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Reacher Season 4 Returns in August, Neagley Spin-Off Lands the Following Month

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Prime Video has confirmed the premiere dates for both Reacher Season 4 and its upcoming Reacher spin-off, Neagley.

Reacher Season Four will return on Wednesday, August 12, 2026. As with previous seasons, it will launch with the first three episodes and be followed with a new episode weekly. New episodes will run until Wednesday, September 16. In conjunction with the Reacher Season 4 finale, all eight episodes of Neagley will also hit Prime on September 16.

Prime released a handful of stills from Neagley, as well as a brief outline of the story. For those who may have forgotten – or those yet to tune into Reacher – ex-military police officer Frances Neagley is a private investigator in Chicago, and the former protégé of Jack Reacher during their time in the Army’s 110th Special Investigations Unit.

Her spin-off series will see her digging into a dangerous case involving a friend from her past who has been killed in a suspicious accident. Maria Sten returns as Frances Neagley, alongside Greyston Holt as Detective Hudson Riley, Adeline Rudolph as Renee Birdwhistle, Jasper Jones as Keno, Matthew Del Negro as Pierce Woodrow, and Damon Herriman as Lawrence Cole. Alan Ritchson will guest star as Reacher. The Neagley series is not based on any specific Reacher novel, so fans of the books needn’t be concerned about Reacher himself having any of his stories snatched out from beneath him.

Prime Video recently confirmed its hit action-drama has been renewed for a fifth season already. The third season of Reacher reached 54.6 million viewers globally during its first 19 days on the service, which Prime notes makes it the most-watched season on the service since the first season of Fallout over the same timespan.

It’s not known what book Reacher Season 5 will be based on, but Season 4 is based on the 13th novel in the series, Gone Tomorrow – which was published in 2009.

For his part, Ritchson himself also has a new film – Motor City, alongside Shailene Woodley, Pablo Schreiber, and Ben Foster – arriving in cinemas in July.

Luke is a Senior Editor on the IGN reviews team. You can track him down on Bluesky @mrlukereilly to ask him things about stuff.

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Jagmas
5 hours ago
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Round Rock, Texas
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See Taylor Swift's Most Bridal-Worthy Fashion Through the Years

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Taylor Swift, Bridal Fashion MomentsTaylor Swift might not be wearin’ a gown shaped like a pastry on her wedding day.  The “Fate of Ophelia” singer has been firmly in her bridal era following her engagement to Travis Kelce last...
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Early access sci-fi multiplayer RPG Jump Space gets a big update that’s all about weapons

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You know that the designers of Jump Space are not fans of the Beatles. Why? Because the latest update to the game rejects the notion that happiness is a warm gun. Happiness is a heavily modified and custom-built gun, which is why players can now get randomized stats on weapons and components that you can take […]
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Jagmas
7 hours ago
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Round Rock, Texas
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Report Says Dishonored, Blade Developer Is Also On Xbox’s Chopping Block

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Blade Largeherocenter Announce

Xbox reportedly wants to sell off the studio and cancel the project

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Jagmas
9 hours ago
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Round Rock, Texas
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The Internet Can’t Stop Mocking Trump’s Terrible State Fair

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Trumpgreatamericanfair

Welcome to the Great American State Fair. No, there's no tables and chairs.

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Jagmas
9 hours ago
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Fresh off of dumping on Xbox's flailing, former Sony exec says PlayStation's pullback from PC releases doesn't make any sense either

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Earlier this month, former SIE Worldwide Studios chairman Shawn Layden said the still-ongoing flailing at Xbox "evince a basic misunderstanding of how the interactive entertainment world moves." Harsh words indeed—but lest you think he's just a partisan hater, he's now taken aim at his former company, Sony, and its pullback from the PC market.

It's been quite a turnaround from Sony. After years of dogged exclusivity, Sony began releasing its games on PC to significant success—to the point that Shuhei Yoshida, also a former SIE Worldwide Studios boss, said it was "almost like printing money."

But earlier this year, Sony began backing away from the strategy, and while no formal announcement was ever made, it soon became clear that a PC pullback is happening.

Layden, who also previously served as president and CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment America and executive vice president and COO of Sony Network Entertainment International, addressed the shift in a new interview with PSI, beginning by noting that in his mind, at least, bringing Sony games to PC was never about making money—it was about getting Sony properties in front of people who otherwise wouldn't see it.

"Not necessarily because they're going to buy a PlayStation," Layden said. "I wasn't that crazy. I didn't think that was going to happen.

"But as we take our intellectual property across other media, whether it's into films or whether it's in television or in comic books or into merchandise, whatever, you need to have as many eyeballs that are aware of this character, of this story, and just concentrating on the PlayStation population and only telling them these stories, and then try to bring it off of that platform into different media, that's going to be a hell of a jump."

While some have suggested that releasing PlayStation games on PC could "devalue" the brand, Layden says the strategy of holding them back for a year or so effectively addresses that concern: "I think if someone's waiting 18 months for something to come on PC, we didn't lose a sale to them. They weren't going to buy the hardware anyway."

"If it's a way to cover costs or the burden of making a port, there is some money attached to that, or the distraction or whatever," Layden said. "I don't know what they're thinking."

I don't either, but I do think it's interesting that we seem to be moving inexorably into a new round of the console wars: Microsoft has indicated that it's also looking at leaning more heavily on console exclusives in order to resuscitate the flagging Xbox brand. In that case, though, the impact on PC gamers should be minimal: Microsoft chief content officer Matt Booty said earlier this month that Xbox exclusives will "still show up on all the normal places where we sell the PC version."

The material impact of the PlayStation PC pullback is also debatable: PC Gamer's Morgan Park recently reminded that in the short term, at least, we're not likely to miss out on very much.

Here's another fact not to be overlooked: Unlike the ignominious dark days of "PC gaming is dying," PC gaming has never been stronger than it is right now. While year-over-year console revenue growth was close to stagnant, according to a Global Games Market Report published earlier in June, PC revenues leapt by 12%, powering the market past $200 billion in a single year for the first time. Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick says PC gamers have to wait for Grand Theft Auto 6 because we're not part of its "core" audience, but he also admits that PC can account for 45-50% of a big game's total sales. I have no idea how to square that either, but I definitely agree with Layden: Bringing Sony games to PC made sense, and taking them away just does not..

2026 games: All the upcoming games
Best PC games: Our all-time favorites
Free PC games: Freebie fest
Best FPS games: Finest gunplay
Best RPGs: Grand adventures
Best co-op games: Better together



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Jagmas
10 hours ago
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