
GTA 6 release date sparks panic as rival companies fear new delay
Rockstar's newly announced launch date for GTA 6 has led to panicked meetings at other studios, as they try to dodge its blast zone.
You may have already heard, but after originally being slated for autumn 2025, Rockstar has pushed back the launch of GTA 6 to May 26, 2026.
We already knew publishers were trying to avoid the game's release date, with the likes of Ghost of Yōtei and Marathon now no longer in the firing line, but the delay has reportedly caused a new wave of panic for those that were planning to launch games next year.
In theory, announcing the May date, over a year in advance, should give companies plenty of time to pivot, but uncertainty around whether GTA 6 could be delayed again has led to some 'emergency meetings'.
In a report on Bloomberg, the delay of GTA 6 is likened to a 'massive game of 4D chess' which is 'playing out across the entire video game industry', as business executives try to assess whether Rockstar 'will actually finish the game in time'.
According to the report, various unnamed studios working on games slated for autumn 2026 are 'praying that Rockstar doesn't slip again', while others are hoping for the opposite 'so they have an excuse to delay to 2027 and score more time'.
One developer on a 'big multiplayer game' previously delayed their release date from autumn 2025 to spring 2026, a decision partially made to 'get far away' from GTA 6. Now, however, it is 'caught in a vice' due to the costs of delaying the game for a second time.
During its latest earnings call, EA CEO Andrew Wilson seemed newly positive about the release window for the next Battlefield, in light of GTA 6's delay. The shooter is set to launch at some point before March 2026, at least two months clear of Rockstar's juggernaut.
However, others aren't quite so scared. Publisher Devolver Digital said it is planning to launch a game on the same date as GTA 6, although given the studio's history it's unclear if it is just a stunt for internet giggles.
While GTA 6 is inevitably going to suck up attention when it is released, it's unclear whether it will have detrimental impact on other games releasing around the same time.
When GTA 5 came out on September 17, 2013, FIFA 14 was still released a week later, with Nintendo's The Legend Of Zelda: The Wind Waker HD and The Wonderful 101 on the Wii U also out within days of the game.
However, Activision previously released 2018's Call Of Duty: Black Ops 4 roughly a month earlier than usual to avoid Rockstar's last game, Red Dead Redemption 2. The latter went onto to become the best-selling game of that year, beating Black Ops 4, so there's good reason to avoid Rockstar's blast radius.
The unprecedented success of GTA 5 (210 million copies sold, as of February this year), coupled with a less stable industry than 2013, means GTA 6 will launch in very different circumstances, when compared to its predecessor.
For some within the industry, the impact of GTA 6 doesn't represent a much-needed boost in general interest, that will be good for everyone, but another 'forever' title which will suck away attention from all the other games in the years to come.
It's so strange how people talk like GTA 6 is going to be the shot in the arm that the game industry needs. How does a GTA 6 release benefit any game company other than Rockstar? Trickle down theory doesn't work. I don't care if "the industry" makes $6b, I care whether a wider variety of games sell. — Brandon Sheffield (@brandon.insertcredit.com) 2025-05-06T18:03:19.073Z
In a post on Bluesky, Brandon Sheffield, director at Necrosoft Games, wrote: 'It's so strange how people talk like GTA 6 is going to be the shot in the arm that the games industry needs. How does a GTA 6 release benefit any game company other than Rockstar? Trickle down theory doesn't work. I don't care if 'the industry' makes $6 billion, I care whether a wider variety of games sell. More Trending
'GTA 6 releasing does the opposite of helping the industry in my view – it will become another forever game like Fortnite that draws eyes away from new releases, and becomes one of the only games the general public plays, to the exclusion of all else. Delay it forever as far as I'm concerned!'
As for whether GTA 6 could be pushed back again beyond May 2026, Rockstar has often delayed its games several times before launch. In the past, it has typically launched new games in the second half of the year, but there are some exceptions to the rule, with the original Red Dead Redemption launching in May 2010 and GTA 4 in April 2008.
