• Netflix’s Next Three Games Take Aim At the Casual Market

    Netflix is continuing its foray into video games with three new titles aimed at casual audiences. However, most people around the world still can't try out the service.

    As reported by TechCrunch, Netflix subscribers in Spain, Italy, and Poland can access three new games starting today: Shooting Hoops, Teeter Up, and Card Blast. Users in these regions can find the titles under a new 'Games' tab in the Netflix app, but only on Android devices.

    Users will not have to pay extra to access games on Netflix. The games added today also won't include ads or in-app purchases, which is consistent with Netflix's previously detailed mobile game strategy.

    This project is still in its experimental phase for Netflix. This summer, the streaming giant said, "We think the time is right to learn more about how our members value games.” For now, the company is focusing mostly on mobile games, as well as interactive shows in the vein of Black Mirror: Bandersnatch.

    Netflix previously launched an early version of this service in Poland to subscribers with an Android device. The library originally included Stranger Things: The Game and Stranger Things 3: The Game.

    Earlier this year, Netflix was reportedly approaching industry veterans to help the company with its expansion into video games. They eventually brought veteran video game executive Mike Verdu on as the new vice president of game development at Netflix.

    On the television side, Netflix has also been interested in video game properties. Following the success of season one of The Witcher, Netflix is also investing in shows based on Sonic the Hedgehog, Assassin's Creed, Resident Evil, and more.

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

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    New World is Already Steam’s Most Played Game of 2021 Despite Server Struggles

    New World is already Steam's most-played game of 2021, even though it's only been out for a day.

    Not only is Amazon Games' new MMO the most played game of 2021, but its all-time player count peak is also more than 200,000 players higher than Valheim’s, which previously held the record.

    At the time of this writing, New World has 684,364 concurrent players and an all-time peak of 707,230, which it hit about half an hour ago. Valheim, which was released earlier this year to much acclaim, previously held the record as the most played game on Steam this year with an all-time peak of 502,387.

    Over on Twitch, 947,000 viewers are watching New World streams. Perhaps those viewers are watching the game because it's really hard to play the game right now due to its ongoing launch day server stress. As noted by analyst Simon Carless on Twitter, about 400,000 players are waiting to log into the game's EU servers — that doesn't even take into account the players looking to jump into other regional servers.

    A quick scroll through the New World subreddit reveals similar queue lengths, too. There, players are easing the server pain by making memes.

    As you can see in the tweet above, the server queue numbers are nothing to scoff at — we're talking hundreds and hundreds of players in line to play New World. The official New World Twitter account addressed these massive queues, first thanking players before talking about how the team is going to address these long queue times.

    "It has been an unbelievable 24 hours and the support for New World that we've seen so far has been incredible," the New World post reads. "We understand that some players are experiencing lengthy queue times and we are working hard on a few things to help address these issues."

    The team is working to create additional servers and expand the capacities of those already set up. Their sole focus at the moment is to get everyone logged in and playing, according to the post. To allow players into the game without the worry of picking a server they don't want to be on, New World will allow players to relocate their characters to a new server of their choice for free in the next two weeks, too.

    For more about New World, check out this breakdown of the game's post-launch plans and then read up on how to group up with friends in the game. Check out this video explaining how to farm and use Azoth after that.

    Wesley LeBlanc is a freelance news writer and guide maker for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @LeBlancWes.

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    Midnight Mass: Ending Explained

    Warning: This article contains FULL SPOILERS for the ending of the series. Midnight Mass is currently available to stream on Netflix.

    Now that you've (hopefully!) made your way through all of Mike Flanagan's Midnight Mass, let's unpack the final episode — "Book VII: Revelation" — and the series' ending as a whole to see where the story landed.

    And if you haven't yet, feel free to check out IGN's Midnight Mass review here!

    The penultimate chapter, "Book VI: Act of The Apostles," capped things off with a harrowing Easter service bloodbath, as Monsignor Pruitt (Hamish Linklater) introduced the "Angel" to his congregation, encouraging everyone to take poison so that they may be resurrected in eternal life – aka as vampires (though vampirism is never said outright).

