• Halo 3’s Original Servers Shutting Down Along With the Rest Of the Series On Xbox 360

    343 Industries has revealed the date when the online multiplayer servers for several Halo games on Xbox 360 will close down: January 13, 2022. Back on December 18, 2020, the studio announced these servers would shut down no earlier than one year after it had posted the notice, but now a definitive date has been decided.

    "To date, we’ve juggled future-facing work and priorities with continued upkeep of Halo’s Xbox 360 legacy services. Maintaining these legacy services today requires significant time and resources which directly impacts the studio’s ability to support current and future projects like Halo: The Master Chief Collection and Halo Infinite," wrote 343 Industries in a statement.

    As the player base of these games on Xbox 360 dwindle more and more, the imbalance between maintaining the Xbox 360 servers and working on recent projects increases. Additionally, the digital sales of the Xbox 360 Halo games have greatly slowed down and new physical sales of them were halted back in 2018.

    The following games are affected: Halo 3, Halo 3: ODST, Halo: Reach, Halo 4, Halo Wars, Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, and Spartan Assault. While the multiplayer functions of these games will be limited following the server closures in January, the games will remain playable offline. Along with finally deciding on a date for sunsetting the servers, 343 Industries also showed off some footage of Halo Infinite's campaign this morning.

    Halo Infinite launches on December 8 for PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X|S.

    George Yang is a freelancer writer for IGN

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    State of Play October 2021: How to Watch and What to Expect

    Sony announced a State of Play broadcast for this week and this time, the focus will be on updates and announcements for upcoming third-party PS4 and PS5 games. If you don’t want to miss out on all the PlayStation news, here’s everything you need to know to watch.

    When is the State of Play (October 2021)?

    The next State of Play is scheduled to air on Wednesday, October 27 at 2:00 PM PT, 5:00 PM ET, and 10:00 PM BST. If you’re watching from Australia, that will be on Thursday, October 28 at 7:00 AM AEST. Sony revealed the broadcast will last for about 20 minutes.

    How to Watch the State of Play (October 2021)?

    We’ll be hosting the next State of Play here on IGN.com and all of our platforms, so you can watch it wherever you enjoy watching streams the most. We'll also be covering the event so make sure to check back here to catch up on all the latest news. Here is the full list of places you can watch the upcoming State of Play:

    State of Play (October 2021) Predictions and What to Expect

    First, let’s focus on what we do know. Sony specified that the next State of Play will focus on “upcoming third-party releases headed to PS5 and PS4”. There were no titles revealed outside of that but based on what we know, we can take a few guesses at what we might see.

    Square Enix has an exciting slate of games planned for 2022, and it includes Forspoken, Strangers of Paradise: Final Fantasy Orgins, and Final Fantasy XVI. All are planned for the PS5 with Final Fantasy Origins also confirmed for the PS4.

    Other potential titles include Ghostwire: Tokyo and Pragmata, though Pragmata was recently delayed into 2023, so that seems less likely.

    For the folks who are always on the lookout for upcoming indie games, it's possible Stray, Little Devil Inside, and Wytchwood could make an appearance at the show as well.

    Felicia Miranda is SEO Editor at IGN. You can find her on Twitter at @FeliciaVagabond.

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    Furnace Board Game Review

    In the late ’90s, a certain kind of title came to dominate board gaming. Typified by classics like Catan and Carcassonne they were easy to learn and offered with a great balance of strategy, randomness, and player interaction. As time went on, the former came to dominate the latter two and games were heavier and dryer.

    Furnace is very much a return to that older paradigm, and for many players it’s a welcome return. Casting players as businessmen during the industrial revolution, you’ll need to buy businesses that create a supply chain from which you can make the most profit. And like a lot of games of this ilk, it’s a whole lot more fun than it might sound.

    Box and What’s Inside

    Strictly speaking, Furnace is a card game because it has no board. Instead, the box contains some cardboard tokens, wood pieces to represent oil, coal and iron, four wooden discs for each player, and some decks of cards. The art is great across all the components, echoing the technical illustrations of the era in which it is set. It also has a novel turn tracker that mimics a turning gear.

    What’s not so great is the card quality. They’re of very thin stock which will wear quickly, with an annoying texture that makes them stick to each other but not the table or your fingers. They’re a pain to handle but the issue is easily solved with some cheap card sleeves.

    Rules and How to Play

    There are four turns in a game of Furnace, each divided into two phases. In the first, some business cards are dealt off the deck and players compete in an auction to win them. In the second you can activate businesses you own one at a time to gain or exchange resources.

    Auctions were another popular feature of late ‘90s games, but this one has a clever modern twist. Each player gets four tokens of increasing value and they use them to indicate their bids. The catch is that in Furnace, if you lose an auction you get compensated, either with raw materials or the chance to exchange some for a different type. You can claim this compensation as many times as your bid token. Often, that makes it more valuable to lose an auction than to win it.

    The art is great across all the components, echoing the technical illustrations of the era.

