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WEWORKREMOTELY.COMCData Software: Senior DevOps/Platform Engineer (remote)OverviewCData Virtuality is a strong data integration and management solution and Product Unit of CData Software. We are known for our powerful data virtualization capabilities that enable companies to access, integrate, and manage data from multiple sources in real-time without the need for extensive data replication. CData Virtuality's platform supports a variety of data sources and formats, making it a powerful tool for organizations looking to streamline their data infrastructure and improve decision-making processes. Join Our Team as a Senior Platform Engineer at CData Software!The Senior Platform Engineer has a critical role that will have a significant impact on Cloud products. We’re looking for someone who is excited about taking ownership of improving the existing infrastructure, designing the future of CData’s cloud applications, and working with a diverse team. Attention to detail and eagerness to learn new technologies and systems is critical to the success of this role.Responsibilities include but are not limited to:Advance Infrastructure-as-Code and GitOps for the company.Increase successful product delivery velocity.Produce templates, modules, and other reusable components to enable other engineering teams to be successful.Debug problems at scale for our mission critical services and help our development teams implement lasting fixes to recurring issues.Build, debug, and configure CI/CD pipelines.Define and help implement infrastructure improvements CData cloud applications.Support & contribute improvements to the availability, scalability, latency, and efficiency of Cloud applications.Define and measure production availability, downtime, and service level outages.Enhance monitoring and observability of application performance and errors.Define and implement monitoring metrics and alerts to ensure tools and environments are meeting SLA's for uptime and performance.Professional Requirements:Knockout criterion - production Kubernetes experienceB.S. degree in Computer Science or related technical field (e.g., EE, physics or mathematics), or equivalent practical experience and including: 5 + years professional coding software development experience.Deep understanding of Linux and containerization.Experience with Kubernetes both as a developer and from an operations perspective.5+ years of experience working with public cloud infrastructure (Azure preferred)Experience deploying and operating applications, Java or C# preferred.Experience with GitOps based workflows. (FluxCD preferred)Infrastructure as code experience (Terraform preferred)Database experience (SQL Server, PostgreSQL)Experience with development practices and tools (ex. JIRA, Git, Azure DevOps)Experience with messaging systems and APIsWorking knowledge of networking (e.g., firewall, routing, network topologies, etc)Personal Attributes:Communication: Strong communication skills, fluent in spoken and written English.Self-Organization: Ability to work independently with a structured approach.Motivation and Ambition: High motivation, responsibility, and ambition to support company growth.Empathy: Empathetic and able to understand and address team and customer needs.Analytical Approach: Strong analytical and problem-solving skills with a number-based approach.Curiosity: An inquiring mindset to continuously learn and improve.If you are driven by innovation and possess the technical skills and personal qualities listed above, we would love to hear from you! Join CData Software and be part of a team that values growth, collaboration, and excellence.Apply now and help us shape the future of cloud technology!What our amazing team worldwide loves about working with CData Virtuality:A stable and reliable job with the freedom and flexibility of a freelancerWorking as a contractor worldwide or as an employee in GermanyFlexible working hours and workplacePaid vacation days and paid sick leavesFast and dependable monthly payment – in EUR, USD, or Crypto, as you preferContributing to the success of a growing companyWorking with cutting-edge technologiesKnowledgeable and approachable C-LevelContinuity and growth potentialSmart, friendly, and international colleaguesFull integration into our teams and invitations for our team events worldwide-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------We are committed to creating a diverse environment and are proud to be an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, genetics, disability, age, or veteran status.Important Notice: The CData recruitment team does not use SMS or WhatsApp to communicate with job applicants. If you receive a message from these platforms claiming to be from CData regarding a job opportunity, please be aware that it is a scam. All current open positions are listed on our CData Careers page. Please use the Apply Now link or apply via LinkedIn.Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now Automatically Apply to Remote Design JobsLet your copilot automatically search and apply to remote jobs from We Work Remotely0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 59 Visualizações