    While this truly horrific scene occurs, with families watching each other painfully die and come back to life, Mildred (Alex Essoe) shoots Pruitt "dead," allowing Bev (Samantha Sloyan) her chance to take the reins on this awful operation. A few escape the massacre un-vampired, but Bev then orders Sturge (Matt Biedel) to open the doors, damning the rest of the residents of Crockett Island to the cravings of the St. Patrick's horde.

    Pruitt, coming back to life, weakly objects, knowing this wasn't the plan, but Bev is unstoppable now. "Let God sort them out," she cruelly says, knowing that those left on the aisle who weren't attending church and taking communion wouldn't get resurrected.

    For creator/writer/director Mike Flanagan, the thematic ties between religion and vampire lore have fascinated him for a long while. In an interview with IGN, he spoke about his preoccupation with "what happens when we die."

    "Somewhere around 2008 or 2009, the idea of vampire blood being in communion wine took root for me and how — if people experienced the benefits of vampire blood that I'm familiar with from their expressions in the genre — that they would believe them to be miraculous. I thought that that was just a really irresistible idea."

    "Being that weirdo, who was already a burgeoning horror fan, who looked around when they said this is the blood of Christ and if you drink it you'll live forever. Looked around and said, 'Does anyone else think this Vampiric?' And being told by parents and teachers to please stop bringing that up."

    Let God Sort Them Out

    The finale, "Book VII: Revelation," tracks the newly-christened vampires, released from St. Patrick's as they devour the stragglers, the dozens still left out on the island, while Erin, Sheriff Hassan, Sarah, Warren, Leeza, and Annie do their best to survive (and sabotage Bev's plans to spread this "gospel" to the mainland by burning the boats).

    With a bloodlust that all but Ed (Henry Thomas) find too irresistible to manage, the vampires ransack the island, killing the rest of the citizens, most of whom perished in the carnage. After Warren (Igby Rigney) and Leeza (Annarah Cymone) discover the Angel feeding on a poor woman — in a type of feeding trance that consumes all of its attention — they try to light it on fire. When Bev sees the house burning, she decides that the entire island can burn, as long as the church and the recreation center stand as shelters for them during the daylight hours.

    Monsignor Pruitt, Mildred, and Sarah

    Mildred, having been attacked directly by the Angel, wakes up as a vampire, in the form of her "best self," a much younger version (like Pruitt), and finding Pruitt inside the church. It's here that he confesses his real motivations for bringing the Angel to the island. The heart of his plan was to share this "gift" with Mildred so that the two of them could have a second chance to be together, and then even reveal to Sarah that he was her real father.

    Though it was his plan to (kill and) resurrect this island on Easter, a scheme born of his love for Mildred ("even out of blackness, love rises again"), it wasn't his idea to unleash his congregation on people who couldn't be brought back to life. He wanted the church doors closed and locked for when they all woke up so that he could explain to them what had happened, much like he had done with Riley. But now Bev had taken over and Pruitt was defeated. While the island burned, he chose to spend time with Mildred.

    In the climax of the episode, Pruitt, disgusted by Bev and what his congregation had become, found Sarah (Annabeth Gish) inside St. Patrick's spreading gasoline around. Realizing his daughter — to whom he'd never gotten to tell the truth — was doing the right thing, he told her to escape out the back. But right then, Sarah was gunned down by Sturge. Dying in her parents' arms, Pruitt attempted to feed her his blood so that she could be brought back to life. But Sarah, with the strength she had left, spit out the blood, refusing to become a vampire. In the end, Pruitt and Mildred carried Sarah's body to her favorite bridge and waited for the sun to rise.

