News
Fallout Season 2: December Release Date, New Vegas Setting Revealed
The wasteland is calling us back. Prime Video has unveiled the trailer for Fallout Season 2, and it looks absolutely stunning.
Premiering December 17, 2025, the eight episode second season picks up where that jaw dropping finale left off, taking us from the irradiated wilds into the neon glow of post apocalyptic New Vegas. The Mojave Desert has never looked so beautifully dangerous.

Ella Purnell, Aaron Moten, and Walton Goggins return alongside Kyle MacLachlan, with Kumail Nanjiani and Macaulay Culkin joining the cast. Episodes roll out weekly until the February 4, 2026 finale.

Let’s be honest: Season 1 was a great example of how to turn a video game into a series! Where so many have stumbled and fallen flat on their faces, Kilter Films and showrunners Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Graham Wagner delivered something that honoured the source material well. Over 100 million viewers worldwide agreed. This is genuinely one of the most anticipated releases of December for us, and we suspect we’re not alone in that feeling.

The history of video game adaptations is littered with disappointments, projects that missed the point entirely or tried too hard to please everyone and satisfied nobody. Fallout broke that curse. It understood what made the games special, the dark humour, the retro futuristic aesthetic, the moral ambiguity lurking beneath the surface.

The trailer promises mutated creatures, wasteland mysteries. And yes, we CAN’T WAIT for the Deathclaw! If you’ve played the games, you know exactly why that matters. These terrifying creatures have haunted our nightmares since the original games, and seeing one realised with this production quality has us properly excited. If you haven’t encountered one before, you’re about to understand why seasoned vault dwellers approach certain areas with extreme caution.

