• BUILDINGSOFNEWENGLAND.COM
    Moseley-Widger House // 1906
    One of the many houses in the Cottage Farm-adjacent neighborhoods of Brookline, Massachusetts, is this great blending of the Tudor Revival and Arts and Crafts styles of architecture, which dominated residential architecture in the Boston suburbs in the early 20th century. This residence was built in 1906 for Mr. Frank Moseley and his wife, Martha Hawes Moseley from plans by architect Robert C. Coit. Covered in stucco siding and half timbering, the charming house evokes the countryside of England, right here in Brookline. After WWI, the house was owned by Ms. Lizzie Widger, a water color artist and member of Copley Society of Boston, and her husband, Samuel Widger, a cotton broker. The Moseley-Widger House looks as it did 120 years ago and is in a great state of preservation, thanks to generations of loving stewards.
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  • WWW.ZDNET.COM
    This video of humanoid robots running a half marathon is amazing, hilarious, and a little creepy
    Despite lost limbs, overheating, and a crash or two, a few of the 20 robots competing in China over the weekend did quite well. See for yourself.
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  • WWW.FORBES.COM
    Today’s ‘Wordle’ #1403 Hints, Clues And Answer For Tuesday, April 22nd
    Looking for help with today's New York Times Wordle? Here are hints, clues and commentary to help you solve today's Wordle and sharpen your guessing game.
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  • WWW.TECHSPOT.COM
    Sam Altman says polite ChatGPT users are burning millions of OpenAI dollars
    Manners are not ruining the environment: The costs of training and running artificial intelligence model are massive. Even excluding everything but electricity, AI data centers burn through over $100 million a year to process user prompts and model outputs. So, does saying "please" and "thank you" to ChatGPT really cost OpenAI millions? Short answer: probably not. Some shocking headlines involving the costs of being polite to AI chatbots like ChatGPT have circulated over the past few days. A few examples include: Your politeness could be costly for OpenAI – TechCrunch Saying 'please' and 'thank you' to ChatGPT costs OpenAI millions, Sam Altman says – Quartz Being nice to ChatGPT might be bad for the environment. Here's why – Laptop The news stems from an offhand comment Sam Altman made on X. It began with a simple question: How much money has OpenAI lost in electricity costs from people saying "please" and "thank you" to its language models? Altman replied, "Tens of millions of dollars well spent – you never know." That one-liner was enough to send outlets like the New York Post and Futurism down a rabbit hole of speculation, trying to estimate the computing cost of civility. The logic goes like this: every extra word adds tokens to a prompt, and those extra tokens require more computational resources. Given the scale of ChatGPT's user base, these seemingly trivial additions can add up. // Related Stories However, several factors complicate the math behind Altman's comment. First is the actual cost per token. ChatGPT says GPT-3.5 Turbo costs roughly $0.0015 per 1,000 input tokens and $0.002 per 1,000 output tokens. "Please" and "thank you" typically add between two and four tokens in total. So the cost per use amounts to tiny fractions of a cent – somewhere around $0.0000015 to $0.000002 per exchange. Based on rough estimates, that amount translates to about $400 a day or $146,000 a year. That's several orders of magnitude lower than "tens of millions." As for real energy costs, the US Energy Information Administration's Electric Power Research Institute estimates OpenAI's monthly electricity bill at around $12 million, or $140 million a year. That figure includes every interaction – not just polite ones. So while it's theoretically possible that courteous prompts account for more than $10 million annually, we simply don't have the data to break that down. Only OpenAI's internal metrics can say for sure. Furthermore, Altman's phrasing wasn't literal. The follow-up – "you never know" – suggests the remark was tongue-in-cheek. It reads more like a wry endorsement of politeness than a real financial estimate. He likely meant that in an era when courtesy feels increasingly rare, maybe it's worth the negligible cost, whether $400 or $40 million. Sure, bots don't have feelings – but if humanity ends up answering to a superintelligent AI someday, it might just remember who was polite – "you never know." Image credit: Abaca Press
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  • WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COM
    NASA’s Lucy shares striking close-up of Donaldjohanson asteroid
