The Final Fantasy XV movie, Kingsglaive, opened in select theaters earlier this month. For its initial debut, it played at 24 theaters across the country. Most of the major cities were covered, but now, the CG film is expanding its reach to nine new cities in the United States.
New markets include Phoenix, Philadelphia, Detroit, Minneapolis, Charlotte, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, Columbus, and Denver. Additionally, a tweet from the Kingsglaive account mentions that the film’s run in select cities has been extended a week, though it didn’t name these markets specifically. Check out the chart below to see all the theaters in the US where Kingsglaive is playing. Note that the movie will open at the Alamo Drafthouse Littleton in Littleton, Colorado on September 9.
Kingsglaive features the voices of Sean Bean (The Lord of the Rings, The Island), Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad, Need for Speed), and Lena Headey (Game of Thrones). You can watch a clip from the film here.
The film will be available through digital channels on August 30, while the Blu-ray/DVD version will arrive on October 4. Here is the official plot synopsis:
“The magical kingdom of Lucis is home to the sacred Crystal, and the menacing empire of Niflheim is determined to steal it. King Regis of Lucis (Sean Bean) commands an elite force of soldiers called the Kingsglaive. Wielding their king’s magic, Nyx (Aaron Paul) and his fellow soldiers fight to protect Lucis. As the overwhelming military might of the empire bears down, King Regis is faced with an impossible ultimatum–to marry his son, Prince Noctis, to Princess Lunafreya of Tenebrae (Lena Headey), captive of Niflheim, and surrender his lands to the empire’s rule. Although the king concedes, it becomes clear that the empire will stop at nothing to achieve their devious goals, with only the Kingsglaive standing between them and world domination.”
“The casting is on point, and the visuals are sharp and spectacular,” critic Alexa Ray Corriea said. “As a film, audiences may have some problem chewing on what’s essentially a beautiful story dump ahead of Final Fantasy XV’s release. But as a Final Fantasy film, it’s a tribute to all who have touched this series and who have been touched by it–a labor of love for the fans who ask for more from their stories. The power and the praise that Kingsglaive lends XV’s team is well-deserved indeed.”
For more on Kingsglaive, check out this review roundup to see what other critics are saying.
Final Fantasy XV‘s delay might have been a bummer, but you can now watch 30 minutes of new gameplay footage from the long-awaited game.
Square Enix has published a 33-minute video for the RPG on YouTube. It’s only in Japanese (watch 50-plus minutes of English footage here), so you might miss out on the dialogue, but gameplay is gameplay. On display here are a series of battle and driving sequences, while the trailer also shows off the game’s lovely looking visuals. Take a look:
According to people on NeoGAF (via Polygon), the video contains footage captured on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, which explains why it might look different in some sequences. Forum users also mention that not all of this footage is completely new.
According to Nova Crystallis, both versions run at 30 FPS, though Sony’s PS4 has the advantage right now in terms of resolution. Optimization efforts may still be ongoing.
They are still working on it. Currently FFXV runs at: PS4: 900-1080p at close to 30FPS. Xbox One: 756-900p at close to 30FPS.
Luke Cage will be the third Marvel show to hit Netflix, following the success of Jessica Jones and two seasons of Daredevil. The series is released at the end of September, and a first clip has arrived. Check it out below:
The show stars Mike Colter as the title character, a reluctant super-powered New Yorker who first appeared in a supporting role in Jessica Jones. Luke Cage also features Mahershala Ali, Alfre Woodard, Simone Missick, Theo Rossi, and Frank Whaley. A trailer was released earlier this month.
In a recent interview with Collider, Colter spoke about playing this unlikely superhero. “He’s a guy that has been thrust into a place that he doesn’t really want to be,” he said. “He’s a guy who’s been endowed with abilities, as they say. To him, it’s not positive. At least he doesn’t see it that way. He doesn’t want any part of this.
“But ultimately, it’s something that he’s going to have to deal with. It’s perfect for me because I don’t really like the spotlight either. I think with him, it feels like a glove.”
The events of Luke Cage will eventually tie into The Defenders, the superhero team-up show that will also feature Daredevil, Jessica Jones, and Iron Fist. It is expected in late 2017. An Iron Fist series is expected before this, and a first teaser was revealed at San Diego Comic-Con.
It has also been confirmed that Daredevil will return for a third season. Although the show has proved extremely popular, Netflix’s increasingly busy Marvel schedule hadn’t included a third outing for the blind superhero until last month.