With a third season already confirmed, Fallout has established itself as one of the most exciting genre shows around.
Season 1 remains available on Prime Video. Catch up now, because December 17 cannot come soon enough.
Games
Austin Wintory and Troy Baker Live at Game Music Festival 2026
Look, if you’ve ever wondered what goes on inside a video game composer’s head while they’re scoring that moment where you’re flying through the clouds in Journey or sneaking through Victorian London in Assassin’s Creed: Syndicate, you’re about to get the closest thing to a live answer.
Look, if you’ve ever wondered what goes on inside a video game composer’s head while they’re scoring that moment where you’re flying through the clouds in Journey or sneaking through Victorian London in Assassin’s Creed: Syndicate, you’re about to get the closest thing to a live answer.
Austin Wintory, the Grammy Award winning composer behind some of gaming’s most iconic soundtracks, is teaming up with Troy Baker (yes, that Troy Baker, the voice of Joel in The Last of Us and Sam in Death Stranding) for a one night show called The Art of Game Music. It’s part of Game Music Festival 2026, and it’s happening on Friday 19 June at Fairfield Halls in Croydon, South London.
But here’s the thing that makes this different from your standard “orchestra plays video game music” gig. This isn’t just a greatest hits setlist. Sure, you’ll hear pieces from Journey, ABZÛ, The Pathless, Assassin’s Creed: Syndicate, and the Grammy winning Sword of the Sea. The London Mozart Players are handling those, and they’ve been around for over 75 years, so you know the performances are going to sound incredible.
The really interesting bit, though, is the live composition element. During the show, Wintory is going to score gameplay in real time on stage. As in, there’s a visual prompt playing, and he’s composing and adapting the music as it happens, right in front of you. That’s the kind of creative process you never normally get to see. Usually it’s just the finished product layered under gameplay and you never think twice about the thousands of micro decisions that went into making that music feel right.
If you know anything about Wintory and Baker together, you’ll know these two have serious chemistry. They’ve been doing podcast conversations about games and music for a while now, and this show is basically them taking that energy and putting it on a stage with a full orchestra behind them. Baker put it well when he said that their conversations always come back to celebrating what makes game music so powerful, and this is the live version of that.
The whole performance runs about 90 minutes with no interval, so it’s a focused, uninterrupted experience. VIP ticket holders also get a meet and greet session afterwards.
Tickets are available now at gamemusic.net, including a limited pool of VIP options that come with premium seating and access to an educational event with special guests (details on that are still to come). You can also book directly through the Fairfield Halls website.
For a proper look at how the live composition element is going to work, Wintory has posted a video breakdown on his YouTube channel that’s worth checking out.
Events
Dungeons & Dragons Fan Expo London 2026: Cast, Dates & Tickets
Dungeons & Dragons is getting its very own fan expo, and it’s going big.
Dungeons & Dragons is getting its very own fan expo, and it’s going big. Wizards of the Coast has partnered with AEG Presents to bring a two-day D&D celebration to The O2 Arena in London on 21-22 August 2026, and if that line-up is anything to go by, this could be one of the most exciting tabletop events the UK has ever seen.
The Short Version
Friday 21 August kicks off at Indigo at The O2 with a live one-shot from High Rollers, the UK’s biggest actual play group who are currently celebrating their tenth anniversary. Then on Saturday 22 August, the main O2 Arena, yes, the full 20,000-capacity arena, hosts a live actual play spectacular featuring an absolute dream team of voice actors and D&D performers.
Tickets go on general sale Friday 6 March at 10am via dndfanexpo.com. There’s a presale for AEG Presents newsletter subscribers from 10am on Wednesday 4 March, and a venue presale through The O2 on Thursday 5 March at 10am.
That Cast Though
Right, let’s talk about who’s actually playing on that Saturday night. Jasmine Bhullar, known as ThatBronzeGirl, is running the game as Dungeon Master. If you know, you know. She’s the DM behind Dimension 20‘s Coffin Run, the creator of DesiQuest, and has written and performed for Critical Role and Acquisitions Incorporated. She’s one of the most versatile DMs working in actual play right now.
Sitting around the table? Four members of the Baldur’s Gate 3 cast: Neil Newbon (Astarion), Samantha Béart (Karlach), Devora Wilde (Lae’zel), and Theo Solomon (Wyll). That’s four of the six origin companions from one of the biggest RPGs ever made, all playing D&D together on stage. If you’ve ever wanted to see the people behind those characters improvise their way through a live campaign, this is your shot.
Rounding out the party are Anjali Bhimani (Symmetra in Overwatch, plus she’s a frequent presence on Critical Role and is actually part of the DesiQuest cast alongside Bhullar) and Jasper Cartwright, co-founder of the award-winning 3 Black Halflings podcast and a Dimension 20 alumnus through Rotating Heroes and Oaths & Empires.
High Rollers’ Big Anniversary Moment
High Rollers hit their tenth anniversary in January 2026, which makes this August show a continuation of what’s been a massive year for the group. DM Mark Hulmes and the crew, Kim Richards, Chris Trott, Katie Morrison, Rhiannon Gower, and Tom Hazell, have been running their current campaign, Altheya: The Dragon Empire, and are also in the middle of a Kickstarter for the Altheya campaign setting sourcebook.
The official expo site specifically says they’ll be bringing the world of Altheya to the Indigo stage, so expect a one-shot set in their homebrew world rather than an off-the-shelf adventure. For High Rollers fans, that’s a big deal.
What Else Is Happening?
Beyond the headline shows, both days will feature panels and Q&A sessions with creators and performers, gaming tables where you can actually sit down and play, traders from across the D&D ecosystem, and cosplay meetups. The organisers have promised more announcements before August, including meet-and-greet and photo op add-ons.
It’s worth noting that Friday’s High Rollers show requires a separate ticket from the main Saturday event, though VIP upgrades are available. Saturday’s main event ticket gets you access to all the daytime activities plus the evening arena show.
Easter Egg Watch
The cast list is absolutely stacked with Baldur’s Gate 3 connections, but there’s one notable absence: we’ve got Astarion, Karlach, Lae’zel, and Wyll represented, but no Shadowheart (Jennifer English) and no Gale (Tim Downie). The press release does say “more announcements to follow.” So it will be interesting to see how this unfolds.
And keep an eye on the staging. The press release mentions “bespoke staging designed to immerse fans directly into the campaign.” For a venue the size of The O2, that could mean some seriously ambitious set design. The production values could be something we’ve never seen from a live D&D event before.
Also: this is being billed as the “first ever official D&D fan expo.” The word “first” is doing a lot of heavy lifting there. If this goes well, expect it to become an annual event, and potentially expand to other cities.
Why This Actually Matters
D&D being played live in the main O2 Arena is a genuine milestone for tabletop gaming in the UK. This isn’t a side room at a comic convention. This is the same venue that hosts Beyoncé and the NBA. The fact that an actual play show can headline that space says something real about where tabletop gaming sits in the culture right now.
Whether you’re a seasoned player who’s been rolling dice since the THAC0 days or you got into D&D because of Baldur’s Gate 3 or Stranger Things, this feels like the kind of event that’s worth paying attention to.
Tickets go on sale Friday 6 March at 10am. We’d suggest signing up for the AEG Presents presale if you want the best chance of getting in.

