• 3 Signs That Youre A Serial MonogamistBy A Psychologist
    www.forbes.com
    With the prevalence of long-term monogamous relationships worldwide, jumping from one to another may ... [+] seem like the normbut that doesnt always mean its healthy.gettyIf youve watched the popular 2005 sitcom How I Met Your Mother, you might remember Ted Mosby and his potential date, Maggie Wilks. Maggie was the dream girl-next-door that Ted wanted to date for years, but never got the chance to.She moved from one serious relationship to another, with very short periods of singlehood in between. She eventually entered yet another (and final) relationship with her childhood sweetheart, Adam, before Ted could pursue her.Maggie seemed to be a serial monogamistsomeone who moves from one long-term monogamous relationship to another with very little time for herself in between. Its possible her relationship with Adam was serendipitous, but the question remainsis it healthy to date people for one, two or more years, and then quickly move on to someone else?While there is nothing wrong with enjoying monogamous relationships, it is crucial to be able to function independently without relying on a relationship. But for some, being in a relationship feels more comfortable due to societal expectations or a possible fear of loneliness or abandonment.Here are three signs that you might be a serial monogamist, and why you might need to take some time out for yourself.MORE FOR YOU1. You Are Rarely (If Ever) SingleWhen was the last time you were truly singlewith no relationship, situationship or unresolved feelings for your ex? If these periods in between relationships are rare or fleeting, its possible youre a serial monogamist.Jumping from one relationship to another with little to no time for healing can be a definitive sign that its difficult for you to be single. For instance, If you crave the high that comes from being in love, you may be pursuing relationships for the wrong reasons.Research also shows that many individuals settle for less in their relationships out of a strong fear of being single. This can trap them in unhappy, stagnant or even harmful relationship dynamics.If this sounds familiar, ask yourself if you would be truly comfortable being by yourself and not dating for at least a year. If the answer is no, you may need to reflect on what singlehood means to you, with curiosity and self-compassion.Ask yourself, what specifically makes you anxious about being alone? Do you tend to overthink, fear the future or look down on yourself? These answers bring you one step closer to being kinder to yourself and learning to embrace time alone.2. You Dont Take The Time To Truly Heal From HeartbreakImagine dating someone who just got out of a relationship. Theres a good chance they might bring up their ex in conversations, even unintentionally, which could make you uncomfortable. Hearing about a partners past can often lead to feelings of comparison and inadequacy.While its important to keep an open mind when discussing past relationships, if youre the one constantly bringing up your past with someone new, it may indicate youre still emotionally attached to your ex. This can hinder the development of emotional intimacy and trust in your current relationship.When we dont fully understand how our life experiences, traumas, previous relationships and families influence us, the way we show up in romantic partnerships will likely be a continuation of whatever role we played in those previous relationships, says Moe Ari Brown, LMFT, therapist and Hinges Love and Connection expert.If youve ever wondered why Maggie from How I Met Your Mother was a serial monogamist, its possible that she was playing the same role in every relationship. Without much time to explore her own hobbies, interests and needs between relationships, she couldnt break the cycle.If youre trying to heal from a past relationship, its crucial to acknowledge your emotions and focus on self-care. Take time to rediscover your hobbies, pursue new goals and reconnect with loved ones. These steps will help you rebuild your sense of self and ensure youre entering your next relationship from a place of emotional wholeness.3. You Find Yourself Overly Romanticizing LoveWhen someone begins to fall in love, it can activate reward systems in the brain, which is why love has been scientifically likened to an addictive drug. Humans are naturally wired to enjoy feelings of love and affection, but for some, these feelings can extend beyond a healthy interest in relationships. When this happens, it is referred to as love addiction.Consequently, serial monogamists often seek fulfillment through romantic relationships, idolizing romantic love to the point where it involves excessive and unrealistic expectations. This means placing romantic attachments on a pedestal and believing that love is the ultimate source of happiness. This can lead to constantly seeking out relationships that they believe will finally meet their expectations, while leaving no room for healthy conflict or personal growth in the process.However, this mindset is dangerous, as it often sets you up for constant disappointment and lowers your commitment to making a relationship work. Even the healthiest relationships have flaws, and accepting this is crucial to making love last.One way to counter this pattern is by taking an extended break from the dating scene. Stepping away from the cycle of romantic relationships allows you to reset, reflect and focus on building a healthier relationship with yourself, and form a more balanced perception of what relationships with others should look like.Some people naturally gravitate toward long-term relationships without ever spending much time on their own. Serial monogamy is not inherently harmful, but it becomes a problem when it prevents you from exploring your own individuality or healing from past experiences.If you recognize these signs in your own dating experiences, it may be wise to take a step back before you jump back in. Ultimately, the goal is not to avoid love, but to love in a way that nurtures both you and your partner in the long run.Is a fear of being single driving you toward serial monogamy? Take the science-backed Fear Of Being Single Scale to find out.
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  • Escape From Tarkov Wipe And Patch Date Confirmed, And Its Very Soon
    www.forbes.com
    The next Tarkov wipe is coming very soon. Credit: Battlestate Games / Mike StubbsBattlestate Games has announced the release date for the next Escape From Tarkov wipe and patch, and as expected it will arrive before the end of this week.In an announcement on the Escape From Tarkov social media accounts, it was announced that the next Tarkov wipe will arrive tomorrow, December 26. The wipe will launch alongside patch 0.16.0.0, which will also be installed on the same day.The installation of Escape From Tarkov patch 0.16.0.0 will begin at 7:00 AM GMT / 2:00 AM EST on December 26, and is expected to take around eight hours. This means that the patch, and new wipe, could be playable as early as 3:00 PM GMT / 10AM EST on December 26. However, during the installation process neither Escape From Tarkov, or Escape From Tarkov Arena will be playable, so you will have to find something else to fill your time.Speculation has been rife over the past few days that the wipe may not arrive on a Thursday as is usually the case. With the end of wipe events taking a slightly different direction this year, some speculated that the wipe could arrive over the weekend, but the launch of the fire sale event earlier today all but confirmed that the wipe will arrive tomorrow. That means you only have a few hours to try out the best builds you can think of for cheap before everything wipes tomorrow.When the wipe does arrive tomorrow, which based on previous years could be later than 3:00 PM GMT due to delays, there will be a lot of new toys added to Tarkov. The gun nerds among you will likely be racing to find some of the new weapons, which include the awesome looking Sako TRG M10 bolt action sniper rifle, which takes .388 Lapua ammo and will likely one shot other PMCs if you have good aim.MORE FOR YOUThen theres the expected rework to the Customs map, which hasnt been shown off too much so far but is expected to be more of a visual overhaul rather than a new design. However, we do know that some areas will change, including the big warehouse attached to the mechanics shop, which should finally be opened up and not just a massive inaccessible block on the map.Other changes coming in Escape From Tarkov patch 0.16.0.0 include the upgrade to the Unity 2022 engine, a brand-new type of extraction and a new recoil system. However, it will not be a surprise full release for Tarkov, with that now expected to come in 2025.