    NASA has shared the first closeup images of the Donaldjohanson asteroid, captured by its Lucy spacecraft on a recent flyby around 139 million miles (223 million km) from Earth. Our #LucyMission took a look at asteroid Donaldjohanson, its second asteroid encounter on its journey to Jupiter’s Trojan asteroids. The first images reveal a unique fragment of an asteroid that formed about 150 million years ago! Find out more: https://t.co/Bgg5CkQfYd pic.twitter.com/lgZRG8Qngh— NASA (@NASA) April 21, 2025 Prior to Lucy’s flyby, Donaldjohanson had only been observed from Earth, with no previous spacecraft having visited it at close range. Lucy’s encounter provides the first detailed, high-resolution views of the asteroid — believed to have formed some 150 million years old — revealing its shape, geology, and other characteristics for the first time. Recommended Videos Lucy’s images were collected as the spacecraft flew around 600 miles (960 km) from Donaldjohanson on April 20. Related “Asteroid Donaldjohanson has strikingly complicated geology,” Hal Levison, principal investigator for Lucy, said in a release. “As we study the complex structures in detail, they will reveal important information about the building blocks and collisional processes that formed the planets in our solar system.” The team studying the close-up images have been surprised by the odd shape of the narrow neck connecting the two lobes, which NASA said “look like two nested ice cream cones.” Initial analysis of the imagery suggests that the Donaldjohanson asteroid is about 5 miles (8 km) long and 2 miles (3.5 km) wide at the widest point — larger than originally estimated. NASA said it will take a few more days to downlink the rest of of the encounter data from the spacecraft, at which point it will be able to make a better judgment regarding the asteroid’s overall shape. Data collected by Lucy’s other scientific instruments — the L’Ralph color imager and infrared spectrometer and the L’TES thermal infrared spectrometer — will be retrieved and analyzed over the next few weeks. Lucy also made a close flyby of the Dinkinesh asteroid in 2023, but neither that one nor Donaldjohanson is the primary target of the Lucy mission. They were simply flybys as the spacecraft heads to the Jupiter Trojan asteroid Eurybates, which it’s set to reach in August 2027. “These early images of Donaldjohanson are again showing the tremendous capabilities of the Lucy spacecraft as an engine of discovery,” said Tom Statler, program scientist for the Lucy mission. “The potential to really open a new window into the history of our solar system when Lucy gets to the Trojan asteroids is immense.” And in case you’ve been wondering, the asteroid Donaldjohanson is named after American paleoanthropologist Donald Johanson, who discovered the “Lucy” fossil skeleton in in Ethiopia in 1974 in what’s regarded as a key find in the study of human evolution. The naming of the asteroid honors Johanson’s significant contribution to science, and also creates a symbolic link with NASA’s Lucy spacecraft, which is itself named after the famous fossil. Editors’ Recommendations
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  • ARSTECHNICA.COM
    Controversial doc gets measles while treating unvaccinated kids—keeps working
    Irresponsible Controversial doc gets measles while treating unvaccinated kids—keeps working Ben Edwards has grown popular in Texas for providing unproven measles treatments. Beth Mole – Apr 21, 2025 7:28 pm | 33 Signs point the way to measles testing in the parking lot of the Seminole Hospital District across from Wigwam Stadium on February 27, 2025 in Seminole, Texas. Credit: Getty | Jan Sonnenmair Signs point the way to measles testing in the parking lot of the Seminole Hospital District across from Wigwam Stadium on February 27, 2025 in Seminole, Texas. Credit: Getty | Jan Sonnenmair Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more A controversial doctor providing unproven measles treatments to unvaccinated children in West Texas recently contracted the highly infectious virus himself amid the mushrooming outbreak—and he continued treating patients while visibly ill with the virus. The doctor's infection was revealed in a video posted online by Children's Health Defense (CHD), the rabid anti-vaccine advocacy organization founded and previously run by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a long-time anti-vaccine advocate who is now the US secretary of health. Kennedy headed CHD until January, when he stepped down in anticipation of his Senate confirmation. In the video, the doctor, Ben Edwards, can be seen with mild spots on his face. Someone asks him if he caught measles himself, and he responds, "Yeah," saying he was "pretty achy yesterday." He went on to say that he had developed the rash the day before but woke up that day feeling "pretty good." The video was posted by CHD on March 31, and the Associated Press was the first to report it. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a person infected with measles is considered contagious from four days before the rash appears to four days after it appears. The virus is among the most infectious known to humans. It spreads in the air and can linger in the airspace of a room for up to two hours after an infectious person is present. Up to 90 percent of people who lack immunity—either from prior infection or vaccination—will get sick upon an exposure. In the video, Edwards is wearing scrubs, apparently in a clinic with patients, parents, and people from CHD. In an email to the AP, Edwards claimed that he "interacted with zero patients that were not already infected with measles" during the time he was infectious. "Therefore, obviously, there were no patients that were put in danger of acquiring measles since they already had measles." However, the video shows him in a room with other people who do not appear sick, and he is not wearing a mask. Edwards has become quite popular in the severely undervaccinated community in Gaines County, Texas, the epicenter of the explosive outbreak that began in late January and continues to grow steadily. Edwards set up a makeshift measles clinic in Gaines and provides unproven treatments, such as cod liver oil, the antibiotic clarithromycin, and the glucocorticoid budesonide, which is used to treat asthma and Crohn's disease. Edwards and his unproven treatments have garnered direct praise from Kennedy, who in a social media post called Edwards and another controversial doctor working in the area, Richard Bartlett, "extraordinary healers." In 2003, Bartlett was disciplined by the Texas Medical Board for "unusual use of risk-filled medications" in multiple patients, including children. The risky treatments included intravenous antibiotics and hefty doses of glucocorticoids. In the social media post, Kennedy claimed the two doctors had treated "some 300" children with measles amid the outbreak. According to another video posted by CHD, some of those children included the four surviving siblings of an unvaccinated 6-year-old girl who died of measles in February. In the video, members of CHD interviewed the girl's parents, who believed that if Edwards had treated their now-deceased daughter, who developed measles before her siblings, she, too, would have lived. They also falsely claimed that the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine was dangerous. Misinformation The interview culminated with the parents urging others to avoid the MMR vaccine. "We would absolutely not take the MMR," the mother said through a translator of Low German. "The measles wasn't that bad, and they got over it pretty quickly," she added, speaking of her four living children. In the video with Edwards that has just come to light, CHD once again uses the situation to disparage MMR vaccines. Someone off camera asks Edwards if he had never had measles before, to which he replies that he had gotten an MMR vaccine as a kid, though he didn't know if he had gotten one or the recommended two doses. "That doesn't work then, does it?" the off-camera person asks, referring to the MMR vaccine. "No, apparently not, " Edwards replies. "Just wear[s] off." It appears Edwards had a breakthrough infection, which is rare, but it does occur. They're more common in people who have only gotten one dose, which is possibly the case for Edwards. A single dose of MMR is 93 percent effective against measles, and two doses are 97 percent effective. In either case, the protection is considered lifelong. While up to 97 percent effectiveness is extremely protective, some people do not mount protective responses and are still vulnerable to an infection upon exposure. However, their illnesses will likely be milder than if they had not been vaccinated. In the video, Edwards described his illness as a "mild case." The data on the outbreak demonstrates the effectiveness of vaccination. As of April 18, Texas health officials have identified 597 measles cases, leading to 62 hospitalizations and two deaths in school-aged, unvaccinated children with no underlying medical conditions. Most of the cases have been in unvaccinated children. Of the 597 cases, 12 (2 percent) had received two MMR doses previously, and 10 (1.6 percent) had received one dose. The remaining 99 percent of cases are either unvaccinated or have no record of vaccination. Toward the end of the video, Edwards tells CHD he's "doing what any doctor should be doing." Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth is Ars Technica’s Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes. 33 Comments
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    A dramatic rethink of Parkinson’s offers new hope for treatment
    Sunnu Rebecca Choi Per Borghammer’s “aha” moment came nearly 20 years ago. The neuroscientist was reading a paper from researchers who were examining whether REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD), a condition that causes people to act out their dreams and is often found in people who later develop Parkinson’s disease, could be an early form of the neurological condition. Rather than starting with the brain, however, the team instead looked for nerve cell loss in the heart. Though Parkinson’s is historically associated with nerve cell depletion in the brain, it also affects neurons in the heart that manage autonomic functions such as heart rate and blood pressure. And, says Borghammer, “In all of these patients, the heart is invisible; it is gone.” Not literally, of course. But in these