I'm a gamer. I grew up in and around one of the best cities anywhere, Austin, Tx. Head down if you like live music or games!
138986 stories
·
8 followers

J. Michael Straczynski Is Being Upfront With Fans Over Potential Babylon 5 Revival Following Netflix's Warner Bros. Acquisition

1 Share

Babylon 5 fans are hoping Netflix’s big-money acquisition of Warner Bros. means the chances of a continuation of the much-loved sci-fi series will improve. But creator J. Michael Straczynski has calmed excitement, insisting there’s a long road ahead for any positive developments.

Warner Bros. owns Babylon 5, which has remained largely dormant since the iconic space opera ended in 1998 after five seasons. Despite efforts to get a revival off the ground, nothing new appears to be in the works, but some fans have expressed hope that Netflix may be interested in Babylon 5 should its deal to buy Warner Bros. goes through.

However, Straczynski outlined the many hurdles Babylon 5 must overcome before Netflix — or any company for that matter — might greenlight its return. As for now, there is nothing in the works. “The studio is contractually required to notify me if anything is put forward on B5,” Straczynski tweeted. “No such call has come.”

But would Netflix even be interested in Babylon 5 should it come to own it? Does Netflix need a sci-fi show right now? It would have plenty of competition within the Warner Bros. library even if Netflix decided to go down the sci-fi show route, Straczynski said.

“Yes B5 is a space/SF show and it's always good to have those,” Straczynski explained. “But the Warner IP also includes V, Flash Gordon, 2001, Firefly, Blade Runner, Gravity (both via acquisition), Forbidden Planet, Mad Max and the DC catalog among hundreds more. So let's see if the deal passes first.”

Straczynski is certainly keen, based on his tweets. “Nothing could make me happier if this happened, but things have to run their course: finalize the deal, get the show lists from Warners, check chain of title on prospects, review video sales, ratings, merchandise prospects, minimax profit reports, required elements, how much money various divisions can put in, what the prior worldwide distribution looked like… on and on and on… then and only then will they have a list of viable prospects to choose from,” he cautioned. “It's not ‘wouldn't it be cool if’... it's ‘how do we make money and control the property?’”

The upshot is, according to Straczynski, that more Babylon 5 is “a possibility, but that's all until the dust settles after the acquisition by Netflix. And Warners has a ton of other library titles. So we'll see, but again, this will take time.”

This isn’t the first time there has been talk of a Babylon 5 reboot. In 2021, The Hollywood Reporter said a "from-the-ground-up reboot" was in development for The CW with original creator Straczynski in place as writer and executive producer. This new version would have reportedly revolved around series protagonist John Sheridan as he takes command of Babylon 5 — a diplomatic station built in the wake of a devastating war with an advanced alien race.

So what happened to the reboot? Straczynski said it’s dead in the form that was described — that is, the CW reboot script is dead.

“The problem we ran into was three-fold: first, it's rare when network A picks up a show from another network unless it's been a big hit or it has major talent attached to it. That wasn't the case here it was just a script,” he explained. “Second, the well-documented paralysis that would grip Hollywood for the next several years was already starting to make itself known and buying was slowing down across the board. Third, that the project came from the CW was a liability with streamers who felt that a show that could air on the CW wouldn't work for them. But the studio believed in the project and felt it was important to try anyway.

“It took almost a year for the studio lawyers to claw back the rights to the scripts (different entities, lots of legal aspects), then lay out a plan for where to take it and who at that place should see it. (One twatcaster said the other studios had said no at the very moment when I was literally looking at an email with the last roster of names for submission in the coming months; meaning the other studios hadn't even *seen* it yet.) The studio took its best shot, but given the three issues noted above, we knew it was an uphill climb, and it bounced.”

So what does this mean for the future? “Actually, it doesn't mean anything one way or another,” Straczynski said. “Lots of TV shows go through whole slews of pilot scripts before one breaks through. It's commonplace. But you kind of have to wait a while before going back to the well. When that happens, there will be questions like: do we do a version of this that's network friendly, or for a streamer? Because as above, if you write for one you tend to preclude the other, as a CW script wouldn't work for one of them.”

But is a Babylon 5 reboot with another script possible? “Absolutely,” Straczynski insisted. “Not just possible but likely over time. The TV business is slowly starting to pull itself out of the malaise that's gripped it for the last five years, and there are a lot of deck chairs being moved around on a lot of boats, and you don't want to sell something to an exec who gets replaced in a sale because the new order will kill that project at once to put their own stamp on it. So there's merit in waiting.

“That said, do I think that the B5 universe will continue in one fashion or another, sooner or later, maybe sooner? Yes, I do. And when that should happen, I will break the news to the fans honestly and straightforwardly, just as I have for the last 30 years.”

