Resident Evil 7 Sales Reach 4.1 Million Units

Resident Evil 7 Biohazard has sold 4.1 million copies as of September 30.

Capcom revealed the figure as part of its latest financial results, which show Resident Evil 7 is now tied with Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate, Monster Hunter 4, and Street Fighter II Turbo as the publisher’s seventh best-selling game of all time. Resident Evil 5 remains atop that list with 7.2 million units sold.

Resident Evil 7 was released this past January on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. A Gold Edition of the first-person horror game will be released on December 12—the same day as its long-awaited, story-based add-ons, Not a Hero and End of Zoe.

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Ric Flair on Being the First Wrestler to Get an ESPN Doc

Note: This interview was conducted back in July, before Ric Flair’s medical emergency in mid-August.

On Tuesday, November 7th, ESPN will air its first ever 30 for 30 film focused on a wrestler. Fans will enter the life and career of the legendary 16-time world champion “Nature Boy” Ric Flair, in all its glory and tragedy.

Widely regarded as the best wrestler of all time, both in the ring and on the mic, Flair, along with director Rory Karpf, sat down to speak with me about the film and Flair’s feelings involved with seeing his many adventures, accomplishments, and wrong turns become the subject of a documentary.

“I’m extremely honored,” Flair said, right off the bat, of being the first wrestler in the 30 for 30 series. “More than I can express really. It didn’t hit me full until I saw it finished, but after seeing it the other day, it’s compelling. Just to be in this position. I know for a fact that WWE was pushing for Andre the Giant

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Daily Deals: 1-Year PS Plus for $39.99 Now Only at Gamestop, Xbox One X Is Shipping

Welcome to IGN’s Daily Deals, your source for the best deals on the stuff you actually want to buy. If you buy something through this post, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.

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ddxboxonex5Xbox One X Release is TOMORROW!

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Our Guide to the Best Xbox One Gifts This Holiday

The Xbox One platform is an excellent place to visit when deciding on what gifts to give during the holiday season. The upcoming Xbox One X is the most powerful console ever created, there are plenty of awesome Xbox One S bundles, and new games like Call of Duty: WWII and classics like Titanfall 2, not to mention the ever-increasing backwards compatible library, make the Xbox One an excellent choice for any gamer. Here are our picks for the best gifts for the Xbox One fan in your life.

What good are Xbox One gifts without an Xbox One console? Check out these excellent bundles of joy to give that special someone (who also loves Xbox). Screen-Shot-2017-10-26-at-8.28.59-AM

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Out This Week: Xbox One X, Horizon: Zero Dawn – The Frozen Wilds DLC, Sonic Forces

With so many new games and movies coming out, it can be hard to keep up. Lucky for you, IGN is here to help with a weekly round-up of the biggest releases each and every week. Check out the latest releases for this week, and be sure to come back next Monday for a new update.

Note: The prices and deals compiled below are accurate at the time we published this story, but all are subject to change.

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Where Will Thor Go After Ragnarok?

One complication of the MCU formula of interconnected, shared universe stories has been the endless need to maintain forward momentum. Each franchise has to push forward into more movies, which, ideally, makes room for more character introductions who will in turn make more room for more movies and–well, you get the idea.

But what happens to that forward momentum when an installment of the MCU comes up against the literal end of the world and loses?

Thor: Ragnarok’s dire conclusion, in which all of Asgard is summarily and gleefully demolished by a towering fire demon, poses this question, leaving us with questions of our own–like where, exactly, can the Thor franchise go now that Asgard is no more and her residents are cosmic refugees?

Thankfully, Marvel’s extensive backlog of comic book continuity has some pretty strong suggestions for just where the God of Thunder’s cinematic doppelganger could end up next, and it just might be a little more mundane than you’d guess.

As Thor and the survivors of Asgard leave the ruins firmly in the rearview, he offhandedly commands the lifeboat make a course of Earth–and, well, let’s just say that crazy-sounding idea has some precedent in the comics.

