• Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Halts Filming After Letitia Wright’s On-Set Injury

    Filming for the Marvel sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever has been put on hold until early 2022 as star Letitia Wright recovers from an on-set injury.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter Wright, who plays T’Challa’s sister Shuri, was reportedly injured during a sequence involving a stunt rig back in August. Wright has been recovering in London while filming continued without her.

    However, director Ryan Coogler is said to have shot all the footage available that doesn’t include Wright and so production must wait until she can return to the set.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Wright’s character Shuri was “elevated” as the lead in the sequel after appearing in Black Panther and Avengers: Infinity War/Endgame. Also per THR, Black Panther 2 is still on track for its November 11, 2022 release date.

    Story details for Black Panther 2 are being tightly guarded, especially after franchise star and Black Panther himself, Chadwick Boseman, died in 2020 from cancer. Questions about how the record-breaking Black Panther franchise could continue without Boseman were one of the primary questions surrounding the sequel.

    Boseman’s death left a crater in Hollywood beyond just Black Panther. The newly released Netflix western Harder They Fall included a small tribute to Boseman as an easter egg.

    Marvel still has plenty of movies coming out in between now and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Check out IGN’s Eternals review or the full schedule of upcoming Marvel shows and movies.

    Matt T.M. Kim is IGN's News Editor. You can reach him @lawoftd.

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    The Essential Marvel MCU Movies in Chronological Order

    A Marvel movie marathon may be in order! With Marvel's Eternals out now and Spider-Man: No Way Home fast approaching, you might be wondering which Marvel Cinematic Universe movies you should watch (or re-watch) to prepare for the next epic superhero event. Or perhaps you've just seen one of the Avengers movies and want to embark on a huge re-watch. That would lead to the question of what order to watch the MCU movies in. Well, we've got you covered.

    Fortunately, you don't actually have to re-watch all 26 MCU movies and binge every single TV series to get caught up. We're breaking down the essentials here, the ones that introduce key characters or deal directly with the Infinity Stones that are so important in Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame.

    Be aware that while Disney+ series like Loki are open to inclusion, we're ignoring earlier projects like Marvel's Agents of SHIELD and the various Netflix shows that may or may not be part of the official MCU canon. For completists, we've also put together a quick rundown of every MCU movie and D+ series in the proper chronological order. Read on to learn more.

    Beware of some spoilers ahead!

    1. Captain America: The First Avenger

    Steve Rogers' character arc is a huge part of the first three phases of the MCU. That's especially true in Endgame, as the man formerly known as Captain America comes to terms with his failures and inability to move on in a post-Decimation world. For that reason alone, it's worth going back to the first Cap movie and reliving his early World War II exploits. Plus, this film gives necessary context to the Steve/Bucky relationship as the two friends are finally reunited (sans brainwashing) in Infinity War before being cruelly torn apart again.

    There's also the fact that Captain America: The First Avenger revolves heavily around the Tesseract, the Hydra artifact that Red Skull used to power his army and which contained the first Infinity Stone to be introduced in the MCU – the Space Stone. Not to mention that Infinity War finally addressed the fate of Red Skull himself.

    2. The Avengers

    The Avengers marks the first time Earth's Mightiest Heroes banded together to fight a common enemy. This movie is the true launching point for much of what's unfolded since in the MCU. Not to mention that it technically showcases the first conflict between the Avengers and Thanos's forces, though that fact wasn't made clear until the mid-credits scene.

    Perhaps most importantly, The Avengers hinges on Loki's efforts to steal the Tesseract and acquire it for Thanos. That story finally comes full circle in Infinity War.

    3. Thor: The Dark World

    While not generally regarded as one of the better MCU movies, Thor: The Dark World makes one important contribution by introducing another Infinity Stone, the Reality Stone, found in the destructive weapon known as the Aether. This film also sets the stage for the downfall of Asgard in later MCU movies, ending with Odin being betrayed and replaced by his adopted son, Loki.

    4. Guardians of the Galaxy

    Prior to Infinity War, most of Thanos' screen time came in 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy. This film more firmly establishes his role as a shadowy power player on the intergalactic scene, as well as his habit of raising women like Gamora and Nebula to be his fiercely loyal assassins. The Thanos/Gamora relationship is a crucial part of Infinity War, and Nebula has an equally important role in Endgame.

    The first Guardians movie is also notable for introducing the Power Stone (encased in the Orb everyone is after in this film), which is among the first Thanos adds to his Infinity Gauntlet. Plus, one of the biggest selling points of Infinity War and Endgame are that they feature the first team-up between the Avengers and the Guardians, so it doesn't hurt to see where the latter team got their start.