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WWW.BDONLINE.CO.UKPatel Taylor working up plans for 220m Canary Wharf towerProposals for 77 Marsh Wall site to contain 925 homes and a mixed-use podium Sketch of the proposed tower shown in a first round of public consultation Patel Taylor is working up plans to build one of London’s tallest residential towers in Canary Wharf for developer Areli Group. The 220m tall 77 Marsh Wall scheme is being developed on behalf of British Airways Pension Trustees Limited and would contain 925 homes above a mixed-use podium. Currently in early pre-planning, it would be Canary Wharf’s third tallest tower if built, behind the 235m One Canada Square and 233m Landmark Pinnacle. A sketch of the tower included as part of a first public consultation shows a building consisting of three split floorplates of varying heights on the 0.47ha dockside site. It would require the demolition of the site’s existing building, a 17-storey office block built in the early 1990s known as Sierra Quebec Bravo. The site’s existing 17-storey office block would be demolished Areli said the building offers “very little in the way of benefits to the community” and that it wanted to maximise the “unique and exciting” potential of the waterfront site with new public spaces, shops and restaurants. The podium would contain around 4,000sq m of retail, leisure and workspace along with a cinema and cycle parking under early plans aired in the public consultation. Homes in the tower above the podium would be of a mix of tenures including shared ownership, build to rent, social rent, apart-hotel and co-living. The 77 Marsh Wall site, highlighted in red “We want to challenge traditional housing models and deliver the UK’s most exciting multi-tenure housing development, an outward-facing space that embraces the existing community,” Areli said. The firm has also submitted a 26-page environmental impact assessment scoping report, drawn up by consultant Trium, to Tower Hamlets council ahead of the submission of a full planning application. Other firms currently on the project team include planning consultant DP9 and communications firm Kanda Consulting.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 68 Visualizações
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WWW.CNET.COMBuy or Wait Guide: How Tariffs Will Change Tech Prices and What to Do Now, According to ExpertsFrom phones to TVs, electric cars and cameras, CNET experts weigh in on what you should look at buying now before tariffs increase prices.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 56 Visualizações
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WWW.SCIENTIFICAMERICAN.COMFiring the Scientists Who Make Working Safe Is FoolishOpinionApril 9, 20256 min readEnding Federal Research into Workplace Safety Is DangerousThe Trump administration’s mass federal firings include the scientific investigators who make dangerous workplaces safe for millions of peopleBy Dan Vergano A firefighter works during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, CA, January 9, 2025. Barbara Davidson/The Washington Post/Getty ImagesBlack lung is a cruel disease. Incurable, it scars and hardens lungs, makes breathing hurt and leads to tuberculosis, heart disease and cancer. Still a recurring threat to miners, it is preventable by controlling exposure to dust in mines. We know that thanks to federal scientists the Trump administration now aims to wipe out. That’s a mistake that threatens everyone.In March, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., restructured away some 20,000 agency workers, ones who do everything from checking food to investigating HIV outbreaks. Among them in April were 873 of the roughly 1,300 people employed by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, the $363 million agency which ensures the trustworthiness of firefighter respirators, surgical gear and construction-site safety monitors and oversees most every other aspect of workplace safety.The decision to fire NIOSH scientists—alongside such genius moves as cutting the lead poisoning prevention office at CDC and forcing the resignation of the FDA’s trusted chief vaccine safety official—point to a fundamental blind spot of the Trump administration: People won’t work in mines or fight fires or drive cars or take new drugs, it turns out, if they don’t believe they’re safe. And they won’t be safe in Trump’s “golden age” economy, because the scientists testing their workplaces and equipment are missing.