• Star Wars Fans Feel Like They Got the Short End Of the Lightsaber During Disney+ Day

    All the major announcements from Disney+ Day are out in the wild, and Star Wars fans are feeling a little let down by the number of announcements featuring the galaxy far, far away.

    Star Wars fans did get a new behind-the-scenes look at the Obi-Wan Kenobi TV series, but no trailer to go along with it. The concept art hints at a rematch between Obi-Wan Kenobi and Darth Vader, Obi-Wan's new desert outfit, and more. But some people were hoping to see footage of the series, which has finished shooting and is set to come out next year.

    Other than that, Under the Helmet: The Legacy of Boba Fett is available on Disney+ as of today, detailing the history and popularity of Star Wars' most famous Bounty Hunter.

    Marvel fans, on the other hand, had tons of announcements to get excited about on Disney+ Day. We got our first look at Moon Knight, She-Hulk and Ms. Marvel, as well as brand new shows announced for Spider-Man, Agatha from WandaVision, and Marvel Zombies. We also got a ton of new logos for Marvel shows, and the announcement of X-Men '97 coming in 2023. It's safe to say fans noticed the slim pickings of Star Wars news compared to the feast of Marvel news from the presentation.

    Besides the upcoming Obi-Wan show, Star Wars fans can also look forward to The Mandalorian Season 3, the Cassian Andor show, and The Bad Batch Season 2. None of these projects, however, made an appearance at Disney+ Day.

    There were plenty of other shows and movies announced by Disney today. For everything revealed in addition to Marvel and Star Wars projects, check out everything announced on Disney+ Day.

    Logan Plant is a freelance writer for IGN. You can find him on Twitter @LoganJPlant.

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    Luxury Brand Collabs Continue With a $10,000 Gucci Xbox

    Have you ever wanted to play video games in luxury? Well, now you can. Xbox and Gucci have teamed up to create a special and very, very limited Xbox Series X console. Only 100 of these bundles will be created, each costing $10,000.

    This Gucci-branded Xbox Series X has the GG pattern laser-cut into the console itself. Billed as an "evolution" of the original Gucci Rhombi design from the 1930s, the initials not only represent Guccio Gucci's initials but also stands for "Good Game." Two customized Xbox Wireless Controllers will be included, complete with the House Web's blue and red stripes.

    The console also comes with a vintage luggage box that you can pack and carry in. The luggage also sports the blue and red House Web stripes with yellow trim. Each console will be individually numbered well. Additionally, this bundle can only be purchased in-store on November 17 at various locations across the world:

    • New York – Wooster
    • Beverly Hills – Rodeo Drive
    • Mexico City – Moliere Palacio de Hierro
    • Milan – Gucci Circolo
    • London – Gucci Circolo
    • Berlin – Gucci Circolo
    • Beijing – SKP
    • Tokyo – Shibuya Parco

    Lastly, each set comes with a subscription for Xbox Game Pass! It's unclear how many months the subscription comes with, but regardless, it's still a nice gesture, right?

    Xbox has been in the news recently as it celebrates its 20th anniversary. It already did a collaboration with Adidas for a sneaker drop. There's also a 20th-anniversary stream coming next week on November 15.

    George Yang is a freelance writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @yinyangfooey

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    WoW Brings Back Tier Sets, But the Community Is Divided

    Activision Blizzard is currently facing serious ongoing allegations of harassment and mistreatment of marginalized workers. To learn more, please visit our timeline as well as our in-depth report on the subject.

    World of Warcraft has shared some details about the game's next major content update, which will conclude the current expansion: Shadowlands. The update includes the return of the much-desired class tier sets of armor, but despite a general community love for tier gear, some folks are less than thrilled.

    Tier gear has been a beloved WoW institution since the game first came out. For years, most major raids would reward players with unique, multi-piece sets of armor with cool designs, with one set tailored for each specific class. These would often have some of the best stats available at the time, and sometimes even really cool abilities or boosts tacked on if you were wearing multiple pieces. Also, if you had the full set, you could ride around Orgrimmar with flames spouting out of your shoulders or something so that everyone in town knew you had killed the latest dragon or demigod or undead overlord threat with 19 or so of your friends. It was a great time.

