Apple’s Entry-Level Tablet Just Got a Big Power Boost
Apple just introduced a new 8th Generation iPad with a ton more power.
Although the new 10.2-inch iPad looks exactly the same as last year's model, the new A12 Bionic inside is a 40% faster CPU while also providing a two times jump in graphics power. With the new chip in tow, Apple promises it's two times faster than the top-selling Windows laptop, three times Android tablet, and six times faster than Chromebooks.
To make the new 8th Generation iPad a well-rounded device for school work and office work, Apple has introduced a new case complete with a keyboard and touch pad. Of course, users will also be able to use the Apple Pencil on this tablet to write note and annotate papers.
The 8th Generation iPad will retail for $329 – or $299 for educational users. It's available to order today and will release on September 18th.
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Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.
Kevin Lee is IGN's Hardware and Roundups Editor. Follow him on Twitter @baggingspam

The Mandalorian Season 2: Every Official Image Released So Far
Cyberpunk Ninja Game Ghostrunner Gets October Release Date
The cyberpunk ninja game Ghostrunner will be released on October 27, 2020, on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC.
If you are a PlayStation Plus subscriber or plan on purchasing Ghostrunner on PC, you will get a 20% discount and "exclusive access to two cyber katanas." There will also be a 10% discount on Xbox One.
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When we first got our hands-on Ghostrunner, we said it was like what happens when Doom meets Blade Runner. In our second demo, we got answers to such questions as, "who is the Ghostrunner? What is this tower we’re climbing? Who is the “whisper in your head?”
Ghostrunner looks to help make the wait for Cyberpunk 2077 a bit easier with its style and world, and it would also go nicely with seven other cyberpunk games to play while you are waiting for CD Projekt Red's latest adventure.
Ghostrunner will support ray tracing on PC at launch, yet there has been no confirmation on whether it will make its way over to PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X in the future.
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Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.
Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.
Fortnite Will Get Nvidia Ray tracing This Week
Epic Games and Nvidia have revealed that an upcoming Fortnite patch will add ray tracing to the game on PC.
It was recently announced during a Nvidia GeForce event that Fortnite would be getting the RTX treatment and players won't have to wait much longer as ray tracing will be added to the game on September 17. This patch will make Fortnite the first ever Battle Royale-style game to feature ray tracing.
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"On September 17, the game will add support for ray traced reflections, shadows, global illuminations, and ambient occlusion significantly raising the image quality in the game," a press release about the patch reads. "At the same time, Nvidia DLSS is coming to Fortnite to boost frame rates and generate beautiful, sharp images in the game. Additionally, Nvidia Reflex technology for reduced latency will also be supported."
Nvidia says it has worked with Fortnite content creators to develop a new Creative Mode map known as the RTX Treasure Run that has been designed specifically to showcase the game's new ray tracing capabilities. The map drops players at the entrance to a museum where they are challenged to a scavenger hunt that highlights different ray traced effects.
"Along the way, players can explore a hall of mirrors, a medieval castle, a jungle, climb a giant statue, and explore a shrunken science lab to uncover the most treasures in the least amount of time," the press release reads. "RTX Treasure Run will be available with the launch of Fortnite with RTX."
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For more Fortnite, be sure to check out ray tracing in the game in action and then watch this Iron Man Stark Industries update trailer for the game. For another look at what ray tracing can do for a game, check out what Minecraft looks like with Nvidia RTX.
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Wesley LeBlanc is a freelance news writer and guide maker for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @LeBlancWes.
Apple Announces the Apple Watch Series 6 Smartwatch
Apple just unveiled a new flagship smartwatch, the Apple Watch Series 6, at its press conference from the Steve Jobs Theater in the Apple campus in Cupertino, California.
The Apple Watch Series 6 is going in a strong direction towards more health and fitness tracking. One of the watch's signature features is a new health sensor, that combined with watchOS 7, will provide blood oxygen monitoring.
The new health sensor shines red, green, and infrared light onto your wrist while photodiodes measure the light reflected back by blood every 15 seconds to monitor changes to your blood oxygen level. Users will be able to take on demand measurements while they're still, otherwise the wearable will take more periodic measurements as you wear the watch. All data will be visible in the Health app, and the users will be able to track trends over time to see how their blood oxygen level changes. Apple also announced it will work with health networks to study heart health and Covid 19 as well.
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Aside from the new health sensor, the Apple Watch Series 6 features a new S6 processor, which is a dual-core CPU based on the A13 Bionic that promises to be 20% faster than the company's previous wearable processor. The Apple Watch Series 6 also integrates a new U1 chip and Ultra Wideband antennas for short range wireless communication that'll be useful in the future as digital car keys.