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  • I finally have RCS on my iPhone, and its one of my favorite iOS 18 features
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Table of ContentsTable of ContentsFinally, no more pixelated images and videosIts the little thingsApples Messages app has certainly come a long way. When the first iPhone launched in 2007, it could only send SMS there werent even picture messages. Then it got MMS protocol support in iPhone OS 3.0 with the iPhone 3GS. With iPhone OS 5.0, Apple implemented its own iMessage chat protocol, making it easy for Apple users to communicate with other Apple device users.However, when it came to messaging Android users, Apple dragged its feet for the longest time, sticking with SMS and MMS, which arent encrypted and dont offer full-quality photo and video sending. It also sparked the whole blue bubble versus green bubble war.Recommended VideosIn 2024, though, Apple finally brought peace by adding Rich Communication Services (RCS) to iOS 18. This is a feature Ive been waiting years for, and it has made messaging much easier for me and my non-iPhone-using friends and family. Heres why RCS has been a game-changer for me and my family.RelatedChristine Romero-Chan / Digital TrendsIve always been a heavy photo taker with my iPhone, but ever since becoming a parent a few years ago, my smartphone camera use has gone way up. Before my kid, I didnt take many videos, but now there are so many more moments where a still image just wont do.I frequently chat with my sister, the only Android user in my immediate family, through messages. We often share photos and videos, especially of our pets. But whenever we did, the videos were sent through MMS, meaning they were the size of a postage stamp and incredibly pixelated and blurry, like from a potato phone in the early 2000s. It got to the point where we wouldnt even send each other video clips; instead, we mostly just relied on uploading to something like Google Photos or iCloud and then sharing the link.With iOS 18, Apple finally implemented RCS support in Messages, making it easier to communicate with Android users. RCS supports high-resolution photos and video, and this has been my favorite use case for RCS on my iPhone 16 Pro.Christine Romero-Chan / Digital TrendsAgain, I take a lot of photos and videos of my daughter and her shenanigans. For sharing batches of media, I typically upload them all to an app Ive been using for the past three years called Family Album, where all my invited family members can view our photos and videos.But sometimes, I want to make sure that my sister has seen something, whether thats my daughter or our cat or dog or even something cute I come across that she would like. Ive really appreciated having RCS support now because I know the images and videos I send her no longer look like they were taken with a flip phone from the 2000s. Even in group chats, RCS support has made a difference because those images used to be pretty low quality, but now everything that gets sent looks great.Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital TrendsThough the high-resolution images and video are the biggest reason why I love having RCS, its not the only one.Another thing I like is the fact that you can not only see when an RCS message was delivered, similar to SMS, but you can also see if it has been read as well. Of course, this is dependent on the user enabling read receipts, but in the case of my sister, its been handy to see when she actually read my message instead of me just wondering if she saw it or not.Its also worth remembering that RCS on the iPhone is in its infancy right now. The full-resolution photos and videos are the main highlight and read receipts are the second-most important feature to me. Its great that we have RCS finally on the iPhone, but theres still room for improvement. Currently, RCS between Android and iPhone does not have end-to-end encryption (E2EE), which is a bummer.Joe Maring / Digital TrendsWhen RCS is sent from Android to Android, there is some encryption on those messages to keep them safe from interference. The same E2EE applies to iMessage, which is Apples proprietary messaging protocol. It sounds like the organization behind RCS is working on implementing E2EE between Android and iPhone, though there is no estimated time frame yet.I also wish that RCS messages were a different color than green, which is also used for regular SMS. It would be much easier to differentiate between SMS and RCS, similar to SMS/RCS and iMessage.Despite the flaws, having RCS has been beneficial and worth the wait. Some people may just use iMessage exclusively because everyone they talk to may use an iPhone. But for me, when I have some family and friends who use Android and wont switch, having RCS has definitely been a great quality of life improvement.Editors Recommendations
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  • 7 best music biopics ever, ranked
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Searchlight PicturesTable of ContentsTable of Contents7. Walk the Line (2005)6. Im Not There (2007)5. Love & Mercy (2015)4. The Pianist (2002)3. Tick, Tick Boom! (2021)2. Maestro (2023)1. Amadeus (1984)James Mangolds Bob Dylan biopic, A Complete Unknown, would seem to mark a return to an era of serious-minded films about serious-minded musicians, psychological character studies rather than jukebox-inflected, semi-fantasist extravaganzas. (Scott Coopers upcoming Deliver Me From Nowhere, about Bruce Springsteen, looks to continue the trend.)In honor of its release this past week, its worth looking back at the films that have led us here. The following is a list of the seven best music biopics has ever released.Recommended Videos7. Walk the Line (2005)20th Century FoxMangolds earlier music biopic was the prototypical 21st-century example of the genre. Walk the Line, the birth-to-death story of Johnny Cash (played by the Oscar-nominated Joaquin Phoenix), was memorably parodied in Jake Kasdans spectacular 2007 film Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (Dewey Cox has to think about his whole life before he plays), and its easy to see why.RelatedWalk the Line has a time-jumping, playing-the-hits structure that just makes sense for this kind of movie. The 2010s to 2020s run of second-rate musician bio-dramas (Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman, Stardust, Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody) tried vainly to replicate this movies old-Hollywood appeal but failed to capture what made Walk the Line so captivating when it premiered in 2005.6. Im Not There (2007)A conventional biopic cannot contain Bob Dylan, an enigma whose current film biography, courtesy of Mangold, correctly but somewhat evasively characterizes him as a complete unknown. Better to look at this utterly strange jigsaw puzzle, constructed by co-screenwriters Oren Moverman and Todd Haynes and directed by the latter.Six actors play six different aspects of Dylan, none of them named Bob Dylan. Some of them (like Marcus Carl Franklins 11-year-old Black troubadour calling himself Woody Guthrie) resemble the singer/songwriter only in superficial, artistic ways. Others, like the singer characters played by Cate Blanchett and Christian Bale, are closer fits. They have one thing in common to see them properly, as with certain virtuoso paintings, you have to step back and see all the brushstrokes arrayed side by side.5. Love & Mercy (2015)The second of Oren Movermans screenplays to make the cut here (this one co-written by Michael Alan Lerner), Love & Mercy is an innovative film biography that fittingly assigns two vastly different eras of the life of the Beach Boys mastermind Brian Wilson to two different actors.The Batmans Riddler, Paul Dano, delicate and intense, is Wilson in the era of Pet Sounds, the 1966 album that cemented his legacy as a genius. John Cusack, heavy-footed and doleful, is Wilson in his forties, lost at sea and under the influence of a pill-pushing psychologist (Paul Giamatti). The performances are stellar, but its the immortal music that grabs and keeps you.4. The Pianist (2002)Famed Polish Jewish composer and pianist Wadysaw Szpilman was 28 and a star on Polish radio when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939. Rounded up, along with his family, into the Warsaw Ghetto in 1940, he was subsequently separated from them and survived for five years, hidden in attics and secret apartments in occupied Warsaw.His survival ultimately depended upon entertaining a Wermacht captain (Thomas Kretschmann) with a penchant for Chopin. The Brutalists Adrien Brody won the Best Actor Oscar for his wrenching, body-transforming turn as Szpilman in this harrowing watch with adulation for incongruously elegant, lilting music at its core.3. Tick, Tick Boom! (2021) Jonathan Larson, the martyr-hero of the musical theater world, was 35 when he died of an aortic dissection on the night of the first Off-Broadway preview of his masterpiece Rent in 1996. His cause of bringing musicals to the masses was