• RSHPs 2,100-home Victorian gasworks scheme to progress after section 106 deal agreed
    www.bdonline.co.uk
    Berkeley Homes and Newham Council have reached an agreement over the schemeRSHPs plans to turn a Victorian gasworks in east London into a 2,100-home neighbourhood are set to go ahead after Berkeley Group completed a section 106 agreement with the local council.Proposals brought forward by St William Homes, a joint venture of the housebuilding giant and National Grid, were given the green light by Newham Council planners last July, but have only now reached an agreement over section 2016 commitments.The scheme in Bromley-by-Bow will see 72m invested in restoring the seven listed gasholders on the 23-acre brownfield sites.As a result of the works, the site will be made publicly accessible for the first time in 150 years, with 70% of the area turned into open space, including a 4.2-acre park on the River Lea.The development will include 13 separate residential buildings, several of which will sit within existing gasholder frames.St William Homes was set up in 2014 to build homes on redundant gas sites.Its managing director, Dean Summer, said: This is one of the most challenging brownfield sites in the country and transforming it into thousands of sustainable, well-connected homes and a publicly accessible 4.2-acre riverfront park was always going to require a unique, collaborative solution.It is a testament to our brilliant partnerships with Historic England and the London Borough Newham and the invaluable input we have received from residents that we have reached this milestone and that we move one step closer to realising this sites enormous potential.Private / public sector collaborations like these have never been more important as we continue to navigate challenging market conditions and work together to boost housing delivery and growth.St William has worked with Historic England to ensure key heritage features of the site would be protected.Craddys and Shepley Engineers, which worked on restoration projects at Big Ben and St Pancras, as well as the Kings Cross gasholders, have been advising the developers.
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  • City of Edinburgh Council framework 2025-29
    www.architectsjournal.co.uk
    The maximum four-year framework will cover a range of projects including housing, residential repairs, facilities management, and the refurbishment and construction of schools and nursery buildings. A total of 40 consultants will be appointed.The framework is divided into 11 lots including project management, building surveying, quantity surveying, architecture for education and non-residential, architecture for residential, landscape architecture, structural and civil engineering, mechanical and electrical engineering, fire engineering and consulting, multi-disciplinary design and transportation services.According to the brief: The City of Edinburgh Council wishes to appoint contractors to a framework agreement to deliver construction related professional services.AdvertisementPlease note that the councils, registered social landlords and other organisations named within the contract notice can also access the framework agreement for their requirements.Edinburgh is Scotlands second-most populous city with 500,000 inhabitants. The City of Edinburgh Council last updated its construction consultancy services framework in 2019.The latest framework will cover a range of residential and educational projects across the historic city and beyond. It will also be available for use by other local authorities, housing associations, and public bodies across Scotland.Bids for inclusion on the framework will be evaluated 70 per cent on quality and 30 per cent on cost. Architects applying for the residential and schools lots must have an annual average turnover of at least 1.1 million.Applicants must hold 10 million of employers liability insurance. 10 million of public liability insurance, and 2 million of professional indemnity cover.AdvertisementCompetition detailsProject title Greenwich Professional Services Consultancy Dynamic Purchasing SystemClient City of Edinburgh CouncilContract value 115 millionFirst round deadline Midday, 15 April 2025Restrictions Bidders will be required to provide relevant examples of services carried out during the last three years through two reference projects that demonstrate that they have the relevant experience in delivering the services as describedMore information https://www.find-tender.service.gov.uk/Notice/009057-2025
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  • Microsoft Adds Paywall for AI Features in Notepad and Paint
    www.cnet.com
    Users will need an active Microsoft 365 account to access some of the new AI features in these apps.
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  • Protect Your Money From Market Volatility. Today's CD Rates, March 17, 2025
    www.cnet.com
    CDs are a low-risk way to grow your savings in an uncertain economy.