Luke Cage hits Netflix in its entirety on September 30, 2016.
2K Games has released a new “Let’s Play” video for its upcoming BioShock: The Collection. This video shows off the first 14 minutes of the BioShock remaster featured in the package–and it looks great.
As you can see, the 2007 game is looking better than ever, with the water effects looking especially nice in the opening sequence. We can also see in this video that there are now jellyfish. It’s not clear what platform this footage was captured on, but whatever the case, 2K has said all games in The Collection run at 1080p and “up to” 60 FPS. The video is narrated by YouTuber GhostRobo.
The Collection includes remastered versions of BioShock, BioShock 2, and BioShock Infinite, so it’s possible other videos will focus on the latter two games. All single-player DLC is included for the three games, while The Collection also comes with a video series featuring commentary from director Ken Levine and lead artist Shawn Robertson.
As announced previously, BioShock and BioShock 2 are being remastered for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC, while Infinite is only getting a remastered version for consoles. The Collection for PC does include Infinite, but this will be the regular, non-remastered version that is likely on par with the PC version that is already available.
PC players may also be able to get The Collection free. Read this post to find out if you’re eligible.
The Collection launches on September 13 for all platforms. The compilation is being developed by Blind Squirrel Games, which collaborated with Irrational Games in the past for Infinite.
This year’s Captain America: Civil War might have been packed with Marvel superheroes, but there were a couple of noticeable absences. Neither Thor or Hulk were anywhere to be seen, leading fans to speculate on what they were up to while their fellow Avengers were fighting it out. The answer is revealed in a hilarious new short feature that was screened at San Diego Comic-Con this year and has now been released online. Check it out below:
While You Were Fighting: A Thor Mockumentary will also be included on the upcoming Digital HD and Blu-ray release for Captain America: Civil War, which arrives on September 2 and 13 respectively. The short was directed by Taika Waititi, who is currently making Thor: Ragnarok in Australia.
“It’s hard to say what the movie is because it’s changing,” he told Polygon. “The plot has changed and the script has changed. There are buddy elements to it between Thor and the Hulk, but who knows what the final movie will look like.”
Last month, images were released from the production that revealed the gladiator armor that Hulk will wear in the film. This has reinforced speculation that Thor: Ragnarok will take some inspiration from Planet Hulk, a comic book storyline in which Hulk battled monsters on an alien planet.
Lawmakers in California would like to see the existing ban on texting while driving to include playing Pokemon Go, among other things that could distract motor vehicle operators.
The Los Angeles Times reports that the state Assembly this week sent a new bill proposal to governor Jerry Brown outlining the measures. Bill Quirk (D-Hayward) said it’s time to expand the texting-ban law to get with the times.
The bill would ban using a handheld device in any way that distracts the driver. It’s an “important step in reducing distracted-driving accidents, injuries, and deaths,” Quirk said.
It does more, too:
“The bill also plugs a loophole that has made it difficult for law enforcement to enforce existing laws. In 2014, the California Court of Appeal ruled that the existing ban only prohibits a driver from holding a wireless telephone while talking on it, Quirk said,” according The Times.
Earlier this week, multiple fatalities were reported in Japan related to Pokemon Go, including one where a woman in her 20s was reportedly struck on her bicycle by a person playing the popular game.
Through in-game messaging, Pokemon Go itself warns players to be aware of their surroundings while playing the game. Pokemon Go encourages players to go out into the real world in search of Pokemon to catch, but playing behind the wheel is obviously a bad idea. A recent update introduced a prompt stressing that you should not play while driving a car.
World of Warcraft’s next expansion, Legion, was initially unveiled just over a year ago at Gamescom 2015. Now, finally, the 11-year-old MMO’s sixth expansion is due out next week, and players are bracing for its host of sweeping changes.
Legion will introduce a brand new world-scaling leveling system exclusive to the new continent, Broken Isles, as well as a new means of story progression through Class Order Halls. It’ll also grants players uniquely powerful, class-specific Artifact Weapons and, perhaps most importantly, introduce Demon Hunters–a new class of fighters that function more like the hero of an action game than another avatar in an MMO.
Now that Legion’s nearly upon us, we sat down with lead game designer Luis Garraga, technical game designer Chad Nervig, and character designer Genevieve St-Michel to discuss the long-in-development expansion in greater detail, digging into some specifics surrounding Legion’s ambitious changes and exploring the team’s post-launch plans.
