James McAvoy, the young X-Professor in the X-Men series, recently starred in a 12-minute time loop adventure game, which is why he discussed the game in an interview with Forbes.
As it turns out, as a young and lesser-known actor, McAvoy played The Elder Scrolls 4: Annihilation for a long time. "It was a game I always loved when I was a kid," he said, "role-playing games, Zelda, Legend of the Sacred Sword, stuff like that." I really like fantasy rpg games. ”
His love of Rolling 4 became a problem because he was playing Anne Hathaway's lover in the period drama Becoming Jane Austen. "I have to go to bed at 10 p.m. because I get up at 6 a.m. every morning," McAvoy explains, "and I have a lot of lines and a lot of other work to prepare." But I stayed up late until four in the morning to play Annihilation. "When he ended the night at 5:35 a.m., 10 minutes before a car arrived to take him to the set, it got him in trouble. To solve this problem, he turned on his gas stove. "I just put the disc on top of it and watched it burn and melt a little bit. I thought, 'Well, we're done, we're done, we're done, we're never going to play again!' '”
That was the end of his Addiction to Annihilation. Interestingly, in four years' time McAvoy will play Professor X, a role originally played by Patrick Stewart, who voiced the character Yuriel Septin VII in Annihilation.
Although McAvoy vowed not to play games at the time, he has recently started "true incense" again. He regularly plays Call of Duty: Warzone to keep in touch with his friends. "During the pandemic," he said, "my guys and I are all in our 40s with gray hair, baldness, and all kinds of problems with getting old." We now chat every two or three nights, playIng Warzone, we chat about life, love, everything, while being beaten to tears by 12-year-olds from other countries. ”