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  • New Form of Parkinson's Treatment Uses Real-Time Deep-Brain Stimulation
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 17, 20254 min readNew Form of Parkinson's Treatment Uses Real-Time Deep-Brain StimulationA new form of adaptive deep-brain stimulation adjusts itself based on the brains unique signalsBy Susan Kreimer edited by Tanya Lewis Juan Gaertner/Science Photo Library/Getty ImagesFor decades, Keith Krehbiel took high doses of medications with a debilitating side effectsevere nauseafollowing his diagnosis with early-onset Parkinsons disease at age 42 in 1997. When each dose wore off, he experienced dyskinesiainvoluntary, repetitive muscle movements. In his case, this consisted of head bobbing and weaving. Krehbiel is among one million Americans who live with this progressive neurological disorder, which causes slowed movements, tremors and balance problems.But soon after surgery to implant electrodes into specific areas of his brain in 2020, his life dramatically improved. My tremor went away almost entirely, says Krehbiel, now age 70 and a professor emeritus of political science at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, whose Parkinsons symptoms began at age 40 and were initially misdiagnosed as repetitive stress injury from computer use. I reduced my Parkinsons meds by more than two thirds, he adds. And I no longer have a sensation of a foggy brain, nor nausea or dyskinesia.Krehbiel was the first participant to enroll in a clinical trial testing a new form of deep-brain stimulation (DBS), a technology that gained approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for Parkinsons tremor and essential tremor in 1997 (it was later approved for other symptoms and conditions). The new adaptive system adjusts stimulation levels automatically based on the persons individual brain signals. In late February it received FDA approval for Parkinsons disease based on results of the international multicenter trial, which involved participants at 10 sites across a total of four countriesthe U.S., the Netherlands, Canada and France.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.This technology is suitable for anyone with Parkinsons, not just individuals in clinical trials, says Helen Bronte-Stewart, the recent trials global lead investigator and a neurologist specializing in movement disorders at Stanford Medicine. Like a cardiac pacemaker that responds to the rhythms of the heart, adaptive deep-brain stimulation uses a persons individual brain signals to control the electric pulses it delivers, Bronte-Stewart says. This makes it more personalized, precise and efficient than older DBS methods.Traditional DBS delivers constant stimulation, which doesnt always match the fluctuating symptoms of Parkinsons disease, adds neurologist Todd Herrington, another of the trials investigators and director of the deep-brain stimulation program at Massachusetts General Hospital. With adaptive DBS, the goal is to adjust stimulation in real time to provide more effective symptom control, fewer side effects and improved patient quality of life.Current FDA approval of this adaptive system is for the treatment of Parkinsons only, not essential tremor, dystonia (a neurological disorder that causes excessive, repetitive and involuntary muscle contractions) or epilepsy, which still rely on traditional, continuous DBS, Herrington says.Our personalized treatment can control debilitating tremors for a person living with Parkinsons, says Ashwini Sharan, chief medical officer of the neuromodulation operating unit at Medtronic, the Minneapolis-based medical device company that manufactures this technology. Placed under the skin of the chest, a DBS device transports electrical signals through very thin wires to an area in the brain that controls movement.Neuroscientists have been on a decades-long journey to decode brain signals to personalize the deep-brain stimulation experience, says Michael S. Okun, national medical advisor to the Parkinsons Foundation, who was not involved in the study. The era of smart stimulation for Parkinsons disease has arrived, he adds, while cautioning that time will tell how well adaptive devices work, particularly for more challenging and frequently fluctuating symptoms.Many people will not require adaptive stimulation to fully optimize control of Parkinsons symptoms, but the new technology can make a big impact in select cases, says Okun, who is also executive director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases at University of Florida Health.Although this is a significant advancement, it is still too early to determine whether its efficacy is superior to that of existing DBS systems, adds Vibhash Sharma, a neurologist and medical director of UT Southwestern Medical Centers neuromodulation movement disorders clinic. More studies and data are needed to assess its effectiveness across a broader range of patients, says Sharma, who was not involved in the new research.The surgical technique for implanting a DBS device carries similar risks for conventional and adaptive systems. Theres a low risk of stroke, infection, hemorrhage and seizures during the placement of electrodes, Sharma says.People with such implants