• First Glimpse of Guillermo Moreno Alfaros Dark Action Puzzle Game
    cgshares.com
    After several years of development, artist Guillermo Moreno Alfaro is finally ready to show the first gameplay look at Project The Witch a dark fantasy game full of mystery and challenges.Weve seen a swamp environment from there before, and now you can see what else the creator has come up with.My first associations when I watched the teaser were Hellblade and Tomb Raider. While the former is mostly due to the protagonists hair, the movement, especially climbing, was likely inspired by the latter, although I might be wrong.The video ends on a cliffhanger that heavily implies who the witch is, but we dont really see any magic from her just a lot of exploration showing off Alfaros excellent environment art skills and a curious creature covered in mushrooms, who seems to be the protagonists servant.I also appreciated the sound design; it really helped with the horror atmosphere. Watch the whole thing here and dont forget to visit Alfaros ArtStation to see more beautiful art made with Unreal Engine, Maya, Houdini, ZBrush, and Substance 3D tools.You can also learn more about his teaser-making workflow and The Mandalorian tribute in our interviews.Join our 80 Level Talent platformand ournew Discord server, follow us onInstagram,Twitter,LinkedIn,Telegram,TikTok, andThreads,where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post First Glimpse of Guillermo Moreno Alfaros Dark Action Puzzle Game appeared first on CG SHARES.
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  • Final Fantasy XIV: Seekers Of Eternity Features New Dungeon, Raid, And Much More
    www.gamespot.com
    Last year, Final Fantasy XIV players celebrated the release of Dawntrail, the game's first major expansion since 2021. And while a fresh expansion isn't on the immediate horizon, there is new content coming to the game in late March with the arrival of Patch 7.2, Seekers of Eternity.Producer and Director Naoki "Yoshi P" Yoshida laid out the upcoming additions during a livestream in Japan, but Square Enix has helpfully shared the highlights. There will be additional main scenario quests, as well as a new dungeon called The Underkeep, a fresh raid called The Arcadion: Cruiserweight Tier, a new trail called Recollection--which can be played on normal or extreme--and Hells' Kier, an Unreal Trial that will pit players against one of the Four Lords: Suzaku.Promotional art for Final Fantasy XIV: Seekers of Eternity.From there, players can blast out into space in Cosmic Exploration as they discover uncharted stars to find new resources for crafting. Players also have the option of exploring a mysterious island called Occult Crescent, which is inhabited by residents who will do almost anything to protect its secrets.Continue Reading at GameSpot
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  • The Imagine Dragons Starfield Song Will Beam From Moon To Earth This Month
    www.gamespot.com
    Bethesda's partnership with the band Imagine Dragons adds another layer with a forthcoming real-world space launch, as the Starfield song, "Children of Sky (A Starfield Song)," will be transmitted from the surface of the Moon back to Earth as part of Lonestar's Freedom Mission launch on February 26."Our goal is to inspire the next generation of kids to be excited about the future of space and technology, which is why we chose 'Children of the Sky' as the first song in history to be broadcast from the Moon," Lonestar investor Ryan Micheletti said.The lyrics seem to riff on the themes and ideas from the sci-fi game.Continue Reading at GameSpot
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  • How To Fix Connecting To Ultimate Team Is Not Possible Error In EA FC 25
    gamerant.com
    Like many online games, EA Sports FC 25 often suffers from connection issues that affect the experience, either completely preventing access or limiting the game's capabilities.
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  • Best Isekai Adventure Anime
    gamerant.com
    An adventure is an epic tale that usually features some sort of journey or quest in which the hero has a definite goal and deals with many challenges on the way. This can be paired with so many different genres including isekai.
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  • APEDROP
    gamedev.net
    Is set to launch this year. Inspired by DR. MARIO, Donkey Kong and Tetris!In the first image it was our first attempt at backgrounds. In the second image we were figuring out a layout!
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  • APEDROP
    gamedev.net
    Is set to launch this year. Inspired by DR. MARIO, Donkey Kong and Tetris!In the first image it was our first attempt at backgrounds. In the second image we were figuring out a layout!