Despite the increase in power and focus on health tracking, Apple promises users can still expect up to 18 hours of battery life on their wearable. The Series 6 will also be faster to charge to full within less than an hour and a half.
Another new feature of this wearable is an integrated altimeter, which climbing users will find helpful to check their current level of elevation. The Always-On Retina screen, meanwhile, is up to 2.5 times brighter than the previous Apple Watch Series 5.
As usual, Apple's new smartwatch comes in a variety of colors and finishes including blue aluminum, graphite, and Product Red. Additionally, Apple is introducing a new watch band called the Solo Loop that's one continuous loop of material. Instead of claps or buckle, the Solo Loop simply stretches onto your wrist. The Solo Loop will come in a variety of styles including a smooth silicon and braided silicon band, leather options, and two fancy Hermes options as well.
The Apple Watch Series 6 retails for $399 – or $499 for a watch with cellular capabilities – and it's available for order starting today.




Apple Watch SE
Apple also introduced an affordable smartwatch with the Apple Watch SE. The lower-end wearable doesn't include the Series 6's fancy health monitor, but it still features an accelerometer, heart rate, compass, gyroscope, motion sensors, fall detection. On board, you'll find a S5 system chip that's two times faster than the Series 3. The Apple Watch SE retails for $279 and you can order it today as well.
You Get and OS and You Get an OS
Apple ended its Time Flies Keynote by announcing iOS 14, iPadOS 14, tvOS 14 and watchOS 7 will all be available on September 16th. While we're used to seeing Apple introduce new operating systems, a new version of iOS coming out without it running on an new iPhone is a little strange. Also unfortunately for Mac users macOS Big Sur was a no show at this Apple event. Alongside the Apple Watch Series 6 and Watch SE, Apple introduce a new iPad Air, 8th generation iPad, and the new Apple One subscription and Fitness+ workout service. [poilib element="accentDivider"] Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com. Kevin Lee is IGN's Hardware and Roundups Editor. Follow him on Twitter @baggingspamFIFA 21: Career Mode Is an Improvement, Just Not a Big One
The developers of FIFA were likely breathing a sigh of relief a few weeks back. “Did you see what the Internet did to Madden?”, I can imagine a wide-eyed producer saying on a Zoom call. “Thank the lord we chucked all that stuff into Career Mode this year.” I then imagine him taking a nerve-calming swig of coffee out of a pure gold thermos funded entirely by Ultimate Team points, but that might just be me.
Yes, as its EA Sports stablemate was, once again, pilloried for a paucity of updates to Franchise Mode (to the point where its team had to hurry to promise to actually make some updates during the course of the year), FIFA had already made a quiet song and dance about its equivalent Career Mode, pointing to new tactical view sim matches, player development decisions, a new match sharpness attribute, and more. It’s a good look, for sure, but having played for a few hours with a PS4 beta version of the game, I’m not entirely convinced it’s the overhaul fans have been waiting for.
But let’s begin with a positive: this is a better Career Mode, one clearly designed to offer a more varied multi-season experience, with more interesting decisions to make than we’ve seen from at least half a decade of FIFA games. Player development, for example, could become a legitimately interesting minigame; recognising the potential of a youth team defender and Gareth Bale-ing them into a world-beating winger, or tuning down the training demands on an aging, talismanic player to squeeze one more season out of them before they dip into “I’m moving to the Lithuanian A-League” decline.
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The new tactical sim mode nabs gratuitously from Football Manager’s dotted top-down viewpoint of old, offering a neat mid-point between playing every match and simply pressing a button to show you the score. It even gives you the pleasure of a full Thanos-in-the-post-credits, “I’ll do it myself” option, letting you drop into the game and take over at any time, impressively seamlessly. FIFA (at least in the form we know it) isn’t Football Manager, of course, so the level to which you can tinker and over-engineer during those matches is significantly reduced, but there’s enough there to prove that there’s more thought going in this year than just stitching matches together with filler menus.
Which isn’t to say there aren’t a lot of filler menus anymore. There are loads. At their worst, the new changes turn the day-to-day of Career mode into something of a slog - schedule planning and match sharpness being the worst offenders. It feels like something of a vicious cycle - match sharpness (a new stat that couples with fitness, showing you not only who can play, but who’s ready to play), demands that you train well and often. As a result, you’ll fill your schedule with training sessions to keep your squad firing on all cylinders. That said, most training sessions just aren’t very much fun, so you’ll probably ultimately sim them, meaning you’ll sit there, hammering the X button, slack-faced, as you wait for a bunch of numbers to fade onto screen, over and over again. You could go to your calendar and sim the few days between each match, but that requires you to steer into a completely separate menu, ending up feeling somehow even slower.