The delays aren't unusually as long as a year though, which gives some hope that this will be the only one for GTA 6.
Following the announcement of the delay, Rockstar released the second trailer for GTA 6, which features a wealth of hidden details.
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Metro
14 hours ago
- Metro
Games Inbox: Are you getting a Nintendo Switch 2 next week?
The Friday letters worries about what Elden Ring Nightreign means for The Duskbloods, as one reader fears for the future of Codemasters. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@ The big decision If this is shown on Thursday we'll be exactly a week away from the Nintendo Switch 2 launch and I still haven't decided whether I want it or not. Ignoring the problem of whether you can find one or not I'm still not decided. It's a lot of money and I'm not really interested in anything this year but Mario Kart and Metroid Prime 4. Admittedly, they probably will be two amazing games but it's always difficult with a new console, knowing when to pull the trigger and trying to be strong enough to resist the fear of missing out. My gut feeling is that I'll cave in within the next couple of days, but I guess I'll see. I do wish Nintendo would reveal more about Metroid Prime 4 though, as I feel we haven't heard much about it yet. If we had more info/footage I'd feel a bit more confident about spending all that money for a day one purchase. Spooner Bad omen I'm not surprised to see the mostly negative reviews for Elden Ring Nightreign, from the more reliable sources, and I agree that it must've started out as DLC. I can't be too angry, because it's at least not too expensive, but it does harm FromSoftware's reputation and seems to overall be a waste of time. More than that though, it makes me worry about The Duskbloods. I'm sure that's a bigger budget affair but some of the problems with Nightreign, like needing a super skilled and committed team to play with, are not things that can be fixed with more budget, they're just fundamentally bad ideas brought on by From's dedication to difficult games. That's fine when you're only wasting your own time, but I don't see how it's ever going to work in multiplayer if you're working in a team. I guess we'll see but I don't have a good feeling about it. Tacle Change of plans It's felt like EA has wanted to back out of making these Marvel games almost as soon as they got the licence. I bet the only reason they're carrying on with the Iron Man one is because it's further along, and the games industry is a big believer in the sunk cost fallacy. Although, to be fair, the Black Panther plot did sound pretty bad. T'Challa has been kidnapped by Skrulls and you have to play as a bunch of other people, including his son. But… why? Why couldn't they just do a normal story with you playing as him? It's not like the character has been removed from the comics, it's only the MCU where it's a problem. Or maybe that was a genius set-up and we'll just never know. If I was anyone at EA working on a licensed game though, I'd be polishing up my CV right about now, because the second the third Star Wars Jedi game is done they're going to jettison all those people into space too. So you can forget all your hopes about Battlefield 3. Hanson Email your comments to: gamecentral@ Disobeying orders I have received an email from GAME saying my Switch 2 order has been cancelled as payment 'was not able to complete successfully'. So initially I think, did I enter my details incorrectly? But no, I did enter the details correctly, so all a bit odd. I checked and it appears this is happening to other GAME pre-orders as well. GAME would not have been my first choice for pre-order, and I am aware of their HQ closing, but they were one of the few retailers with stock when I ordered. Silly me, yes. GAME's online help is useless, and I can't even get into my account with GAME to review the order, so assume it is now cancelled. Have any other GC readers had their pre-orders cancelled by GAME? Mawgan PS: Just an update – GAME have posted on their Facebook and Twitter feeds about the (what looks like) widespread cancellation of Switch 2 pre-orders. GC: Yep, unfortunately it's a pretty widespread problem. Second edition I am interested in getting Fantasy Life i and whilst it seems to be getting a good reception, I haven't seen any reviews from websites I trust. Will you guys be reviewing it? I find your reviews the most informative and always use them when weighing up a new gaming purchase. I am considering getting Fantast Life i as a Switch 2 launch title but was hoping to read your thoughts before committing. Separately, I can't believe it's only a week