In 2007, a creative team consisting of J. Michael Straczynski and Marko Djurdjevic set about the literal resurrection of Thor both as a character and as an ongoing comic. It was “literal” in the sense that several years prior, in 2004, Thor’s last ongoing had ended with–well, Ragnarok, the absolute and total destruction of Asgard at the hands of the demonic Surtur. The finale of Thor volume 2 is one of the most overt inspirations for the ending of Thor: Ragnarok, right down to Thor making the choice to just let the fire elemental destroy his homeworld for the greater good.

In the comics, things immediately got a little complicated. For one, rather than having the luxury of a lifeboat to flee the scene, everyone in Asgard–including Thor–was “killed.” Don’t worry, it sounds more bleak than it actually was–but the point is that the gods of Asgard were all decidedly off the table for a while.

“A while” in this case meant three years. That’s where Straczynski and Djurdjevic came in. They had to figure out a way to restore not just Asgard itself, but everyone in it–after its complete annihilation. Luckily for everyone involved, comics are practically synonymous with complicated resurrection logic, and with the help of some specific continuity deep cuts and loopholes, they were able to pull it off.

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Asgard made its triumphant return from destruction, gloriously reconstructed–just outside a small town in rural Oklahoma.

The town of Broxton is actually a real place–you can find it on a map and take a road trip if you like–but for Marvel’s purposes it was the new home of Thor comics for the subsequent several years. It started when Donald Blake, the sometimes autonomous human alter ego of Thor (a relic from the age of Thor’s secret identity years), summoned Thor’s spirit from the “void of nonexistence,” or, whatever happens to immortals after they die. With Thor back on two feet and moving freely in Midgard, he set upon summoning his fellow Asgardians into mortal bodies with him.

Then came the big one: summoning Asgard itself. Thor rebuilt the city as, well, a floating castle amidst a bunch of cornfields, a couple of miles away of town. Don’t worry, he bought the land legally, using gold left over from the royal treasury. Squatting is unbefitting of the gods, obviously.

With Asgard reconfigured, the comics shifted focus from the grand scale cosmic drama of Thor’s bygone days and zeroed in on the personal drama of the daily life of heroes through the lens of small town Americana. The culture clash between warriors and farmers was played as both a running gag and a heartwarming parable–there were love stories, dangerous misunderstandings, political tensions, you name it, until the events of the crossover event Siege in in 2010 brought it to an end.

So what does any of this have to do with the MCU? Well, it’s unlikely we’ll see a shot-for-shot remake of the Asgard, Oklahoma run of Thor on the big screen any time soon, but as things stand right now? All signs point to Earth for the future of the franchise. Thor volume 3 weaves a story that blends superheroics with the everyday life of Midgardians in a way that could easily match the tone and levity put forth by the increasingly more “auteur” entries into the MCU’s lineup–and, uniquely enough, would actually require less focus on Thor himself.

Contract negotiations and tenures have been a hot topic among fans whenever the state of the MCU post-next summer’s Infinity War comes up in conversation. Many of the core cast of heroes have either stated outright or hinted at the fact that they’re due for contract re-negotiations and will likely be stepping down–or at least pulling back–from their roles in the future. This isn’t a huge problem for characters with long legacy statuses like Captain America or Iron Man, but it represents a challenge for Thor–a challenge that’s recently gotten even more tangled with Natalie Portman’s Jane Foster (the most recent bearer of Mjolnir in the comics) officially exiting the franchise.

A move to Asgard, Oklahoma would make way for an extended cast of Asgardian heroes with Thor himself playing a more supporting role. There would be space for Valkyrie, the return of Sif, and maybe even the introduction of the long absent Balder the Brave to take point for the future of the Thor franchise.

Although, admittedly, this is all assuming that there are any Asgardians left after the MCU’s looming encounter with Thanos. Here’s hoping.

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Microsoft Investing in Making More First-Party Games

Microsoft will invest more in software and services in the near future, with a view to making more first-party games, according to Xbox chief Phil Spencer.

Speaking to Bloomberg, Spencer said: “We need to grow, and I look forward to doing that. Our ability to go create content has to be one of our strengths. We haven’t always invested at the same level. We’ve gone through ups and downs in the investment.”

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