GameSpot: Just starting out, can you give us a quick overview of how Legion fits into the existing lore?
Garraga: The theme of the expansion is the third coming of the Burning Legion to Azeroth. These guys have tried to invade us twice, and we’ve beat them back before. That kind of leads us into the first big feature that I’m super excited about, which is Demon Hunters. The Special Forces branch of the elves, if you will, they were the Demon Hunters. The most elite. All they trained for was hunting down and defeating demons.
Unfortunately, some of their means were misunderstood by their brethren. They were outlawed and thrown into prison. You play as one of these disciples of Illidan. When the Legion comes back it’s like, “Well, do we want to take our chances with these renegade Demon Hunters or do we want to just admit defeat?” The good guys decide to bite the bullet and let the so-called outlaws out, and that’s where Demon Hunters come in.
The Demon Hunter class represents a grey area for the good guys
When we talked about revisiting the idea of Demon Hunters, revisiting Illidan, what excited me was we get to tell the story that we weren’t able to tell before. Maybe if you didn’t completely sympathize with Illidan, you understood where he was coming from. We feel like we want to change the tone and change the direction 15-degrees, 20-degrees, but we also want it to be respectful of the characters that were brought up. Players will see the return of Alturus, Akama, Illidan, Maiev–all characters where we planted the seeds of those stories a long time ago, even before Burning Crusade.
How will the story be structured in Legion? Is there a single linear campaign, or is the story content broken up in some way?
Nervig: Each zone has a storyline of its own.
St-Michel: More of the overarching storyline is held within your Class Halls, so you don’t miss any of [the overarching story]. In general it’s a lot of fun for [people who play a lot of alts]. You can start in one zone on one character, and another zone on another, and you get to see all the individual stories that are contained within those zones. But your overarching story is still being told through the Class Order Halls.
Can you tell us more about what we can expect from these Class Order Halls?
The Warriors’ Order Hall
St-Michel: They’re kind of like the natural progression from Garrisons, except we’ve spent a ton of work to make them very impactful and integrated into the gameplay. [Class Order Halls are] kind of bringing it all back from the story of where the Horde and Alliance are up against the biggest threat ever, the Burning Legion. All the classes just decide to band together within themselves. You collect these very personal heroes that we all know from the lore and bring them under your wing to help you destroy the threat.
Nervig: We definitely learned a lot from Garrisons. For the first month or two in Warlords of Draenor, Garrisons were looking great. But as many people would attest, it got pretty lame just sitting alone in your Garrison for a whole lot of time. The Class Order Halls are not like that. The things you do there are related to stuff outside of the Order Hall, and they send you off to do other things.
Can other people enter your Class Order Hall?
Nervig: They’re shared with your whole class. So all the monks will see each other, all the mages, et cetera.
St-Michel: Horde and Alliance are together also.
But opposing Horde and Alliance players won’t be able to communicate with each other, obviously.
Nervig: Correct. Actually, on that note, Pandaren and Demon Hunters are able to communicate cross-faction now. When Demon Hunters metamorphosize, they speak Demonic. So two metamorphosized Demon Hunters can talk to each other. It was just an edge case where we were like, “Yeah, okay, that makes sense.” And Pandaren have always been an oddity. They know neutral Pandaren, and as soon as they choose Horde or Alliance, they forget the other one? So we were like, “Fine, we’re letting that line be crossed. Let Pandaren all speak Pandaren.”
Metamorphosized Demon Hunters will be able to speak to each other, regardless of Horde/Alliance allegiances
From what we’ve seen so far, Demon Hunters seem way more mobile than any existing class. What was it like trying to build out those mechanics?
Garraga: Our game was never designed with any sort of movement ability system for player-based movements, so it’s very conservative in that end. A lot of our engineers had to basically look at the game, the way our engine worked, and make it do what an action game would do: double jumps, glides, and all sorts of almost twitch-based gameplay. We didn’t even know if it was going to work. There was a moment when an engineer said, “Well, I got everything you wanted except the ability for you to change direction mid-double jump.” I was like, “Okay, well, I guess we can’t win them all.” Then I went in and played it and I’m like, “What are you talking about? It did work.” It was almost supernatural that we got it all in there.
Will Legion update or alter the rest of the core gameplay in any way?
It was almost supernatural that we got it all in there.