may also experience stimulation-induced side effectssuch as tingling, tightness or speech changesif the electrical current spreads to surrounding areas of the brain. Adjustments may be required to avoid these effects.John Lipp, another trial participant, said his use of the new system reduced the number of medications he takes for Parkinsons from 15 to four. The 59-year-old chief executive officer of a nonprofit animal shelter in Alameda, Calif., received the diagnosis in June 2015, a month shy of his 50th birthday. His main symptom was dystonia, which he describes as really intense muscle spasms and cramping.The dystonia almost disappeared after the device was implanted and turned on. When researchers initially made adjustments to the adaptive DBS settings as part of the study, he could feel his symptoms returning, but they subsided when the team made additional modifications.Adaptive DBS isnt a cure, Lipp says. There are a variety of nonmotor symptoms, including sleep disruption, that Im coping with on a daily basis, he notes, adding that his neurologist monitors and adjusts the stimulation in keeping pace with the diseases progression.Recognizing that exercise helps slow down progression, Lipp wanted to be as proactive as possible. He ran his first marathon in 2016. In the course of training, I lost weight, got stronger, and, ironically, got in the best shape of my life, he says.Lipp finished several marathons and half-marathons before his Parkinsons symptoms got in the way. Last November, thanks to improvement he attributes to this new technology, he crossed the New York City Marathons finish line for a second time. He plans to run the same marathon this year.
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  • Four Ways the COVID-Causing Virus Changed Science
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 17, 202510 min readFour Ways theCOVID-CausingVirus Changed ScienceAfter 150,000 articles and 17 million genome sequences, what science has taught us about SARS-CoV-2By Ewen Callaway & Nature magazine Erlon Silva - TRI Digital/Getty ImagesKei Sato was looking for his next big challenge five years ago when it smacked him and the world in the face. The virologist had recently started an independent group at the University of Tokyo and was trying to carve out a niche in the crowded field of HIV research. I thought, What can I do for the next 20 or 30 years?He found an answer in SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic, that was rapidly spreading around the world. In March 2020, as rumours swirled that Tokyo might face a lockdown that would stop research activities, Sato and five students decamped to a former advisers laboratory in Kyoto. There, they began studying a viral protein that SARS-CoV-2 uses to quell the bodys earliest immune responses. Sato soon established a consortium of researchers that would go on to publish at least 50 studies on the virus.In just five years, SARS-CoV-2 became one of the most closely examined viruses on the planet. Researchers have published about 150,000 research articles about it, according to the citation database Scopus. Thats roughly three times the number of papers published on HIV in the same period. Scientists have also generated more than 17 million SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences so far, more than for any other organism. This has given an unparalleled view into the ways in which the virus changed as infections spread. There was an opportunity to see a pandemic in real time in much higher resolution than has ever been achievable before, says Tom Peacock, a virologist at the Pirbright Institute, near Woking, UK.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Now, with the emergency phase of the pandemic in the rear-view mirror, virologists are taking stock of what can be learnt about a virus in such a short amount of time, including its evolution and its interactions with human hosts. Here are four lessons from the pandemic that some say could empower the global response to future pandemics but only if scientific and public-health institutions are in place to use them.Viral sequences tell storiesOn 11 January 2020, Edward Holmes, a virologist at the University of Sydney, Australia, shared what most scientists consider to be the first SARS-CoV-2 genome sequence to a virology discussion board; he had received the data from virologist Zhang Yongzhen in China.By the years end, scientists had submitted more than 300,000 sequences to a repository known as the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data (GISAID). The rate of data collection only got faster from there as troubling variants of the virus took hold. Some countries ploughed enormous resources into sequencing SARS-CoV-2: between them, the United Kingdom and the United States contributed more than 8.5 million (see Viral genome rally). Meanwhile, scientists in other countries, including South Africa, India and Brazil, showed that efficient surveillance can spot worrying variants in lower-resource settings.In earlier epidemics, such as the 201316 West African Ebola outbreak, sequencing data came in too slowly to track how the virus was changing as infections spread. But it quickly became clear that SARS-CoV-2 sequences would arrive at an