Movies
Masters of the Universe Movie 2026: Cast, Plot and Everything We Know
So here’s something that’s been nearly two decades in the making.
So here’s something that’s been nearly two decades in the making. The Masters of the Universe live action movie is finally happening, and the cast list alone is enough to make you do a double take.
Nicholas Galitzine is stepping into the role of Prince Adam, aka He-Man, and if you’ve seen him in Red, White & Royal Blue or The Idea of You, you’ll know he’s got the charisma for it. But can he pull off “most powerful man in the universe”? The trailer, which dropped on January 23rd, gives us our first proper look, and honestly? It’s intriguing. We find Adam living as a regular guy, working in a drab office on Earth, completely unaware of his true heritage. Think Clark Kent energy, but with a magical sword instead of a cape.
The story picks up with Adam having been separated from his home planet Eternia since he was ten years old, when a devastating civil war forced his mother to send him to Earth for his own protection. Almost two decades later, the Sword of Power draws him back to Eternia, where things have gone very, very wrong under Jared Leto’s Skeletor. And yes, you read that right. Jared Leto as Skeletor. Whatever you’re imagining right now, it’s probably not weird enough.

The supporting cast is where this gets really exciting. Idris Elba plays Duncan, aka Man-At-Arms, the orange armour wearing inventor and adoptive father of Teela. Camila Mendes takes on Teela herself, Captain of the Guards and Adam’s closest ally. Then there’s Alison Brie as Evil-Lyn, who in a clever twist poses as Adam’s former college professor on Earth before revealing her true allegiance to Skeletor. Morena Baccarin plays the Sorceress of Castle Grayskull, James Purefoy and Charlotte Riley are King Randor and Queen Marlena, and Kristen Wiig voices Roboto in a gender-flipped take on the character.
Oh, and Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson, the Mountain himself from Game of Thrones, plays Goat Man. A giant warrior goat. We’re not making this up.
Director Travis Knight is the real reason to pay attention here. This is the man behind Kubo and the Two Strings and Bumblebee, both of which proved he knows how to balance heart with spectacle. He’s been pretty upfront about the film’s tone too, acknowledging the inherent silliness of the source material and saying the team is fully embracing it rather than trying to make everything gritty and serious.
The screenplay comes from Chris Butler (who wrote ParaNorman and Missing Link), alongside Aaron and Adam Nee (The Lost City) and David Callaham (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings). That’s a writing team that understands adventure, humour, and how to build a world without drowning you in exposition.
Mattel is clearly hoping this does for He-Man what Barbie did for, well, Barbie in 2023. If it lands, expect this to be the start of a much bigger franchise. The original toy line launched in 1982, and there’s a treasure trove of characters and lore to draw from. For now though, let’s see if they can nail this first outing.
The film was shot in London, with principal photography running from January to June 2025. Amazon MGM Studios handles the US and Canadian release, while Sony Pictures takes care of international distribution.
Masters of the Universe hits cinemas on June 5th, 2026. If you want to catch up before then, Prime Video has the original 1987 Dolph Lundgren film, plus the classic He-Man and the Masters of the Universe animated series from the ’80s and early 2000s.
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