Luis Garraga, Lead Game Designer
Garraga: We have basically looked at every system in the game, and many of them that were showing their age have gotten upgrades. New PvP system, new profession system–one of the coolest things is the way that experience and leveling work in Legion. We have basically a world with five zones. Previously you would have to pick, “What are the two low level zones that I start the expansion with?” Now we have world-scaling, which basically allows us to say: If you go into Azuna at level 100, it’ll be level 100 for you, but if you do Azuna last and your friend is level 108, you can group up together. It’ll be 108 for him, 100 for you, and you will both contribute and you will both get appropriate awards.
It lets us leverage the whole world for the end game. Previously we’d do an expansion with a continent and a little bit of that continent was suitable for the end game. Now, with world quests, we have the entirety of the Broken Isles for players to do quests and get rewards. The rewards keep scaling and they stay pretty competitive with dungeons.
Nervig: There’s a lot of under-the-hood magic that’s going on so that it just works. You don’t have to worry about it. You can just be a level 102 grouped with a level 107, and the game just handles that right.
So will the levels of the enemies appear differently to you than they would to your teammates?
The Broken Isles houses five zones
Nervig: Yeah, if I’m level 102, I’ll see the creatures and they’ll look like level 102 to me. If [my teammate] is 107, they’ll be 107 to her. Her fireball will do the right amount of damage, my backstab will do the right amount of damage and take the right amount of health off the mob. It all just magically works. And if [another teammate] is healing us, it works fine too.
And it works for multiple varying levels?
Nervig: Yes. [In] the pre-launch content that has invasions happening right now, you can be all the way down as low as level 15 and be grouped with a level 100 player and it works fine.
WoW’s been around for so long. Why introduce this now? Was it a technical limitation?
Nervig: Pretty much a technical limitation. Doing that is a new concept to us. It’s been considered and brought up before, but it’s been like a neat dream. But how would we even make that work? But we finally looked at it and did the due diligence on it to figure out how it would work, what the implications would be, what impact it would have, and said,“Hey, we can do this.” So we did.
Can you explain more about Legion’s follower system and how that works?
Nervig: Significant differences there from Garrison, which had many different followers. Class Order Hall followers are a small subset of major heroes that you have more interaction with. You can still send them on missions, but you’ll also have a slot for one of them to be your combat ally. So when you’re outdoors in Broken Isles, that one will be assisting you.
If you don’t want anything in your way, you don’t want that follower-type gameplay, you can pick one that just runs in and stuns everything, then runs out, and that’s your only interaction with it. And that’s a cool ability for you to effectively have. Or you can have one that goes to the full extent of being a tank for you.
Druid Order Hall
So they function like a pet in a way.
Nervig: Yeah…kind of.
Are they around with you all the time, even when you’re back in Azeroth?
Nervig: No, just in Broken Isles.
How do you gain new followers?
Nervig: The Class Order Hall storyline will introduce them to you. You can only get them through that storyline.
St-Michel: That’s what makes it a lot more personal and related to your classes. You’ve definitely heard of this person before if you’ve played your character a lot and you’re really into the lore of your class. You’ll see them and they’ll go out on actual quest lines with you too, in some instances.
Nervig: They are class-specific. I played a whole lot of Legion beta on a monk, and I had Li Li and Monkey King assisting me. There are major characters in the lore assisting you.
Are there Horde/Alliance-specific followers?
Nervig: No, they are neutral ones.
Have you learned any other lessons from previous expansions that changed the way you approached Legion?
Suramar’s quests open up after hitting level 110.
Garraga: Our fans held our feet to the fire a little bit [because] there might not have been enough content for them to do in Warlords for their play style. There was a lot of raiding content, a lot of PvP stuff to do, but some people wanted a little bit more. We didn’t support Warlords enough with updating the content that players had at their disposal, especially at the end game. Players ran out of stuff to do. I don’t think that there was an aggressive enough patch schedule. That’s what I want to promise our players: we will be very aggressive with making sure that there’s content on the table, and we should not see a content drought like we saw before. Even as we’re getting ready for players to play Legion, we’re already working on stuff that’s going to very rapidly get put in the content pipeline for them.
St-Michel: You also have the level 110 zones that open up. So hitting the level cap, you’re not even close to the end. You have Suramar, which just opened up. You still have your artifact that you’re levelling. There’s a lot of content to just going past level 110.
Which actually brings us to the new Artifact Weapons–can you tell us a little bit about what those are and how they work?