    0 Yorumlar ·0 hisse senetleri ·33 Views
  • Use This App to Curate Your Own Custom Timeline for the Whole Internet
    lifehacker.com
    As convenient as the internet is, when big tech companies chase endless growth, that can mean bloat. Nowadays, it feels like every company wants to lure me into an algorithm trap, convince me to use their AI services, or try to make me pay a premium to browse like I used to. One of my favorite tools for fighting back against these trends is Tapestry. It's a timeline app for iPhone and iPad that lets you combine multiple feeds from blogs, YouTube, podcasts, and social media, then view them in chronological order, with a beautiful interface. Essentially, you can use it to make your own curated version of (nearly) the entire internet.Tapestry is designed by The Iconfactory, which also developed the excellent (but now-defunct) Twitter client Twitteriffic.What is a timeline app?Timeline apps are a new genre of app that lets you take back control from big tech's algorithms and decide what you want to see and when you want to see it. These apps allow you to create your own personalized timelines with posts from multiple websites. You could use these apps to follow a blog you like, a YouTuber you enjoy, and even a subreddit or social media feed that you like seeing. It's like using an RSS reader, but with support for content from many more types of sources. Making the most of Tapestry on your iPhoneInstalling Tapestry will start you off with a very useful sign-up flow. This shows you a list of various recommended feeds you can add to your timeline with just one tap, which allows you to populate the app in record time. If you're big on customization, you can also skip the recommendations and manually add your feeds to the app by going to the Settings tab and tapping the Add Feed button. After that, you can just paste the URL of the website, YouTube channel, podcast, or Mastodon/Bluesky account you want to follow, and Tapestry will look for the feed and add it to your timeline. There's a bit more than that going on in the back end, but Tapestry's Feed Finder feature is pretty good at locating and loading feeds for you from a simple URL. Once your feeds are added, you'll be able to view them all in a neat, chronological timeline.The app's free tier is quite generous. It allows you to add multiple feeds and follow them all on one infinite scrolling timeline. If you like a post, tap the flag icon below the post to mark it (aka bookmark it) or use the share button to send it to your friends or social media accounts. Without a subscription, Tapestry will show you ads in your timeline. However, these are some of the least intrusive ads I've come across. They follow the design language of the app, and most of the ads I saw were either asking me to add a feed to Tapestry or to install another app.The app is beautifully designed and reminds me a lot about the best of Twitteriffic. A unified timeline can easily get very messy, very fast, but Tapestry handles this well by color-coding posts from various sources and prominently displaying a logo for each feed. It picked up the logos of two newsletters I loaded, too, which is a very nice touch. You can customize this experience by going to the Appearance settings page within the app, where you can change the font and the length of post previews. This lets you make your timeline look neater, and you can make it even better by tapping the three-lines icon in the bottom-left corner of the timeline. That lets you choose different sizes for each post I find the collapsed view is best for quickly browsing, but the expanded view is better for skimming through newsletters. Credit: Pranay Parab Each post in your timeline is truncated by default, and even the expanded view only shows a few paragraphs at most. However, you can tap the Read More button on any post to read it in full in a new page. This view is free of ads and clutter, loads quickly, and the background retains the color scheme Tapestry assigned to it on your timeline. Tapestry also has two types of filters to help you clean up your feedsmuffles and mutes. Muffles will collapse posts containing specific keywords and are useful when you want to avoid spoilers from a new movie or TV show. Mutes will hide posts containing certain keywords entirelygreat for blocking politics, sports, or other subjects from your feed, as an example. The biggest limitation of Tapestry's free tier is that it lets you add just the one timeline. You do have access to certain timeline filters that let you view marked posts, only posts from today, or posts from a single feed at a time. However, if you want to create more than one timeline, you're going to have to upgrade to the paid tier, which costs $2/month or $20/year. There's also a one-time lifetime unlock option at $80, in case you want to avoid subscriptions.Once upgraded, you'll no longer see ads and you can create as many timelines as you like. I've used this to separate social media feeds, newsletters, and other types of feeds, but the good news is that you can craft a timeline to suit your needs. Some people would prefer to combine posts from Bluesky and Mastodon into one chronological feed, and Tapestry allows you to do that, too. One of my biggest complaints about Bluesky is that it doesn't save your reading position, which means that it refreshes to the top of the feed whenever I open the app. I like it when apps remember where I stopped reading and then allow me to scroll to catch up on all the posts that came after the last one I read. Tapestry shows you a nice counter in the top-right corner, which says how many posts are above what you're reading, and it remembers where I paused scrolling. This is great for timeline completionists like me, and I've been using Tapestry to read my Bluesky feed in chronological order, and to follow a few accounts from Bluesky. Credit: Pranay Parab Note that you can't use Tapestry to post anything to social media, to like posts, repost, or interact with them directly. You can tap a button to open the post in the site it's hosted on, and interact with it there. Still, Tapestry is great for creating a timeline and reading, watching videos, or listening to podcasts. This app lets you listen to entire podcast episodes without leaving it if you like, and it also loads YouTube videos in the company's own player. It's a fairly seamless experience if you want to follow a few of your favorite creators. You're going to enjoy Tapestry the most if you're careful about the feeds you add. If you add a high-volume news feed, it could drown out low-frequency feeds, but if you find the right balance, it could become your own cozy corner of the web.The Iconfactory has delivered a very polished app considering it's just version 1.0 at this point. I'm excited to see where Tapestry goes and I hope that it heads to desktop at some point, too. At the moment, there aren't too many timeline apps that do the job that Tapestry does. The best alternative I've come across is Reeder, which is another beautifully designed timeline app with a similar feature set and pricing model. Ideally, you'll try both apps and decide which one works best for you, and I suspect the decision will come down to which design language you like more. Tapestry's bright and colorful design appeals to me, while others may prefer Reeder's subtler tones and animations.