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.NIOSH is best known, to the extent that it is known at all, as the institute that rated mask performance in the COVID pandemic. But some 50 million U.S. workers wear some type of respirator on the job, says Cam Mackey, president of the International Safety Equipment Association, all tested and certified by NIOSH.“A lot of people have never heard of this agency and therefore might assume that it doesn’t do anything valuable. But in fact, the opposite's true,” says Mackey. “It does absolutely groundbreaking work that no one else does and probably no one other institution would do. The sad reality is without NIOSH, workers are going to get sick. And workers are going to die.”An occupational health image from 1973 shows the lungs of a coal worker with Pneumoconiosis, or Black Lung Disease.Smith Collection/Gado/Getty ImagesSome 210 of the NIOSH job cuts landed at its Morgantown, W. Va., lab, which began in 1967 as the Appalachian Laboratory for Occupational Respiratory Disease, studying black lung disease just as coalfield demands for treatment there spurred a protest movement. The lab runs free black lung screenings for miners, which are mandated by a 1969 law but now appear in jeopardy.One of the Morgantown scientists who lost her job is Catherine Blackwell, who was put on administrative leave from her research position. She studies what happens to people’s immune systems when they encounter mold and other contaminants in buildings, cannabis or hemp dust in grow facilities, wildfire smoke that firefighters breath in, and coal dust.She tells Scientific American that her entire branch was shut down. As a young researcher, she chose government science because the work she would do would benefit everyone.“Workers are going to be immediately less safe,” she says, if no one is testing masks and respirators.Elsewhere, the institute runs a firefighter fatality investigation program, which investigates deaths and issues safety recommendations. It funded a study looking at cancer rates among firefighters that led to changes in safety protocols around smoke, fumes and soot. Those now save firefighters about $71 million per year in medical costs and lost work, and more importantly, they save 15 to 45 lives per year, according to a 2017 RAND study. The economic benefits of just six NIOSH programs alone, including the firefighter cancer study, exceed the institute’s entire research budget, noted a 2023 American Journal of Industrial Medicine report.Another NIOSH case study looked at rules limiting concrete dust from asphalt milling machines on roads, which is linked to lung cancer. They saved hundreds of lives, with an economic benefit ranging from $304 million to $1.1 billion a year. Highway construction work is already famously dangerous; adding any cancer risks to workers building overpasses and roads is just cruel.Without NIOSH, private industry simply will not pick up its work ensuring safety equipment is safe. We know this from the pandemic, when NIOSH tested imported N95 and KN95 masks that were suddenly appearing on the market in 2020 and found around 60 percent failed tests. “Businesses have to make money, and this kind of research costs money,” Markey says. “That’s what the government is for, to do this kind of research.”The pandemic also taught us deeper lessons about safety and trust that Trump and his allies are serially botching, and not just with the NIOSH lay-offs. RFK, Jr., a “proven menace to public health,” as health journalist Maggie Fox wrote in November in Scientific American, is again putting lives at risk by downplaying the Texas measles outbreak, notwithstanding a recent post endorsing the MMR vaccine. By removing Peter Marks, the FDA vaccine official who worked hardest to ensure scientific confidence in Operation Warp Speed’s hurriedly developed vaccines, Kennedy has set us up for even wider vaccine hesitancy in the next pandemic. For an example, consider the poor pandemic performance of Vladimir Putin’s Russia, the government Trump seems to most wants to emulate. Despite Russia releasing the first COVID vaccine in 2020, only 19 percent of the population was vaccinated a year later. That’s because nobody trusts a vaccine pushed on them by an authoritarian serial liar. It’s something for Trump to bear in mind.RFK, Jr., has suggested that around 20 percent of fired HHS workers would get their jobs back, “because we’ll make mistakes.” That’s either an open admission of incompetence or, as reported by Politico, dishonesty. Regardless, he plans to fold a denuded NIOSH into a smaller Administration for a Healthy America, with workplace safety not among its listed priorities. Why anyone wants this guy to run a lemonade stand, much less a $1.8 trillion federal agency, remains a mystery.What nobody wants is to rush into a burning building wearing a respirator they don’t trust, says