    5. Avengers: Age of Ultron

    The road to Infinity War becomes a lot clearer in the second Avengers movie. This film introduces the Mind Stone, revealing it to have been hidden within Loki's mind-controlling staff and serving as the catalyst for the birth of Vision. Vision and his stone later became major plot catalysts in Infinity War and WandaVision.

    But in a larger sense, Avengers: Age of Ultron is all about alluding to bigger, darker events awaiting the Avengers. Tony Stark has a nightmare/hallucination about the team being destroyed by an unstoppable cosmic threat, influencing his reckless decision to create Ultron. Similarly, Thor is haunted by visions of extinction – visions which would shortly come to pass for Asgard. This is all important foreshadowing for movies like Infinity War and Thor: Ragnarok.

    6. Captain America: Civil War

    Every Avengers movie is essential viewing in the road to Endgame. And given that Captain America: Civil War is basically The Avengers 2.5, it's among the most critical MCU movies. Civil War is most crucial when it comes to establishing the state of the Avengers in Infinity War, showing how the fallout of Age of Ultron and the ratification of the Sokovia Accords drives a wedge right down the middle of the team. One of the biggest challenges facing Cap, Iron Man and the rest in Infinity War is that they aren't united against this powerful new threat. That thread pays off in Endgame when the gang finally gets back together.

    Civil War also introduces two new MCU heroes who become critical in Infinity War – Spider-Man and Black Panther. Both characters have since had their own solo movies, but you learn everything you really need to know about the two in Civil War.

    7. Doctor Strange

    Infinity War marks the first time we see Stephen Strange and Wong fight alongside the Avengers, so it doesn't hurt to go back and watch their MCU debut in 2016's Doctor Strange. This film is also important in that it introduces the Eye of Agamotto, a time-manipulating artifact that houses the Time Stone. That stone, and the visions of the future it bestows to the doomed Doctor Strange, are both critical to Infinity War and Endgame.

    8. Thor: Ragnarok

    The most recent Thor movie does quite a lot to alter the status quo of the MCU and pave the way for Infinity War. This film chronicles the destruction of Asgard, as hinted in Age of Ultron, and Thor's rise to power as the new king of a homeless people. The post-credits scene directly sets up the events of Infinity War, as the resilient Asgard is finally decimated by Thanos and the Black Order.

    Thor: Ragnarok is also a key chapter in the story of Thor's relationship with his brother, Loki. It's also a big movie for Hulk, explaining what the character has been up to in the years since Age of Ultron and why his return to Earth is such a big deal.

    9. Black Panther

    In terms of its ties to Infinity War/Endgame, Black Panther isn't quite as essential as the other films on this list. The title character himself is already introduced in Captain America: Civil War. That said, it's still worth adding it to your watch list. One of the major action sequences in Infinity War takes place in Wakanda, and as one of the survivors of Infinity War, T'Challa's bodyguard Okoye has a role to play in Endgame. Plus, Black Panther is one of the best MCU films to date, and there's never a bad time to re-watch it.

    There's also the fact that the MCU will have to deal with the tragic passing of actor Chadwick Boseman. Marvel is moving ahead with a sequel called Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, one which will honor Boseman's memory rather than recast the T'Challa role. However the MCU moves forward, Black Panther shows us why T'Challa and is kingdom matter so much.

    10. Avengers: Infinity War

    Avengers: Infinity War delivers a massive superhero epic that ties up most of the loose ends from the first decade of the MCU. The Avengers and Guardians of the Galaxy finally join forces to take on Thanos. And surprisingly, the movie ends not on a triumphant note, but with complete and utter failure. Infinity War raises the stakes as the survivors prepare to confront Thanos one more time in Endgame.

    11. Avengers: Endgame

    As its name suggests, Endgame is the culmination of everything in the MCU up to that point. The fourth Avengers movie shows us a team grappling with its own failure, struggling to find a way to undo Thanos' act of cosmic genocide. Fortunately, there's still plenty of fun to be had along the way, culminating in the most epic and emotionally stirring battle scene in the entire MCU. Multiple heroes are given the sendoffs they deserve, while others are positioned for even bigger and better things.

    12. Spider-Man: Far From Home

    The second MCU Spider-Man movie is both an epilogue to Endgame and a taste of things to come in Phase 4 of the MCU. Most importantly, this sequel is all about Peter Parker stepping up to fill the void left by heroes like Iron Man and Captain America and becoming more than just a friendly neighborhood hero. If the shocking mid-credits scene is anything to go by, it's going to be a very rocky road ahead for poor Spidey. Plus, with its emphasis on the multiverse, the upcoming Spider-Man: No Way Home promises to be even more important to the MCU.