    And then, World of Warcraft got rid of them, poof! Back in 2017 with Battle for Azeroth. The reasons given at the time were that the armor limited player choice in what kind of armor they could wear. But over the past two expansions, armor has neither become more choice-filled, nor has it ever been as cool as it was to wear a freakin' tornado belt with matching spaulders. So after a few years of the community longing for the return of cool tier gear, hey, we finally got it.

    Except, uh, the community isn't thrilled about this, either. A quick peek at discussion on the topic on the WoW subreddit reveals that folks are largely underwhelmed by the designs. Complaints mainly focus on the visual look of the tier sets, which many point out seem to miss the "class fantasy" of previous sets. Several people have noted that the armor seems very specifically designed around the "Kyrian" covenant, a group of winged angel folks that, depending on what you were up to for most of Shadowlands, you may have had very little intersection with. You may have instead chosen to spend the expansion with the undead-themed Necrolords, the vampiric Venthyr, or the (best covenant) forest-dwelling Night Fae. And if you did vibe with the Kyrian, you probably already have a bunch of armor that looks like this.

    Also, if you're a shaman (best class), you have to wear pants. There's no kilt. Blizzard has confirmed this matter of utmost importance to IGN. Sorry, kilt-loving shaman. You don't get to wear a giant chain mail skirt this tier.

    That said, there is some positivity. A lot of folks are just happy tier gear is back at all given how beloved it was. And as one popular thread points out, these sets are now available from other kinds of content aside from raids, which is great news if you want to dress up in the coolest gear but don't have a big guild of people and two to three evenings a week free to spend trying to get bosses down multiple times and collect it all. Specifically, you can get the gear from PvP content or Mythic+ dungeon content, both of which are much more accessible to more people while remaining challenging.

    Tier sets aren't the only element of this upcoming patch, of course. We're getting a new raid called the Sepulcher of the First Ones where we finally fight the expansion's big bad, the Jailer. There a new faction called The Enlightened, and a new zone called Zereth Mortis where a bunch of ancient beings hang out and create all the afterlives we've seen throughout the expansion. Actual playable stuff aside, the WoW community is still rather icy on the current story, especially with how it's treated formally beloved Banshee Queen Sylvanas over the entire last expansion and change.

    On the bright side, the return of tier sets now makes it more likely we'll see them continue into the next expansion, where Sylvanas and the weird afterlife might no longer be factors at all. Hopefully we'll get shaman kilts back then, too.

    Rebekah Valentine is a news reporter for IGN. You can find her on Twitter @duckvalentine.

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    New World Governors Are Embezzling Gold, And No One Can Stop Them

    "I never stole gold," says Stibs. "I took the gold out of the treasury of the company I co-owned at the time."

    Stibs has had his reputation tarnished. As a consul in wilderness MMO New World, he was one of the players responsible for handling money in his company, a group of players who band together to face the wilds. One day he took 15,000 gold coins from the shared pot, left the company, and signed up with another faction. He had his reasons.

    He's not the only one taking company cash. In the midst of a creaking economy, the aristocracy of New World are looking at the coin piled in their treasuries with an increasingly glittering eye. For some, the temptation proves too much. This game is set in a lush landscape of forest and fern, designed to be exploited by colonizing player conglomerates. But it's also a hard place to earn a living, which has led to a trend. Embezzlement.

    It's been happening from the earliest days of the game. In some cases, a trusted consul pilfers the pot and escapes to a new server with his ill-gotten riches. In others, the governor himself (the head of the company) takes the cash, then kicks everyone out of the company and switches sides to fight for a different faction altogether.

    For Crociata, a fighter in an 80+ company of warmongers, it happened unexpectedly. The consul of his company (traditionally the person who is second-in-command) took all the cash and disappeared.

    "What makes the whole thing worse is we funded the first war on this server," he says. "That [money] was what we had gathered back up."