Mackey, the safety equipment official. “Our promise to workers is that we'll give you a fair living wage and make sure that you can go home safe to your loved ones at the end of the day. And, and that's the challenge here. The workers are the ones that are losing out.”Coal miners, 1935.FPG/Archive Photos/Getty ImagesUltimately, some 125 million U.S. workers use personal protective gear on the job, from nurses to construction workers to paint sprayers. And because of cuts to NIOSH, Mackey added, “they’re going to be at risk and that’s going to keep people away from manufacturing jobs, that’s going to make manufacturing jobs more dangerous.”Due to more accidents and illness, medical costs will go up, along with workers’ compensation costs, which will decrease productivity. Businesses that focus on best safety practices save money. And safety rules, for everything from making drugs to building roads, are what have allowed industries, from pharmaceuticals to construction, to grow so large in the first place. People like their medicines, and their jobs, to be safe.Little considered until they’re gone, agencies like NIOSH are the glue holding the economy together. From the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, which led to the FDA, to the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969, passed under pressure from the black lung movement, the laws that created the health agencies now facing severe cuts or outright elimination were meant to allow just the kind of manufacturing economy that Trump says he wants to flourish.“That's the risk here,” says Mackey. This will really kind of put a damper on any type of manufacturing renaissance.”This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 61 Visualizações
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WWW.EUROGAMER.NETHere's your lineup of PS Plus Premium and Extra games for AprilAs we thunder forward through this sunny April (apologies for any undue excitement if your local area is currently sun-free), Sony has revealed the latest titles joining its PlayStation Plus game catalogue for Premium and Extra subscribers this month. And that includes stellar puzzler Blue Prince, if you're looking to have your noggin particularly meddled with. Read more0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 54 Visualizações
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WWW.VIDEOGAMER.COMEx-Blizzard president slams Diablo 4 2025 roadmap as it fails to fix the game’s core issuesYou 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 here The Diablo 4 2025 roadmap is here, and Blizzard’s ARPG has some okay plans for the rest of the year. While the next expansion has been pushed into 2026, the standard seasonal updates are continuing with Belial’s return and the ability to steal boss powers to use as your own. (There’s also an uncomfortable focus on IP Collabs.) As it stands, the new Diablo roadmap isn’t impressive, especially not for a game that’s touted as the first true live-service game in the series. While fans are underwhelmed, upset or both, former Blizzard president Mike Ybarra has thrown his two cents into the ring, and he’s also unhappy. Mike Ybarra on Diablo 4 2025 plans Speaking to fans on Twitter, the ex-Blizzard head and current Microsoft executive told Blizzard “don’t ship to check a box”. Ybarra explained that Diablo 4 “season’s need to get off the cycle of shipping, spending two months to fix issues, then repeating”, referring to Blizzard’s recent trend of releasing broken season updates only to spend the rest of the season fixing bugs. “Pause and give the team time to really address the end-game issues,” the ex-Blizzard exec said. “Playing for a week to then one or three shot a ‘uber’ boss 500 times for a unique, then quitting until next season is fundamentally not fun.” Ybarra also explained that the current “expansions schedule is too long” as Blizzard continues to focus on seasons that fail to push the game forward. Instead of adding new Uber Bosses, classes and more, time is wasted on seasonal powers that are completely scrapped once a season ends. It’s not a bad slew of content, but it feels like it’s missing something. “If the cycle continues to just ship w/o fixing the fundamental issues, then I’m not sure where Diablo is going,” Ybarra concluded. “You can add all the end-game activities you want, but you’ll be running in place with the same issues. At some point there’s just so many random things, it’s not worth the effort.” Diablo 4’s move towards live-service is a move that even series creator David Brevik was planning during the original development of D3. However, the current ARPG’s focus is on the wrong thing with new seasons feeling more like fast food than the finely constructed meals of previous Diablos. Let’s face it: if you’re coming back every season, you want to experience something that also lasts beyond it. Diablo 4 isn’t a bad game, but it’s clear that the team is confused about the direction it needs to go. For our money, Ybarra is right: Blizzard needs to focus on bringing value to the game that lasts “more than a few days”. Diablo 4 Platform(s): PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series S/X Genre(s): Action, Action RPG, RPG Subscribe to our newsletters! By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime. Share0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 54 Visualizações