later taken up by successor Lin-Manuel Miranda, whose notably assured 2021 debut feature film adapted Larsons earlier autobiographical musical, Tick, Tick Boom!.The film covers Larsons abortive attempt to complete a musical based on Orwells 1984and unwittingly foreshadows Larsons abbreviated life in covering the story of his best friend (Robin de Jess) being stricken with AIDS. The chief highlight of the film is Andrew Garfields Academy Award-nominated performance as Larson, which is loose-limbed and charming.2. Maestro (2023)NetflixSuffused with the balance of exquisite reality and high-flown fantasy that is itself the hallmark of great music, Bradley Coopers biopic of composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein, Maestro, is in every sense an improvement on his A Star is Born retread of 2018.Anchored by well-matched performances by Cooper himself as Bernstein and Carey Mulligan as his wife Felicia, the film is more a portrait of the sexual dynamics of their marriage than a story about his music, per se; nonetheless, Cooper directs a bravura sequence of Bernstein conducting in the Ely Cathedral in England that perfectly captures Bernsteins charisma on the podium. The film is very possibly a modern masterpiece and deserves another look after being shut out at last years Oscars.1. Amadeus (1984)Orion PicturesIn its own way, the central relationship in Amadeus, between the divinely inspired but insipidly crude Wolfgang Mozart (Tom Hulce) and the haughty but mediocre Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham, who won an Oscar for his role), is as paradigmatic as Romeo and Juliet, King Arthur and Lancelot, the black hat and the white hat.Its portrayal of insane jealousy motivated by grudging regard reveals something fundamental about musicians and composers the gift for music is a tactile skill bound by ones own physical limitations, all the more infuriating because it can rise to such supernatural heights in a few lucky, gifted geniuses.Editors Recommendations
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  • At 25, The Talented Mr. Ripley is still the best take on a chilling classic
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    Matt Damon and Jude Law in The Talented Mr. Ripley Paramount Pictures / Paramount PicturesThe big turning point of The Talented Mr. Ripley is a brutal act of violence on the water the moment when conniving con man Tom Ripley claims the charmed life that he wants. But thats not exactly how the scene plays out in the second and still finest adaptation of Patricia Highsmiths 1955 bestseller. Highsmith presented Toms actions as entirely calculated, even as they seemed to occur to him rather casually, like a solution to a problem he hadnt acknowledged. But theres no premeditation to what happens on that boat in the 1999 movie made from The Talented Mr. Ripley. Here, a dark plot becomes a crime of passion, an impulse. Were watching a Ripley more warm- than cold-blooded, but no less dangerous for it.? THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY (1999) | Trailer | Full HD | 1080pYou could call the film a warm-blooded Ripley, too. Written and directed by the late Anthony Minghella, it transformed literatures most devious charlatan into a tragic figure an approach that vexed some Highsmith heads in 99. (An earlier adaptation, the 1960 Purple Noon, cast French movie star Alain Delon as a much more characteristically blank Ripley.) Today, the film might startle a whole new generation of viewers, those whose only exposure to this iconic character is Netflixs recent Ripley. That black-and-white, eight-episode limited series plays the same song in a much different key. Its the starkly reptilian yin to the sunny, anguished yang of Minghellas less reverently faithful version.Recommended VideosThe Talented Mr. Ripley, which hit theaters 25 years ago this month, now looks like one of the great prestige productions of its decade a dazzling suspense thriller that deepens its source material rather than merely replicating it. Minghella was coming off the success of The English Patient, another literary adaptation and period piece that won a bunch of Oscars (including Best Picture) but also inspired a whole Seinfeldepisode about how boring it was. His Ripley is just as lavish it drinks in the luxury Tom covets, the brilliant splendor of mid-century, seaside Italy and considerably more lively. It also boasts a murderers row of glamorous, Miramax-era awards darlings, including Gwyneth Paltrow, Cate Blanchett, Jude Law, and a hilariously catty Philip Seymour Hoffman.MiramaxThe setup is straight out of Highsmith: Two-bit New York fraud Tom Ripley (Matt Damon) is hired to go overseas and bring home erstwhile playboy Dickie Greenleaf (Law), whose shipping-magnate father confuses our anti-hero for a prep-school confidante of his irresponsible son. But for as close as Minghella hews to the basic shape of the original story, he also tweaks it in significant ways, including retelling it against the backdrop of a burgeoning 1950s jazz scene and complicating Toms eventual subterfuge his juggling of two identities through the introduction of a socialite (Blanchett) who confuses him for Dickie.Talented Mr Ripley Everybody Should Have One TalentThe most meaningful deviation is the characterization of Ripley, who doesnt much resemble the empty vessel Highsmith described. As played by a young Matt Damon, the character is needier and perhaps more disturbingly human, an eager-to-please nerd too besotted with Dickie (and his life of leisure) to recognize that hes fast overstaying his welcome and losing his fickle new companions interest. Damon, coming off his Oscar-nominated turn in Good Will Hunting, weaponizes his boyishness, planting a simmering resentment and a ruthless intelligence behind the puppy-dog ingratiation. Turning Ripley into a clingy, lovelorn misfit is a bold gamble, but the star pulls it off.MiramaxToms sexuality was something of a question mark in the Ripley novels. Highsmith shrugged it off in interviews. Like everything else about the character, it seemed fluid, maybe arbitrary, discardable: If he pursued men as well as women, it was as a creature of opportunity, recognizing any potential fulfillment of his appetites. Minghella clarifies the matter, turning queer subtext into text by making Ripley explicitly closeted and self-loathing. This version of the character aches not just for Dickies status and wealth and privilege but also for Dickie himself and how could he not, with Law in the role, at the height of his charm, smarm, and sex appeal?MiramaxThe choice lends The Talented Mr. Ripley a devastating new emotional dimension, even before Minghella introduces a love interest (Jack Davenport) that Highsmith didnt, a chance at real happiness that must be sacrificed in a very literal sense before Tom can complete his climb up the ladder. On the page, the saga of Tom Ripley is an amoral awakening: a tale of self-actualization through violence and identity theft, where pulling yourself up by the bootstraps means pulling someone else down under the waves. On the screen, it becomes something sadder, a drama about the desperate loneliness of pretending to be someone or something youre not of playing straight and rich, as this Ripley does.MiramaxIts Damon who gives Minghellas soulful reworking of a classic its, well, soul. Hes never been better, or scarier: The scene where a bathrobed Tom approaches the suspicious Marge (Paltrow), disguising menace as cloying concern, could make a corpses skin crawl. One might say that upward mobility is the throughline of the stars whole career; many of his most memorable roles, from Will Hunting to the mole gangster of The Departed, are working-class guys circling a class promotion. Perhaps that resonates with Damon and his mythologized backstory as an ordinary dude from Boston who made good. As Ripley, a nobody faking his way into the life of a somebody, the actor supplies new complexity to a character usually defined by little more than his cold-eyed aspiration and duplicity.The Talented Mr. Ripley - Final sceneThe 99 Ripley wont satisfy any stickler for fidelity. The Netflix version comes much closer to capturing the spirit of Highsmiths novel, both in the inclusion of subplots only a TV runtime could accommodate and in the icier portrayal of the title character. (Despite being in his mid-40s, Andrew Scott really nails the authors conception of a go-getter unburdened by conscience.) But Minghella and Damon tap a richer vein of drama in the material by giving us a more sympathetic Ripley, one whose hurt feelings the envy and dejection and raw pining that drives him are more relatable than a non-homicidal viewer might care to confess. In that respect, the film gets at the true, discomforting appeal of this story: You stare at Tom Ripley and recognize yourself in the black hole of his murderous machinations.The Talented Mr. Ripley is currently streaming on Paramount+ and is available to rent or purchase through major digital services. For more of A.A. Dowds writing, visit his Authory page.