    Ed and Annie

    Ed didn't make it out of the church like Annie (Kristin Lehman) did, but while others of his vampiric ilk ran roughshod over Crockett Island, killing everyone they saw, Ed was able to see things with a clear mind and not blackout like the rest of them. Later, reunited with Annie (who had taken her own life in order to distract Bev and Sturge), he explained that it was possible to not become a murderous monster and that the Angel's blood, and subsequent resurrection, revealed people's true violent selves.

    After Sarah, Erin, and Hassan burned the church and rec center, the remaining congregation, now all vampires, realized there was nowhere to go when the sun came up. With most now realizing all the horrors they'd committed during the night, even having killed their own loved ones, they joined together in song. Led by Ed and Annie, the town sang the hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee" (a song reportedly played by the Titanic's string ensemble as the ship sank), echoing Monsignor Pruitt's sermon from the second episode when he more or less subtweeted his entire plan, saying with fervor "that's what it means to have faith, that in the darkness, in the worst of it, in the absence of light and hope, we sing."

    So they sang, rejoicing, before the sunlight burned them all away, removing their blighted existences from the world.

    Sheriff Hassan and Ali Hassan

    Though Sheriff Hassan (Rahul Kohli) and Ali (Rahul Abburi) were not spared a tragic ending, they were at least able to come together and reunite in love and Muslim prayer, as father and son, during their final moments. With Hassan shot down during his attempt to burn the rec center, Ali was able to snap out of his vampiric daze and see the actual evil he'd become a part of. Like Ed, Ali was able to stray from the pack. The sight of his mortally wounded father allowed him to take control and ignite the rec center himself, finishing the job that Erin and Hassan couldn't.

    At the shore, with the sun rising. Hassan and Ali were able to perform the Salah (prayer) before Hassan succumbed to his gunshot wound and a vampiric Ali burned up in the light.

    Erin (and is the Creature a Vampire or Angel?)

    "So what do you think happens when we die, Erin?"

    Erin (Kate Siegel) was killed by the Angel, who flew in and tackled her while she was trying to help Hassan burn down the rec center. While the Angel fed on her, taking its time, and in a state of crimson stupor, Erin used a knife to slice holes in the membrane of its wings. This ultimately led to the Angel flying poorly, as opposed to its normal speed (which was pretty damn fast and precise), and probably dying in its attempt to make it 30 miles to the mainland for shelter before the sun could incinerate it (more on that in a bit…).

    Erin herself, however, died. During her remaining time, with her body's cells dying but the neurons in her brain firing, she remembered her cosmic beginnings and realized that "we are the cosmos dreaming of itself."

    "It's simply a dream that I think is my life. Every time."

    Erin's life would be the last life, presumedly, that the Angel would take. Flanagan noted that his idea for the killer Angel came from 1995's The Prophecy, starring Christopher Walken, and the line in the film that says if you look through the Bible and you see, whenever God wants this horrible thing done, he sends an angel. "The idea that we could take a classic vampire story and reframe it through a biblical angel, in a case of really unfortunate mistaken identity was also really, just kind of fun," he told IGN. "The creature that you see in the show, I think the biggest influence that we gave it was to take, to take biblical descriptions of angels and combine them with Klaus Kinski from Werner Herzog's Nosferatu."

    Bev

    Bev doesn't get her full comeuppance until the end. With her plans up in literal flames, given that both the church and rec centers had been burned up (and the rest of the island torched thanks to her own malicious machinations), she was forced to accept death in the face of sanctifying sunlight. But unlike the rest of Crockett Island, who met their fiery fate with grace, song, and prayer, she ran from it like a coward: screaming, crying, and digging into the sand in a last-ditch effort to find shelter.

    Leeza and Warren (and What Does the Ending Mean?)

    Leeza and Warren managed to find their way to The Uppards during the chaos, and then row their way off of Crockett Island using a boat. Safe from the violence out in the open water, watching the flames rise into the sky, they notice the Angel flying off the island in desperation. They question its ability to make it to the mainland, given the distance and the time before sunrise.

