• How a Mega Man fan project got an official Capcom license
    www.polygon.com
    Back in 2021, Philip Summers launched a Kickstarter campaign for Hand-Drawn Game Guides, a series of books that resembled traditional strategy guides, apart from the fact that they were all illustrated by Summers. The campaign was a hit, generating over $300,000 in pledges, but like a number of fan projects utilizing game company IPs, it was pulled before the countdown ended.He ended up changing plans due to legal concerns, going on to work on other projects and releasing the planned guides from the campaign as free downloads. From the outside, that seemed like the new path for Hand-Drawn Game Guides.But then, in January 2025, Summers returned to Kickstarter with a surprise announcement hed struck a deal with Capcom to make an officially licensed entry in the series: Hand-Drawn Game Guides: Mega Man. That campaign was also a success, and Summers is now working on the book and intending to release it later this year.In an effort to spotlight game-related books and documentaries, Polygon is running an email interview series with the people behind them. We previously connected with Julian Rignall about his not-quite-an-autobiography The Games of a Lifetime, Paul Vogel about his Housemarque documentary The Name of the Game, Lewis Packwood about his obscure game hardware book Curious Video Game Machines, and Oliver Harper about his Street Fighter 2 documentary Here Comes a New Challenger. Below, Summers discusses how the Mega Man project came about and where he wants to take Hand-Drawn Game Guides in the future.Polygon: When you launched the Kickstarter campaign, a lot of people were surprised that the book was licensed by Capcom. How did that come about behind the scenes?Philip Summers: Lucas Thomas from Nintendo Force Magazine/NF Publishing was a fan of the original Hand-Drawn Game Guides campaign and basically remembered me all these years later! He has been expanding into book publishing and wanted to work on a property officially. With some work he was able to get the license from Capcom to create Mega Man books and asked if I would be willing to resurrect the Hand-Drawn Game Guides concept and do it legit this time. We still needed to pitch the book to them for approval, so we created a sequence of pages to present. They liked what they saw and we were able to move ahead from there.Theres a long history of game books running into legal issues with copyright holders. Do you have any advice for others looking to do similar projects?Unfortunately I dont have any real advice on how to go about jumping through some of these loopholes. In the years since my original campaign shut down, Ive come to find that different companies respond to different types of projects and they all have their own reasons. What I can tell you is that if you plan on launching something like a Kickstarter where your funding totals are public and the project heavily features IP that you dont have the rights to, its highly likely it will get shut down.In the Mega Man Kickstarter campaign, you mentioned the possibility of doing more Mega Man books after this one. Whats the status of that?At this point its too early to tell. I think well have a much better understanding of where we stand once the book is completed and shipped. Assuming people are happy with it, and Capcom is happy with it, I think its fair to say well be able to move onto the next one, which the obvious choice is Mega Man 2. Though I really love Mega Man X too!Long-term, what are your plans for Hand-Drawn Game Guides? Is the idea to get official licenses for other games and make this a regular thing?For sure! I have a whole list of games Id love to work on, and if we end up putting out a great product were hopeful more companies will be receptive to letting us give one of their classic games the Hand-Drawn Game Guides treatment. This is a side gig for me, so I can only work so quickly, but who knows maybe that could change one day too.
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  • Severance season 3: everything we know so far about the wildly popular Apple TV+ show's next chapter
    www.techradar.com
    Severance season 3 hasn't been announced by Apple yet, but here's what we know about it so far.
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  • Project Digits is now DGX Spark: Nvidia raises its price by 33% as HPE, Dell jump on Petaflop mini AI bandwagon
    www.techradar.com
    Nvidia has rebranded its tiny Project Digits AI supercomputer as DGX Spark, while Asus, Dell, and HPE are readying their own versions.
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  • Crypto's long battle with SEC comes to a close with Ripple victory
    www.cnbc.com
    Ripple said this week that the SEC had officially dropped its four-year-old lawsuit against the company, ending a long battle between the regulator and crypto.
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  • Klarnas deal with DoorDash is a dystopian reminder that groceries are so expensive you need a loan to shop
    www.fastcompany.com
    DoorDash just penned a deal with Klarna that will let you pay for your take-out burrito in installments.This week, DoorDash announced it would be teaming with Klarna to offer a range of payment options to customers, including a Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) plan that allows users to defer payments to a more convenient time, as well as another plan that lets meal payments be divided into four interest-free installments.Klarna, a fast-credit fintech company, uses BNPL loans as a kind of consumer credit, similar to a standard credit card. When users are late on their payments, theyre typically charged a feethough Klarnas main profits come from charging other merchants to offer their payment options, which attract consumers who, for a number of reasons, would rather pay in chunks than all at once.The DoorDash deal comes a week after Klarna filed paperwork signaling its intention to debut an initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange. As the company gears up to go public, it appears to be highlighting its dealmaking abilities; it also announced that it would become Walmarts exclusive provider of BNPL loans. But while the Walmart deal, announced earlier this week, was largely heralded as a positive sign for Klarna, the DoorDash agreement is garnering some strong pushback on the internet.In an era when groceries are increasingly expensive, the prospect of paying off a McDonalds hamburger in four installments is dystopian to say the least.Why does buying a burrito feel like an investment?The rising cost of living is a serious problem in the U.S., one that more and more people are citing as the top reason for wanting to leave the country. According to a report last month from the Labor Department, the consumer price index (which accounts for rises in key purchases like gas, cars, and groceries) increased 3% year over year. And new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that food prices have gone up 23% since February 2021.Rising prices for groceries, especially fresh produce, were enough for Fast Company to predict that vegetables could become celebrities hot new status symbol. Its no surprise, then, that the internet has been quick to point out the near-ghoulish tone-deafness of Klarnas new partnership, which positions take-out as a kind of investment.Excited to announce that I closed on a $31.38 transaction to secure a burrito and side of chips, reads one tweet with 87,000 likes. 20-year senior fixed rate financing was provided by Klarna. DoorDash provided delivery of the asset. Congratulations to all involved.just doordashed a burrito lunch special that only cost me $1.04/monthly for 2 years, another X user wrote. thank you klarna! the future is here!Other responses have run the gamut, from parodying a celebratory LinkedIn post to comparing Klarna to the hitmen in Pulp Fiction and Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street.While Klarnas IPO is still highly anticipated in the fintech space, it seems like the company might benefit from focusing on partnerships its customers actually asked for, rather than deals that make the experience of ordering some chicken tenders to go feel one step closer to paying off a mortgage.