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  • The 3-year bear market in home sales is finally over, research firm says. Here's how to invest for a rebound.
    www.businessinsider.com
    US home sales just ended a 39-month year-over-year decline, signaling the end of the bear market, NDR said.Affordability issues, driven by high mortgage rates, drove the 3-year decline in home sales activity.Investors could take advantage of the setup by buying the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF, NDR said.The bear market in US home sales is finally over, according to a recent note from Ned Davis Research.The firm highlighted that total single-family home sales finally turned positive year-over-year after 39 months of consecutive declines.The 39-month decline in home sales was only outdone by the 43-month decline during the housing bubble from 2005 through 2009."But the recent affordability-driven pandemic bear could not be more different than the credit-driven housing bubble bear," Pat Tschosik, a strategist at Ned Davis Research, said.The main difference between the two notable declines in home sales is affordability.Whereas the affordability index rose 53 points from 2005 through 2009, it plunged 39 points from 2021 through 2024, driven by high mortgage rates and ever-rising home prices. Ned Davis Research "Homeowners, locked into low rates and unwilling to move, added to low supply and higher prices," Tschosik said.Additionally, the stocks of homebuilders outperformed over the past three years, compared to them underperforming during the 2005 through 2009 stretch.The recent rebound in home sales activity suggests to Tschosik that the housing market should thaw in 2025, enabling a rebound in durable and home improvement spending.For investors, that means the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF could be a worthy addition to portfolios for next year. The ticker symbol is "ITB.""We are watching ITB for an upgrade. If inflation fears are overblown, the recent ITB correction could be a great buying opportunity," Tschosik said.The ETF has declined by more than 15% since fears of a rebound in inflation gripped the market in late November.The top holdings within the Home Construction ETF include home builders D.R. Horton, Lennar Corp, NVR, and Pulte Group, as well as home-improvement retailers Home Depot and Lowe's.
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  • The 4 most fascinating storylines in the creator economy that BI's reporters will be watching next year
    www.businessinsider.com
    Amanda's storyline to watch: Spotify and YouTube battle over video podcastingJoe Rogan dominates the podcast landscape. Syfy/Getty Images Creators are launching their own talk shows in the form of video podcasts.As this growing trend of serialized long-form content takes over screen times, two tech giants Spotify and YouTube will continue to compete to be the best platform.YouTube is already a strong leader in the creator economy and a go-to creator platform. Spotify has also had a good year, reporting increased profitability in its Q3 earnings.As video podcasts rise in popularity, these two platforms will have to convince both creators and viewers why they're the best place to earn money, engage with fans, and reach new audiences.The race has already begun. YouTube took a stand by releasing a suite of tools and features that creators can't get on other podcast platforms including the ability to go live, respond to comments, and earn revenue from donations.Meanwhile, Spotify invested heavily in video in 2024, developing its own tools and more ways to pay creators for video podcasts through subscription earnings and ad revenue.So, how will these platforms compete in 2025, and who will ultimately win in the video podcast race?-Amanda Perelli, senior reporter
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  • Our Favorite io9 Stories of 2024
    gizmodo.com
    There was so much to cover in 2024 across genre entertainment. Film and television welcomed new projects in the realms of Marvel Studios, anime, Star Wars, Warner Bros. and its DC Studios,and more. io9 also brought you latest from the worlds of games and theme parks, including big franchises like Indiana Jones and Universal Studios soon-to-arrive Epic Universe. Geekcore collectibles, toys, books, and comics kept our wallets very busy, too. Here are our favorite staff picks for stories and coverage of all things genre. Film Krypto! Warner Bros. 15 Things We Learned From James Gunn on the Set of Superman By Germain Lussier Its a bird, its a plane, its a report from the set of James GunnsSuperman. This past June, io9 was among several outlets invited to Cleveland, Ohio to visit the set of one of themost highly anticipated superherofilms ever. The relaunch of the DC Universe, starring the worlds first and most famous superhero, all from theman who madeGuardians of the Galaxy. And on that beautiful summer day, we learneda great many things about the film. And while we cant share everything we learned just yet, we can share some very,very cool stuff. [Read more] Captain America: The Winter Soldier By Justin Carter Back in theearly Marvel Cinematic Universe days, the second movies of a sub-franchise werent much to write home about. BothIron Man 2in 2010 and 2013s Thor: The Dark World felt like unremarkable sequels compared to their predecessors, hamstrung by being fast-tracked before they were ready or just not doing much beyond offering some light spectacle. That wasnt the case withCaptain America: The Winter Soldier. [Read More]MoanasMoana 2Destiny Was Foretold in the First Film By Sabina Graves When the credits rolled onMoana 2, we could not get over the stunning reveal that Moana (Aulii Cravalho) made a huge sacrifice which resulted in theDisney Princess becoming more than a royal wayfinder. As Moana gazed upon her gifts in the form of a new tattoo and oar upgrade, she asked herself does that mean? before Maui (Dwayne Johnson) gave a winking response as a non-answer as they celebrated theirwin against the gods. [Read more]Madame Web Is the Best Superhero Movie 2003 Has to Offer By James Whitbrook You may have heard that Madame Web isnot a good movie. That there are, in fact, things about Madame Web that could be described as The Worst. I am not here to refute those claims; there are in fact many things aboutMadame Webthat are not what you would feasibly call good. But in its surprise camp turn, it embraces its period setting to deliver a potent reminder on how far superhero movies have come, and what theyve lost along the way. [Read more]Time Is Finally onTenets By Justin Carter When Tenet released in 2020, it did so under the worst of circumstances. The context of the pandemic made the film a lightning rod when writer-director Christopher Nolan encouraged people to see it in theaters. Compared to his other recent movies, the time-bending spy thriller saw a more muted reaction. It made $365 million (against a $200M budget), and those who went to see it werent fully clicking with it. [Read More]Image: E One. Jennifer Kent Looks Back on 10 Years of Traumatizing Audiences With The Babadook By Cheryl Eddy The Babadookis returning to theaters forits 10-year anniversarybut really, did Jennifer Kents searing tale of a mother grappling with grief so powerful it manifests a monster everreallyescape your thoughts? The movie is terrifying on multiple levels, adroitly drawing on elements plucked from the darkest nightmares. io9 was thrilled to talk to the writer-director about her 2014 debut, which for a variety of reasons (somedecidedly more lighthearted than others) has only seen its pop culture footprint grow larger since its release.