unprecedented volume and pace, says Emma Hodcroft, a genomic epidemiologist at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute in Basel. She works on an effort called Nextstrain, which uses genome data to track viruses, such as influenza, to better understand their spread. We had developed so many of these methods that, in theory, could have been very useful, Hodcroft says. And all of a sudden, in 2020, we had an opportunity to put up and show up.Initially, SARS-CoV-2 sequencing data were used to trace the spread of the virus at its epicentre in Wuhan, China, and then globally. This answered key early questions such as whether the virus spread largely between people or from the same animal sources to humans. The data revealed the geographical routes through which the virus travelled, and showed them much more quickly than could conventional epidemiological investigations. Later, faster-transmitting variants of the virus started appearing, and sent sequencing labs into hyperdrive. A global collective of scientists and amateur variant trackers trawled through the sequence data constantly in search of worrying viral changes.It became possible to track the evolution of this virus in tremendous detail to see exactly what was changing, says Jesse Bloom, a viral evolutionary biologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Washington. With millions of SARS-CoV-2 genomes in hand, researchers can now go back and study them to understand the constraints on the viruss evolution. Thats something weve never been able to do before, says Hodcroft.Viruses change more than expectedBecause no one had ever studied SARS-CoV-2 before, scientists came with their own assumptions about how it would adapt. Many were guided by experiences with another RNA virus that causes respiratory infections: influenza. We just didnt have much information about other respiratory viruses that could cause pandemics, says Hodcroft.Influenza spreads mainly through the acquisition of mutations that allow it to evade peoples immunity. Because no one had ever been infected with SARS-CoV-2 before 2019, many scientists didnt expect to see much viral change until after there was substantial pressure placed on it by peoples immune systems, either through infections or better yet, vaccination.The emergence of faster-transmitting, deadlier variants of SARS-CoV-2, such as Alpha and Delta, obliterated some early assumptions. Even by early 2020, SARS-CoV-2 had picked up a single amino-acid change that substantially boosted its spread. Many others would follow.What I got wrong and didnt anticipate was quite how much it would change phenotypically, says Holmes. You saw this amazing acceleration in transmissibility and virulence. This suggested that SARS-CoV-2 wasnt especially well adapted to spreading between people when it emerged in Wuhan, a city of millions. It could very well have fizzled out in a less densely populated setting, he adds.A healthcare worker uses a pipette to process Covid-19 test samples at the SpiceHealth Genome Sequencing Laboratory set up at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi, India, on January 14, 2021.T. Narayan/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesHolmes wonders, also, whether the breakneck pace of observed change was merely a product of how closely SARS-CoV-2 was tracked. Would researchers see the same rate if they watched the emergence of an influenza strain that was new to the population, at the same resolution? That remains to be determined.The initial giant leaps that SARS-CoV-2 took came with one saving grace: they didnt drastically affect the protective immunity delivered by vaccines and previous infections. But that changed with the emergence of the Omicron variant in late 2021, which was laden with changes to its spike protein that helped it to dodge antibody responses (the spike protein allows the virus to enter host cells). Scientists such as Bloom have been taken aback at how rapidly these changes appeared in successive post-Omicron variants.And that wasnt even the most surprising aspect of Omicron, says Ravindra Gupta, a virologist at the University of Cambridge, UK. Shortly after the variant emerged, his team and others noticed that, unlike previous SARS-CoV-2 variants such as Delta that favoured the lower-airway cells of the lung, Omicron preferred to infect the upper airways. To document that a virus shifted its biological behaviour during the course of a pandemic was unprecedented, says Gupta.Omicrons preference for upper airways probably contributed to its clinical mildness its relatively low virulence compared with previous iterations. But that shift is hard to disentangle from the fact that Omicron struck after much of the world had begun to establish some immunity, says Bloom, and there is evidence that Omicron was just as nasty as the version of SARS-CoV-2 that emerged in Wuhan.And although Omicron and its offshoots were milder than Alpha, Beta and Delta, those had all proved more virulent than the lineage they replaced, toppling the idea that the virus would evolve to be less deadly. The idea that theres some law of nature that says that a virus is going to rapidly lose its virulence when it jumps into a new host is incorrect, Bloom says. Its an idea that never had