    Crociata's company had finally scraped together a fresh war chest of gold from member donations and taxes following a war. That's about the time the game's developers, Amazon Games, added a much-desired new feature: server transfers. To many, this was a chance to hop servers and finally play with friends. To others, it was the perfect escape hatch. Crociata's consul took 35,000 in coin from the treasury and was never seen again.

    What makes the whole thing worse is we funded the first war on this server. That [money] was what we had gathered back up.

    Escapades like this are common in games like EVE Online, where lawlessness has reigned for years, and such acts of sabotage are celebrated as player-made "content". In the same way, some wilderness explorers welcome such ruthlessness as part of New World's learning curve.

    "I think it's scummy for sure," says Wing Wow, a player with a Gandalf-looking hairstyle in a group called Solaires Disciples. "But if they join [a company] solely with the intention of working up the ranks only to steal all your stuff, whatever…"

    He laughs.

    "They are scum," he says, "but they are indeed a good spy."

    Others are annoyed that such skullduggery can be possible in a more traditional MMO. Crociata and his fellow warriors reported the consul that betrayed them. What happened to that thief in the end is a mystery.

    "I got no clue," he says.

    New World's complicated economics

    But why steal gold in the first place? Well, in the woodlands and frontier farms of this grind 'em up, gold is getting harder to earn. It involves some complicated economics, but basically a lot of graphs are going down. Income from quests is too low, some complain, and the cost of owning an in-game house is too high. This coupled with other problems means the economy is suffering from the rare disease of deflation. The short version? Wood is infinite, but coin is rare.

    In the absence of a trusted currency, barter has become an alternative method of trade, with players swapping ore or animal hide, rather than part with their gold. Some players are using iron ingots as a metric for value. On one server, people report trading Starmetal tools (high-tier wood axes or skinning knives) for 40 iron bars. On another server, 20 eggs can earn you hundreds of iron ingots (a good egg is reportedly hard to find).

    Barter has not entirely replaced the market, of course. Some servers are less affected than others. But in the market stalls of Brightwatch and Monarch's Bluff, everything is bottoming out. Many player-made items currently sell for one penny. Ultimately, this means a squeeze on players. Even governors, the feudal lords of New World's companies, are feeling the pinch.

    "I try to [barter] when able," says AlphaTekk, a governor of one well-traveled province. "I had to spend the rest of my gold this morning for my housing tax and city tax."

    Has he ever felt the urge to dip his hand in the company coffers?

    "It wouldn't make any sense to," he says. "I put all of my money into the company anyways. I only touch it if I need to get something to help out others in the company."

    Most governors share that attitude. Whether the long-term plans of a spy or the act of an opportunistic thief, cases of embezzlement are still infrequent. There have been four instances of "sudden liquidation" on the server I'm playing on. The trouble is, some players may not even know they're being conned.

    This is because the in-game ledgers used by governors and officers to run the affairs of a company lack the basic information to keep an eye on your cash flow. There's no record of donor names, for example, and no record of who withdraws cash. Imagine if all your accounting was done by Dory from Finding Nemo. Imagine if your bank statement arrived and it just said: "lol i dunno".

    This makes it easy for governors and consuls to drain accounts as slowly or rapidly as they like. Many companies have resorted to using external spreadsheets and Discord channels, tracking donations and withdrawals with the shrewd eye of a public administrator. Others embrace the chaos of an anarchic pot, and simply leave things to trust without major incident.

    "The lack of transparency and limits for the governors and consuls is very scary," says Milvan, the former governor of a company called Gryphons. "Any governor or any consul can withdraw any amount of gold they want any time and there isn't even a treasury log to keep track of that."

    Any governor or any consul can withdraw any amount of gold they want any time and there isn't even a treasury log to keep track of that.

    Milvan is a level 60 axeman, a proud berserker who fights in PvP battles from the front. As governor of the Gryphons, he saw paranoia and mistrust spreading through his company after the members learned just how much gold was being stockpiled in the treasury. When they realized how little control or knowledge they had over its use, attitudes began to boil. Milvan's solution was simple.

    He would take the money before anybody else did.