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WWW.PCMAG.COMApple Reportedly Flew in 5 Plane Loads of iPhones to Dodge Trump Tariffssubmitted by /u/indig0sixalpha [link] [comments]0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 57 Visualizações
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WWW.VG247.COMMicrosoft bets big on The Outer Worlds 2 as Obsidian’s RPG takes over the Starfield and Black Ops 6 spot at Xbox’s big summer showcaseTop Billing Microsoft bets big on The Outer Worlds 2 as Obsidian’s RPG takes over the Starfield and Black Ops 6 spot at Xbox’s big summer showcase Microsoft has officially revealed some of what we can expect from its summer showcase in June. Image credit: Xbox, VG247 News by Sherif Saed Contributing Editor Published on April 9, 2025 Xbox’s next big project to dedicate a lot of time to is going to be The Outer Worlds 2, Obsidian’s upcoming action RPG. The game will headline the Xbox Games Showcase taking place this June, after last year’s Black Ops 6, and Starfield the year before that. The double feature was just announced, making Xbox the first to confirm any sort of line-up for its big June event. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. The Xbox Games Showcase will return for another year in June, right around the time of what used to be E3. The event will be livestreamed on Sunday, June 8. Although the announcement doesn’t mention what other games we can expect to see as part of the showcase, it does confirm that it will be immediately followed by a big deep dive into The Outer Worlds 2. Obsidian’s upcoming major project is taking the slot that was occupied by Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 last year, after the trend started with Starfield in 2023. The main showcase will, as always, go through upcoming first and third-party titles. Interestingly, however, there won’t be a physical event this year, meaning the livestream will be the only way to follow the news. It also suggests we won't be getting Phil Spencer and other Xbox executives on stage in between segments . We’ll be able to tune in to Xbox’s official channels on YouTube, Twitch, and Facebook at 10am PT, 1pm ET, 6pm UK, 7pm CEST to catch it. As for The Outer Worlds 2 Direct, you can expect a look behind the scenes at the game’s development at Obsidian, alongside a boatload of new gameplay and details. It’s very likely that the release date will also be announced on the day, too. To see this content please enable targeting cookies.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 60 Visualizações
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WWW.NINTENDOLIFE.COMNintendo Direct: Mario Kart World: Time, Date, Where To Watch, What To ExpectThe World Wide Road What We Expect - Mario Kart World Direct Predictions Image: Nintendo We've already seen so much more than revealed in the initial teaser, and we discussed our broad hopes back when we were calling it 'Mario Kart 9' and DK's redesign was fresh news - back when we didn't know it was an open-world game! But with Nintendo pinning its Switch 2 launch-day hopes on this one, we get the feeling there's an awful lot more to be revealed. Over to Team Nintendo Life for their considered, expert predictions, plus their wildest of wild-card dreams... Collectibles, courses, cows (Alana Hagues, deputy editor) Even after playing a good few rounds of Mario Kart World last week, I still have a ton of questions. It's a huge game, so I want to know what I can get lost in, and why this is the Mario Kart to pick up. One thing I saw from other previews were a variety of things I had no idea could happen. UFOs can capture you? Collectibles can be found on maps? I'd love a tease for these things. I don't want to know everything, just a teaser. Beyond that, I'd actually like to know how that seamless structure works. Are those in-between courses actual courses, or will they not be selectable in other modes? Do you need to unlock access to certain cups and tracks? Is there a mode where you can literally just race through every single track (Free Roam notwithstanding)? I'm sure we'll also discover why you can play as the Moo Moo Meadows Cow, too. Image: Nintendo Mobility montage (Gavin Lane, editor) After going hands-on with the game, I can confirm that there's absolutely zero learning curve for anyone who's spent a few hours with