much buy-in with virologists anyway.One of Satos big fears is that a drastically different SARS-CoV-2 variant will emerge and overcome the immunity that stops most people becoming severely ill. He worries that the result could be disastrous.Chronic cases could reveal insightsBefore Gupta turned his attention to SARS-CoV-2, his focus was HIV, which is ordinarily a lifelong infection. As a clinician, he had treated the second person ever cured of HIV through a blood stem-cell transplant. But his research group studied how antiretroviral drug resistance evolves over the course of months and years in people.Most scientists presumed that, unlike HIV or other long-term infections, respiratory viruses such as SARS-CoV-2 were acute, and those who survived their infections cleared the virus in a matter of days. Longer-term infections occur in influenza, but they seem to be an evolutionary dead end. The virus adapts to survive in the host, not to spread to others.But in late 2020, Gupta characterized a 102-day SARS-CoV-2 infection in a man in his 70s with a compromised immune system. The infection was ultimately fatal. In the mans body, the virus developed a high number of spike-protein changes. Many of these would also be observed in worrying variants, including the Alpha variant that sent case counts rocketing and prompted another wave of lockdowns in late 2020 and early 2021.The mans case didnt give rise to any widespread variant, but it gave Gupta, with his HIV evolution background, the idea that chronic infections could be a source of the drastic evolutionary leaps that characterized SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern. We didnt have the preconceptions the flu field had of what respiratory viruses do, he says.Alex Sigal, a virologist at the Africa Health Research Institute in Durban, South Africa, had a similar idea when another variant, called Beta, was identified in his country. South Africa has a high rate of HIV infections many of which go untreated and Sigal wondered whether it was more than a coincidence that Beta seemed to have emerged where there were high numbers of people who were immunocompromised.Omicron which was first detected by scientists in Botswana and South Africa strengthened the case that long-term infections are a source of variants. Omicron was also littered with spike mutations that had been observed in people who were immunocompromised. Researchers have observed similar evolution by tracking cryptic SARS-CoV-2 lineages identified in wastewater sampling but not seen elsewhere.No one has yet identified the precise source of Omicron or any of the major variants, but most scientists now think that they begin in people with chronic infections, during which the virus has time to string together otherwise improbable combinations of mutations that evade immunity and boost transmission (exactly how is an active area of research). Scientists, including Sigal, have begun studying immunocompromised individuals, including people with untreated HIV infections, to better understand the characteristics that can give rise to the viral evolution observed in variants such as Omicron.Researchers are also now asking whether chronic infections are important to the evolution of other pathogens, including the viruses that cause mpox, chikungunya, Ebola and RSV, a common respiratory virus that can cause severe disease in young children and older people. This is something that is a paradigm-shifting observation from COVID-19, and well now be looking for this in future pandemic viruses, says Gupta.A responsive way of doing scienceSato uses the term responsive science to describe how his lab operated during the pandemic. As soon as a worrying new variant was observed, researchers around the world and a number of highly skilled non-scientists started scouring the data. Satos team worked around the clock characterizing variants learning about their capacity to dodge immunity or spread from cell to cell and churning out data in days or weeks, rather than years. When another variant emerged, the cycle repeated.This was one of the first times where evolutionary biology became an applied science, says Bloom. His lab conducted deep mutational scanning experiments that probed the effects of tens of thousands of potential, predicted viral changes.The rush to study SARS-CoV-2 delivered effective vaccines, therapeutics, such as monoclonal antibodies, and actionable insights into the viruss spread. Peoples mindsets changed, says Sigal. If the same levels of data sharing, collaboration and urgent investment became common in other spheres such as cancer biology, he argues, it could save more lives.Susan Weiss, a virologist at the University of Pennsylvanias Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia who has studied coronaviruses since the late 1970s, says that the successful race to develop vaccines, especially those based on messenger RNA, was probably the most important lesson from the pandemic. But beyond that, she questions whether the rush to study SARS-CoV-2 created a knowledge base that scientists studying the basic biology of other coronaviruses can build on. Many labs have moved on from SARS-CoV-2. I dont know a lot of people who stuck with it, Weiss adds.Satos lab is still focused on