    This makes the auction phase a relentless and ever-shifting cauldron of competing priorities. Let’s say you want to win a business that can turn coal into cash, which serves as victory points. You can bid high on that, but to make use of it, you’ll also need coal that turn. So you bid low on a business with coal as compensation. But the other players can see this. They may purposefully outbid you on the cash business while leaving your low bid to win the other card, denying you the compensation.

    Of course, while it’s tempting to use your bids to screw up other players’ plans, you also need to get your own supply chain running. So it’s a constant multi-way balancing act trying to win what you need while also getting the necessary compensation and putting a spanner in other players’ works at the same time. It’s high stakes too: with only four rounds, you need to take every opportunity to make money or you’ll fall behind fast.

    While absorbing and challenging, this dance also has a weakness. A good auction game needs a good tempo, with bids coming in to increase the excitement. But here, players need to bid with great consideration and care, especially in the first two rounds. Waiting while someone lines up the strategies in their head can be a bit frustrating.

    In addition to the three core resources, coal, iron, and oil, there’s a fourth more abstract quantity — upgrade tokens. A few cards let you exchange these for money, but for the most part you want to spend them to upgrade your businesses. Each has two effects: one that you can use after purchase and a second that you can also activate when it’s upgraded. To upgrade, you’ll need to spend resources along with the token, making timing your upgrades critical.

    As the game goes on, your ultimate goal is to create a chain of cards that lets you maximize your point-scoring. A business that produces coal, another that lets you exchange coal for oil and a third that can cash in oil – the most valuable resource – for money. Just having such a chain isn’t enough, as exchange effects can only be activated a limited number of times per round. You need a balance, to ensure as many points as possible each turn.

    Making this work is the core of the second phase. While not as engaging as the auction, it’s a neat little puzzle in itself. Upgraded businesses have to have their effects in order, without another activation in between so the right order can take some working out. All the more so as the game goes on and your chains become more complex and interdependent. It is a heads-down activity though, with no input from other players. That speeds up the game, with players able to do it simultaneously, although that leaves room for individuals to make rules errors.

    Furnace makes those simple rules and three resources work as hard as they can. At the start, each player gets a capitalist card with a special power and a unique starting business. Between them, they provide a variety of guide rails for how you’ll begin building your supply chain. The business cards then offer decent diversity between compensation, resource and exchange effects but the combinations begin to feel thin after a while.

    Where to Buy

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    These New Duke-Style Controllers Celebrate 20 Years of Xbox

    Do you have nostalgia for the original Xbox? A new pair of wired controllers that are modeled after the classic Duke controller are up for preorder. Made by Hyperkin, these accessories are intended to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Xbox. There's a black one and a white one, plus a translucent purple one celebrating Cortana, the AI assistant from the Halo series. Preorders are available now. The controllers will ship December 15 and carry an MSRP of $89.99.

    Preorder Duke Controller 20th Anniversary Limited Edition

    Note that these are wired controllers, and they can't be played wirelessly. That said, the wire is removable for storage purposes. For the white and black models, the original Xbox startup animation plays right on the controller's Xbox button. For the purple one, you'll see a Cortana montage play in the same spot.

    The bumper buttons mirror the black and white buttons. You can plug in a headset using the 3.5mm jack. The controllers feature vibration and have precision analog triggers.

    Given the price and the form factor, these controllers won't appeal to everyone. But if you're an Xbox gamer of a certain age, there's an undeniable appeal to these throwback designs. Currently, Amazon has the purple and black model up for preorder. The listing is live for the white one, but it's not available to preorder at the time of this writing.

    In other news, Microsoft has an official 20th anniversary Xbox controller and matching headset available for preorder (out November 15). You can also still buy some of Hyperkin's previous Duke-style controllers, including a translucent green one (on sale for $49.99) and a translucent red one for $69.99.

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    Where to Preorder the Leia Organa Star Wars Black Series Lightsaber

    No matter what your opinion on the sequel trilogy, it did give us brief glimpses into parts of Star Wars lore we previously only imagined, such as Leia's time as a Jedi. OK, it was only mentioned briefly in Rise of the Skywalker, but as far as Star Wars collectibles go, there have been far more obscure references turned into tangible, real-world items.

    At Hasbro's PulseCon 2021, Hasbro announced it was bringing Leia's blue lightsaber to its incredible Black Series FX line. The blade is removable, so you can just clip it to your belt (as was the style at the time), or you can attach it to the hilt and it lights up and features authentic light saber sounds.

    Where to Preorder the Leia Organa Black Series FX Lightsaber

    You can preorder this lightsaber now and count down the days until its October 1, 2022 release. That's a long time from now, but it also gives you plenty of time to squirrel away the money to make sure your account covers it once it does release.

    And as always, if the price drops at Amazon any time between release and when you ordered, you get it for the reduced price. Given the fact Entertainment Earth has it for $249.99, I expect Amazon will drop the price to $249.95 any moment now.

    Seth Macy is Executive Editor, IGN Commerce, and just wants to be your friend. You can find him hosting the Nintendo Voice Chat podcast.

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