We're with you if you're about to get ready to go into overdrive.

It's now possible to buy and play on your own TV or laptop loud enough for your neighbours to hear. You can now buy the film on a variety of platforms, even though streaming details are yet to be confirmed. The Top Gun sequel has made over one billion dollars at the global box office. At any rate, that warrants a great amount of filigree.

Tom Cruise reprises his role as Pete "Maverick" Mitchell in the new film. Bradley "Rooster" Bradshaw is the son of Nick "Goose" Bradshaw, who died in the first film, and he is being trained by him. One of the most poignant scenes in the film is when Tom "Iceman" Kazansky is seen.

Mav spent his time trying to make it up to Rooster while accidentally buying rounds for everyone at the bar, annoying his commander VADM Beau "Cyclone" Simpson, and preparing for a dangerous mission with the young pilots. The stunts in Top Gun: Maverick are some of the most ambitious and expensive stunts you can see in an action movie.

How do I watch Top Gun: Maverick online?

Top Gun is now available to buy from a number of websites, including Prime Video, Apple TV, and others.

A release date hasn't been announced, but it is expected to stream on Paramount+.

Is Top Gun: Maverick worth watching?

Joseph Kosinski's film has received mixed reviews but mostly positive feedback, and viewers seem to like it. It depends on whether you like the film's use of nostalgia or not.

Here is a part of the review by the deputy entertainment editor of Mashable.

In the moment, Top Gun: Maverick is a fun action movie that leans heavily on an audience's love of the original to carry it through. It's not only callbacks and returning characters, but repeated beats and soundtrack rehashing that make this not so much a sequel as a victory lap for the character and Cruise too. And honestly, that's pretty comforting entertainment. But should a movie about a life-or-death mission play it so safe?

Nostalgia is one thing, but rerunning the same plotlines, resuscitating the same archetypes, and coasting on the relics of pop culture past makes for a movie that feels sanitized instead of sensational, safe instead of sexy. Essentially, this franchise has lost that loving feeling. And with it gone (gone, gone), so too is a bit of the thrill. 

The high-flying trailer can be seen on the website. The trailer is one of the best of the year so far.

Anything else?

Kenny Loggins' "Playing With the Boys" is not in the original Top Gun, but it is in the remake. This isn't a scene like that. Loggins is jumping into frame with his guitar. You are welcomed.