Yakuza: Like a Dragon. The two men would sure as hell have a lot to talk about.

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth finally brings the two mainline protagonists together for an ultra-compelling and sprawling game that lives up to its subtitle. The three-and-a-half-ish hours I spent roaming Honolulu and Yokohama, sprucing up the trashed Dondoko Island, and battling a Megalodon-sized shark felt like a drop in the Pacific Ocean in terms of the game’s scope. And that’s just speaking to the gameplay. Having both Kasuga and Kiryu as playable protagonists place the story on a broad emotional spectrum that plays to the strengths of each character’s worldview: Kasuga and his ridiculousness, Kiryu and his legacy of struggle. It’s a great balance between the past and future of the Like a Dragon franchise.

Over in Honolulu, Kasuga and his pals are out searching for his mother once thought dead. The map here is something to behold. It’s Ryu Ga Gotoku’s biggest-ever area for the series, beautifully designed, and the amount of detail put into it is staggering to take in. More restaurants, shops, minigames, and substories are available, and locations to unlock bond conversations with Kasuga’s teammates are now conveniently marked. A bigger map also means more transportation options. Aside from the taxi stands, trolley lines are all around Honolulu, which is a more relaxed option to take in the sights and have conversations with Kasuga’s teammates. Lastly, Kasuga acquires a rechargeable Segway through an appropriately ridiculous substory, which is, of course, much faster than running around on foot, less rigid than the set locations of trolleys and cabs, and extremely goofy-looking. All around, a net positive.

Infinite Wealth also carries on the same turn-based combat as Yakuza: Like a Dragon. It either works for you or it doesn’t — I’m in the former camp — and the studio has made definite improvements to that system so that I felt more engaged and had more ways to act strategically. It seems simple, but having a circle in which to move around gives a real advantage when it comes to actions like utilizing nearby objects as weapons or sneaking behind an enemy to perform a powerful back attack. The command interface has also been improved (and Persona-fied). Tag Team moves are no longer hidden in skill lists but shown directly next to the command menu. Maybe the best improvement in this category is an easier way to avoid fighting. In Yakuza: Like a Dragon, I always got a little annoyed when I got tangled up with some of the street freaks when I was just trying to get from one place to another, especially if they were so many levels below me that the experience points from defeating them would be negligible. In Infinite Wealth, enemies are now color coded by strength, and they’re less sensitive to me running by.

I can say so much more about just hanging out in Honolulu — All my new friends! The abundance of job changes! Swimming in the ocean! — but then this would go on for an hour. Instead, I’ll just say that Hawaii is a blast, filled with hidden gems and a fantastic sense of humor.

Dondoko Island could legitimately be its own standalone game that the cozy gamers might sink 300 hours into without batting an eye. 

Next, I was ported over to Dondoko Island, which many people have already called, rightfully, Like a Dragon’s Animal Crossing. The garbage-filled landmass gets Kasuga as its one-man cleanup crew with the goal of building it up into a five-star resort. Aside from the more violent spearfishing, the mechanics of picking up shells and netting bugs is pretty much identical to Animal Crossing, and time also similarly passes. Kasuga has a cozy house to decorate, he can buy junk from the island’s general store, and he can craft new items by acquiring resources like wood and stone. But, in true Like a Dragon fashion, even the serene Dondoko Island isn’t immune to a little fighting here and there. It’s the one place where the game turns back into an action brawler to take out pirates and other threats. All in all, it’s a nice break from the main storyline and could legitimately be its own standalone game that the cozy gamers might sink 300 hours into without batting an eye.

Jumping over to Yokohama, Kiryu’s point of view begins and the tone of the storyline turns significantly more melancholy and existential. Kiryu has cancer, and his new buddies in Kasuga’s old squad encourage him to write a bucket list of things he wants to do before he dies. At the top of the list is, yes, karaoke. On top of those tasks, the map is littered with callouts to take nostalgia trips that replay key parts of Kiryu’s life. The quick 30-or-so minutes I played in Yokohama felt like the beginning of what would probably serve as a long, bittersweet goodbye to Kiryu.

In many ways, Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth is a watershed moment for franchise. It’s quite likely a final send off for the cancer-stricken underworld legend Kiryu, and the official induction ceremony for Kasuga as Kiryu’s successor in the series moving forward. It’s no surprise, then, that RGG would have put an immense amount of time and effort to make such a massive game that ups the ante on the nearly 20 years of titles that came before it while nailing the balance of silly and serious. I have no reason to believe this game isn’t gonna rule.

Xbox Series S Toaster Is Real and Now Available to Buy From Walmart

First, we had the Xbox Series X Mini Fridge, and now we’re veering into other kitchen appliances. The Xbox Series S toaster is real, it costs $39.99, and is currently available to buy directly from Walmart. Now we’ve seen everything.

The new two-slice toaster also features a bagel function, digital countdown timer, and six different shade settings. Moreover, it will also expertly toast the Xbox logo onto your toast — what a marvel of engineering.

We have also left a handy link just below if you’re interested in checking out the live Xbox Series S Toaster listing at Walmart (or even want to consider buying it).

Due to some unconventional design choices, both the Xbox Series X and Series S have already been the subject of various memes since launch.

As mentioned, the Xbox has already leaned into this discussion with the release of the Xbox Series X Mini Fridge and now seems to be testing the waters with more Xbox-themed applicances.

The Xbox Series S Toaster was first speculated about back in March 2023 when France-based outlet Xbox Squad first tweeted about their discovery.

Xbox Squad’s source has also claimed that even more products like the Series S toaster could be on the way, including dinner sets, pens, and more.

Robert Anderson is a deals expert and Commerce Editor for IGN. You can follow him @robertliam21 on Twitter.