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  • Everything I'm Seeding in February
    lifehacker.com
    Good news: Spring is around the corner. By the time the ground is warm enough to receive your flower, vegetable, and herb starts, its a race to see how much production you can get from these plants before the season is over. The bigger the plant you start with, the better. Thats why I give my plants a head start by growing seedlings inside. Here's everything I'm starting indoors this month, and a few seeds you can direct sow outside, too. (If you've never grown from seed indoors before, don't be intimidated. It's incredibly rewarding, saves money, and will give you the gardening high you need while the weather is still terrible.) Start long-germinating flowers todayIt might be hard to imagine summer flowers right now, but some take forever to germinate. In those cases, starting them inside in January or February makes sense. Tall, spiky flowers like lupines, snapdragons, foxglove, hollyhock, stock and delphiniums all need the extra time inside in order to be bloom-ready this summer. You can also start your perennials such as echinacea and coneflower now, so theyre big and healthy by the time you put them in the ground in late spring.Spring vegetables need to be ready in four to five weeksSometimes people forget theres a whole season before summer tomatoes and eggplants go in. You can have a productive (if short) spring crop if you plan appropriately. Start veggies including cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, hardy lettuce, chard, fennel, kale and kohlrabi right now. In many places, spinach and mustard greens only do well only in spring and fall, so get those seedlings started, too. All onions, leeks and celery should be started inside in February, as soon as possible, as they take a while to be ready to plant.While most people purchase three-year-old asparagus crowns and plant those, you can grow asparagus from seed. Growing delicate French varieties is only possible if you grow from seed, but be aware it will be years before you can harvest the spoils. Artichokes can also be grown from seed, although most people simply transplant a pup from an existing plant and grow it into a full-size start. In either case, artichokes and asparagus will go in the ground early in spring.Hardy herbs need a head start, tooTender herbs like basil and cilantro can wait, but herbs that have woody stemslike sage, lavender, winter thyme, and rosemaryneed to be started now. These are possible to grow from seed, or you can take cuttings and attempt to establish them. These seedlings will go outside once the ground is warm enough, but next year theyll overwinter outside.Direct-sow these seeds nowThere are a few seeds you can direct sow outside now. Poppies traditionally dont transplant well, so the best course of action is to simply toss seeds around outside, and hope a small percentage of them germinate. You can also plant peas outside nowboth edible and non-edible sweet peas. Dont mix them togethersweet peas are highly toxic (though worthwhile for their smell and beauty). Edible peas should have their own area, and both will come up in early spring. You should be planting carrots while it is still raining, so they benefit from the help germinating, and beets, radishes, and turnips can be direct-sowed as soon as the ground is workable.Keep in mind, too, that tomato, pepper, and summer seeding gets underway next month. Make sure youve got the seeds you need now, so youre ready.
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  • Engadget Podcast: Volvo Groups CTO on his vision for zero-emission trucks
    www.engadget.com
    This week, Devindra chats with Volvo Group CTO Lars Stenqvist about the companys progress developing zero emissions trucks, both of the electric variety and experimental hydrogen options. While its a completely different company from Volvo Cars, Volvo Group still impacts consumers as one of the largest producers of heavy trucks. Stenqvist dives into how Volvo is thinking about new technology, and we chat a bit about how its approaching completely autonomous vehicles. (Note: This interview was recorded in early January, so we didnt have a chance to talk about this weeks partnership between Volvo and the self-driving truck startup Waabi.)Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you've got suggestions or topics you'd like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcast, Engadget News!Subscribe!iTunesSpotifyPocket CastsStitcherGoogle PodcastsCreditsHost: Devindra HardawarGuest: Lars Stenqvist, CTO Volvo GroupProducer: Ben EllmanMusic: Dale NorthThis article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/engadget-podcast-volvo-groups-cto-on-his-vision-for-zero-emission-trucks-123006981.html?src=rss
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