Garraga: So players might be familiar with legendary quest lines from before where some classes got special quests to go and get a very special weapon unique to their class. For Legion, we did one quest line for every class spec. That means mages have three individual acquisition lines for each of their specs. Druids have four. Once again, one for each of their specs. A very, very hand-tailored story about how you get the weapon. Very specialized powers that come along with this weapon. Then as you grow in power, the weapon grows in power with you. It’s basically the classes’ version of Excalibur.
From what I understand, these weapons are not going to carry over into the next expansion, should one ever come. Can you comment on the thinking behind that decision?
Garraga: In a way, it gives us permission to make these weapons as awesome as we want them to be. If there’s anything about the powers that we really like and feels like this should be core to the class, we have the ability to move that skill over to the main class. If right off the bat we said, “This is something we have to carry over,” you would see a much narrower field of design space [and] much more conservative powers. Some of the talents at the end of each branch of the tree are very powerful and they change the way that you play, so we want to treat them a little bit as experimental. In a way, it’s a way for us to try new things without having that commitment of [being] married to this idea from here on out forever.
Artifact Weapons themselves will disappear after Legion, but the skins will remain.
Like Garrisons, for example, was the first time we said, “Hey, we really want to try this feature, but we’re not sure we want to try it out forever.” I think that paid off because everything about them felt very integral to Warlords of Draenor, but by the time Warlords was done, we were kind of like, “Okay, Garrisons had their place, but we want to move on.” Had we said garrisons are a feature of the game rather than the expansion, we would have a very cumbersome system to have to upkeep and facelift over and over again. This is a new model that we like better.
So will all Artifact Weapons disappear completely before the next expansion, even if players invest time in leveling them up?
Garraga: For players that did level up their Artifact Weapons and unlocked the special looks and all that, they earned those transmogs, so they can make future weapons almost like a badge of prestige. Say, “Hey, I was part of Legion, and I unlocked this prestige skin.”
What was the rationale behind the decision to remove stat bonuses from gear when players enter PvP arenas?
Nervig: To ease the barrier of entry to PvP so you don’t feel like you’re way behind if you’re not up to date on full PvP gear. We wanted to get more people PvP’ing. Also to be more fair, so that we could balance and tune classes based on the gear stats that we assigned them. For example, if [Warlock’s] Destruction mastery is overpowered in PvP, we’ll just give them less mastery on their PvP set of stats.
We will be very aggressive with making sure that there’s content on the table, and we should not see a content drought like we saw before.
Luis Garraga, Lead Game Designer
Now that Legion’s almost here, I wanted to ask about the long-term future of World of Warcraft. Do you think there’s ever going to come a point where the team decides, “We’re going to do one more expansion, we’re going to wrap everything up in some way, and we’re going to put an end cap on this as opposed to letting it fade out the way so many MMOs do”?
Garraga: It’s a very hard question to answer. We have generations of players that will basically have grown up playing World of Warcraft. You imagine one of those kids gets to grow up and work on the game, bringing that fresh new take on things. I’m sure there will be a time when we pass the torch, but it’s a game that instils such passion in people that, at least in the near future, I don’t see that point of just calling it quits.In terms of momentum–and in terms of the energy that we and our community have for the game–this is the expansion I’ve been the most excited about. This is an expansion where we have gotten to do basically everything we wanted, from the new class to all the new features. We had systems before that we weren’t happy with. We just said, “Our players deserve better.” As long as we keep doing that, we hope that our players will continue to reward us with playing the game.
As announced previously, the new maps are Temple (Warzone Assault) and Mercy (Arena), the latter of which is a reimagining of Halo 4‘s Haven map. Some of the new weapons include the Tactical Magnum, as well as Wicked Grasp and Berserker’s Claw, which are classified as rare and ultra-rare respectively.
Halo 5 senior systems designer Dan Wiksten shared more insight on the new assaults cannons in 343’s newest weekly blog post, which you can find below the video.
Assault Cannon: Wicked Grasp
“Need to protect a base against infantry? The Wicked Grasp should make it easy to hold on and defend. It fires a burst of homing plasma shots that will drop a Spartan really quick. The projectiles have a slower velocity than most UNSC weapons, so effective range is diminished and the weapon is best used at short to mid-range.”
Assault Cannon: Berserker’s Claw
“Equally effective against infantry as well as medium vehicles, the Berserker’s Claw requires a short charge up before it can be fired, but does fire projectiles that will explode on impact and possibly take out a cluster of targets with one shot. The projectiles also track flying vehicles, and are a great counter to early vehicle play.”