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  • Why these business leaders center culture at the core of their companies
    www.fastcompany.com
    As the Trump administration continues to wage war against diversity, equity and inclusion programs, many business leaders have had to grapple with either standing firm in their previously stated DEI goals or abandon them and face consumer backlash. However, for some executives who have built their businesses around specific cultures, the ethos of DEI is inextricable from their missions. The founders of Mab Artisanal Tea and Issei Mochi Gummies, and the president of Minnetonka Moccasin Company, took to the stage at the Fast Company Grill at SXSW earlier this month to share how this approach to business shapes, rather than detracts from, their success.Education over exploitationFor Jori Miller Sherer, president of the shoe company Minnetonka, reconciliation and community work are top of mind. Founded in 1946, the Minneapolis-based business has sold Indigenous-inspired moccasins since its inception, though it was not founded by nor did it employ people from those communities. The company first addressed and apologized for its history of cultural appropriation in 2021, hired a reconciliation advisor, and began working with Indigenous artists to design their products, which included a partnership with Red Lake Nation member Lucie Skjefte on a rebrand of the companys signature Thunderbird, or Animikii shoes.One of the first things that we did was get to know people in our local community and just listen and learn from them, Miller Sherer said, noting that a number of Indigenous people reside in the Twin Cities. Over 40% of Minnesota residents who identify as American Indian live in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, according to a 2021 report from the Minnesota Department of Health.For the Indigenous designers Minnetonka works with, it isnt just about sending a check or having a royalty payment, which of course we do, Miller Sherer said. It is about really giving them the microphone and giving them the spotlight.Jerry Grammont, the founder and CEO of Mab Artisanal Tea, echoed this sentiment. Grammont, who is from Haiti, was inspired to start his iced tea company in 2020 to blend wellness and taste. His teas contain mauby bark, an ingredient used in traditional Caribbean beverages that is believed to offer a variety of health benefits. Grammont is mindful of how he can use his product to educate consumers who may be unfamiliar with the drink and the region it originates from.I find that when were educating our customers around our culture and what were doing, were also selling the product itself because its directly tied to it, he said. Its not about the financial gains. Its about how we bring this wellness ingredient to the States.Getting creative with limitationsMika Shino, the founder and CEO of Issei Mochi Gummies, discovered quickly after launching her mochi snack business that most American manufacturing equipment isnt designed to handle gummies made from traditional Japanese ingredients. The mochi, which is made from rice flour rather than wheat and gelatin, created gummies of a much thicker consistency than factory machinery is built to handle.We called over a hundred manufacturing facilities. We worked with over 11 food scientists, all PhDs in starchI didnt know you could get a PhD in starch, right? she told attendees. We hand baked, hand slabbed, and hand cut 3,000 pounds of mochi. It was really difficult, but it taught me the difficult path of innovation when youre really trying to do something new.Jumping into her business sans blueprint paid off. Issei, which means first generation in Japanese, now has two patents that are pending. We could never have done that if we were just another gummy bear with less sugar or just another peanut butter cup, Shino said.Staying the course and building long-term successFor Minnetonka, success means continuing to directly confront the companys past. The business reckoned with its history of cultural appropriation and went public with its reconciliation efforts after the murder of George Floyd at a time when many corporations made similar commitments that they have since reneged on.For Miller Sherer, the pledge that Minnetonka made to elevate the voices of Indigenous people is more than a fad or empty words. We first went public with this back in 2020, and we didnt do it because of external pressures or because of trends at the time. We knew it was the right thing to do, and it was the right thing for the business too, she said. Were going to keep talking about this story because its now become a part of who we are and it always will be.At Mab, diversity is essential to the companys functionality. Were a Black-owned company. We have probably 75% females in our company, said Grammont. Theres no way that I can say, Im not going to employ diversity [as] part of my strategy. It literally is my company.Shino, who worked at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization for 17 years, said culture was essential to facilitating diplomacy and connection. I think when you make things that are authentic to you, its a stealth way to communicate a message, Shino said. I worked at [UNESCO], where we used cultural goods like philosophy, art, literature, poetry, music as a way to bridge cultures. I really hope that our product can be a part of that, so youre not forcing [that message].At the same time, Shino doesnt plan to shy away from what makes Issei unique. Were not going to waver from who we are, she said. Were going to lean into [the fact that] were Asian owned, were women owned, were heritage proud. Thats not going to change, she said. And thats how you resist.
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  • BYD's 5-Minute EV Charging Sounds Great. But How Useful Is it?
    www.wired.com
    Fast charging is viable, but experts say building the actual charging stations will be the trickyand potentially very expensivepart.
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  • A Mysterious Startup Is Developing a New Form of Solar Geoengineering
    www.wired.com
    Stardust, an IsraeliUS startup, intends to patent its unique aerosol technology for temporarily cooling the planet.
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