    "As a governor I did what was necessary to keep my people united," he says. "Was it very convenient for me? Yes, it was, and the game gave me powers to do it, so why not embrace this social experiment to see what could happen?"

    He took 450,000 gold from the company treasury and left. The Gryphons were a large band of Marauders — so big they needed to set up a secondary company just to hold all the recruits joining. They had saved an obscene amount of money. As you can imagine, many people were upset.

    "There were people that raged and harassed me on my social [media]; there were people that just laughed and joked about it; and there were people that were really supportive for what I did," he says.

    He reasons that by stealing the gold, he gave his former warmates a reason to stick together. He dispelled their bickering with a unified figure of hate: himself.

    "Mostly guild leaders run and hide after they 'steal' company gold but since I actually stood up for my position it drew a lot of attention."

    Naturally, many didn't see it his way. He was mass reported by his former guildmates, leading to a ban on two separate occasions following the heist. But these bans were "instantly reverted by moderation" when he appealed, he says. That suggests Amazon Games are happy to let this sort of mischief occur. There's nothing in the rules of the game to prevent higher-ups emptying their shared kitties (aside from social disgrace).

    "Is it a feature?" he asks, rhetorically. "I mean does Amazon create this game theory-ish model because it wants to watch the world burn? I really don't know."

    Amazon Games Studios calls it "a social risk that is built into the game."

    "Ideally players will behave and be good fellow humans," says creative director David Verfaillie. "But with the power to affect change comes some risk. We believe this risk is worth the dynamic, ever-changing world it creates…

    "The intention is to create a world where players can have an impact and to give them the tools to make their own decisions…. where players feel like their actions have consequences and weight."

    In other words, it is a feature. For his part, Milvan says all the cash he stole was gathered from taxes (from players who owned a house in his region of Everfall, for example). If money had been directly deposited by players into that treasury as donations, it would've been another story.

    "This is a line I wouldn't cross and it actually has some real-life consequences because gold in New World isn't really easy to earn."

    Crisis? What crisis?

    As controversial as Milvan's actions are, most players will agree with his last point. Gold is slow to earn. Some have suggested the MMO is in the midst of a full-blown currency crisis. Amazon Games meanwhile have acknowledged the complaints and say they're keeping an eye on the problem. However, they don't seem half as worried as the players. Recently, they coolly acknowledged the coinage problem with a graph showing that gold flow is "within acceptable levels". Crisis? What crisis?

    That graph does show a downward trend, however. Even Amazon admits that the means of earning a buck dry up as you reach the endgame. To a high-level player, an unguarded casket of coin could start to look very inviting.

    "I never stole gold and changed faction, if that's what you're talking about," says Stibs.

    Stibs has had his reputation tarnished.

    "Yes, a lot of people think I stole gold."

    Drama in MMO guilds is not new, and the flames of animosity that spread through Stibs' server led to a lot of players wanting to change allegiance from his purple-colored faction, the Syndicate, to another faction, the green Marauders or the yellow Covenant.

    "I thought it was mutual that we were going yellow," he says.

    It would prove an untidy schism. He took the gold and left, assuming his guildmates would follow. But many of his former company mates were not so eager to jump ship. When they saw an empty bank account, they got annoyed. In the end, Stibs did what made sense to him. He handed all the money back.

    "When I found out they didn't wanna change, I gave the gold back… It was probably 25% mine. But I didn't even keep some gold… I gave all 15k back."

    At least this tale of embezzlement has some closure. When the dust settled, a bunch of his former clansfolk followed Stibs out the door after all, and founded a new company.

    "Everyone is pretty tight now," he says.

    That tightness is something you need in a place like Aeternum, where accountancy doesn't exist. When in-fighting is more plentiful than coin, the only real currency is trust. If you can't guarantee that, well, there's always Microsoft Excel.

    Brendan Caldwell is a freelance contributor at IGN

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    Ms. Marvel: Kamala Khan’s Origin and Powers Explained

    She’s marvelous! She’s magnificent! She’s… a teenager from New Jersey? Don’t let Kamala Khan’s humble beginnings fool you—she’s one of the newest heroes in the Marvel Comics universe and also one of its most compelling. And now Kamala, aka Ms. Marvel, is joining the MCU thanks to her Disney+ television series, where she'll be played by newcomer Iman Vellani. Vellani will also appear in the Captain Marvel sequel, The Marvels.