until the Switch 2 launch now. I got my pre-order in early from Amazon and I am very excited to play Mario Kart World, as well as the hopefully many other great Nintendo games to come over the next few years. Pigfish2 (PSN ID/NN ID) GC: Thank you. If we get a chance we'll try and look at the Switch 2 Edition, but it's not actually confirmed to be a launch title in the UK yet – even though we suspect it will be. Double launch I really think we have to be ultra conservative when it comes to expectations about Nintendo at Sumer Game Fest. In my opinion, the chances of them showing anything at a Geoff Keighley event when they'll probably have their own a week later is minuscule. The worst thing is that everyone is going to get worked up into imagining all these amazing new reveals and the 'secret Christmas game' and then blame Nintendo for not announcing it, even though they never promised anything. I agree that the most likely outcome will be nothing but a montage and a bit of on-stage banter. If we're really lucky we'll get a hint at a new game for next year but nothing else. They're not going to announce a big new game out of nowhere for this year because there's not the time to build up the hype for it and, most importantly, they'll still be pushing Mario Kart World by the time it gets to Christmas. June is a weird time to launch a console for a reason. Very few people are spending money on consoles at that time of the year so really this autumn is going to be the second launch of the Switch 2 and there's no need to complicate that with another big game, when most non-gamers will barely, if it all, be aware the console exists until they start thinking about presents for the year. Casper Physical treasureJust a quick message to say Metro Redux 2033 is free on Xbox until May 30th. It is not currently free on PlayStation Store, unfortunately. Andrew J. PS: Just seen recently you can pre-order Another Crab's Treasure physical version on Amazon and iam8bit. I've been waiting to pick this up on physical for PlayStation 5, after GameCentral's good review of the game a while back. I'm in danger So it sounds like Codemasters is going to shut down by EA, just a few years after they outbid Take-Two for them, for a $1.2 billion. So… what was the point of that? I imagine the Codemasters' driving games are pretty consistent in sales – they're always high quality and the audience is always there – so what was EA expecting? What it probably means is that Codies has just been sacrificed to ensure EA's graphs keep pointing up (there was already talk about 'growth' in the story) after EA Sports FC 25 and Apex Legends didn't do so well. You don't need me to tell you how shortsighted and dumb this is but what happens next year when they also need to show growth? They keep doing it and they'll soon have no one left to make any of their games. They already publish far fewer than they used to, so if something big like EA Sports FC even just underperforms the whole company is in trouble, as we see. Ubisoft are already on the edge of the cliff, EA are going to be half the size they used to be if they keep this up… the truth is the triple-A video games business is dying and it's so far gone I don't think anything can help it now. Imagine a future where the only independent publisher is Take-Two, because they've got GTA, and everyone else is either owned by someone else or is basically an indie publisher. Maybe that wouldn't be so bad in itself but just look how far we've fallen! Focus Inbox also-ransMaybe I've missed something but why is it called Pokémon Legends: Z-A? Seems a pretty bad name to me, if no one knows what it means. Ansel GC: We don't think they've ever said exactly but it seems to be to do with tournament ranking (starting at Z and going up to A) and as a reference to the legendary pokémon Zygarde. Little heads up but Hasbro are releasing a line of figures based on Marvel characters from Marvel Vs. Capcom and they look dead on. No Capcom characters but you should be able to find plenty of them in the same scale. Gorf More Trending Email your comments to: gamecentral@ The small print New Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers' letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content. You can also submit your own 500 to 600-word Reader's Feature at any time via email or our Submit Stuff page, which if used will be shown in the next available weekend slot. You can also leave your comments below and don't forget to follow us on Twitter. MORE: Games Inbox: When will the new Tomb Raider be revealed? MORE: Games Inbox: What review score will Mario Kart Worlds get? MORE: Games Inbox: Are video games too expensive on console and PC?