people, the neurons that produce the neurotransmitter norepinephrine, which helps control heart rate, were so depleted that their hearts didn’t show up on scans using radioactive tracers. This kind of neuron loss is associated with Parkinson’s, but at the time, none of the people had been diagnosed with the disease and their brain scans seemed normal. What struck Borghammer was that Parkinson’s didn’t seem to follow the same trajectory in everyone it affected: RBD strongly predicts Parkinson’s, but not everyone with Parkinson’s experiences RBD. “I realised that Parkinson’s must be at least two types,” says Borghammer – when neuron loss starts outside the brain, eventually working its way in, and when neuron loss is largely restricted to the brain from the beginning. By 2019, Borghammer,…
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  • WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COM
    Internal Microsoft email to managers details new policies aimed at culling low performers
    Microsoft has created new policies and tools for managers as part of an effort to dial up performance pressure on employees, according to an internal email viewed by Business Insider.Amy Coleman, Microsoft's new chief people officer, on Friday emailed managers about "new and enhanced tools to help you accelerate high performance and swiftly address low performance."There's a new option for exiting underperformers, and a policy that bars these people from transferring within Microsoft or getting rehired by the company for two years, according to the email.Many tech companies have been getting tougher on employees in the past year or so. Efficiency has replaced perks and pampering, as performance-based job cuts become more of a regular occurrence.For instance, Mark Zuckerberg targeted low performers when Meta eliminated thousands of jobs earlier this year. And, similar to Microsoft's new policy, Meta puts ousted employees on "block lists" that stop them getting rehired. Earlier this year, Microsoft fired 2,000 employees deemed underperformers without severance. Managers spent months evaluating employees all the way up to the executive level as part of changes to the company's performance review and management process, insiders told BI.Coleman's email, in full below, details some of those changes and suggests others on the horizon. Microsoft declined to comment."Employees with zero to 60% rewards" refers to employees with low scores in Microsoft performance reviews, which use a scale from 0 to 200 that influences how much they receive in stock awards and cash bonuses.Read the full email to Microsoft managers:Managers,Thank you for your patience yesterday with the unexpected technical product issues. As customer zero, this was an opportunity to learn and quickly make improvements.As Satya shared at the recent Employee Town Hall, our success as a company depends on our relevance in year 51 and beyond - in terms of our innovation, the products we deliver, and the impact we have for our customers and partners. With that, our focus remains on enabling high performance to achieve our priorities spanning security, quality, and leading Al. This focus and our growth mindset encourage excellence, motivates us to push ourselves through challenges, and enables us to deliver results.Today, we're rolling out new and enhanced tools to help you accelerate high performance and swiftly address low performance. Our goal is to create a globally consistent and transparent experience for employees and managers (subject to local laws and consultation). These tools will also help foster a culture of accountability and growth by enabling you to address performance challenges with clarity and empathy.Manager Readiness: FY25 Performance, Connect and Rewards: Register for a 60-minute virtual, facilitated session to dive deeper into the performance landscape at Microsoft. Each session will explore what's new for FY25 rewards, provide guidance on differentiating rewards outcomes, and define what it means to deliver "significant impact." Next week, you'll also see a mail from Performance and Development to all employees with more details on Connects.Clarity and Transparency in Rewards: This year, we'll ensure more transparency and clarity in the Rewards process for managers including additional guidance for each rewards outcome and showing payout percentages to help you make decisions that align with our high-performance expectations. More Rewards details will be shared by the end of the month.Performance Improvement Process: If an employee is not meeting expectations, you can use the Performance Improvement Plan (PIP), a new globally consistent approach to set clear expectations and a timeline for improvement. The employee can accept the improvement plan or choose to transition out of the company with the offer of a Global Voluntary Separation Agreement (GVSA). This performance improvement process is available year-round so you can act quickly to transparently address performance issues, while offering employees choice.Updated Internal Movement/External Rehire Policy: Employees with zero