It turns diligent management into a chore (which, to be fair, it probably is in real-life, but I’m not being paid tens of thousands of pounds a week to do it). It’s all well and good to take some of Football Manager’s more simulation-focused ideas, but Sports Interactive’s series offers dozens of options to streamline those processes, while never really losing out on their effects. FIFA simply doesn’t offer the same level of tinkering, or automation.
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A general air of faff hangs heavy over Career Mode in general, with menus still not connecting intuitively (why do I have to go to two different places to scout a player, then bid for them?), and entirely unnecessary negotiation cutscenes with creepily mute facsimiles of real managers still turning the exciting business of buying new players into long, freakish digital puppet shows powered by Bioware dialogue wheels. The fact that I can now organise modern loan-to-buy deals during those choices isn’t much comfort when I’m meeting a flailing, dead-eyed Sean Dyche for the thirtieth time.
I’m genuinely pleased that EA’s seen fit to try something with Career Mode, to freshen up an experience that millions of players want to like, but traditionally haven’t been given much to enjoy. I’ll almost certainly play a long career this year to see how it all shakes out and that’s (a little sadly) more than I expected from FIFA 21. My worry is that these are development decisions made because they feel like sops to a weary fanbase - window dressing for a mode that hasn’t changed a great deal in reality - not because they’ll turn Career mode into something legitimately new and exciting. If I was being kind, I’d say this was promising groundwork, a foundation to build on - I hope I still feel kind when the full game arrives.
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Joe Skrebels is IGN's Executive Editor of News, and his manager in FIFA 21 looks like an absolute creep. Follow him on Twitter.
Amnesia Rebirth October Release Date Announced for PC, PS4
Frictional Games horror game sequel Amnesia: Rebirth received a fresh October 20 release date for PS4 and PC. A perfect time to load up some scares for Halloween.
10 years after the release of Amnesia: The Dark Descent, Frictional is following up with a proper sequel. Set in the Algerian desert, the new Amnesia stars Tasi Trianon, a survivor of a deadly plane crash that strands her in the middle of the desert. Check out the new trailer below.
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The trailer shows off some of the encounters you'll experience in the new Amnesia. For example, finding a source of light has always been important, but it looks like Tasi may only have access to matches with severely limited life.
There are also some hallucinations, what looks like some sort of creeping poison affecting Tasi, and of course, a brief glimpse of some monsters hunting her in the middle of nowhere.
"Amnesia is not just another haunted house spook-fest, but an emotionally harrowing journey," says Frictional creative director Thomas Grip. "We aim to go beyond simple jump-scares and to affect players on a deeper level."
Frictional appears to be focusing on the emotional side of horror, something the studio explored previously in Soma. A similarly terrifying yet emotional adventure into the depths of the human mind (and the ocean).
Amnesia: Rebirth will be released on Steam, Epic Games Store, PS4, and GOG.
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Matt T.M. Kim is a reporter for IGN.
Fall Guys: Major Update Brings New Course Changes
The latest Fall Guys: Ultimate Knockout update is a major one that brings new course variations and the confirmation of the Big Yeetus' existence.
This update, which was teased as coming soon, is out now and brings many new changes to the game's usual rotation of minigames. Mediatonic says that dozens of new obstacles have been added alongside fresh rotations and even more tumbling fruit.
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"With this latest patch, you will quickly start to see that all is not what it seems in The Blunderdome," a blog post about the update reads. "Familiar favorites will have to be tackled in all new ways, with the addition of dozens of obstacles, dizzying random rotations and of course, plenty of tumbling fruit. And what's more, players will have no idea when these changes will occur — no bean's dignity shall be spared!"
Mediatonic said it's leaving most of the changes a mystery for players to discover but teased that door patterns on Gate Crash may "end up all kinds of wavey," and that turntables could "turn the tide in an unpredictable take on Fall Ball." The studio also said that approaches to See-Saw will need to be tweaked and that turnstiles in Hit Parade will behave differently now.
"Since the very beginning, we've been keeping a keen ear out for feedback from the community and implementing hot-fixes and tweaks to improve the Fall Guys experience," the blog post reads. "This major mid-season patch continues this quest! You can expect changes to enhance server stability, nifty VFX improvements and a whole lot more to make Fall Guys just that little bit smoother."
