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‘Marvel Rivals' Is Making Ultron a Lean, Mean, Healing Machine

‘Marvel Rivals' Is Making Ultron a Lean, Mean, Healing Machine

Gizmodo22-05-2025

Marvel Rivals has had a bit of a support problem in its latest season. Amid the glitz and glamor of Emma Frost's arrival and the Hellfire Gala, the hero shooter's sophomore season aimed to try and reign in a meta that had seen the game's cast of strategists—the healing and support heroes in the game's riff on the classic Tank/Healer/DPS triangle—become dominantly powerful, with balance updates that saw support characters face longer cooldowns, smaller health pools, and even a rebalancing of how the game weighted support contributions to end-of-match rewards. That and the general hero-shooter-reputation of support players feeling undervalued by their teams caused a lot of ire (and even calls for a strike), to the point that developer NetEase began reverting some of the tweaks it made.
But while those have somewhat calmed the ire of angsty strategist mains, it seems like they're getting a big bone thrown to them with Rivals' latest addition, Ultron, a strategist who seemingly asks: aren't you tired of being nice? Don't you just want to go apeshit?
Although we've known since the start of the season that Ultron would be Rivals' mid-season addition to the roster, today NetEase lifted the lid on our first proper look at him in action, and it seems like he's going to be a maligned support player's dream. First up, he's pretty aggressive, with both his primary fire looking quite mean and his nature as the first flying strategist hero letting him chase down foolhardy duelists who wanted to try and pick off a support. That flight also gives him a nifty escape option, as we get to see him boost out of and away from being pinned by Wolverine's perpetually annoying leap attack, too.
But all that aggro doesn't mean Rivals players will seemingly have to fear 'DPS Ultrons' who don't balance their damaging abilities with healing output. Ultron will be able to tag allies with a healing drone that provides sustained healing over time in a radius around the tagged teammate, while he keeps attacking, and what looks like a temporary shield buff that grants overhealth to mitigate incoming damage. And if that wasn't enough, his ultimate lets Ultron call in a host of drones to fire a volley of beam blasts that simultaneously heal allies and and harm foes. Sometimes the best way to heal your friends is to obliterate anything that threatens to damage them in the first place!
Time will tell just how Ultron slots into Marvel Rivals' meta, but you can probably to expect to suddenly see a lot more support mains in your lobbies when he arrives alongside the season 2.5 update next week starting May 30.

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  • Digital Trends

Games weren't better when you were younger, you've just experienced more

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At the start of the game, Sam meets the President of the Automated Public Assistance Company or APAC. The company is bankrolling Draw Bridges and Sam's effort to connect Australia to the Chiral Network. APAC also owns APAS, a system used throughout the game to improve Sam's performance and skills. Toward the end of the game, The President confides in Sam through a private channel that he believes there is someone working against them. He tells Sam not to inform the others. It ends up that The President, however, is not to be trusted, and he wasn't real in the first place. The President, who has been working with Sam, is just another robot controlled by an entity referred to as APAS 4000. Sometime in the past, there was a voidout that killed 4,000 people and these souls somehow converged with the APAS AI system that handled deliveries. The APAS 4000 then went about concocting a plan to make humans into souls that would be trapped in the world of the dead. APAS 4000 views this as reclaiming the world before there was a Death Stranding, but it would ultimately kill all humans. Higgs is back. Kojima Productions/Screenshot by CNET What is Higgs up to? Higgs continues to want to see the world destroyed. He said he has been alone for tens of thousands of years on the Beach after being given the choice to stay by Fragile at the end of the first game. Then APAS 4000 brought him back from the Beach to have him compel Sam to work with Draw Bridges and connect Australia. They even provided him with a Ghost Mech army. Higgs, however, had plans of his own. His ultimate plan was to do the Last Stranding, an event where everyone would die and humans would go extinct. This is what Sam prevented in the first Death Stranding game, but with Tomorrow, Higgs could try again because she is an extinction entity, which is a being that will bring out an extinction event. He ultimately failed at his plan and was killed when Lou, in a giant baby form, ate him. What's with Die Hardman's dance? It's Kojima. Just go with it. Death Stranding 2 is out now, exclusive for the PS5 and costs $70.

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