SARS-CoV-2. Part of the move away from the virus is due to the lack of urgency and long-term funding. SARS-CoV-2 sequencing has levelled off: last year, fewer than 700,000 sequences were added to the GISAID repository.The experience of studying SARS-CoV-2 so intensely also left many scientists burned out, says Peacock. Its quite soul-destroying, because you just end up feeling like a production line rather than a science unit doing hypothesis-driven science. Hes now working on another potential pandemic-causing virus: H5N1 avian influenza.Many researchers are now asking what is the right level of sequencing for SARS-CoV-2 and other human and animal pathogens given scant resources and unknown threats. Peacock hopes for a deep reserve of capacity. Can we use that existing infrastructure to have a peacetime way of running things, but then can quickly ramp up to a wartime one? asks Peacock.Hodcroft would like to see more sequencing to monitor changes in viruses that people regularly encounter, such as RSV, seasonal coronaviruses or human metapneumovirus, which tend to cause mild respiratory infections. Paying close attention to diverse pathogens will broaden peoples understanding of where future threats might lurk. The virus behind the next pandemic could hold even bigger surprises than SARS-CoV-2 did.Yet some researchers worry that the opportunities presented by SARS-CoV-2 research are now being squandered, particularly in the United States after the election of President Donald Trump. With cuts to federal funding for public health and research, the intention to pull out from the World Health Organization and other upheavals, his administration has limited scientists ability to track and respond to infectious disease and to share information, they say. If you look at the policies that are being implemented, weve actually gone backwards, says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada.In the early days of the pandemic, it seemed as if politicians were open to the lessons to be learnt from SARS-CoV-2. In 2020, world leaders, including those in the United States, looked ready to establish a global pathogen surveillance network, Holmes says. The politics have mired it down, he says. Were actually in a worse place in terms of pandemic prevention than we were before the pandemic started.This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on March 12, 2025.
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  • Mortal Kombat 2 movie reveals best look yet at Karl Urban's Johnny Cage
    www.eurogamer.net
    Mortal Kombat 2 movie reveals best look yet at Karl Urban's Johnny CagePunch in.Image credit: Warner Bros. Pictures News by Victoria Kennedy News Reporter Published on March 17, 2025 Mortal Kombat 2 will be coming to theaters 24th October, and now we have a fresh look at the upcoming sequel.These latest images give us our best look yet at The Boys star Karl Urban as Johnny Cage, as well as Martyn Ford as Shao Kahn, Adeline Rudolph as Kitana and Hiroyuki Sanada, who is reprising his role as Scorpion.The 7 Best Game Franchise Revivals Ever. Watch on YouTubeJohnny's "integration into the Mortal Kombat story and universe is a big part of what this movie explores," NetherRealm's Ed Boon told EW. "He's a washed-up Hollywood guy thrown into this magical, ultra-violent thing. Karl, his depiction of Johnny Cage is different than our games in some ways."He's adding his own flare to it, but I think it'll feel fresh. There's like a novelty factor in there."Boon added Johnny's introduction in the film is "ridiculously hilarious", with the game developer stating his debut incited "some of the biggest laughs" during the film's early screenings. Image credit: Warner Bros. PicturesMortal Kombat 2's director Simon McQuoid said the movie team "wanted a character that wasn't just completely silly, comic book It's a character that could instantly go there and become too light and throwaway if we were to lean too much into the kind of cheese".The director believes Urban's casting has "allowed that character to have more depth". Image credit: Warner Bros. PicturesIn addition to Urban, Adeline Rudolph - who previously starred in Netflix's The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina - will play Princess Kitana. Meanwhile, fellow Sabrina alum Tati Gabrielle is Kitana's bodyguard, Jade.This is not Gabrielle's first foray into the video game adaptation scene. She also starred as Jo Braddock in 2022's Uncharted film adaptation, and has been cast in The Last of Us' second season as Nora, "a military medic struggling to come to terms with the sins of her past".Along with these new images, EW revealed new movie-accurate skins of characters including Urban's Johnny, Rudolph's Kitana, and Ford's Shao Kahn are coming to Mortal Kombat 1 some time later this year. Image credit: Warner Bros. PicturesEurogamer's former editor Wesley Yin-Poole wasn't overly keen on the first Mortal Kombat film when it came out a few years ago, calling it "boring"."There's just enough low-rent entertainment to prevent the Mortal Kombat movie from being a complete disaster, but it's tough to recommend when it costs 16 to rent online. A tenner straight to Blu-ray feels like a better fit," he wrote in Eurogamer's Mortal Kombat movie review.