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The final piece of this update is the confirmation of the Big Yeetus. Mediatonic said they're aware of the many rumblings across the Fall Guys community about a "certain large and rather aggressive hammer obstacle, rumored to be bringing future physics wildness to Fall Guys." The studio said it can't share all the details yet but that the hammer obstacle is, in fact, called the Big Yeetus.
For more Fall Guys, read about how the developers created cheater-only servers and then check out this update's trailer. After that, check out these details about the upcoming Season 2 and then read our essential tips to survive in Fall Guys.
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Wesley LeBlanc is a freelance news writer and guide maker for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @LeBlancWes.
Immortals Fenyx Rising Was Inspired By an Assassin’s Creed Odyssey Bug
Inspiration for a game can come from many places, but there can't be too many projects from major publishers that were inspired by a simple bug in another game. Immortals Fenyx Rising was created from just that, after its creative director saw the potential in Assassin's Creed Odyssey glitch.
Speaking to IGN as part of our IGN First on Immortals Fenyx Rising, creative director Scott Phillips revealed the unlikely starting point for the upcoming open world game:
“For me, the first memory I have of what would eventually become Immortals Fenyx Rising was a bug on Assassin's Creed Odyssey where you'd be sailing on your ship, but instead of your human crew, you ended up having cyclopes as your crew. It was just sort of one of those moments like, ‘Oh wow. Yeah, that'd be really cool actually to do a full game focused on this mythology.’”
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While Odyssey wasn't afraid to dip into the fantastical, Phillips wanted to create a game entirely centred on myth rather than history, which led to the game originally known as Gods & Monsters, which in turn became Immortals Fenyx Rising.
That mythical setting also meant the game could take a less realistic approach to creating a world. Where Odyssey's Greece is a sprawling web of islands, Immortals' Golden Isle is a single landmass, densely packed with skill challenges, boss fights and puzzles – and let Ubisoft balance the Assassin's Creed action-RPG influences with Zelda's approach to a challenge-packed hero's tale.
Our IGN First interview with Phillips covers that entire journey from Odyssey to Immortals, covering a lot more ground that the initial seed of an idea – it's well worth reading in its entirety – and we'll have much more on Immortals Fenyx Rising for you all month, including exclusive new footage from the game.
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Joe Skrebels is IGN's Executive Editor of News. Follow him on Twitter. Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.
How Assassin’s Creed Odyssey Became Gods & Monsters and Finally Immortals Fenyx Rising – IGN First
Immortals Fenyx Rising is Ubisoft Quebec’s big new project, and the studio’s first new IP in over a decade. Fresh off of Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, the Canadian team transformed its love for Ancient Greek mythology into a whole new world for protagonist Fenyx to journey through. Immortals itself has also experienced quite the journey, and we spoke to game director Scott Phillips to learn more about the creation of this new universe, and its evolution from original title Gods and Monsters to Immortals Fenyx Rising.
“For me, the first memory I have of what would eventually become Immortals Fenyx Rising was a bug on Assassin's Creed Odyssey where you'd be sailing on your ship, but instead of your human crew, you ended up having cyclopes as your crew,” Phillips recalls. “It was just sort of one of those moments like, ‘Oh wow. Yeah, that'd be really cool actually to do a full game focused on this mythology.’”
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Phillips and the team didn’t plan on just recreating Assassin’s Creed Odyssey with a greater emphasis on the more fantastical elements of Greek mythology, but there were ideas from Odyssey that they could use. “We spent a lot of time on Odyssey developing compelling loops,” says Phillips. “As an open world game with lots of exploration, you need to entice the player to travel the world. You need to entice them to go off the beaten path and not just do an A to B to C experience.”
Those loops influenced the philosophy that drives Immortals. “Early on, we came onto a phrase that I think still continues now to be true, that we wanted the journey to be as challenging and rewarding as the end destination,” says Phillips. And so Immortals’ structure began to take shape.
“We wanted everything that you do along the way to get to some place to be fun, exciting, challenging, interesting,” he says. To create that challenge, Fenyx has a stamina bar that drains when they climb, glide, and unleash powerful combat abilities. “That's where bringing in stamina makes the exploration of the world a bit more uncertain. We don't give you as much information.”