    13. Loki

    Loki isn't the first Marvel series to hit Disney+, but it is the one with the clearest impact on the larger MCU. This six-episode series follows the Loki variant who escapes custody in Avengers: Endgame, as he's forcibly recruited to help the Time Variance Authority stop another, even more dangerous version of Loki. The final episode is a real game-changer for this cinematic universe, setting the stage not just for Season 2 but also films like Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and (presumably) the next Avengers movie.

    14. Eternals

    As if having an Oscar-winning director like Chloé Zhao isn't enough incentive, Eternals is worth watching for the hints it provides about the future of the MCU. Eternals sheds far more light on the cosmic beings known as the Celestials and their designs for Earth, with the promise of much more to come. Both the mid-credits scene and post-credits scene introduce pivotal new characters who will surely play a key role in Phase 4 and beyond.

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

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    Marvel’s Hawkeye Show Doesn’t Forget He Killed All Those People as Ronin

    Remember in Avengers: Endgame when Hawkeye was Ronin and killed a bunch of people? It looks like the writers for the upcoming Disney Plus series, Hawkeye, do.

    In an interview with Gamesradar, the comedy writing duo Bert & Bertie (Amber Finlayson and Katie Ellwood), said that the six-episode lighthearted Christmas-themed show isn't what most people would expect from Marvel Studios. The show borrows quite a bit from the 2012 Hawkeye comic run and Christmas issue by Matt Fraction and artist David Aja. Even so, it looks like the show will have some dark undertones to it.

    When Clint Barton took up the mantel of Ronin, he went on a rampage after his entire family was wiped out by Thanos. Jeremy Renner, who plays the eponymous hero, didn't want to leave that part of the character out. The vigilante is part of Hawkeye now and in the upcoming series, it looks like his murderous past will catch up to him.

    "[Renner] wanted the darkness," Bert says. "He wanted to go there. And there are moments that the Ronin Clint resurfaces. It's very important to have those depths that you can explore, so that he can come out of it."

    The first two episodes of Hawkeye will air on Disney Plus on November 24. The most recent Marvel Cinematic Universe adventure, Eternals, arrives in theaters today. Make sure to check out IGN's Eternals review. 2021 will close out with Spider-Man: No Way Home on December 17, and be sure to also check out the full lineup of upcoming Marvel movies and shows.

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

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    Game Scoop! 650: PS3, Wii Turn 15 – Remembering the Launches

    Welcome back to IGN Game Scoop!, the ONLY video game podcast! This week your Omega Cops — Daemon Hatfield, Sam Claiborn, Justin Davis, and Mark "I Don't Know What a Sequel Is" Medina — are looking back on the launches of the PS3 and Nintendo Wii. And, of course, they play Video Game 20 Questions.

    Watch the video above or hit the link below to your favorite podcast service.

    Listen on:

    Apple Podcasts

    YouTube

    Spotify

    Stitcher

    Find previous episodes here!

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    The Retro Game and Cryptocurrency Booms Intersected in One Wild Pinball Auction

    I can't explain how Jim Blasko made his money. His Facebook page proudly touts that he once spent 50 Bitcoin on a canary yellow Lamborghini. That same car is emblazoned across his Facebook header image, complete with three models in black negligee emerging out of the doors somewhere in the Nevada desert.

    Blasko is a crypto guy, and crypto guys, in my experience, are famously ambiguous when it comes to their wealth and influence. What I do know is that Blasko purchased 37 machines at September's Museum of Pinball auction in Banning, California. He topped out at an $8,000 purchase of a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles pinball machine, and claims to have had a huge bid in for Computer Space — widely regarded as the first commercial video arcade machine ever made — before getting out-maneuvered by another patron. "I may have missed out on it," says Blasko. "That piece might be worth $100,000 in a couple of years."

    The arcade collecting community was anticipating this auction for months. The Museum of Pinball in Banning, California (hence the commonly used nickname for the museum and its auction, “Banning”) had cultivated one of the largest hoards of vintage pinball machines, video arcade games, and other electro-mechanical devices designed to gobble up quarters in the world. But over the course of two weeks, owner John Weeks liquidated his entire catalogue due to the pandemic economic downturn. More than 1,000 games went up for sale, representing a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for longtime hobbyists to supplement the remote corners of their stockpile with all sorts of offbeat rarities.

    It was a dream come true… until the high-rollers showed up.