and 60% Rewards outcomes and/or on an active PIP will not be eligible for internal transfers. Former employees who left with zero or 60% Rewards or during/after a PIP will not be eligible for rehire until two years after their termination date.Manager Excellence Initiatives: Additionally, in the coming months, we'll launch several initiatives to strengthen how we measures manage, and motivate teams to deliver for our customers. You'll have access to scenario-based, Al-supported tools designed to help you prepare for constructive or challenging conversations by practicing in an interactive environment.Thank you for your leadership and commitment to driving high performance and accountability across your team. This isn't just about Microsoft's success. This is about your success, your team's success, our customers' success, and together, fostering a culture where high-performing, winning teams can thrive.Have a tip? Contact this reporter via email at or Signal at +1-425-344-8242. Use a personal email address and a nonwork device; .
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  • WWW.VOX.COM
    Pope Francis is dead. The Church must now confront an uncomfortable truth.
    If you wrote a novel in which the first Latin American pope died on Easter Monday — which happened to fall on April 21, the traditional anniversary of the founding of the city of Rome — it would be rejected by any decent editor. But that is precisely what has happened. Pope Francis, a symbol for many of the possibility of a more compassionate Christianity, has died. The apostolic throne of St. Peter is now empty. The period between the death of one pope and the election of his successor by the College of Cardinals is known rather ominously as a “sede vacante” (the vacant seat). It ordinarily lasts about 15 to 20 days, nine of which are the official mourning period known as the novendiale. Shortly after the nine-day period, after funeral rites for the recently deceased pope have been concluded, the Catholic Church’s leading cardinals will meet privately to elect a new pope in a conclave.The word conclave, from the Latin “with key,” comes from the 13th century when, following the death of Pope Clement IV, the cardinals were unable to agree on a new pope for almost three years. As frustration grew, it was decided to lock the cardinals away, providing them with only bread and water until they came to a decision. This practice of secluding the cardinals while they name their choice is now a matter of canon law. Even though the conclave has not begun, in our anxious times many are already starting to consider who might be the next Bishop of Rome. The election of a new pope has always been as much political balancing act as spiritual exercise. Most of the current conversation has focused on the “progressive” versus “traditionalist” strands of the global culture wars. Broadly speaking, this refers to the growing divide in the Catholic Church between the so-called “progressives” who favor reforms to the church’s attitude toward cultural and social issues (particularly those related to gender and sexuality) and the “traditionalists” who oppose such reforms, often advocating for creating even stricter norms in light of liberalization in the wider society. (Francis was considered progressive, whereas his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI was a traditionalist.) This divide is not unique to the Catholic Church and can now be seen in nearly every religious tradition. But while this conflict will likely dominate the conclave and coverage of it, there are also other factors at play. In trying to forecast the next papacy, it is also crucial to focus on the question of national — or more accurately, regional — origin. This has always been a factor in choosing a pope, the vast majority of whom have been Italians. The election of Polish Pope John Paul II in 1978, the first non-Italian in over 500 years, was considered an important show of support to the Catholics still living behind the Iron Curtain. So where might the next pope come from — and who might he be, and what might that signal about the future of the church? The fact is that what the average Christian looks like and where the average Christian lives is changing faster now than ever before, which will inevitably shape the next papacy. Christianity is on the decline in North America and western Europe, even if that decline seems to have slowed in the United States, at least recently. But in Latin America, Asia, and Africa (a region some call the “Global South,” though the term hits a colonialist note), Christianity is growing, both because of higher birth rates and conversions. Some estimates suggest that by 2050, 78 percent of the world’s Christians will live in the Global South. African Christianity, in particular, has experienced tremendous growth, with data suggesting that by 2050, 40 percent of the world’s Christians will live in Africa. For Catholicism in particular, these numbers are even more stark, and the Vatican’s own reports suggest that the future of the Catholic Church is undeniably in Africa.While the