[poilib element="quoteBox" parameters="excerpt=%E2%80%9CI%20don't%20think%20you%20can%20really%20be%20a%20gamer%20and%20say%20that%20you%20don't%20like%20Zelda%2C%20or%20you%20haven't%20played%20a%20Zelda%20at%20least.%E2%80%9D"]“That was a philosophy that we carried throughout the entire game, that changed the traversal to the fights to the puzzles as well, which is a whole new aspect for us,” Phillips notes. “There were some people on the team that had Prince of Persia experience, but as a global entity, the directors and the team didn't have a ton of [puzzle] experience, but we felt really confident that this was a way to separate ourselves to make something unique and different.”
With stamina and puzzle solving key parts of the gameplay loop, it’s easy to draw parallels to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Immortals even has puzzle dungeons, called Vaults of Tartaros, which are akin to Breath of the Wild’s Shrines. Phillips says that Zelda - and more importantly, its idea of the hero’s journey - has indeed had an influence on Immortals.
“I don't think you can really be a gamer and say that you don't like Zelda, or you haven't played a Zelda at least,” he says. “So, that sort of Zelda, Lord of Rings, Dungeons and Dragons, all of these things that have fantasy and being a hero and finding the sword and saving the world. There are all these elements that come into play for Immortals Fenyx Rising as well. We wanted to give a fresh take on that by really binding ourselves to Greek mythology and bringing that into the 21st century.”
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All of these elements were part of the game when it was revealed at Ubisoft’s E3 conference in 2019. Back then it was known as Gods and Monsters, and had a slightly more Pixar-like quality to its art style. It was set to be released the following February, but a long delay meant that Ubisoft Quebec had many months to improve and iterate on what it had created. This led to many new features, the most notable being a refreshed art style and a new name.
“Visually, we wanted to add more details,” Phillips says, noting that the stylistic design was a new challenge for the team after the realism of Assassin’s Creed. “Having more time, you can really look at, ‘Okay. How can we make everything consistent, raise the quality bar everywhere? Add some things where it makes sense.’ And then on the gameplay side, a lot of it was adding quality, adding variation to enemy attacks.”
The extra time also allowed the team to put together extra challenges for players. “We've got legendary creatures and world bosses and these wraiths that are these fallen heroes of ancient Greece. We really expanded on the variety,” Phillips says.
[poilib element="quoteBox" parameters="excerpt=%22It's%20ancient%20Greek%20Guardians%20of%20the%20Galaxy.%22"]“On the narrative side, we wanted to change the framing of the narrative with the narrator,” he adds. When the game was known as Gods and Monsters, it had just one narrator; legendary Greek author Homer. “You heard his voice a lot, so you didn't feel like it could change or was necessarily involved in the story that you were being told,” explains Phillips. These days, Immortals has two narrators: the god Zeus and Titan Prometheus.
“We wanted to go with two characters that could sort of oppose each other,” Phillips explains. “In a way, it's almost like a sportscaster. You've got the guy that's calling the shots, calling the play-by-play, but then you've got the color commentator. Prometheus is the play-by-play, and then Zeus is the color commentator making things fun and interesting and unique. And so, that sort of reframed the tone a bit.”
“It put more focus on Fenyx as well, and so that's where the name change comes from,” Phillips adds, although speculation about other reasons for the change has since been made. “We wanted to promote Fenyx, and Fenyx's journey with the gods to be the centerpiece.”
As for that tone, Phillips has a good comparison that instantly sparks excitement. “I think the description for me of the tone that's worked the best and made me understand it very quickly was that it's ancient Greek Guardians of the Galaxy,” he says. “It's light-hearted, interpersonal interactions. It can be fun, it can be very light, but the stakes of the universe are on the line and everything could be destroyed if you failed. So, it's that great interplay that makes the game special.”
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Making Fenyx the centerpiece of the game led to a redesign of their character. “I think where we were at E3 2019, we were still not sure,” says Phillips of Fenyx’s old, wide-eyed design. “I think that's potentially why you could see the helmet. We were just not sure. ‘Is this right? Are we fully happy with how this is going to look?’ So, we kept tweaking and tweaking and tweaking”
“The player character we've defined better, and made them much more varied, with more options for you to customize your own Fenyx,” says Phillips. “The core and the heart of the game were there at E3 2019, it's just expanded and improved since then.”
With all these iterations locked in, Immortals Fenyx Rising is now in the last stages of production. The final touches are being added, but we’ve been impressed with what we’ve seen so far; read our Immortals hands-on preview to see our detailed thoughts. For more, stick with IGN, as we have other exclusive Immortals Fenyx Rising interviews and videos to come over the next few weeks.
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Matt Purslow is IGN's UK News and Entertainment Writer.