    Simply put, the material sold at the Banning auction was far more expensive than the orthodox resale bill, by multiple degrees. Case in point: Back to the Future usually prices between $3,600 and $4,100. At Banning it moved for $14,000. Williams’s Tales of the Arabian Nights might fetch $8,000. The final bid last month was also $14,000. Scroll through the numbers, and you'll see that nearly every item tells the same story. Buyers heedlessly blew past the warning lights and explored an unprecedented, psychedelic nether region of arcade commerce. These aren't pristine-quality machines, either. The Pinball Museum was open to the public, meaning all of these games, despite upkeep, have accumulated a lot of player-hewn wear and tear. Compare that to the card investors who quickly encase their rare LeBron James rookies in antiseptic plastic. You'll never find the same protective measures applied to a cola-stained 1981 Donkey Kong available for public play.

    The obvious conclusion one could draw was that a huge number of new buyers — people who had no skin in the game, and rarely, if ever, purchased arcade machines before — swept into the Banning auction house and derailed the arcade and pinball community’s expected results. The identities of these potential interlopers were unknown, a feature common to most auctions, which generally respect bidder anonymity. But thankfully, one Banning bidder, Blasko, answered my Facebook message and was willing to talk.

    But Blasko isn’t a new buyer at all. He's been a regular at arcade sell-offs in the past, and represents a new class of consumer — someone willing to spend oodles of cash on pinball machines, laughing in the face of all estimated valuations.

    Blasko has a truly eccentric plan for his collection. He is the chairman of a flagship cryptocurrency called "Aspire," and hopes to build the first-ever blockchain arcade in Las Vegas. His vision is to retrofit these ancient arcade machines with the ability to process Aspire crypto tokens. If a player gets a particularly high score in, say, Space Invaders, they will be rewarded with an NFT that is deposited directly into the player's digital wallet. "You can take that NFT to the marketplace where you can sell it or trade it or do whatever you want with it," says Blasko. "That's just the gaming aspect of it. I'd love to incorporate more, like a roller skating rink [to] liven the place up." Like so many other people who participated in the Banning auction, he arrived with big dreams and left with a truckload of motherboards.

    Who would pay that?

    Blasko isn't sure who he was bidding against. He tells me that he's seen a slow increase in arcade game auction prices throughout the last year, predating the humongous spike in Banning. That bears out in the data. According to This Week In Pinball, one of the foremost blogs in the hobby, the average cost of a pinball machine has nearly doubled since 2018. Blasko believes that, generally, people are becoming more accustomed to the scarcity of the true rarities in the hobby — the same fuel that sparked booms in sports cards and vintage video games. "There's been a transition of wealth from parents to kids, and now people are in their 40s and 50s who are saying, 'You know, I'd love to have an arcade machine," he says.

    The reaction from pinball insiders has been mixed. On the Pinside forum, one of the largest online gatherings of retro gaming enthusiasts, auction spectators, some bidders themselves, could hardly believe their eyes when the Banning prices rolled in. ("Munsters $13,500! Wow!" "Goldeneye for $9,200?? WTF??? Who would pay that???") These are quotes pulled from a 92 page thread documenting the auction. It starts relatively inert — pinball fans eyeing the lots, mourning the loss of the Museum — before growing increasingly confused by the astronomical, market-setting thresholds. Forum posters passed around the mysterious bidder IDs assigned to the biggest spenders. (One of them, bidder #1660, purchased a mind-boggling 110 cabinets.) Are they shadowy CEOs? Eccentric millionaires? Corporate flippers? That's what we wanted to find out. Some Pinside hobbyists seemed to be struck with euphoria by the spectacle; dazzled at how, in a matter of days, a profound new financial benchmark was set for hundreds of machines. Others felt like their private clubhouse was suddenly under attack, and thirsted for revenge.

    There's been a transition of wealth from parents to kids, and now people are in their 40s and 50s who are saying, 'You know, I'd love to have an arcade machine

    "My texts were blowing up," says Jake Peterson, who moderates the r/pinball subreddit. "People are just flabbergasted and frustrated. There are people who are outraged by the increased prices in general, who think the auction is a canary in the coalmine for the future of the market. There are cheerleaders who have large collections and look at them as investments rather than, I don't know, games. And there's a whole group of [arcade] operators who are scared to death right now. People who just enjoy pinball machines being out in the community for people to play. It's becoming prohibitively expensive to maintain that."

