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Is Call of Duty losing its grip on gamers?

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engadget.com

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Fri, Jan 19, 2024 01:18 PM

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It's Friday, January 19, 2024. A Call of Duty game sells. That’s what it does. And it usually

[The Morning After]( It's Friday, January 19, 2024. A Call of Duty game sells. That’s what it does. And it usually tops the sales charts, almost every year since 2009. However, last year was a bit different: Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III [landed in second place](. To convey the gravitational pull of CoD, when Microsoft was fighting to buy Activision Blizzard – publisher of the game series — the Xbox maker had to make concessions and ensure the games would come to PlayStation and other platforms to[make the purchase happen](. This time around, however, Hogwarts Legacy — a game not without its own controversies — beat it to the top spot. It did benefit from being the only Harry Potter game in a decade. In that time, there have been 11 Call of Duty releases. Headlines aside, the series will be fine. Another thing worth noting: 2022’s Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II still took the number seven spot. — Mat Smith You can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox. [Subscribe right here!]( The biggest stories you might have missed [Take a look at the sharpest image of a black hole yet]( [Ayaneo’s latest mini PC looks just like an old-school NES]( [Bose Ultra Open Earbuds clip onto your ears and cost $300]( [Indiana Jones and The Great Circle is coming to Xbox and PC ‘later this year’]( [Instagram will start telling night owl teens to close the app and go to sleep]( Younger users won’t be able to turn off the Nighttime Nudges. Instagram’s latest mindfulness feature targets teens. When a younger user scrolls for more than 10 minutes in Reels or their DMs, the app will suggest they close the app and get to bed. Nighttime Nudges will automatically appear on teen accounts, and it won’t be possible to switch them off. Instagram didn’t specify whether the feature will be for all teenagers or just under 18s. Could we get it for us over 18s too? [Continue reading.]( [Apple’s Vision Pro won’t have access to YouTube and Spotify apps at launch]( Users will have to access them from a browser. [TMA] Engadget According to Bloomberg, Google’s YouTube and Spotify don’t have any plans to develop an application for Apple’s Vision Pro, at the moment. YouTube won’t make its iPad app available for download on the headset, either. For these apps — including Netflix — users will have to watch things through the web browser. In most cases, this will mean losing the ability to watch or listen to content offline. According to MacStories, Meta’s Instagram and Facebook might also be missing from the Vision Pro’s app store. Companies might be waiting to see whether it’s worth dedicating resources for the $3,500 headset — the Apple Watch took time to generate its own app library. [Continue reading.]( [The Rabbit R1 will offer up-to-date answers powered by Perplexity’s AI]( No, I haven’t heard of Perplexity either. [TMA] Rabbit The Rabbit R1 launch left many questions unanswered, with some of us wary of it being the[vaporware candidate]( from this year’s CES. Now, Rabbit has revealed which LLM (large language model) will power the device’s interaction: Perplexity. Fortunately, you won’t need to pay for a subscription. The first 100,000 R1 buyers will receive a year of Perplexity Pro, for free. This advanced service adds file upload support, a daily quota of over 300 complex queries. Perplexity is a San Francisco-based startup with investment from NVIDIA and Jeff Bezos. [Continue reading.]( The Morning After is a daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't [subscribe](. Craving even more? [Like us on Facebook]( or [follow us on Twitter](. Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? [Send us a note.]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Youtube]( [Instagram]( You are receiving this email because you opted in at [engadget.com](. Not interested anymore? [Unsubscribe from this newsletter.]( Copyright © 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved.

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