    Leeza and Warren, having never died and come back to life, were safe from the sunlight. Never becoming full vampires, they were the only two survivors of Crockett Island. So why did Leeza then lose the feeling in her legs again? Well, that could have been a strong hint that the Angel didn't make it across the waters.

    Aside from the fact that the entire plague of righteous violence was over, and that the contained madness unknowingly unleashed by Pruitt had gone up in flames, signaling a symbolic break from the miraculous hope it all briefly delivered, the "head" vampire dying usually means an instant signal break from its subjects. In popular vampire lore, the lead vampire's demise frees those controlled by its blood. For Leeza though, that would mean the end of her restorative gift. The ability to walk that she was granted by the Angel's blood was now gone and she was returned to her paralyzed state. While it's a sad ending for Leeza (though maybe not as sad as Warren and Leeza losing their entire families), it's good news for the world overall, right?

    There's a reason, however, the Angel's fate and Leeza's regression aren't made more clear, as Flanagan wanted a bit of ambiguity to linger at the end. "The Angel, the creature itself, really was just a stand-in for the idea of fanaticism and fundamentalism," he said. "That isn't something that we, as human beings, are going to be able to kill. We may be able to win battles. We may be able to even chase it out of our community in pieces, but we feel like it always comes back. And so we wanted them to at least have the victory of banishing corrupting influence from Crockett, but we thought it would be dishonest to show the audience it dies."

    What did you think of Mike Flanagan's Midnight Mass? Let us know in the comments section below.

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    Amazon’s Sci-Fi-Like Ring Security Done Now Available for Preorder

    Last year, Amazon announced the Ring Always Home Cam, an indoor security camera that's a drone flying inside your home. If you are interested in having this drone protect your house, you can now apply for an invitation to preorder it today on Amazon.

    As announced during Amazon's hardware event, the Ring Always Home Cam will ship sometime later this year and will retail for $249.99. The Ring Always Home Cam is designed to keep tabs on activity going on inside your home without the need to having multiple cameras set up inside your house.

    The Ring Always Home Cam features a built-in LED that automatically lights activate when flying at night or in areas with low light while the footage is captured in 1080p video. The drone is designed to only record footage when flying and when it is not in use, it will sit in a charging dock that covers the lens.

    Amazon notes that the Always Home Cam is designed for a single floor, so if you live in a home with many stairs like a townhouse and were hoping to have the drone cover the entire inside of your home, this might not be the purchase for you. The Always Home Cam is also not designed to fly for extended periods with a battery life of only five minutes before it requires a charge.

    The Always Home Cam is currently accepting applications to purchase on Amazon's website. The company notes that this "limited-release" period will bring in invited customers to help shape the experience and provide Amazon with feedback on the features the camera comes equipped with. The invitations themselves will be sent out on a rolling basis, with those selected will receive an email inviting them to check out the Always Home Cam.

    Taylor is the Associate Tech Editor at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

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    Xbox Insiders Can Now Try Cloud Gaming on Consoles

    We already knew that Microsoft was planning to release its cloud gaming service onto Xbox Series X, Series S, and Xbox One this holiday season if you are subscribed to Game Pass Ultimate. Now, select Xbox Insiders can test the feature out on their Xbox consoles.

    Starting today, Xbox Insiders with the Alpha and Alpha Skip-Ahead rings will be able to access Xbox Cloud Gaming right from their Xbox hardware. The inclusion of Xbox Cloud Gaming on consoles will allow users the chance to play a game through the cloud before committing to taking up storage on their Xbox console to install a new game.

    The move comes as part of the many steps Microsoft is taking to make Xbox games available on almost any device. Earlier this year, the company announced that it would extend the Xbox One lifespan by using Xbox Cloud Gaming to bring Series X/S titles to the eighth-generation console.

    Microsoft is also planning to build a global ecosystem that would see the Xbox experience on devices including smart TVs and streaming sticks, so you can experience these games without even owning Xbox hardware, though Microsoft insists that playing its games on its hardware will remain a flagship experience.

    Taylor is the Associate Tech Editor at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

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