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  • Power up your Gamer Network ID with our Steam Integration
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    Power up your Gamer Network ID with our Steam IntegrationGet the latest updates on your games without lifting a finger (well, maybe one or two). News by Craig Munro Digital Product Director, Gamer Network Published on March 17, 2025 We've been working on something that we hope you'll love -- especially if you're the kind of gamer who has a wishlist longer than a Final Fantasy cutscene (guilty as charged).Starting today, you can link your Steam account to your Gamer Network ID and get email alerts for articles about games in your Steam library and wishlist.So, what does that mean?Linking your Steam account means we'll know which games you play or are interested in. Then, you can set your account to follow the games in your Steam libary -- and whenever we publish news, reviews, guides, interviews, or updates about those specific games, we'll email you about it.No more scrolling through pages of articles hunting for that one bit of info about your favourite upcoming indie title or the latest patch for your go-to multiplayer game. If it's in your library or on your wishlist, we've got you covered. A snapshot of what a linked Steam library looks like. Don't judge my wishlist!Why link your Steam account?Stay in the loop: Get email updates about the games you actually play or want to play. No fluff, just stuff you care about.Discover more: Find out when we've got guides, features, or deals about games you're already invested in.It's easy: Takes just a few clicks, and you're good to go. No DRM, no loot boxes--just pure, tailored gaming content.How to link your Steam accountGo to the Steam library page in your account area.Hit the "Sign in with Steam" button.Your Steam library and wishlist will be linked to your account. Hit the "Follow all" buttons in the "Games from your wishlist" and "All games you own" sections to add your games to your interests list.Enable email alerting for content about your games at the bottom of the interests page.That's it! We'll email you whenever there's something new to read about games in your account.We built this because we want to make it easier for you to stay informed about the things you love, so whether you're deep into Baldur's Gate 3 or are counting down to the next Stardew Valley update, we hope you find it useful.Thanks for being part of our community -- and let us know what you think in the comments.