[Read more]John KrasinskisIF: The Spoiler FAQ By Germain Lussier Who could have guessed that John Krasinski would be so good at making horror movies? His directorial debut wasA Quiet Place, he followed it up withA Quiet Place Part II, and now hes made IF, not a horror film by genre but a horrible film in quality.We reviewed the film quite unfavorably herebut now that its in theaters, figured it might be worth diving into further by bringing by an io9 classic:the spoiler FAQ. [Read More] Longlegs Osgood Perkins on Nic Cage, T. rex, and the Scariest Movie of the Summer By Cheryl EddyIts almost time forLonglegsto arrive, and if you havent been counting down the days, you must not be a horror fan. It stars Maika Monroe(It Follows)as an FBI agent hunting a truly peculiar serial killerplayed by Nicolas Cage in one of hismost memorably shocking rolesever,which is saying a lot. You can check outio9s review of the film here, and keep reading for an interview with writer-director Osgood Perkins(The Blackcoats Daughter). [Read more] One of Dunes Biggest, Non-Spoiler Questions Is Answered in Sandworm Poop By Germain Lussier Dune: Part Two, which opens in theaters March 1, has a lot of thumpers in it. Like, a lot. Mainly because the Fremen and their culture are such a prevalent part of the film and often need a ride. And while watching, you cant help but wonder, where do these thumpers come from? Who makes them? Are they just one-and-done devices? We decided to ask the man himself, Dune: Part Two co-writer and director Denis Villeneuve, for his thoughts on thumpers and his answer did not disappoint. [Read More] io9 Meets the Real Hero of theVenomFranchise: Mrs. Chen By Gordon JacksonAs the bizarre and divisive yet always shockingly good-naturedVenomtrilogydraws to a close(still the gayest Marvel franchise, contrary to public opinion), something we can all agree on is the sheer joy of its breakout character: Mrs. Chen, the unflappable bodega proprietor and Eddie Brocks only human friend. Its for this reason we were honored to have the opportunity to speak to Peggy Lu, the pharmacist-turned-actor who portrays her. [Read more] Sonic 3 Is a Fast and Furry-ous Ride By Sabina GravesFull of electric spectacle and action-packed adventure,Sonic the Hedgehog 3completes the best video game movie trilogy yet. [Read more] How Cult Filmmaker Don Coscarelli Brought Phantasm From the Screen to the Page By Cheryl Eddyio9 talked to cult filmmaker Don Coscarelli when he released his memoir in 2018. Now, the director of Phantasm I-IV, as well as Bubba Ho-Tep, The Beastmaster, and John Dies at the End, is trying something new: fiction. Or rather, Phictiona book of short stories that explores tales from the world of Phantasm. [Read More] Aliens Villain Carter Burke Is Back! And Paul Reiser Told Us All About It By Germain Lussier James Camerons Aliens is one of the great sequels of all time. Heck, it might beone of the greatest movies of all time. And, in the almost 40 years since its release, moments, images, andcharacters from the filmhave cemented themselves in thepantheon of pop culture. [Read more] Television Netflix / Science Saru Racists Are Trying to MakeDan Da Danthe Latest Front in Their Culture War By Isaiah ColbertLately, the internet has become anuclear wasteland. The shelf life to enjoy new media, be it video games or anime, inevitably becomes the focal point of ameritless culture war, where chuds accuse art of being woke, pearl clutch at diverse characters who dont look like them being showcased in media, andlaunch harassment campaignsagainst creators and those attempting to foster constructive dialogue. [Read more] Star WarsIs at Its Most Interesting When It Trusts Us to Not Trust It By James Whitbrook The third episode ofThe Acolyteis pretty incredible fora lot of reasons. Its an episode that, in content, invites us to consider new perspectives on some of the sagasmost fundamental spiritual ideas, and delivers a meaty slice of back story for its protagonists and antagonists alike. But it also does something quite remarkable for Star Wars: it asks us to not make the assumption that what we are watching is the whole truth. [Read More] The Creators Behind Netflixs Castlevania Myth-Bust the Ins and Outs of Animation By Isaiah ColbertAnimation has experienced a mixed output in 2024. On the one hand, shows and films like the recently releasedDan Da Dan,Look Back,andRanma 1/2have reignited fans affinity for animation continuing to be an awe-inspiring medium teeming with visual clarity and fluid artistry. On the other hand, hotly anticipated shows like the long-delayedAdult SwimUzumakianime adaptationandBlue Lockseason twohave left fans wondering why their favorite projects didnt get as much shine as their contemporaries. [Read more] Banned Bluey Episode Dad Baby Is Finally Viewable in the U.S. By Sabina Graves ABlueyepisode originally released in 2020 everywhere except the United States finally gets the green light to be seenwith a catch: its only online (for now). [Read more]Evils Andrea Martin on Acting With Demons and the Terror of AI By Cheryl Eddy Andrea Martins career has included a lot of comedyshe was on legendary 1970s sketch seriesSCTVbut over the years shes excelled in nearly every genre, with two current projects earning her even more new fans: HulusOnly Murders in the Building, andParamount+sEvil. WithEvilheading toward its series finale, io9 jumped at the chance to talk to Martin about what its like starring onone of TVs best-ever horror series, particularly in the context of her character: Sister Andrea,a wise, wisecracking, demon-slaying nun. [Read More] The Best Moment in Deep Space Nines Greatest Episode Is a Punch Left Unthrown By James Whitbrook Twenty-six years ago today,Deep Space Ninedelivered the knife under its cloaked examination of Star Treks morals in wartime with all the delicate precision of a sewing needle: the incredible In the Pale Moonlight, not just one ofDS9 or Star Treks finest hours, but one of the all time greatest episodes of TV ever made. But the finest moment in an already immaculate piece of television is all about the ways to enact violence without lifting a single finger.[Read more]Interview With the Vampires Season 2 Finale Goes Full Divorce Court By Sabina Graves Leave it up to Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian) to giveLouis (Jacob Anderson) interview a final definitive disruption that leads to marital woes for Armand (Assad Zaman). Call it a vendetta writ large for our entertainment while Molloy plays roast host like a daytime Maury or Divorce Court episode, because youll be hootin and hollerin during And Thats The End Of It. Theres Nothing Elsethe eighth episode of AMC and AMC+sInterview with The Vampireseason two. The episode brings inshowrunner Rolin Jones as its scribe for all the explosive revenge and revelations in the finale directed by Levan Arkin. [Read more] Games, Immersive Entertainment, and Theme Parks Bethesda Every Moment Youre Playing Indiana Jones and the Great Circle Feels Like Torture By James Whitbrook Indiana Jonesshould be the perfect video game hero. He solves puzzles,he shoots Nazis, he leaps and swings through an international cavalcade of locations primed for platforming. His very existence has inspired some of the greats of the medium, fromTomb RaidertoUncharted, all in homage to the whip-slinging blueprint Indy provided. And while hes definitely starred in plenty of attempts over the years, he still feels like hes waiting for his moment to shine in the world of games of his own accord, rather than simply via the impact of his legacy. WithIndiana Jones and the Great Circle, hes very much still waiting. [Read more]The Essence of Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser Was You Made the Experience By Sabina Graves A year after theStar Wars: Galactic Starcruisertook its last flight, heres a look back at the best of Disney Parks bold venture into the immersive entertainment spaceand why in the end, it couldnt quite work. [Read More] Borderlands Will Always Shoot to the Beat of Its Own Gun by Justin Carter In its heyday, the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 era produced many still-ongoing franchises, but few have endured quite as interestingly asBorderlands. Gearbox Softwares shooter-RPG series has been so definitive and soinfamousfor so long in ways that will never truly go away. At the same time, its always been itself: for better or worse,Borderlandshas no interest in changing what it is, or at least not for very long. [Read more] The Dark Universe Begins Again at Universals Theme Park By Sabina Graves Universal Studios would not be the premiere