demographic center of the Christian world has been shifting, the power centers have stayed firmly in the West. No African or Asian leader has been elected head of a major global Christian denomination since Late Antiquity. (The last pope born in Africa was Pope Gelasius I, who died in 496.) And though Pope Francis was indeed the first pope from Latin America, as the son of Italian immigrants to Argentina, he came firmly within the cultural framework and historical trajectory of southern European Catholicism. It is difficult to see him entirely as a “Pope from the Global South.”One might assume that progressives within the Catholic Church would be championing the rise of leaders from outside Europe. Yet an uncomfortable truth for many of these progressives is that the Global South, and particularly Africa, has become a significant power center for traditionalists in the fierce cultural debates that have rocked Christianity over the past four decades. This has been true not just for Catholics, but Anglicans, Methodists, and others. Of course, it is important to note that millions of dollars have been spent pushing a conservative social agenda in Africa and that African Christians are far from a monolith. But in broad demographic terms, a betting progressive Catholic would likely prefer a European pope over an African one.There are only a few realistic African contenders at the moment, both deeply traditionalist. There is Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, 76. Brought to the Vatican by Pope Francis’s conservative predecessor, Turkson is best known outside of Vatican circles for his anti-gay attitudes, including endorsing Ghana’s draconian anti-homosexuality law. He is joined by Cardinal Robert Sarah, 79, from Guinea, who once positioned himself as a “parallel authority” to Pope Francis. He has defended clerical celibacy, denounced “gender ideology,” and argued that there can be “no theological dialogue” with Islam. These men are among the most conservative potential candidates to be the next pope. Meanwhile, the majority of the progressive candidates, including the most progressive, are nearly all from Europe. There is Cardinal José Tolentino Calaça de Mendonça from Portugal. His relatively liberal views on same-sex relationships as well as his sympathies with a pro-choice Benedictine nun who favors women’s ordination put him firmly in the progressive camp. However, at 59, he is the youngest among the candidates and thus unlikely to get the job on those grounds. More likely would be the Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi (and what is more conventional than an Italian pope?) Largely in the theological and pastoral image of Pope Francis, Zuppi would in some ways be the most “Eurocentric” choice, having spent time as the Vatican’s peace envoy to Ukraine and Russia and seen as largely focused on the European church.Given the demographic realities facing the Catholic Church, a progressive European cardinal seems highly unlikely, even though a progressive, at least on issues of gender and sexuality, is likely needed to stem the bleeding in Europe in particular. Even a traditionalist European cardinal, of which there are many, might be seen as out of step with where Catholicism is headed. All this puts the coming conclave in a seemingly impossible situation.The man who might offer a way around this impasse comes from the traditionally Catholic, Asian country of the Philippines, a progressive candidate from outside Europe (and this time with no European immigrant parents): Cardinal Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle. Cardinal Tagle has been dubbed the “Asian Francis” in some circles because of his commitment to social justice. Yet, he is still not a European and would be the first Asian pope, and the first non-white pope since the early Middle Ages. (It is possible, even likely, that the three African-born popes of Late Antiquity were Black.)His election would pacify Western progressives, who have proven all too ready to jump ship should the church maintain too conservative of a position on key social issues, while offering the Global South — and the new Christian majority — a leader who looks and has lived more like his flock. It seems a clear way forward for a church increasingly divided not just along ideological lines, but geographic ones as well. And, for what it’s worth, Tagle currently leads the Vegas betting odds — as good an indication as any about who will step out onto the balcony in St. Peter’s Square after the white smoke rises. Whoever appears before the crowd that day will be a compromise, a man who in his life and theology must satisfy, to some degree, the varying factions of a changing Catholic Church that is increasingly divided by geography and politics — a reflection of the wider world. He will have just been handed the world’s loudest pulpit and what he does with it will affect not only the faithful, but the world.See More:
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  • METRO.CO.UK
    Games Inbox: Is Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion better than Skyrim?