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  • This underrated Marvel Rivals character is secretly the most lethal DPS
    www.videogamer.com
    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereThe Duelists have emerged as undisputed stars in Marvel Rivals, capturing players with their high-octane powers and jaw-dropping plays. These heroes, as the damage-dealing backbone, dominate the battlefield, racking up kills and topping DPS charts in intense encounters. Duelists are the heroes spectators flock to, with their spectacular moves and crucial moments defining the games competitive edge, ranging from the blazing aerial attacks of Human Torch to the agile web-slinging tricks of Spider-Man.Recent patches, such as the March 13 balancing patch, have further added to their brilliance, with improvements to fan favorites like Iron Man and Human Torch confirming their place as meta-defining powerhouses. Despite the attention focused on these well-known figures, one hero is quietly outperforming them all.While the community debates the most bothersome or overpowered picksStorms 57% win rate on PC and platform raises concernsone Duelist is quietly altering the DPS narrative and dealing more damage in single shots than even Hawkeye.Squirrel Girl emerges as the highest damage-dealing DPS in Marvel RivalsMarvel Rivals players have seen Squirrel Girls abilities ever since she was released and have been treated as a regular B-tier hero who cant take on large fights in the game. However, with new Season 1 buff, shes become one of the best DPS with an ult so overpowered it can track enemies through walls.Squirrel Girls Ultimate is one of the deadliest in the game. Captured by VideoGamer.Players have taken it to Reddit to debate if shes canonically the most powerful character or not, surpassing the likes of Magik and Spider-Man in the game, both of whom shes easily defeated across Rivals matches. One such player described his experience playing her while saying, I was maining her last night. Good lord does she put out so much damage. I was getting double the amount of damage than the next teammate and way more Final Hits. She is an absolute menace on maps with choke points that start thinning especially. Ult those areas and that thing pinballs around shredding opposing teams.Other players who have had a similar experience playing with her, but in Ranked lobbies also wrote, Shes been one of the lowest win rate heroes in the game since release despite her buffs in S1. Shes better in the lower metal ranks, and shes not unplayable, mostly because anyone can make any hero work, theres some Black Widow one tricks in Celestial+. But shes not good once people know how to deal with her. Her win rate goes down with each rank division you go up. Shes just one of those heroes people find annoying even if theyre not good, like Jeff and Moon Knight. I dont think shell get nerfed. worse that happens is some of her power gets shuffled around.As per our experience, Squirrel Girl stands out as the fiercest DPS, quietly dominating with unrivaled damage output. Her explosive acorns unleash deadly area-of-effect blasts, shredding gathered foes and chipping away at tanks from a safe distance. She easily controls chokepoints with quick reloads and bouncing missiles, and her Squirrel Blockade holds enemies in place for simple eliminations. Squirrel Girl, an often-overlooked hero, mixes range, crowd control, and raw power, leading DPS statistics and demonstrating that beyond her whimsical exterior lies a deadly force.Marvel RivalsPlatform(s):macOS, PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series XGenre(s):Fighting, ShooterRelated TopicsMarvel Rivals Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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  • Baldurs Gate 3 publisher wants an official mature cartoon, but it needs to be comedy
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    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereLarian Studios Baldurs Gate 3 is not just an amazing adaptation of Dungeons and Dragons with amazing well-written characters and amazing art direction, but its also absolutely hilarious.While Larian is officially leaving Faerun behind as the studio works on its next game, BG3 director of publishing Michael Douse has expressed a desire to watch a full cartoon series based on the RPG.Baldurs Gate 3: The SeriesResponding to a fan animation on Twitter, Douse revealed their deep want of an official Baldurs Gate 3 cartoon that keeps the comedy vibes of the video game. While the game does go to some beautifully dark and emotional places especially that Astarion moment its also immensely funny.I maintain that a mature BG3 cartoon series would pop the f**k off if someone continued our legacy of those shorts, Douse told fans. This is great.Some fans pitched in with their own takes on what an official Baldurs Gate 3 series could be. One fan explained that they would love a show similar to Edgerunners, the gritty Cyberpunk anime that pretty much revived popularity in the maligned sci-fi RPG. However, Douse maintains that any official BG3 show should be rooted in comedy.Needs to be comedy, Douse told fans.Baldurs Gate 3 is deeply rooted in comedy throughout the entire game. From little jabs from one character to another to flinging characters with a windmill, Larians RPG is consistently hilarious, and thats just whats actually written.When it comes to adapting any Dungeons and Dragons content, comedy is obviously the way to go. After all, theres numerous official D&D movies, but only the comedic Honor Among Thieves is actually any good.For more Baldurs Gate 3 coverage, read about the amazing mod that brings Heroes of the Storm characters to the game as new feats. Additionally, check out the amazing mod that brings areas based on World of Warcraft to the game.Baldurs Gate 3Platform(s):macOS, PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series S/X, Xbox Series XGenre(s):Adventure, RPG, Strategy10VideoGamerSubscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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