    Fans of Marvel's Avengers video game of course also know who Kamala Khan is. But some others might be asking, why does she have Ms. Marvel’s name? What are Ms. Marvel's powers? And what might we expect from a series starring the teenage hero? So let’s take an embiggened look at the Avenger-turned-Champion and her place in the Marvel universe for some ideas. These are the topics we’ll be covering here:

    • Who Is Ms. Marvel?
    • Ms. Marvel’s Origin
    • Ms. Marvel’s Powers and Abilities
    • Ms. Marvel’s Connection to Captain Marvel
    • Ms. Marvel’s Signature Villains
    • Ms. Marvel's Most Heroic Moments
    • Ms. Marvel in TV, Games, and the MCU

    Who Is Kamala Khan, aka Ms. Marvel?

    A smart Pakistani-American geek who loves playing video games, hanging out with friends, and writing Avengers fan fiction, Kamala is the first Muslim character to star in her own Marvel Comics series.

    As Ms. Marvel, Kamala is an Inhuman with the ability to polymorph all or parts of her body. She began her superpowered career as a friendly neighborhood hero, but the universe had other plans for Ms. Marvel, and she soon found herself embroiled in landmark events ranging from the superhero conflict of Civil War II to the end of the world in 2015’s Secret Wars. Through it all, Kamala retains her humor and hope thanks to the family, friends, and teammates at her side.

    [She] loves playing video games, hanging out with friends, and writing Avengers fan fiction…

    Ms. Marvel’s Origin

    Kamala Khan was created by writer G. Willow Wilson, artist Adrian Alphona, and editor Sana Amanat in 2014’s Ms. Marvel #1.

    Ms. Marvel’s story began when Kamala was a typical 16-year-old in Jersey City. Kamala often clashed with her parents over adhering to Muslim traditions and values, but she was very close to them. One night, after another argument at the dinner table, Kamala’s parents forbade her to go to a high school party. In a rare rebellion, she decided to sneak out—and everything changed.

    As it would happen, a strange, transformative chemical cloud known as Terrigen Mist was drifting over the city, unleashed by the events of Marvel’s Infinity storyline. The blue gas flooded the dark streets, surrounding Kamala as she walked home alone. Her dormant Inhuman genes were activated by the Terrigen, and she was instantly enveloped in a cocoon to begin her transformation.

    When she woke up, Kamala discovered she had the extraordinary ability to shapeshift her body. A new life as a hero was just beginning, but would she be able to juggle it with her old life as a normal teen as well? (Spoiler: No.)

    Ms. Marvel’s Powers and Abilities

    Ms. Marvel has the ability to shapeshift, whether it’s changing her appearance or altering specific parts of her body like her fists or legs. She can also change her size at will, “embiggening” or shrinking, with the proportional strength to match. Kamala also has an advanced regeneration factor that is most effective when she’s not using her shapeshifting abilities.

    In addition, Kamala is a devoted fan fiction writer, and she even had the chance to tell Wolverine all about the stories she wrote about him.

    Ms. Marvel’s Connection to Captain Marvel, Carol Danvers

    While Kamala was inside the cocoon, she dreamed of Carol Danvers, her longtime hero, who used to go by the name Ms. Marvel before she became Captain Marvel. Kamala wished she could be just like her—tough as nails and clad in the classic black costume of Ms. Marvel (because thigh-high boots). When Kamala awakened, that’s exactly who she looked like, thanks to her new shapeshifting powers. As she dealt with the weird things happening to her body, she heard a cry for help, and saved a life while still in Ms. Marvel’s form.

    Word got out that Ms. Marvel was back to her old name and costume, and Kamala decided to keep it—with her own masked likeness and take on the costume—in honor of her hero. “Maybe the name belongs to whoever has the courage to fight,” she mused. Kamala eventually received Carol’s blessing to use the name and make it her own.