cinematic experience theme park without the Universal Monsters. Influencing filmmakers from Spielberg to Peele, they are the blueprint of thrills and its about damn time that the almost century-old fandom will finally get its due withEpic UniversesDark Universe, the theme park home of gods and monsters. This new area joins the previously announced lands at Universal Studios Orlandos newest theme park, includingSuper Nintendo WorldandHow to Train Your Dragons Isle of Berk. [Read more] Dragon Age: The Veilguard Is Ready to Bring You Back By Justin Carter After revitalizingMass Effectwith aremastered collectionof the first three games and handing offStar Wars: The Old Republicto a separate studio, BioWares now putting its full weight behind its other big franchise,Dragon Age.Over the years, its been a question of if (and in what way) BioWare would return to the world of Thedas, even as itd continuously reaffirm a new entry was in development. [Read more] Tianas Bayou Adventure Breaks 87 Years of a Weird Disney Princess Canon By Sabina Graves Over the past few days Disneyfans who have managed to ride Tianas Bayou Adventure at Walt Disney Worldhave been among the first to experiencethe continuation of Tianas fairytaleafter the events 2009s The Princess and the Frog. The ride itself serves as a sequel in attraction form, where guests follow Tiana and friends as they put together a band for their Mardi Gras celebration. But there are so many more details revealed even before you board the flume water ride for fans of the beloved Disney film. [Read more] Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, whats next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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  • Apartment With a View / i29
    www.archdaily.com
    Apartment With a View / i29Save this picture! Ewout HuibersApartment InteriorsAmsterdam, The NetherlandsArchitects: i29AreaArea of this architecture projectArea:300 mPhotographsPhotographs:Ewout HuibersManufacturersBrands with products used in this architecture project Manufacturers: Arco, Dum, FLOS, HAY, Steega InteriorsMore SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. Situated on the 19th floor in the heart of Amsterdam's vibrant Zuidas business district, this stunning apartment offers breathtaking views of the city skyline. Here, the dynamic energy of urban life blends seamlessly with the warmth of tactile materials and a soft color palette, creating a serene high-rise retreat.Save this picture!Save this picture!The open-plan layout is thoughtfully curated, with custom-designed elements defining distinct living areas while maintaining an airy, cohesive flow. Spanning 300m, the apartment features expansive wooden surfaces and rich textures that exude a luxurious, contemporary feel. Upon entering, a hallway marked by dark, elegant tones provides a striking contrast to the light, open atmosphere of the kitchen and living spaces beyond. The interior reveals the i29 signature approach, with a graphical play that highlights distinct areas and adds a unique, refined touch.Save this picture!Save this picture!This is a peaceful home where the vibrancy of the city fades away, replaced by a sense of tranquility. Every detail has been carefully considered to foster an environment of calm and sophistication, offering a perfect balance of urban energy and serene retreat.Save this picture!Save this picture!The spacious layout includes a custom-designed kitchen, a large open living room, two bedrooms, an office nook, two bathrooms, and two toilets. Each room reflects the apartment's refined aesthetic, ensuring a seamless flow of style and luxury. From the soft, neutral color palette to the clean, modern lines, every element contributes to an atmosphere of understated elegance.Save this picture!Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessProject locationAddress:Amsterdam, The NetherlandsLocation to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.About this officePublished on December 25, 2024Cite: "Apartment With a View / i29" 25 Dec 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1023849/apartment-with-a-view-i29&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • 2024's Hidden Gems: The Best Games You May Have Missed (Or Never Heard Of)
    www.gamespot.com
    Odds are, you know the big games in a given year. If you regularly play games, it's hard not to at least hear the names of the latest releases from big publishers, which spend huge sums of money to spread awareness of these releases. But it's often in the smaller, less widely known games that you see the most creativity, innovation, and originality. These are often games that are not seeking to appeal to as many people as possible and are instead the vision of a smaller number of people. That can mean that, when you find the right one, it feels like it's meant for you, because it's so acutely designed to appeal to your particular tastes and sensibilities.As such, identifying hidden gems can be a real treat, because it's an opportunity for us to help spread the word on games we love that might have flown under the radar for you. Just look at Steam or any other digital games storefront and it's hard not to be struck by the staggering number of games that release each week, let alone each year. It's no surprise that there are so many great games that any given person has never heard of.In compiling the list below, we tried to accomplish one thing: Highlight lesser-known games that were released in 2024. Some games that fit that description can also be found in our personal favorites list, where we compiled our individual top choices that didn't make the site's overall top 10. But we couldn't limit ourselves to just those--not when there are so many great games. There's almost certainly a game out there you've never heard of and that will delight you in a very personal way, and hopefully we can help you find one. Pepper GrinderAvailable on: PC, Nintendo Switch, PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PS4, Xbox OneI'm always looking for games that feel like they're doing something new and interesting. That's especially true when what a game attempts is to give you a new way of getting around, and that's at the core of Pepper Grinder. It's a side-scrolling platformer game in which you'll rely on your character's giant drill to burrow through the ground, collecting items and boosting you across jumps that you wouldn't be able to navigate on foot.Given you're meant to be drilling, that means you can't take immediate sharp turns, which--combined with the momentum you build up to exit the group and leap through the air--forces you to be thoughtful about your every move. This quickly becomes intuitive and drives the gameplay throughout, as you'll need to also use your drill to take out enemies in specific ways. Pepper Grinder is a short game but a good one, with new ideas and challenges being consistently introduced throughout.-- Chris Pereira See at Fanatical Fanatical and GameSpot are both own by Fandom. EuropaAvailable on: PC, Nintendo SwitchWhat If Studio Ghibli made Journey? That's the simple explanation of Europa, a gameplay-light puzzle-platforming game in which you mostly just float around a gorgeous but troubled world digging up a mysterious past. Playing a young boy with an odd jetpack strapped to his back, you'll hover to the top of green hills, through magnificent ruins, and occasionally dodge enemies or other obstacles--though the game wisely offers a Zen Mode that lets you turn off some of these elements so you can more freely vibe with the world.Europa is essentially a game about nature and the balance of our planet, told through a futuristic story about humans who have fled to Jupiter's moon to start anew after Earth became uninhabitable. Are we doomed to make the same mistakes elsewhere? As beings living in the present, what do we owe future generations? Europa grapples with these big-picture ideas but does so in a Ghibli-esque manner, complete with incredible music and an atmosphere that feels relaxing even when the story stakes are, at times, more serious.