    The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion – is it the best one? (Bethesda) The Tuesday letters page thinks a new 3D Mario could still be released this year, as one reader looks forward to Doom: The Dark Ages and a Quake reboot. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk Best Scroll So, the world’s worst kept secret is finally going to be revealed, with The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion remaster/remake. It sure has taken a long time to get here but I am convinced it will be worth the wait and that people are forgetting what a great game it is.Morrowind and Skyrim are the games that always get talked about, but I honestly think that Oblivion is better than either of them. Morrowind is just too old and janky, and probably should’ve got a remake first, as it’s almost unplayable right now. Skyrim is obviously a classic, but it’s so overexposed I don’t think there’s anything that could get me to play it again. But Oblivion is basically Skyrim but with more varied scenery and I think that with a good makeover it’ll be seen as one of the best role-playing games ever again. The only problem is that its story is even more of an afterthought than Skryim, but it’s not really good for any of The Elder Scrolls games, so that’s hardly a dealbreaker.Hammeriron Too much excitement So I guess the only real chance for a 3D Super Mario this year is if they announce it between now and their June event. But, like you say, if that was the plan why not just announce it at the Direct? Even if it’s out next year, the Direct would’ve been fine I think. I mean what’s the worst that can happen, that people get too excited for your upcoming slate?Although, I suppose, if I was to think like a marketing person, they probably don’t want to give you any reason not to get Donkey Kong. If you knew that was coming out in July and Mario in October, you might be tempted to just skip one and wait. That makes a fair amount of sense, I guess, and does leave a chance for there to be a secret big Christmas game. I dunno though, this all seems to be creating so much unnecessary confusion and speculation. I really don’t know how it benefits Nintendo to leave people guessing like this.Statto Every second counts A nice reminder, with that Paul Rudd 1991 advert, that marketing back then didn’t mean anything more complicated than a 30 montage of games… apart from Paul Rudd in a trench coat that was it. Ah, simpler times.Maybe 30 seconds is a bit short but I’d much rather that the Nintendo Direct had been a lot shorter and packed a lot more in. I really don’t know why they didn’t include teasers for things like Mario and Animal Crossing, that we know are coming but they haven’t mentioned yet. Just five seconds each would’ve been fine but a montage of everything coming to the Switch 2 for the next few years would’ve got me opening my wallet a lot quicker than Hyrule Warriors 3 and Kirby: Air Riders.Benjy Dog Email your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.uk Doomed release I’m really looking forward to Doom: The Dark Ages next month, but I notice there’s not a lot of hype around it at the moment. I don’t see many people talking abut it and I don’t know anyone in real life that is aware of it.This disappoints me because the other two reboot games are some of my favourites of the last 10 years or so and, I would say, by far the most interesting first person shooters of the last two generations. I guess they’re pretty hard, and the Doom franchise isn’t as big as it was, but I hope The Dark Ages isn’t the last one for now. I also hope there’s more interest in the long rumoured new Quake from MachineGames. After the success of Indiana Jones And The Great Circle I feel they must be in Microsoft’s good books at the moment and will hopefully get a lot of money and support. I’d really love to see a big budget, Lovecraftian Quake with a proper single-player mode, that has the weird, experimental atmosphere of the original. None of the other sequels had it but I’m really hoping that MachineGames will vibe with that, and we can get another classic on our hands.ChrisI Froze toes Very interested to see what Assassin’s Creed Shadows looks like on Switch 2, but I’ve already got the game so I’m not going to be buying it. I do feel it’s a bit of a shame that Ubisoft has not announced anything new or exclusive yet though.They’ve always worked closely with Nintendo and I even enjoyed ZombiU and Rayman Legends on Wii U, so I