    Ms. Marvel’s Signature Villains

    The first major story arc of Ms. Marvel’s solo series had her taking on a villain calling himself The Inventor. Preying on lonely Jersey City teenagers, The Inventor recruited them to do his dirty work. The Inventor was eventually revealed to be a man-bird hybrid who was kidnapping teens to use their bodies as power sources in his robotic experiments. Kamala defeated The Inventor with the help of her friends in her first major battle.

    Her heart remains with Jersey City no matter where her adventures take her, and when an effort to gentrify her neighborhood was revealed to be the result of machinations by Hydra, she took it personally. (Especially since they used her likeness around town in advertisements.) With the help of a new friend from school, she stopped Hydra in their tracks and once again saved her hometown. She would take Hydra on again with the Champions at her side at the culmination of the Secret Empire event.

    Ms. Marvel's Most Heroic Moments

    Since her first transformation into Ms. Marvel, Kamala has gone on not just to save her hometown of Jersey City, but the world as well as a member of the Avengers, New Warriors, and Champions.

    During the events of Civil War II, Kamala would find herself at odds with her idol and mentor Captain Marvel. Realizing that they landed on different sides of the philosophy at the heart of the conflict, Kamala chose to walk away from her hero in one of the most difficult decisions she has had to make.

    After becoming disillusioned with the Avengers, Kamala quit the team to lead a new team with Spider-Man (Miles Morales) and Nova (Sam Alexander). They were quickly joined by Hulk (Amadeus Cho), Viv (daughter of Vision), and Cyclops (a time-displaced Scott Summers). Together as the Champions, they fought for the little guy, from taking down a human trafficker, to fighting militant oppressors in another country, to rescuing a group of helpless Chitauri in far off space. Kamala left the team to clear her head and take some time to herself, but the Champions team continues to grow as more young heroes vow to make a difference.

    Most recently, in her newest solo title The Magnificent Ms. Marvel, Kamala traveled to a distant world to defend its inhabitants from an invading force. She discovered an ancient Kree ship in the sky, which Kamala entered alone. Inside she learned a Kree warrior had once fought the invasion back before, and Kamala was granted the warrior’s costume with abilities she’s still discovering. She saved the entire planet but returned home to personal tragedy, learning that her father is afflicted with a rare disease. Not even her superpowers nor the resources of Tony Stark can save him.

    Ms. Marvel in TV, Games and the MCU

    • TV: After gaining popularity quickly, Ms. Marvel made the jump to video games and animated television series faster than you can say embiggen. Kamala first appeared in cartoon form in the Disney series Avengers Assemble before going on to be a guest star on Spider-Man in the episode "School of Hard Knocks." Most recently, Ms. Marvel is featured as one of the starring characters in the Marvel Rising animated shorts and movies.
    • Games: She’s appeared in mobile games like Marvel Puzzle Quest and Avengers Academy, been a playable character in Marvel LEGO games, and joined the fight in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order. Ms. Marvel also plays a heavy role in Square-Enix's Marvel's Avengers, where she's depicted as a rookie heroine fighting alongside Earth's Mightiest Heroes.

    The Marvel Cinematic Universe is ready for a character like Kamala: young, hopeful, and selflessly brave. And Marvel looks to have found those qualities in actress Iman Vellani, who will be the first to portray Kamala in live-action. What will the future hold for Kamala in the upcoming Disney+ series—will she be saving entire planets or staying local as Jersey City’s homegrown hero? Who will fill out her cast of supporting characters? And how big of a role will Captain Marvel play, if any?

    Only time will tell, but we can’t help but hope that Brie Larson makes an appearance, even if it’s just her appearance in Kamala’s first transformation, staying true to the comics. We can’t wait to find out.

    November 12, 2021: This story has been updated with the latest information about Ms. Marvel.

    Kelly Knox is a freelance writer who also contributes to StarWars.com, DCComics.com, Nerdist, and more. Follow her on Twitter at @kelly_knox to talk Star Wars, Dungeons & Dragons, and comics.

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