Mario Kart 8 - and most people reading this will have spent much more than 'a few' hours with MK8! Which means Nintendo has to show everyone what's new and different here compared to the game they've been playing for 10 years. I'm anxious to find out more about traversal. Nobody wants to be stuck in a soupy kart in the middle of a field, and the addition of wall-jumping suggests Nintendo is injecting platforming-style mobility to maximise and make pleasurable the open-world exploration. The locomotive freedom will never be the same as BOTW or Odyssey, but avoiding the frustrations of slow turns, hitting dead ends, and having to reverse will be key to keeping the wonder (heh) alive. Characters and costumes, sure, but that's the stuff I want to hear more about. Image: Nintendo The sweat, the tears, the evil babies More Free Roam chat, less GameChat...chat (Jim Norman, staff writer) Much like Gavin, the Free Roam stuff is the feature that I'm really keen to hear more about. Getting to drive around the world at your own speed is one thing, but I want to be told that there's a point to it. Show me that there are missions, unlockables, or collectibles out there, and I'll be happy! The Nintendo Treehouse hosts were pretty cagey with what can be achieved in Free Roam, only really showcasing the ability to... drive around tracks again, only slower. There has to be more to it than that. Honestly, the only thing that I don't want to see is another surface-level rundown of the game's three main modes and how GameChat is integrated into them. We've seen all that fun stuff already, so here's hoping that the Direct can bring something new to the table. Image: Nintendo Rainbow roadmap (Ollie Reynolds, staff writer) It feels like we’ve already been shown quite a lot, but the fact that we’re getting a dedicated Direct indicates that Nintendo is keeping a few big surprises under wraps. Will there be proper aircraft vehicles with full airborne races? Is that how we reach the inevitable Rainbow Road track? Otherwise, I hope to see some sort of roadmap in terms of DLC (perhaps keep it to smaller, free updates for the foreseeable future though – sheesh!). Nintendo dipped its toes in the water with the Booster Course Pack for Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, but I suspect it’ll want to ensure there’s a steady flow of new content available over the coming months (and years). How this works and, perhaps more crucially, how new tracks will be implemented into the open-world structure will be very interesting to see. You can’t just slap a bunch of new courses into the main menu – not this time. Image: Nintendo Karteristics and boss battles (PJ O'Reilly, staff writer) I'm very excited to see what further details we get from Nintendo on the open-world and free-roam exploring aspects. Just how much freedom will we have whilst moving between race locations? Will they tie the new grinding and wall-jumping mechanics into the world to make traversal more varied and involving? All that sort of stuff, but also what will they bring to the table in terms of the game's collectibles? How will they tempt us to dig in and grab them all? With snazzy new kart parts or outfits? Will there be rarities involved? Other than this, I'm gonna need more vehicle details. I wanna know if I can expect cool transformations like those found in the sublime Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed, and how any changes to vehicles might then play out in terms of track design. What tricks have they devised to aid us in boosting and shortcutting deviously to glory? Oh, and bosses and challenges? Nintendo, give us some Mario Kart boss fights. Races to the death. The good stuff. Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube806k Looking forward to finding out more about this Mario Kart World? Let us know your predictions, hopes, and wishes in the comments below! Racing to find the best deals Related Games See Also Share:0 1 Gavin first wrote for Nintendo Life in 2018 before joining the site full-time the following year, rising through the ranks to become Editor. He can currently be found squashed beneath a Switch backlog the size of Normandy. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment... Related Articles Where To Pre-Order Nintendo Switch 2 Update: Nintendo pre-orders live in Europe today (with an invite!) Nintendo Switch 2 Direct: Time, Where To Watch, What To Expect It's time for Switch 2 GameCube Games Confirmed For Nintendo Switch Online On Switch 2 Including Zelda: Wind Waker! Title: Mario Kart World System: Nintendo Switch 2 Publisher: Nintendo Developer: Nintendo Genre: Driving, Racing Players: 4 (12 Online) Release Date: Nintendo Switch 2 5th Jun 2025 5th Jun 2025 Series: Mario Kart Also Known As: Mario Kart 9 Where to buy: Pre Order on Amazon0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 57 Visualizações