The Sun
15 hours ago
- The Sun
On stage, I become a romanticised, superhero version of me, says Matt Berninger as he opens up on solo album release
ANYONE who's seen Matt Berninger sing live will know that he has a commanding stage presence. Tall, elegant and blessed with a sumptuous baritone, The National's frontman looks every inch a rock star. 4 4 All 6ft 3in of him. With his beloved band, he's made acclaimed records for 25 years, headlined numerous festivals — and sung with Taylor Swift. And yet, as I discover and he admits, there's a very different person beneath the veneer. As he releases his second solo album, the soul-searching Get Sunk, he says: 'Sometimes, you must go into the world in character just to survive. 'To go on stage and be Matt Berninger of The National for two-and-a-half hours, you need armour. 'I become a romanticised, superhero version of me,' he continues via video call from Los Angeles, where he's rehearsing for his solo tour. 'It's especially odd for people like me who don't play the guitar, like the Bonos of this world. It can be particularly humiliating if you do it badly, you've got nothing to hide behind.' 'Get rid of the acting' Berninger, 54, is supremely aware that audiences 'can smell a fake a mile away'. 'After a while, you've got to take off that stupid costume because you start to get weird and become a dick,' he says. 'I've been through that. You even slip into caricature at home or on the school run. 'I have to tell myself, 'I'm not on stage right now so why am I singing to the garbage men?'' Berninger says things came to a head on The National's last tour. 'I just thought, 'Get rid of all the acting. If you're in a bad mood, talk about it. Don't pretend to be happy and confident if you're not.'' The reason I'm sharing these particular insights is because Get Sunk, five years in the making, brings the REAL Matt Berninger into sharp focus. Though he actually auditioned for acting roles during the pandemic — 'just trying to make the hustle but will never try again' — his song Breaking Into Acting, a duet with Meg Duffy (aka Hand Habits), deals openly with his 'scam' stage persona. 'I can't write a line unless it somehow rings with me emotionally,' he affirms when I ask about his refreshingly candid lyrics. Get Sunk is the follow-up to Berninger's solo debut, 2020's Serpentine Prison, and began life the same year just as the Covid pandemic upended his and all our lives. Unable to tour that record, his first without his National cohorts, he hunkered down in the Silver Lake district of LA with producer Sean O'Brien. They came up with another album's worth of songs, of which only four have survived — Inland Ocean, Junk, Little By Little and Times Of Difficulty. The last of these contains the lines: 'In times of heartache, get drunk/In times of tears, get sunk.' These sentiments proved prophetic, as you'll discover when their author tells us what happened next. 'Yes, I even wrote that when Biden was president,' quips Berninger, suggesting he's not a fan of the present incumbent. He adopts a more serious tone and adds: 'We couldn't put out a new record out because I hadn't even been able to support Serpentine Prison. I didn't want another one to disappear into the void. 'So I did a year of nothing and got really depressed.' Berninger has talked about his battles with depression in the past but confesses that this bout proved particularly debilitating, and that it came with writer's block and crushing insomnia. 'Some antidepressants helped a little but I was sleepless for weeks and months at a time,' he says as he begins an unflinching description of his turmoil. 'Your brain melts down' 'Insomnia can really scramble your logic — you can't leave the bedroom, you can't look out the window but you also can't sleep. 'You just pace and your brain melts down. That's what happened to me.' Berninger vividly recalls being unable to leave the house: 'Sunlight depressed me, hummingbirds outside the window antagonised me. I had contempt for bumblebees because of their joy and because they didn't give a f* about all my problems. I was like, 'F* you!' 'That's what depression does to you. It's crazy and it took a healing process. 'I'd never been to the bottom before and I hope that was the bottom. I learned a lot. 'Am I back at the top? By no means. The bottom's not as far down as we think it is. It's always right there, really close. 