was hoping they’d do something similar now. I don’t know if getting burned on those made them not do exclusives for the Switch 2, but I hope other publishers don’t get cold feet for similar reasons. You’d think the success of the Switch 1 would mean no hesitation but that’s not what we’re seeing so far, which surprises me a bit.Tacle When worlds collide It’s interesting how much effort CD Projekt seems to be making with the Cyberpunk 2077 port for the Switch 2. I guess there was The Witcher 3 port but otherwise I don’t recall them having much contact with Nintendo or ever really acknowledging them.I always like the idea of opposites working together though. I’d love to see an actual collaboration with CD Projekt. Not V being in Smash Bros. but a whole game that they both worked on, CD Projekt doing the script and role-playing elements, maybe, and Nintendo providing the gameplay. Or imagine Nintendo co-operating with Naughty Dog! That’s the one aspect of console exclusives that I don’t really like, that the very best developers are locked to one system and can never really escape. Although it’s a price worth paying, especially when you look at what happens when they do, with someone like Bungie. I always wondered what level of involvement Nintendo had with Eternal Darkness, since they always advise on every game they publish. There probably wasn’t much to do there, since that wasn’t really about the gameplay but the thought of Nintendo helping out on a mature rated game intrigues me.Lawgiver9 Parent company I was wondering why Cristiano Ronaldo was in the new Fatal Fury and now I find out it’s because SNK is owned by a Saudi company and he plays for a Saudi team? And people wonder why buyouts and acquisitions are viewed as a bad thing. Smaller companies either lose their identity as part of the larger company or end up having to do things like change their games to include things they don’t want.To be honest, it’s put me off the game entirely and I think I’ll take a pass until it’s much cheaper. I knew they weren’t the same SNK they used to be, but I didn’t realise things had got this bad.Loscus The game of forever With so many companies very obvious getting out of the way for GTA 6 I’m more interested in what happens when the game comes out. It’s not just that it’s going to suck all the air out of the room at launch, people are going to be playing this thing for months and years.I genuinely think there’s a danger GTA 6 could bring the games industry to its knees but being almost the only thing people play for years on end. Even people that say they don’t like GTA are going to want to see what the fuss is about and that’s just going to bring in more and more players. Short of Rockstar’s servers breaking down, which seems like a real possibility, I don’t see what else is going to stop people playing it. Why would you stop if it plays and looks as good as the trailer. GTA 5 is a pretty flawed game in a number ways but people are still playing it more than a decade later. A brand new GTA 6, that looks and plays better, is going to be so big I don’t think people are prepared for the impact. It would be an irony if the biggest danger to the games industry was its greatest success.Trent Manger Inbox also-rans I still think that McDonalds’ DualSense is the ugliest controller but I’ve got to say that Cap’n Crunch one comes pretty close. Maybe they can sell them in those weird American Candy stores they have everywhere now?JesterNot quite sure what’s more hilarious: Cristiano Ronaldo appearing in the new Fatal Fury or the fact that the depiction of him in the game is even worse than that bronze statue of him from a few years ago! Still, I guess the goal of raising visibility for the game has been achieved, so well played SNK.Julian More Trending Email your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.uk The small printNew Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers’ letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content. You can also submit your own 500 to 600-word Reader’s Feature at any time via email or our Submit Stuff page, which if used will be shown in the next available weekend slot. You can also leave your comments below and don’t forget to follow us on Twitter. Arrow MORE: Games Inbox: Will GTA 6 be on Nintendo Switch 2? Arrow MORE: Games Inbox: How long will the PS5 console last? GameCentral Sign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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