-- Mark Delaney See at Steam Content WarningAvailable on: PCThe long lineage of horror games inspiring other horror games continues in Content Warning, which is clearly modeled after Lethal Company. Like 2023's breakout hit, you and three friends descend into dark depths to investigate strange creatures in an unfriendly environment before hopefully escaping with your life. The monsters are difficult to describe and quick to kill. But Content Warning's unique spin on the formula makes it one of my favorites in this emerging subgenre.Content Warning pits players as content creators, essentially. You'll head into missions with a handcam, recording a finite amount of footage during your spooky adventure. When--er, if--you make it back above ground, you'll get to watch the tape back in your tiny home. The game seamlessly turns this footage of yours into something like a YouTube video, complete with jumpcuts, selfie segments, and all the stylings of a modern viral video. You can even share it online in real life. It's a clever spin on a game that was already great, which has left me feeling like there's room in my horror diet for both Lethal Company and Content Warning.-- Mark Delaney See at Steam Yellow Taxi Goes VroomAvailable on: PCThrowbacks to the N64-era collectathon/platformer have become fairly commonplace, and while Yellow Taxi Goes Vroom firmly falls into that genre, it sets itself apart by fundamentally changing the way you interact with the world. Rather than placing you in the shoes of your Mario or Donkey Kong stand-in, you instead control a wind-up car that obviously can't jump, as you'd expect from the playable character in a game like this. That change results in a substantially different way of navigating the world that gives Vroom a fresh feel, particularly given your taxi's ability to dash long distances and accelerate or brake in mid-air, physics be damned.That creativity extends to the level design, as each world is full of secrets to uncover as you explore. There are also overt references to other classic games, like a level that's full of Crazy Taxi-style passengers to pick up and deliver. It's all quite nostalgic without feeling like a mere retread of what's come before.-- Chris Pereira See at Steam The Cabin FactoryAvailable on: PCAfter PT dissolved, there began a run of horror games of copycats and games taking inspiration that continues to this day. Playing The Cabin Factory, I can see the connective tissue, but unlike so many others inspired by Kojima's doomed demo, PT, it takes the framework of a looping hallway and goes in a very different direction with it. Your task is to investigate an assembly line of nearly identical cabins. If nothing moves, you exit and report it as not haunted. If something does move, however, you exit and report it as haunted. If you can get several of them right in a row, you win.The problem, of course, are the sometimes subtle differences--did that strange father figure sitting stationary at the breakfast table just turn his head toward me or am I seeing things? Other times, the differences are less subtle, including my favorite loop which involves a portrait of the game's motherly figure. I dare not spoil the different ways this game can go, so you should just see it for yourself. This is a great indie horror game from a team that understood its limitations and made them work in its favor.-- Mark Delaney See at Steam FruitbusAvailable on: PCHands down, the most stressful job I've ever had in my life was running a food truck. No air conditioner, long hours serving longer lines of people, and there was so much prep to get the truck to an event only to be slammed the whole time, then have to turn it around and unload and wash everything. It was genuinely mentally taxing. Somehow, I love Fruibus anyway.In Fruitbus, you inherit not a small shack from your grandfather like so many Stardew-like games, but rather a smoothie business on wheels from your grandmother. In first-person, you'll forage for new fruits and vegetables, upgrade your truck's equipment, and serve the locals in a sunny town full of interesting characters. Maybe it's because the lines never quite get so long, or I don't have to worry about the scorching temperature inside the truck, but there's an obvious charm to Fruitbus. It's there in the first moment, and it stays with you for your entire adventure.-- Mark Delaney See at Fanatical Pro Philosopher 2Available on: PCPro Philosopher 2 may look familiar, and that could be because you played the original years ago, or maybe it's because the game essentially reinterprets the gameplay mechanics and visual stylings of Ace Attorney. But you won't be arguing to lock up defendants in this one. You'll be arguing with real philosophers from history, like Machiavelli, Locke, and Marx. This sequel moves away from moral philosophy--which is admittedly more up my alley--and onto political philosophy. In an age where coherent debate no longer moves the needle for an electorate, it's made me feel a weird kind of nostalgia for life before post-truth.But besides that angle, it's also just a fun game for people who are annoying at parties, like me. One of the best parts about it is that, just like in a debate club, you'll sometimes have to argue against things you might actually agree with. As a result, it promotes strong reasoning ability as you'll need to cut down the viewpoints of history's most persuasive thinkers to finally discover the one true philosophy, nullifying all other arguments for the rest of human history. Okay, that last part is a joke.-- Mark Delaney See at Steam InkboundWith Monster Train, developer Shiny Shoe did a masterful job of taking an existing concept--the Slay the Spire-style card-based roguelike--and innovating on it with some fantastic additions and changes that more than sufficiently differentiated it from its clear inspiration. Inkbound does the same thing but with Hades. While I wouldn't argue its writing or music are on par with that of Hades (though that I find that to be an extremely high bar), the gameplay wrinkles here have really hooked me.Inkbound swaps out the real-time combat of Hades for turn-based action, putting you in arenas where you can see your enemies' upcoming actions and run around, taking a series of actions and positioning yourself to minimize or avoid damage. That alone gives it a very distinct flavor, but toss in different character classes that play quite differently, a compelling metagame/progression system, and online co-op support, and you have a game that's much more than the Hades copycat it might appear to be at first glance.-- Chris Pereira See at Steam Classified: France '44Available on: PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PCBeing an XCOM fan sure can be difficult when you have to go so long in between new titles, but a little turn-based tactics game from Absolutely Games and Team17 served as a great substitute this year. Set a few weeks before the enormous D-Day invasion--with an in-game clock drawing ever closer to June 6 as you complete missions--Classified: France '44 can be best described as "XCOM but WW2." With a small squad of paratroopers and local freedom fighters at your disposal, you go behind enemy lines, taking out key members of the Third Reich and softening up their defenses before the gargantuan attack at Normandy.Classified: France '44 hits all the right notes when it comes to combat, emphasising cover and careful troop placement alongside balanced party composition. It also occasionally forces you to make difficult decisions, like assisting one partisan fighter while leaving an allied soldier to fend for himself. You simply cannot be in two places at once, and balancing your desire to keep your allies safe with fully preparing for the landing parties' imminent arrival is a constant struggle in the best way possible. And, naturally, mowing down Nazis with machine guns and grenades feels pretty good, too.