'You could fall into a two-inch puddle and think you are at the bottom of the sea — but now I've got my neck above the waterline.' Berninger reveals that two things kickstarted his recovery process. 'Getting back with The National helped pull me out,' he says. 'And moving from California to Connecticut.' In 2023, he and his family, wife Carin Besser and teenage daughter Isla, upped sticks from LA's beachfront resort of Venice for a rural idyll in the East Coast state not far north of New York City. 4 That, in turn, led him to re-engage with his solo project and the songs started to flow again. Six new compositions were added to the original four and even most of those underwent rewrites with re-recorded vocals. 'I started to enjoy sunlight again and now I just can't get enough of it,' he enthuses. 'I don't have screens so hornets, bees and snakes come into the house and I kind of welcome them. I have reconnected to my love of life.' The call of the wild has long run strong in Berninger and that is reflected in Get Sunk songs Inland Ocean and Frozen Oranges, both beautifully realised and dripping with nostalgia. 'I've never been to a gym in my life but find me a park or a woods or a hill or a trail,' he says. During his childhood in Cincinnati, Ohio, he would spend bucolic holidays on his aunt and uncle's farm in nearby Indiana. 'I spent my wild youth with my older sister Rachel and my five cousins,' says Berninger, as the cherished memories come flooding back. 'We all had rifles' 'The seven of us would hike the railroad tracks to different towns, just like in the movie Stand By Me. 'We all had rifles. It was farm life and my aunt Elaine, also my godmother, was the matriarch. When I was about 12, I would chew tobacco in the fields while harvesting it with my cousins. 'I'd roll up the dried brown stuff, chew on it and get a buzz. I've been a nicotine aficionado ever since — though I don't smoke cigarettes any more.' Later, in the Eighties, the crop changed from tobacco to Christmas trees and Berninger remembers working among them through his college years. Berninger began writing about his time in Indiana before his move to Connecticut but his new surroundings had a profound effect. 'I started to tune into how I felt as a kid, all that time I spent in the woods, just staring at creeks and bugs and snakes. 'I like being more connected to it again. I like to take my shoes off and walk around barefoot — it does something.' However, Berninger adds that he wasn't the driving force behind his return to the East Coast. (He spent 15 years in Brooklyn during the formative years of The National). 'I had built a house in Venice and I thought I was going to be there forever,' he says. 'My daughter was about to go to high school and she's a big Gilmore Girls fan (the comedy set in a fictional Connecticut town). So it was really her and my wife's decision to move.' Once in his new and welcome surroundings, Berninger rediscovered his love of painting, and he began writing lyrics on old baseballs. 'Originally, I was more of a visual artist than a songwriter,' he says. 'I did a design programme at the University Of Cincinnati and worked as a designer in New York City for ten years. 'In The National, I ended up painting lists of songs and what we could do with them on whiteboards. The band's studios are filled with them. 'And I've been writing on baseballs for a long time because they take ink well and they feel good. 'I used to toss baseballs with my dad and now I do it with my daughter. It's more fun than writing in a notebook. It slows you down and makes you think differently.' If Get Sunk is the lyrically rich product of this unique process, it is also notable for guest appearances, including the aforementioned Hand Habits on Breaking Into Acting and Ronboy (Julia Laws) on the wistful Silver Jeep, also blessed with Kyle Resnick's sublime trumpet. There's also a reappearance by R&B legend Booker T. Jones (best known for Green Onions) who produced Serpentine Prison and plays organ and keyboards on self-deprecating Junk, gently pleading Little By Little and life-affirming finale Times Of Difficulty. I ask Berninger if he enjoys collaborating and my question prompts insights into some of The National's high profile friends. 'The first time The National brought anybody in was Sufjan Stevens because Bryce (Dessner) was doing a lot of work with him. That's how we met Annie Clark (St. Vincent). 'Sufjan brought so much — he added colour and energy. He gave us a way of thinking that changed our chemistry.' He adds: 'Obviously there's Taylor Swift and Phoebe Bridgers. These are huge stars but we knew these guys. 