In other Halo 5 news, Microsoft also confirmed this week that the game’s Forge tools will be released on September 8, the same day that Anvil’s Legacy comes out. For more, check out the PC requirements here. 343 will talk more about Anvil’s Legacy and show it off during a livestream event on September 6.
Halo 5’s other expansions included The Battle of Shadow and Light (November), Cartographer’s Gift (December), Infinity’s Armor (January), Hammer Storm (February), Ghosts of Meridian (April), Memories of Reach (May), Hog Wild (May), and Warzone Firefight (June).
Everyone is thinking it and now GameStop said it: the PlayStation Neo is likely to be officially confirmed during Sony’s PlayStation news event in New York City next month. During an earnings briefing this week, GameStop management said all will become clear on September the 7th, referencing the news briefing. Sony is expected to officially confirm the Neo and also announced a slimmed-down PS4.
Authorities in Japan said this week that two people died in cases linked to Pokemon Go, believed to be the first fatalities associated with the popular game. In both cases, drivers reportedly distracted by the game struck pedestrians, who later died in hospitals. This is a terrible thing and hopefully we don’t hear more reports along the same lines.
PlayStation Plus is getting more expensive in the US and Canada. Sony announced that the subscription service, which you need to play games online, is going up in price to $60 for a year and $25 for three months. The one-month plan is staying at $10. A membership also gets you free games every month. You must maintain your membership to continue to play the PS Plus titles.
The Other Stuff (Stories We Like, But Didn’t Cover With a Standalone Post):
There is a Dark Souls easter egg in the newest Overwatch map. How cool is that? Read the story and watch the video to learn more.
A new Astro Boy game is coming. A Kickstarter campaign for the project, Edge of Tomorrow, went up this week, asking for $50,000 to make it a reality.
Sony hasn’t even announced the PlayStation 4 Slim but someone has already unboxed it. Bear in mind this is all unofficial at this point, but it certainly looks real. Get all the details at DualShockers.
Destiny’s Rise of Iron expansion is coming in September and now Bungie has shared lots of insight about the new six-player raid, Wrath of the Machine. Read all about it here at Game Informer.
What were the top-grossing console, PC, and mobile games of July 2016? This new Superdata report has all the answers, and yes, Pokemon Go was on top. Read the full report here.
Titanfall 2’s multiplayer might feel a little slower than the first game–and this is intentional. Read this Shacknews interview with director Steve Fukuda to learn more about why Respawn is changing things up for the sequel.
Who might direct the Captain Marvel movie? According to the Hollywood Reporter, the list of leading candidates has been winnowed down to three. See them here.
Where do Madden’s sound effects come from? Probably not where you’d expect! Read this awesome Eurogamer story to get all the details.
That new Star Wars Rogue One trailer, now with more of your favorite character: Jar-Jar Binks. This is quite the video…
What are the best-selling PS4 games in Japan? Now we know. Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain leads the way–see the rest here.
Is actor/singer/awesome person Donald Glover going to be in the new Han Solo standalone Star Wars movie? The actor finally responded to rumors he might play Lando. Here’s what he said.
Each week we search and gather up the coolest comic book art you won’t see in actual comics. The reason you won’t is because professional artists often draw sketches for fun or commissions and post them on their websites, blogs, and Tumblrs. Some artists even arrange commissions through their sites so be sure to check them out. This is a way to see the artists working on one book draw characters from other comics or publishers.
Todd Nauck posted Superbory and Raven sketches on his Tumblr this week.
Chrissie Zullo posted another Overwatch sketch on her Facebook page.
Franco posted new sketch covers on his Instagram. You can buy his original art here.
Chris Samnee posted a Superboy and Batman sketch on his Instagram.
Kris Anka posted some commissions from FlameCon on his Instagram.
Skottie Young posted more Daily Sketches on his Tumblr. You can buy his original art here.
Mahmud Asrar posted some pre-show commissions for FanExpo Canada on his Tumblr.
Tom Raney posted some sketches from Terrificon on his Twitter.
Chris Giarrusso put up a couple new sketches for sale here. He also posted more sketch cards on his website.
Daniel HDR posted a couple commissions on his Instagram. His commission list is open.
Peter Nguyen posted some commissions on his Tumblr. His list is open for Long Beach and New York Comic Con.
Ryan Lee posted a Captain Marvel sketch on his Twitter.