-- Gabe Gurwin See at Fanatical Skald: Against The Black PrioryAvailable on: PCSkald: Against the Black Priory is a love letter to the early eras of computer RPGs and to Lovecraftian cosmic horror alike, and it's smothered in the mechanical cruft and existential terror both of those inspirations are known for. It's also, in many ways, the grimy, weirder antithesis of a game like Baldur's Gate 3. Both are top-down CRPGs with multiple-choice dialog interactions, tactical turn-based combat, and on-screen dice rolls for skill checks. But where Baldur's Gate 3 offers unparalleled freedom, Skald imposes stricter boundaries on the player's roleplaying agency, which--for me--works to its benefit. Skald has plenty of player choice and varied story outcomes, but the scope is much more contained, and it uses those boundaries to deliver an unsettling narrative that is dripping with evocative imagery and an unsettling, often oppressive atmosphere.That feeling is present in Skald's gameplay as well. This is a crunchy game for RPG sickos. The wounds your party suffers in combat can follow them long after the last foe has fallen, and failure is often a death sentence--whether for you or for the poor souls you're trying to save. To the game's credit, Skald features welcome difficulty and accessibility settings so you can adjust the mechanical tension to whatever level feels most appropriate for you. But the one thing you can't escape on this adventure is those brief glimpses of what lies beyond, always watching, whispering up from the deep.-- Brendan Hesse See at Fanatical Temtem SwarmAvailable on: PCThe Survivor-like bullet-heaven genre is reaching a saturation point, and as a casual fan, only a few per year stand out from the crowd. For me this year that was Temtem Swarm, an unexpected spin-off of the Pokemon-like creature-collection game that is in early access but already feels as full-fledged as many of its contemporaries.The Temtem connection means that Swarm already has a readymade, colorful visual aesthetic filled with unique and differentiated monsters to both play with and battle. Most of the Temtem evolve at particular levels during a run, which adds a wrinkle of strategy as you can count on getting a big power boost at particular points. Each one also has its own deep skill tree to upgrade, and you collect new Temtem by finding and hatching their eggs during the enemy onslaught. It's just already very polished and feature-complete already, with more on the way. It's quickly become my go-to Steam Deck game for taking a quick break between other, longer experiences.-- Steve Watts See on Steam Secrets of GrindeaAvailable on: PCA throwback to classic action-RPGs like Secret of Mana, Secrets of Grindea is a top-down action game with tongue firmly in cheek. The story is cute and self-aware of its own RPG tropes, even tipping a hat to bizarre moments from classics like a subplot that includes Santa Claus. That can make it a little talky at points, but what makes Grindea most engaging is the sheer level of control you have over your experience.The skill tree is massive and varied, and you can spend and reallocate points at will to make your character a fearsome melee warrior, a spell-slinging sorcerer, a powerful summoner, and so on. The sheer amount of variety and low barrier to experimentation means you can produce makes it fun to slowly build toward your ultimate power-build, or just tinker with different powers to keep reinventing the experience. On top of all that, you can team up for four-player co-op, customize your home, or play a roguelike Arcade Mode. It's a game that keeps giving, and despite the title, it never feels like a grind.-- Steve Watts See at Steam WitchfireAvailable on: PCAs the years go by, more and more games are launching in early access. These experiences can fluctuate in quality wildly when they launch, but few release as rock-solid as Witchfire. Thanks to a year in early access as an Epic Games Store exclusive, the Steam launch of the game, despite it still remaining in early access, offers a first-person shooter experience that feels more complete and more polished than some FPS titles that have been fully released.The core of the Witchfire experience is a souls-like--with similar aesthetics to From Software's various games as well--but with FPS gameplay that feels like Destiny 2's. This is then set in a roguelike loop where players must venture forth into various biomes to hunt down each region's witch.Where a lot of early-access games feel like you can hit a content wall after a time, Witchfire's design is built with replayability in mind. Its different levels hold numerous secrets that you uncover the more you play, giving you further insight into the game's lore. Additionally, the more you play, the more abilities and weapons you can unlock, as well as new areas you can access in the hub you return to after each mission.I rarely touch games while they're in early access, but Witchfire is one I've found myself coming back to time and time again since its launch on Steam. With the promise of new regions to explore, enemies to face, and weapons to wield over the next year, and with an intended launch of the full game in Fall 2025, it seems there will be even more reasons to return to Witchfire beyond it just being fun as hell to play.-- Tom Caswell See at Steam Fields of MistriaAvailable on: PCThere are a lot of farming sims out there. Like. A lot, a lot. With that in mind, I've become increasingly more selective about which ones I will devote the same ridiculous amount of hours I've given games like Harvest Moon: Back to Nature and Stardew Valley. Yet Fields of Mistria is one I can easily see myself devoting even more time to, as I truly believe that--even in early access--it is an exceptional addition to the genre.This is not solely because of its quality-of-life improvements, though they are numerous and outstanding. Some things--like fishing and completing upgrades--are made more simplistic, while stamina usage and passing out once you've reached the wee hours of the night are far less punishing. On top of being able to farm, mine, forage, etc., the game adds swimming--a small, but fun activity. The game also gifts you with a robust skill tree, a renown system, and magic, which includes powers such as the ability to change the weather. It's an absolute game-changer.Every store is open all day, as the owners will allow you to leave money on the counter, and it's much easier to find and interact with villagers. This is especially nice considering how interesting and beautifully-designed these characters are. In Fields of Mistria, the town and its inhabitants feel alive and distinct from one another. All of the romance options are well-written and compelling, and the inclusion of fun lil' town events--like Friday nights at the inn, when every villager comes together to drink and hang out with one another--create a sense of community and interconnectedness. Combine all this with graphics that are part Sailor Moon and part Game Boy Advance and cozy music you can easily vibe out to, and you have an exceptional entry in the farming-sim genre that is set to become the new standard.-- Jessica Cogswell See at Amazon Tiny GladeAvailable on: PC I'll admit it: I've never quite gotten the appeal of games such as PowerWash Simulator, which I suspect is because I do enough cleaning as is. However, when my husband, a major PowerWash Simulator fan, explained the kind of dopamine hit the game offered him, I realized I do have my own version of it: Tiny Glade.There are no real objectives in Tiny Glade. No resources to manage, no rules or demands. Instead, you simply build. You build battlements, moats, and bridges--keeps, villages, and wide-open pastures. You can then adorn your buildings with vines and stained-glass windows, run laundry lines between them, or add small courtyards and gardens for sheep to graze in. It's a low-stakes experience that is absolutely gorgeous, and the game's intuitive building mechanics make it stress-free as well.Though there is room for more tools and new additions, as a whole Tiny Glade is a captivating experience that you can easily sink hours into. It offers a gentleness and peace of mind not often found in games, and is a must-play for folks who spend hours in The Sims build mode yet long for something a bit more flexible with charming, medieval vibes.-- Jessica Cogswell See on Steam
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