    Peterson sums up the many uncertainties around the hobby after Banning: Does the auction represent a permanent capital readjustment or a weird, manic outlier? Are arcade games going to carry a punitive luxury tax into the future, or will they quickly fall back down to earth? Why did the bids get out of control in the first place? How is it possible for a cabinet to quintuple in value by the crack of the gavel? The more people I spoke to for this story, the more I became convinced that the great upheaval of pinball and arcade pricing standards wasn't the result of a cabal of swindlers pulling the rug out from under everyday collectors. This might just be what happens when an auction receives wall-to-wall media coverage from outlets that otherwise stray away from gaming. Both the New York Times and the Today Show covered the event, enticing a lot of insurgent customers who had plenty of money to spend, and absolutely no context for the hobby's appraisal logic.

    That's a theory put forth by Bob Cunningham, a veteran of the pinball community who made a living transporting cabinets to collectors all over the country. He was at the museum and putting in bids on behalf of five clients overseas, including a whopping $24,500 offer for the 1975 Jaws-inspired Maneater, complete with a shark-shaped cabinet, a monitor glowing in its gaping maw. But after the first week of the auction, Cunningham had only purchased three machines due to the skyrocketing price points. He's since picked up a number of shipping jobs from the novice auction-goers who suddenly needed someone to haul a few tons of outmoded electronics across state lines. At least the middlemen broke even at Banning.

    "I think [Banning] reached a whole new audience. That's what I've found. I'm moving 50 machines for first-time buyers. Grandmothers, grandfathers," says Cunningham. "They don't understand that the Museum of Pinball functions as an arcade. They think of it as a museum where everything is pristine. There's a whole lot of that. People not knowing that some of these machines still have rat poop in them."

    Cunningham tells me he's working with that enigmatic Bidder #1660, who as I mentioned earlier, purchased 110 games from Banning. Cunningham tells me the anonymous patron operates another pinball museum in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, and for the last month, he's been ferrying the material between California and the mid-south. Cunningham believes the buyer overpaid, but again, does that really matter?

    "I was like, 'Man you paid $5,300 for a Stargate. That's a $600 to a $1,000 game if you're lucky.'" says Cunningham. "He said he got kinda caught up in [the energy.] He said the pictures looked so much better. When I take them out of the truck and you see all four sides, and all the imperfections. But he said, 'Where else am I going to find that many games that I need in one location, right now?'"

    Cunningham's suspicions might apply to other avenues in the collectible video game sector right now. A sealed copy of Super Mario 64 sold for nearly $1.6 million in July. There was no precedent for that cost. In 2010, Stadium Events, famously one of the rarest NES games of all time, sold for an extremely modest $41,300. That's a massive jump in sale price, especially when you consider that Super Mario 64 sold nearly 12 million units, and still-sealed copies are more likely to exist than a quickly-recalled NES game. There is an ethereal unease in the economy that has pushed the margins of blockchain coins, NFTs, sports cards, and now classic Nintendo games past the stratosphere. In that sense, maybe arcade machines are just the latest domino to fall. This is what scares Peterson. Arcades are public institutions. He doesn't want to see the last remaining Burger Times locked up behind closed doors.

    "A lot of these sales are going to private collections," he says. "They may never see the light of day again. That makes me frightened for the future. How else are you supposed to discover pinball?"

    This is just capitalism

    So that's the last question I wanted answered about the Banning auction. Is this a positive trend for the arcade community? Should suspicious diehards — like Peterson — welcome a watershed flush of cash? Or will this be a necrotic, destabilizing force? Everyone I spoke to around the hobby believes that the Museum selloff was a blip and that the bottom-lines will quickly deflate in the future. But is it really possible to put the toothpaste back into the tube after a $20,500 Pong machine?

    "This is just capitalism. The prices were so much higher than people were used to. Why would someone do that? Well, you have to realize that a lot of people are in a very different economic situation, where $10,000 and $20,000 are the same," says Steve Lin, Board Secretary at the Video Game History Fondation. "There were 900 active bidders. That's a lot of people, that's way more than we've seen [at other auctions.] These people aren't browsing Pinside or marketplace forums. They just want to have these machines."

    Overall though, Lin has an optimistic perspective on the Banning Effect. He is an arcade collector himself, which means he is certainly vulnerable to price-gouging, but Lin relishes the idea of people treating old cabinets like treasured properties. He mentions the ocean of untouched relics from the '70s and '80s — prototypes, recalls, unreleased gems, whatever — moldering away on the fringes of society. If the Pinball Museum auction triggers a fresh interest to better archive the antiquity of gaming, then maybe it was all worth it.

    "I see it as a net positive, because people now see that things have value. Machines that are in a barn or someone's basement or whatever will come to light, and they'll go into the hands of someone who doesn't want to trash them," concludes Lin. "[It’s a positive for] for people to say, 'This arcade cabinet has value, and I'm going to try to retain its value."

    Luke Winkie is a freelance reporter for IGN

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