'Phoebe opened for us, one of the people we met in the trenches. Even Taylor I met six or seven years ago because she reached out and she was a fan. So it's kind of organic.' Berninger is at pains to point out that 'they're not plug-in names for the featuring credits. That's not how we work.' His bandmate, multi-instrumentalist Aaron Dessner, work- ed with Swift on her albums Folklore, Evermore and The Tortured Poets Department. And Berninger adds graciously: 'The National songs with Taylor on them are our most listened to songs in the world. 'I'm just stuff' 'If you put The National into Spotify, the first couple of songs are Taylor and Aaron songs but it all makes sense. 'We started out as five dudes from Ohio but now it feels like a giant community, much more than a band. 'Everyone in The National is a total blood sucker for talent and we want to be infected by those people's mastery.' That said, this moment is all about one man's voyage of self-discovery which has resulted in an album for the ages, Get Sunk. Water is an abiding theme of the record, whether 'it's rain, the ocean, a river, a puddle, ice in a glass, a frozen pond, snow' or 'fruit sustained by it like apples and oranges.' Berninger signs off in thought-provoking style: 'I stare into the deep end of swimming pools. I look out across the ocean all the time. I spend a lot of time in creeks. 'There's something unknowing about water but it is why we're all here on earth. It's life, it's death. A raindrop is a metaphor for heartbreak. 'Ultimately, love, bravery and kindness are the only things that will survive. It makes me happy knowing that means there's not much pressure on me. 'I'm just stuff. I'm just water and molecules.' Get Sunk ★★★★★


Scottish Sun
21 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Victoria Beckham reveals new tell-all documentary will show ‘tears' and ‘struggles' amid family rift
Find out what she said about her family taking part in the doc sharing all Victoria Beckham reveals new tell-all documentary will show 'tears' and 'struggles' amid family rift VICTORIA Beckham has revealed she will be giving fans a real insight her life in her upcoming documentary. The 51-year-old says it will show her 'tears' and 'struggles' - insisting nothing will be 'sugarcoated'. Advertisement 4 Victoria Beckham will be opening up about her life in her new doc Credit: Getty 4 The star will be lifting the lid on life with Becks Credit: Instagram It comes amid her family's bitter feud, which has seen Brooklyn Beckham separate himself from his once close-knit crew. Speaking in Bloomberg about her Netflix doc, which The Sun first revealed was happening last year, she explained: 'I've been very defined by a four-year period in my life when I was in the Spice Girls. And I am so proud of that. "But with that came all the preconceptions. I've been in the fashion industry creating my own collections for nearly 20 years. 'And it's taken this long for me to feel confident enough in what I do and my brand, knowing that now is the time that I can talk about my past. Advertisement Read More on the Beckhams NO WAY BECK? Beckhams fear there's no way back with Brooklyn after his latest move 'I can talk about the journey, I can talk about struggles, because I can do that confidently feeling it's not going to damage the brand. Nothing is sugarcoated.' She continued: 'There are tears. And it did occur to me the other day, what am I going to think when I see those tears on a huge screen? Or on an iPhone? To be completely honest, I am in the hands of the editor now.' And she confirmed her famous will be taking part, saying: 'They have filmed a little bit of David and the children because they're such a huge part of everything.' Victoria and her family have been left divided in recent months and things reached boiling point over the weekend when Brooklyn after he declared he 'would always choose' wife Nicola Peltz. Advertisement Brooklyn's public declaration is said to have been a dagger to his parents' hearts. Tensions bubbled over when Brooklyn did not publicly acknowledge fashion designer Victoria, 51, on Mother's Day. He then failed to show at any of David's 50th birthday parties. Victoria Beckham can't keep her hands off husband David as they dance in a restaurant on his 50th birthday 4 Victoria has said her children will appear Credit: Instagram 4 It is unclear if Brooklyn Beckham and wife Nicola will be able to attend Credit: brooklynpeltzbeckham/Instagram