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

Read the whole story
Jagmas
48 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

The best Game Pass games to play first in 2026

1 Share

The new year is upon us, and it'll bring with it dozens of exciting games we're looking forward to. While the usually quiet month of January is actually packed with new releases in 2026, the beginning of the year is also a great time to clear out some of the backlog, especially if games on that backlog are set to leave Game Pass.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
51 minutes ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 player spends 8 hours defeating endgame boss

1 Share

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 can be challenging enough, and its free DLC introduced some even tougher bosses for players to challenge (and die to). The developers at Sandfall Interactive surely knew those added endgame bosses would pose quite a threat for even level 99 players, but they likely didn't expect anyone to spend eight straight hours defeating one. Yet, that's exactly what one Expedition 33 player did.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
2 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

The ‘Super Flu’ Is Hitting Kids Hard—and Some Aren’t Surviving

1 Share
Several states have reported their first pediatric flu deaths this week.

Read the whole story
Jagmas
2 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

Beloved dark fantasy ARPG Grim Dawn gets a new look a decade on, complete with a "controversial change" for Diablo fans

1 Share

Next month marks ten years since the launch of Grim Dawn, Crate Entertainment's dark fantasy ARPG that sits alongside the likes of Titan Quest, Last Epoch, and Torchlight 2 as one of the best games like Diablo that aren't called Path of Exile. 2026 is already set to be Grim Dawn's biggest year in quite a while, bringing us its third expansion, Fangs of Asterkarn. However, with the base game now a decade old, the developer has just unveiled a major UI redesign, and it's also about to free up a huge chunk of your stash.

Read the full story on PCGamesN: Beloved dark fantasy ARPG Grim Dawn gets a new look a decade on, complete with a "controversial change" for Diablo fans



Read the whole story
Jagmas
3 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete

New PS5 and PS4 jailbreak exploits trigger a 1,000% surge in prices for an obscure remaster of the 24-year-old Star Wars Racer Revenge, with copies reaching $300

1 Share

There have been a variety of developments in the PS5 hacking scene over the past handful of days, and it's all pointing to a happy new year for jailbreakers – and owners of the disc edition of Star Wars Racer Revenge for PS4. This game is at the center of a new exploit allowing PS5 and PS4 jailbreaks, and the news has sent prices for the game skyrocketing on eBay.

PS5 and PS4 jailbreaks have been possible for years, but most of them have some serious caveats, requiring you to start from a console running old firmware. An exploit called mast1c0re allows hackers to jailbreak these consoles through the relatively modern 12.0 firmware series, which means much more recent consoles can be hacked.

There's just one problem with mast1c0re – it requires you to own the PS4 version of the PS2 game Okage: Shadow King, which is a digital-only release. You can't download software without signing into the PlayStation Network, and you can't sign into PSN without a firmware update which, in turn, would break the exploit. Unless you already had Okage installed on a 12.0 system, mast1c0re is out the window if you want to jailbreak your console.

Since mast1c0re relies on Sony's PS2 emulator, the real magic bullet would be a version that could be used through a disc-based PS4 version of a PS2 game. You'd be able to install a disc-based game on either a PS4 or PS5 without having to connect to the internet.

That, of course, is what's just happened for Star Wars Racer Revenge. On December 31, a member of the PlayStation hacking scene called Gezine posted a video demonstrating mast1c0re running through the 2002 Star Wars racing game. This version of the hack has not yet been released publicly, but it represents what could be a far more accessible way of jailbreaking PS4 and PS5 consoles.

But there is a catch: the physical PS4 version of Racer Revenge was issued through boutique publisher Limited Run Games. The game is no longer being manufactured, and it's estimated that less than 10,000 copies of the disc are out there.

Prior to news of this new exploit making the rounds, copies of Racer Revenge were regularly selling for about $30. Now, sales have exploded in volume and value, with some prices reaching as much as $300. Some listings have gone up for as much as $400, and while buyers aren't yet biting at that price, it's clear that anybody who happened to add the PS4 version of Racer Revenge to their collection ages ago are now sitting on a gold mine, all because of the promise of an exploit that hasn't even yet been released to the public.

That's not even the only jailbreak news for Sony consoles this week. The end of 2025 also saw the leak of the PS5 ROM keys which, as our friends at Tom's Hardware note, could open the door to even easier hardware exploits in the future.

Our list of upcoming Star Wars games includes a major new addition to the galactic racing lineage, but I'm guessing Sony would be happier if it didn't have anything to do with this whole jailbreak thing.



Read the whole story
Jagmas
3 hours ago
reply
Round Rock, Texas
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories