• Scientists Detect Unusual Airborne Toxin in the United States for the First Time

    Researchers unexpectedly discovered toxic airborne pollutants in Oklahoma. The image above depicts a field in Oklahoma. Credit: Shutterstock
    University of Colorado Boulder researchers made the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffinsin the Western Hemisphere.
    Sometimes, scientific research feels a lot like solving a mystery. Scientists head into the field with a clear goal and a solid hypothesis, but then the data reveals something surprising. That’s when the real detective work begins.
    This is exactly what happened to a team from the University of Colorado Boulder during a recent field study in rural Oklahoma. They were using a state-of-the-art instrument to track how tiny particles form and grow in the air. But instead of just collecting expected data, they uncovered something completely new: the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffins, a kind of toxic organic pollutant, in the Western Hemisphere. The teams findings were published in ACS Environmental Au.
    “It’s very exciting as a scientist to find something unexpected like this that we weren’t looking for,” said Daniel Katz, CU Boulder chemistry PhD student and lead author of the study. “We’re starting to learn more about this toxic, organic pollutant that we know is out there, and which we need to understand better.”
    MCCPs are currently under consideration for regulation by the Stockholm Convention, a global treaty to protect human health from long-standing and widespread chemicals. While the toxic pollutants have been measured in Antarctica and Asia, researchers haven’t been sure how to document them in the Western Hemisphere’s atmosphere until now.
    From Wastewater to Farmlands
    MCCPs are used in fluids for metal working and in the construction of PVC and textiles. They are often found in wastewater and as a result, can end up in biosolid fertilizer, also called sewage sludge, which is created when liquid is removed from wastewater in a treatment plant. In Oklahoma, researchers suspect the MCCPs they identified came from biosolid fertilizer in the fields near where they set up their instrument.
    “When sewage sludges are spread across the fields, those toxic compounds could be released into the air,” Katz said. “We can’t show directly that that’s happening, but we think it’s a reasonable way that they could be winding up in the air. Sewage sludge fertilizers have been shown to release similar compounds.”
    MCCPs little cousins, Short Chain Chlorinated Paraffins, are currently regulated by the Stockholm Convention, and since 2009, by the EPA here in the United States. Regulation came after studies found the toxic pollutants, which travel far and last a long time in the atmosphere, were harmful to human health. But researchers hypothesize that the regulation of SCCPs may have increased MCCPs in the environment.
    “We always have these unintended consequences of regulation, where you regulate something, and then there’s still a need for the products that those were in,” said Ellie Browne, CU Boulder chemistry professor, CIRES Fellow, and co-author of the study. “So they get replaced by something.”
    Measurement of aerosols led to a new and surprising discovery
    Using a nitrate chemical ionization mass spectrometer, which allows scientists to identify chemical compounds in the air, the team measured air at the agricultural site 24 hours a day for one month. As Katz cataloged the data, he documented the different isotopic patterns in the compounds. The compounds measured by the team had distinct patterns, and he noticed new patterns that he immediately identified as different from the known chemical compounds. With some additional research, he identified them as chlorinated paraffins found in MCCPs.
    Katz says the makeup of MCCPs are similar to PFAS, long-lasting toxic chemicals that break down slowly over time. Known as “forever chemicals,” their presence in soils recently led the Oklahoma Senate to ban biosolid fertilizer.
    Now that researchers know how to measure MCCPs, the next step might be to measure the pollutants at different times throughout the year to understand how levels change each season. Many unknowns surrounding MCCPs remain, and there’s much more to learn about their environmental impacts.
    “We identified them, but we still don’t know exactly what they do when they are in the atmosphere, and they need to be investigated further,” Katz said. “I think it’s important that we continue to have governmental agencies that are capable of evaluating the science and regulating these chemicals as necessary for public health and safety.”
    Reference: “Real-Time Measurements of Gas-Phase Medium-Chain Chlorinated Paraffins Reveal Daily Changes in Gas-Particle Partitioning Controlled by Ambient Temperature” by Daniel John Katz, Bri Dobson, Mitchell Alton, Harald Stark, Douglas R. Worsnop, Manjula R. Canagaratna and Eleanor C. Browne, 5 June 2025, ACS Environmental Au.
    DOI: 10.1021/acsenvironau.5c00038
    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    #scientists #detect #unusual #airborne #toxin
    Scientists Detect Unusual Airborne Toxin in the United States for the First Time
    Researchers unexpectedly discovered toxic airborne pollutants in Oklahoma. The image above depicts a field in Oklahoma. Credit: Shutterstock University of Colorado Boulder researchers made the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffinsin the Western Hemisphere. Sometimes, scientific research feels a lot like solving a mystery. Scientists head into the field with a clear goal and a solid hypothesis, but then the data reveals something surprising. That’s when the real detective work begins. This is exactly what happened to a team from the University of Colorado Boulder during a recent field study in rural Oklahoma. They were using a state-of-the-art instrument to track how tiny particles form and grow in the air. But instead of just collecting expected data, they uncovered something completely new: the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffins, a kind of toxic organic pollutant, in the Western Hemisphere. The teams findings were published in ACS Environmental Au. “It’s very exciting as a scientist to find something unexpected like this that we weren’t looking for,” said Daniel Katz, CU Boulder chemistry PhD student and lead author of the study. “We’re starting to learn more about this toxic, organic pollutant that we know is out there, and which we need to understand better.” MCCPs are currently under consideration for regulation by the Stockholm Convention, a global treaty to protect human health from long-standing and widespread chemicals. While the toxic pollutants have been measured in Antarctica and Asia, researchers haven’t been sure how to document them in the Western Hemisphere’s atmosphere until now. From Wastewater to Farmlands MCCPs are used in fluids for metal working and in the construction of PVC and textiles. They are often found in wastewater and as a result, can end up in biosolid fertilizer, also called sewage sludge, which is created when liquid is removed from wastewater in a treatment plant. In Oklahoma, researchers suspect the MCCPs they identified came from biosolid fertilizer in the fields near where they set up their instrument. “When sewage sludges are spread across the fields, those toxic compounds could be released into the air,” Katz said. “We can’t show directly that that’s happening, but we think it’s a reasonable way that they could be winding up in the air. Sewage sludge fertilizers have been shown to release similar compounds.” MCCPs little cousins, Short Chain Chlorinated Paraffins, are currently regulated by the Stockholm Convention, and since 2009, by the EPA here in the United States. Regulation came after studies found the toxic pollutants, which travel far and last a long time in the atmosphere, were harmful to human health. But researchers hypothesize that the regulation of SCCPs may have increased MCCPs in the environment. “We always have these unintended consequences of regulation, where you regulate something, and then there’s still a need for the products that those were in,” said Ellie Browne, CU Boulder chemistry professor, CIRES Fellow, and co-author of the study. “So they get replaced by something.” Measurement of aerosols led to a new and surprising discovery Using a nitrate chemical ionization mass spectrometer, which allows scientists to identify chemical compounds in the air, the team measured air at the agricultural site 24 hours a day for one month. As Katz cataloged the data, he documented the different isotopic patterns in the compounds. The compounds measured by the team had distinct patterns, and he noticed new patterns that he immediately identified as different from the known chemical compounds. With some additional research, he identified them as chlorinated paraffins found in MCCPs. Katz says the makeup of MCCPs are similar to PFAS, long-lasting toxic chemicals that break down slowly over time. Known as “forever chemicals,” their presence in soils recently led the Oklahoma Senate to ban biosolid fertilizer. Now that researchers know how to measure MCCPs, the next step might be to measure the pollutants at different times throughout the year to understand how levels change each season. Many unknowns surrounding MCCPs remain, and there’s much more to learn about their environmental impacts. “We identified them, but we still don’t know exactly what they do when they are in the atmosphere, and they need to be investigated further,” Katz said. “I think it’s important that we continue to have governmental agencies that are capable of evaluating the science and regulating these chemicals as necessary for public health and safety.” Reference: “Real-Time Measurements of Gas-Phase Medium-Chain Chlorinated Paraffins Reveal Daily Changes in Gas-Particle Partitioning Controlled by Ambient Temperature” by Daniel John Katz, Bri Dobson, Mitchell Alton, Harald Stark, Douglas R. Worsnop, Manjula R. Canagaratna and Eleanor C. Browne, 5 June 2025, ACS Environmental Au. DOI: 10.1021/acsenvironau.5c00038 Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter. #scientists #detect #unusual #airborne #toxin
    SCITECHDAILY.COM
    Scientists Detect Unusual Airborne Toxin in the United States for the First Time
    Researchers unexpectedly discovered toxic airborne pollutants in Oklahoma. The image above depicts a field in Oklahoma. Credit: Shutterstock University of Colorado Boulder researchers made the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffins (MCCPs) in the Western Hemisphere. Sometimes, scientific research feels a lot like solving a mystery. Scientists head into the field with a clear goal and a solid hypothesis, but then the data reveals something surprising. That’s when the real detective work begins. This is exactly what happened to a team from the University of Colorado Boulder during a recent field study in rural Oklahoma. They were using a state-of-the-art instrument to track how tiny particles form and grow in the air. But instead of just collecting expected data, they uncovered something completely new: the first-ever airborne detection of Medium Chain Chlorinated Paraffins (MCCPs), a kind of toxic organic pollutant, in the Western Hemisphere. The teams findings were published in ACS Environmental Au. “It’s very exciting as a scientist to find something unexpected like this that we weren’t looking for,” said Daniel Katz, CU Boulder chemistry PhD student and lead author of the study. “We’re starting to learn more about this toxic, organic pollutant that we know is out there, and which we need to understand better.” MCCPs are currently under consideration for regulation by the Stockholm Convention, a global treaty to protect human health from long-standing and widespread chemicals. While the toxic pollutants have been measured in Antarctica and Asia, researchers haven’t been sure how to document them in the Western Hemisphere’s atmosphere until now. From Wastewater to Farmlands MCCPs are used in fluids for metal working and in the construction of PVC and textiles. They are often found in wastewater and as a result, can end up in biosolid fertilizer, also called sewage sludge, which is created when liquid is removed from wastewater in a treatment plant. In Oklahoma, researchers suspect the MCCPs they identified came from biosolid fertilizer in the fields near where they set up their instrument. “When sewage sludges are spread across the fields, those toxic compounds could be released into the air,” Katz said. “We can’t show directly that that’s happening, but we think it’s a reasonable way that they could be winding up in the air. Sewage sludge fertilizers have been shown to release similar compounds.” MCCPs little cousins, Short Chain Chlorinated Paraffins (SCCPs), are currently regulated by the Stockholm Convention, and since 2009, by the EPA here in the United States. Regulation came after studies found the toxic pollutants, which travel far and last a long time in the atmosphere, were harmful to human health. But researchers hypothesize that the regulation of SCCPs may have increased MCCPs in the environment. “We always have these unintended consequences of regulation, where you regulate something, and then there’s still a need for the products that those were in,” said Ellie Browne, CU Boulder chemistry professor, CIRES Fellow, and co-author of the study. “So they get replaced by something.” Measurement of aerosols led to a new and surprising discovery Using a nitrate chemical ionization mass spectrometer, which allows scientists to identify chemical compounds in the air, the team measured air at the agricultural site 24 hours a day for one month. As Katz cataloged the data, he documented the different isotopic patterns in the compounds. The compounds measured by the team had distinct patterns, and he noticed new patterns that he immediately identified as different from the known chemical compounds. With some additional research, he identified them as chlorinated paraffins found in MCCPs. Katz says the makeup of MCCPs are similar to PFAS, long-lasting toxic chemicals that break down slowly over time. Known as “forever chemicals,” their presence in soils recently led the Oklahoma Senate to ban biosolid fertilizer. Now that researchers know how to measure MCCPs, the next step might be to measure the pollutants at different times throughout the year to understand how levels change each season. Many unknowns surrounding MCCPs remain, and there’s much more to learn about their environmental impacts. “We identified them, but we still don’t know exactly what they do when they are in the atmosphere, and they need to be investigated further,” Katz said. “I think it’s important that we continue to have governmental agencies that are capable of evaluating the science and regulating these chemicals as necessary for public health and safety.” Reference: “Real-Time Measurements of Gas-Phase Medium-Chain Chlorinated Paraffins Reveal Daily Changes in Gas-Particle Partitioning Controlled by Ambient Temperature” by Daniel John Katz, Bri Dobson, Mitchell Alton, Harald Stark, Douglas R. Worsnop, Manjula R. Canagaratna and Eleanor C. Browne, 5 June 2025, ACS Environmental Au. DOI: 10.1021/acsenvironau.5c00038 Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Like
    Love
    Wow
    Sad
    Angry
    411
    2 Комментарии 0 Поделились
  • Chicago Sun-Times publishes made-up books and fake experts in AI debacle

    The May 18th issue of the Chicago Sun-Times features dozens of pages of recommended summer activities: new trends, outdoor activities, and books to read. But some of the recommendations point to fake, AI-generated books, and other articles quote and cite people that don’t appear to exist.Alongside actual books like Call Me By Your Name by André Aciman, a summer reading list features fake titles by real authors. Min Jin Lee is a real, lauded novelist — but “Nightshade Market,” “a riveting tale set in Seoul’s underground economy,” isn’t one of her works. Rebecca Makkai, a Chicago local, is credited for a fake book called “Boiling Point” that the article claims is about a climate scientist whose teenage daughter turns on her.In a post on Bluesky, the Sun-Times said it was “looking into how this made it into print,” noting that it wasn’t editorial content and wasn’t created or approved by the newsroom. Victor Lim, senior director of audience development, added in an email to The Verge that “it is unacceptable for any content we provide to our readers to be inaccurate,” saying more information will be provided soon. It’s not clear if the content is sponsored — the cover page for the section bears the Sun-Times logo and simply calls it “Your guide to the best of summer.”The book list appears without a byline, but a writer named Marco Buscaglia is credited for other pieces in the summer guide. Buscaglia’s byline appears on a story about hammock culture in the US that quotes several experts and publications, some of whom do not appear to be real. It references a 2023 Outside magazine article by Brianna Madia, a real author and blogger, that I was unable to find. The piece also cites an “outdoor industry market analysis” by Eagles Nest Outfitters that I was unable to find online. Also quoted is “Dr. Jennifer Campos, professor of leisure studies at the University of Colorado,” who does not appear to exist. Buscaglia did not immediately respond to a request for comment but admitted to 404 Media that he uses AI “for background at times” and always checks the material. “This time, I did not and I can’t believe I missed it because it’s so obvious. No excuses,” he told 404. “On me 100 percent and I’m completely embarrassed.”Another uncredited article titled “Summer food trends” features similar seemingly nonexistent experts, including a “Dr. Catherine Furst, food anthropologist at Cornell University.” Padma Lakshmi is also attributed in the piece for a quote she doesn’t appear to have said.News outlets have repeatedly run AI-generated content next to their actual journalism, often blaming the issue on third-party content creators. High-profile incidents of AI-generated content at Gannett and Sports Illustrated raised questions about the editorial process, and in both cases, a third-party marketing firm was behind the AI sludge. Newsrooms’ defense is typically that they had nothing to do with the content — but the appearance of AI-generated work alongside real reporting and writing by human staffers damages trust all the same. See More:
    #chicago #suntimes #publishes #madeup #books
    Chicago Sun-Times publishes made-up books and fake experts in AI debacle
    The May 18th issue of the Chicago Sun-Times features dozens of pages of recommended summer activities: new trends, outdoor activities, and books to read. But some of the recommendations point to fake, AI-generated books, and other articles quote and cite people that don’t appear to exist.Alongside actual books like Call Me By Your Name by André Aciman, a summer reading list features fake titles by real authors. Min Jin Lee is a real, lauded novelist — but “Nightshade Market,” “a riveting tale set in Seoul’s underground economy,” isn’t one of her works. Rebecca Makkai, a Chicago local, is credited for a fake book called “Boiling Point” that the article claims is about a climate scientist whose teenage daughter turns on her.In a post on Bluesky, the Sun-Times said it was “looking into how this made it into print,” noting that it wasn’t editorial content and wasn’t created or approved by the newsroom. Victor Lim, senior director of audience development, added in an email to The Verge that “it is unacceptable for any content we provide to our readers to be inaccurate,” saying more information will be provided soon. It’s not clear if the content is sponsored — the cover page for the section bears the Sun-Times logo and simply calls it “Your guide to the best of summer.”The book list appears without a byline, but a writer named Marco Buscaglia is credited for other pieces in the summer guide. Buscaglia’s byline appears on a story about hammock culture in the US that quotes several experts and publications, some of whom do not appear to be real. It references a 2023 Outside magazine article by Brianna Madia, a real author and blogger, that I was unable to find. The piece also cites an “outdoor industry market analysis” by Eagles Nest Outfitters that I was unable to find online. Also quoted is “Dr. Jennifer Campos, professor of leisure studies at the University of Colorado,” who does not appear to exist. Buscaglia did not immediately respond to a request for comment but admitted to 404 Media that he uses AI “for background at times” and always checks the material. “This time, I did not and I can’t believe I missed it because it’s so obvious. No excuses,” he told 404. “On me 100 percent and I’m completely embarrassed.”Another uncredited article titled “Summer food trends” features similar seemingly nonexistent experts, including a “Dr. Catherine Furst, food anthropologist at Cornell University.” Padma Lakshmi is also attributed in the piece for a quote she doesn’t appear to have said.News outlets have repeatedly run AI-generated content next to their actual journalism, often blaming the issue on third-party content creators. High-profile incidents of AI-generated content at Gannett and Sports Illustrated raised questions about the editorial process, and in both cases, a third-party marketing firm was behind the AI sludge. Newsrooms’ defense is typically that they had nothing to do with the content — but the appearance of AI-generated work alongside real reporting and writing by human staffers damages trust all the same. See More: #chicago #suntimes #publishes #madeup #books
    WWW.THEVERGE.COM
    Chicago Sun-Times publishes made-up books and fake experts in AI debacle
    The May 18th issue of the Chicago Sun-Times features dozens of pages of recommended summer activities: new trends, outdoor activities, and books to read. But some of the recommendations point to fake, AI-generated books, and other articles quote and cite people that don’t appear to exist.Alongside actual books like Call Me By Your Name by André Aciman, a summer reading list features fake titles by real authors. Min Jin Lee is a real, lauded novelist — but “Nightshade Market,” “a riveting tale set in Seoul’s underground economy,” isn’t one of her works. Rebecca Makkai, a Chicago local, is credited for a fake book called “Boiling Point” that the article claims is about a climate scientist whose teenage daughter turns on her.In a post on Bluesky, the Sun-Times said it was “looking into how this made it into print,” noting that it wasn’t editorial content and wasn’t created or approved by the newsroom. Victor Lim, senior director of audience development, added in an email to The Verge that “it is unacceptable for any content we provide to our readers to be inaccurate,” saying more information will be provided soon. It’s not clear if the content is sponsored — the cover page for the section bears the Sun-Times logo and simply calls it “Your guide to the best of summer.”The book list appears without a byline, but a writer named Marco Buscaglia is credited for other pieces in the summer guide. Buscaglia’s byline appears on a story about hammock culture in the US that quotes several experts and publications, some of whom do not appear to be real. It references a 2023 Outside magazine article by Brianna Madia, a real author and blogger, that I was unable to find. The piece also cites an “outdoor industry market analysis” by Eagles Nest Outfitters that I was unable to find online. Also quoted is “Dr. Jennifer Campos, professor of leisure studies at the University of Colorado,” who does not appear to exist. Buscaglia did not immediately respond to a request for comment but admitted to 404 Media that he uses AI “for background at times” and always checks the material. “This time, I did not and I can’t believe I missed it because it’s so obvious. No excuses,” he told 404. “On me 100 percent and I’m completely embarrassed.”Another uncredited article titled “Summer food trends” features similar seemingly nonexistent experts, including a “Dr. Catherine Furst, food anthropologist at Cornell University.” Padma Lakshmi is also attributed in the piece for a quote she doesn’t appear to have said.News outlets have repeatedly run AI-generated content next to their actual journalism, often blaming the issue on third-party content creators. High-profile incidents of AI-generated content at Gannett and Sports Illustrated raised questions about the editorial process, and in both cases, a third-party marketing firm was behind the AI sludge. Newsrooms’ defense is typically that they had nothing to do with the content — but the appearance of AI-generated work alongside real reporting and writing by human staffers damages trust all the same. See More:
    0 Комментарии 0 Поделились
  • Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play?

    Sludge Vohaul!

    Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play?

    Get ready for some nostalgia.

    Nate Anderson



    May 17, 2025 7:00 am

    |

    14

    Story text

    Size

    Small
    Standard
    Large

    Width
    *

    Standard
    Wide

    Links

    Standard
    Orange

    * Subscribers only
      Learn more

    My Ars colleagues were kicking back at the Orbital HQ water cooler the other day, and—as gracefully aging gamers are wont to do—they began to reminisce about classic Sierra On-Line adventure games. I was a huge fan of these games in my youth, so I settled in for some hot buttered nostalgia.
    Would we remember the limited-palette joys of early King's Quest, Space Quest, or Quest for Glory titles? Would we branch out beyond games with "Quest" in their titles, seeking rarer fare like Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist? What about the gothic stylings of The Colonel's Bequest or the voodoo-curious Gabriel Knight?
    Nope. The talk was of acorns.acorns, in fact!
    The scene in question came from King's Quest III, where our hero Gwydion must acquire some exceptionally desiccated acorns to advance the plot. It sounds simple enough. As one walkthrough puts it, "Go east one screen and north one screen to the acorn tree. Try picking up acorns until you get some dry ones. Try various spots underneath the tree." Easy! And clear!
    Except it wasn't either one because the game rather notoriously won't always give you the acorns, even when you enter the right command. This led many gamers to believe they were in the wrong spot, when in reality, they just had to keep entering the "get acorns" command while moving pixel by pixel around the tree until the game finally supplied them. One of our staffers admitted to having purchased the King's Quest III hint book solely because of this "puzzle."This wasn't quite the "fun" I had remembered from these games, but as I cast my mind back, I dimly began to recall similar situations. Space Quest II: Vohaul's Revenge had been my first Sierra title, and after my brother and I spent weeks on the game only to get stuck and die repeatedly in some pitch-dark tunnels, we implored my dad to call Sierra's 1-900 pay hint line. He thought about it. I could see it pained him because he had never beforecalled a 1-900 number in his life. In this case, the call cost a piratical 75 cents for the first minute and 50 cents for each additional minute. But after listening to us whine for several days straight, my dad decided that his sanity was worth the fee, and he called.

    Much like with the acorn example above, we had known what to do—we had just not done it to the game's rather exacting and sometimes obscure standards. The key was to use a glowing gem as a light source, which my brother and I had long understood. The problem was the text parser, which demanded that we "put gem in mouth" to use its light in the tunnels. There was no other place to put the gem, no other way to hold or attach it.No other attempts to use the light of this shining crystal, no matter how clear, well-intentioned, or succinctly expressed, would work. You put the gem in your mouth, or you died in the darkness.
    Returning from my reveries to the conversation at hand, I caught Ars Senior Editor Lee Hutchinson's cynical remark that these kinds of puzzles were "the only way to make 2–3 hours of 'game' last for months." This seemed rather shocking, almost offensive. How could one say such a thing about the games that colored my memories of childhood?
    So I decided to replay Space Quest II for the first time in 35 years in an attempt to defend my own past.
    Big mistake.

    We're not on Endor anymore, Dorothy.

    Play it again, Sam
    In my memory, the Space Quest series was filled with sharply written humor, clever puzzles, and enchanting art. But when I fired up the original version of the game, I found that only one of these was true. The art, despite its blockiness and limited colors, remained charming.
    As for the gameplay, the puzzles were not so much "clever" as "infuriating," "obvious," or"rather obscure."
    Finding the glowing gem discussed above requires you to swim into one small spot of a multi-screen river, with no indication in advance that anything of importance is in that exact location. Trying to "call" a hunter who has captured you does nothing… until you do it a second time. And the less said about trying to throw a puzzle at a Labian Terror Beast, typing out various word permutations while death bears down upon you, the better.

    The whole game was also filled with far more no-warning insta-deaths than I had remembered. On the opening screen, for instance, after your janitorial space-broom floats off into the cosmic ether, you can walk your character right off the edge of the orbital space station he is cleaning. The game doesn't stop you; indeed, it kills you and then mocks you for "an obvious lack of common sense." It then calls you a "wing nut" with an "inability to sustain life." Game over.
    The game's third screen, which features nothing more to do than simply walking around, will also kill you in at least two different ways. Walk into the room still wearing your spacesuit and your boss will come over and chew you out. Game over.
    If you manage to avoid that fate by changing into your indoor uniform first, it's comically easy to tap the wrong arrow key and fall off the room's completely guardrail-free elevator platform. Game over.

    Do NOT touch any part of this root monster.

    Get used to it because the game will kill you in so, so many ways: touching any single pixel of a root monster whose branches form a difficult maze; walking into a giant mushroom; stepping over an invisible pit in the ground; getting shot by a guard who zips in on a hovercraft; drowning in an underwater tunnel; getting swiped at by some kind of giant ape; not putting the glowing gem in your mouth; falling into acid; and many more.
    I used the word "insta-death" above, but the game is not even content with this. At one key point late in the game, a giant Aliens-style alien stalks the hallways, and if she finds you, she "kisses" you. But then she leaves! You are safe after all! Of course, if you have seen the films, you will recognize that you are not safe, but the game lets you go on for a bit before the alien's baby inevitably bursts from your chest, killing you. Game over.

    This is why the official hint book suggests that you "save your game a lot, especially when it seems that you're entering a dangerous area. That way, if you die, you don't have to retrace your steps much." Presumably, this was once considered entertaining.
    When it comes to the humor, most of it is broad.Sometimes it is condescending.Or it might just be potty jokes.My total gameplay time: a few hours.
    "By Grabthar's hammer!" I thought. "Lee was right!"

    When I admitted this to him, Lee told me that he had actually spent time learning to speedrun the Space Quest games during the pandemic. "According to my notes, a clean run of SQ2 in 'fast' mode—assuming good typing skills—takes about 20 minutes straight-up," he said. Yikes.

    What a fiendish plot!

    And yet
    The past was a different time. Computer memory was small, graphics capabilities were low, and computer games had emerged from the "let them live just long enough to encourage spending another quarter" arcade model. Mouse adoption took a while; text parsers made sense even though they created plenty of frustration. So yes—some of these games were a few hours of gameplay stretched out with insta-death, obscure puzzles, and the sheer amount of time it took just to walk across the game's various screens.Let's get off this rock.

    Judged by current standards, the Sierra games are no longer what I would play for fun.
    All the same, I loved them. They introduced me to the joy of exploring virtual worlds and to the power of evocative artwork. I went into space, into fairy tales, and into the past, and I did so while finding the games' humor humorous and their plotlines compelling.If the games can feel a bit arbitrary or vexing today, my child-self's love of repetition was able to treat them as engaging challenges rather than "unfair" design.
    Replaying Space Quest II, encountering the half-remembered jokes and visual designs, brought back these memories. The novelist Thomas Wolfe knew that you can't go home again, and it was probably inevitable that the game would feel dated to me now. But playing it again did take me back to that time before the Internet, when not even hint lines, insta-death, and EGA graphics could dampen the wonder of the new worlds computers were capable of showing us.

    Literal bathroom humor.

    Space Quest II, along with several other Sierra titles, is freely and legally available online at sarien.net—though I found many, many glitches in the implementation. Windows users can buy the entire Space Quest collection through Steam or Good Old Games. There's even a fan remake that runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux.

    Nate Anderson
    Deputy Editor

    Nate Anderson
    Deputy Editor

    Nate is the deputy editor at Ars Technica. His most recent book is In Emergency, Break Glass: What Nietzsche Can Teach Us About Joyful Living in a Tech-Saturated World, which is much funnier than it sounds.

    14 Comments
    #sierra #made #games #childhood #are
    Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play?
    Sludge Vohaul! Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play? Get ready for some nostalgia. Nate Anderson – May 17, 2025 7:00 am | 14 Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more My Ars colleagues were kicking back at the Orbital HQ water cooler the other day, and—as gracefully aging gamers are wont to do—they began to reminisce about classic Sierra On-Line adventure games. I was a huge fan of these games in my youth, so I settled in for some hot buttered nostalgia. Would we remember the limited-palette joys of early King's Quest, Space Quest, or Quest for Glory titles? Would we branch out beyond games with "Quest" in their titles, seeking rarer fare like Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist? What about the gothic stylings of The Colonel's Bequest or the voodoo-curious Gabriel Knight? Nope. The talk was of acorns.acorns, in fact! The scene in question came from King's Quest III, where our hero Gwydion must acquire some exceptionally desiccated acorns to advance the plot. It sounds simple enough. As one walkthrough puts it, "Go east one screen and north one screen to the acorn tree. Try picking up acorns until you get some dry ones. Try various spots underneath the tree." Easy! And clear! Except it wasn't either one because the game rather notoriously won't always give you the acorns, even when you enter the right command. This led many gamers to believe they were in the wrong spot, when in reality, they just had to keep entering the "get acorns" command while moving pixel by pixel around the tree until the game finally supplied them. One of our staffers admitted to having purchased the King's Quest III hint book solely because of this "puzzle."This wasn't quite the "fun" I had remembered from these games, but as I cast my mind back, I dimly began to recall similar situations. Space Quest II: Vohaul's Revenge had been my first Sierra title, and after my brother and I spent weeks on the game only to get stuck and die repeatedly in some pitch-dark tunnels, we implored my dad to call Sierra's 1-900 pay hint line. He thought about it. I could see it pained him because he had never beforecalled a 1-900 number in his life. In this case, the call cost a piratical 75 cents for the first minute and 50 cents for each additional minute. But after listening to us whine for several days straight, my dad decided that his sanity was worth the fee, and he called. Much like with the acorn example above, we had known what to do—we had just not done it to the game's rather exacting and sometimes obscure standards. The key was to use a glowing gem as a light source, which my brother and I had long understood. The problem was the text parser, which demanded that we "put gem in mouth" to use its light in the tunnels. There was no other place to put the gem, no other way to hold or attach it.No other attempts to use the light of this shining crystal, no matter how clear, well-intentioned, or succinctly expressed, would work. You put the gem in your mouth, or you died in the darkness. Returning from my reveries to the conversation at hand, I caught Ars Senior Editor Lee Hutchinson's cynical remark that these kinds of puzzles were "the only way to make 2–3 hours of 'game' last for months." This seemed rather shocking, almost offensive. How could one say such a thing about the games that colored my memories of childhood? So I decided to replay Space Quest II for the first time in 35 years in an attempt to defend my own past. Big mistake. We're not on Endor anymore, Dorothy. Play it again, Sam In my memory, the Space Quest series was filled with sharply written humor, clever puzzles, and enchanting art. But when I fired up the original version of the game, I found that only one of these was true. The art, despite its blockiness and limited colors, remained charming. As for the gameplay, the puzzles were not so much "clever" as "infuriating," "obvious," or"rather obscure." Finding the glowing gem discussed above requires you to swim into one small spot of a multi-screen river, with no indication in advance that anything of importance is in that exact location. Trying to "call" a hunter who has captured you does nothing… until you do it a second time. And the less said about trying to throw a puzzle at a Labian Terror Beast, typing out various word permutations while death bears down upon you, the better. The whole game was also filled with far more no-warning insta-deaths than I had remembered. On the opening screen, for instance, after your janitorial space-broom floats off into the cosmic ether, you can walk your character right off the edge of the orbital space station he is cleaning. The game doesn't stop you; indeed, it kills you and then mocks you for "an obvious lack of common sense." It then calls you a "wing nut" with an "inability to sustain life." Game over. The game's third screen, which features nothing more to do than simply walking around, will also kill you in at least two different ways. Walk into the room still wearing your spacesuit and your boss will come over and chew you out. Game over. If you manage to avoid that fate by changing into your indoor uniform first, it's comically easy to tap the wrong arrow key and fall off the room's completely guardrail-free elevator platform. Game over. Do NOT touch any part of this root monster. Get used to it because the game will kill you in so, so many ways: touching any single pixel of a root monster whose branches form a difficult maze; walking into a giant mushroom; stepping over an invisible pit in the ground; getting shot by a guard who zips in on a hovercraft; drowning in an underwater tunnel; getting swiped at by some kind of giant ape; not putting the glowing gem in your mouth; falling into acid; and many more. I used the word "insta-death" above, but the game is not even content with this. At one key point late in the game, a giant Aliens-style alien stalks the hallways, and if she finds you, she "kisses" you. But then she leaves! You are safe after all! Of course, if you have seen the films, you will recognize that you are not safe, but the game lets you go on for a bit before the alien's baby inevitably bursts from your chest, killing you. Game over. This is why the official hint book suggests that you "save your game a lot, especially when it seems that you're entering a dangerous area. That way, if you die, you don't have to retrace your steps much." Presumably, this was once considered entertaining. When it comes to the humor, most of it is broad.Sometimes it is condescending.Or it might just be potty jokes.My total gameplay time: a few hours. "By Grabthar's hammer!" I thought. "Lee was right!" When I admitted this to him, Lee told me that he had actually spent time learning to speedrun the Space Quest games during the pandemic. "According to my notes, a clean run of SQ2 in 'fast' mode—assuming good typing skills—takes about 20 minutes straight-up," he said. Yikes. What a fiendish plot! And yet The past was a different time. Computer memory was small, graphics capabilities were low, and computer games had emerged from the "let them live just long enough to encourage spending another quarter" arcade model. Mouse adoption took a while; text parsers made sense even though they created plenty of frustration. So yes—some of these games were a few hours of gameplay stretched out with insta-death, obscure puzzles, and the sheer amount of time it took just to walk across the game's various screens.Let's get off this rock. Judged by current standards, the Sierra games are no longer what I would play for fun. All the same, I loved them. They introduced me to the joy of exploring virtual worlds and to the power of evocative artwork. I went into space, into fairy tales, and into the past, and I did so while finding the games' humor humorous and their plotlines compelling.If the games can feel a bit arbitrary or vexing today, my child-self's love of repetition was able to treat them as engaging challenges rather than "unfair" design. Replaying Space Quest II, encountering the half-remembered jokes and visual designs, brought back these memories. The novelist Thomas Wolfe knew that you can't go home again, and it was probably inevitable that the game would feel dated to me now. But playing it again did take me back to that time before the Internet, when not even hint lines, insta-death, and EGA graphics could dampen the wonder of the new worlds computers were capable of showing us. Literal bathroom humor. Space Quest II, along with several other Sierra titles, is freely and legally available online at sarien.net—though I found many, many glitches in the implementation. Windows users can buy the entire Space Quest collection through Steam or Good Old Games. There's even a fan remake that runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux. Nate Anderson Deputy Editor Nate Anderson Deputy Editor Nate is the deputy editor at Ars Technica. His most recent book is In Emergency, Break Glass: What Nietzsche Can Teach Us About Joyful Living in a Tech-Saturated World, which is much funnier than it sounds. 14 Comments #sierra #made #games #childhood #are
    ARSTECHNICA.COM
    Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play?
    Sludge Vohaul! Sierra made the games of my childhood. Are they still fun to play? Get ready for some nostalgia. Nate Anderson – May 17, 2025 7:00 am | 14 Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more My Ars colleagues were kicking back at the Orbital HQ water cooler the other day, and—as gracefully aging gamers are wont to do—they began to reminisce about classic Sierra On-Line adventure games. I was a huge fan of these games in my youth, so I settled in for some hot buttered nostalgia. Would we remember the limited-palette joys of early King's Quest, Space Quest, or Quest for Glory titles? Would we branch out beyond games with "Quest" in their titles, seeking rarer fare like Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist? What about the gothic stylings of The Colonel's Bequest or the voodoo-curious Gabriel Knight? Nope. The talk was of acorns. [Bleeping] acorns, in fact! The scene in question came from King's Quest III, where our hero Gwydion must acquire some exceptionally desiccated acorns to advance the plot. It sounds simple enough. As one walkthrough puts it, "Go east one screen and north one screen to the acorn tree. Try picking up acorns until you get some dry ones. Try various spots underneath the tree." Easy! And clear! Except it wasn't either one because the game rather notoriously won't always give you the acorns, even when you enter the right command. This led many gamers to believe they were in the wrong spot, when in reality, they just had to keep entering the "get acorns" command while moving pixel by pixel around the tree until the game finally supplied them. One of our staffers admitted to having purchased the King's Quest III hint book solely because of this "puzzle." (The hint book, which is now online, says that players should "move around" the particular oak tree in question because "you can only find the right kind of acorns in one spot.") This wasn't quite the "fun" I had remembered from these games, but as I cast my mind back, I dimly began to recall similar situations. Space Quest II: Vohaul's Revenge had been my first Sierra title, and after my brother and I spent weeks on the game only to get stuck and die repeatedly in some pitch-dark tunnels, we implored my dad to call Sierra's 1-900 pay hint line. He thought about it. I could see it pained him because he had never before (and never since!) called a 1-900 number in his life. In this case, the call cost a piratical 75 cents for the first minute and 50 cents for each additional minute. But after listening to us whine for several days straight, my dad decided that his sanity was worth the fee, and he called. Much like with the acorn example above, we had known what to do—we had just not done it to the game's rather exacting and sometimes obscure standards. The key was to use a glowing gem as a light source, which my brother and I had long understood. The problem was the text parser, which demanded that we "put gem in mouth" to use its light in the tunnels. There was no other place to put the gem, no other way to hold or attach it. (We tried them all.) No other attempts to use the light of this shining crystal, no matter how clear, well-intentioned, or succinctly expressed, would work. You put the gem in your mouth, or you died in the darkness. Returning from my reveries to the conversation at hand, I caught Ars Senior Editor Lee Hutchinson's cynical remark that these kinds of puzzles were "the only way to make 2–3 hours of 'game' last for months." This seemed rather shocking, almost offensive. How could one say such a thing about the games that colored my memories of childhood? So I decided to replay Space Quest II for the first time in 35 years in an attempt to defend my own past. Big mistake. We're not on Endor anymore, Dorothy. Play it again, Sam In my memory, the Space Quest series was filled with sharply written humor, clever puzzles, and enchanting art. But when I fired up the original version of the game, I found that only one of these was true. The art, despite its blockiness and limited colors, remained charming. As for the gameplay, the puzzles were not so much "clever" as "infuriating," "obvious," or (more often) "rather obscure." Finding the glowing gem discussed above requires you to swim into one small spot of a multi-screen river, with no indication in advance that anything of importance is in that exact location. Trying to "call" a hunter who has captured you does nothing… until you do it a second time. And the less said about trying to throw a puzzle at a Labian Terror Beast, typing out various word permutations while death bears down upon you, the better. The whole game was also filled with far more no-warning insta-deaths than I had remembered. On the opening screen, for instance, after your janitorial space-broom floats off into the cosmic ether, you can walk your character right off the edge of the orbital space station he is cleaning. The game doesn't stop you; indeed, it kills you and then mocks you for "an obvious lack of common sense." It then calls you a "wing nut" with an "inability to sustain life." Game over. The game's third screen, which features nothing more to do than simply walking around, will also kill you in at least two different ways. Walk into the room still wearing your spacesuit and your boss will come over and chew you out. Game over. If you manage to avoid that fate by changing into your indoor uniform first, it's comically easy to tap the wrong arrow key and fall off the room's completely guardrail-free elevator platform. Game over. Do NOT touch any part of this root monster. Get used to it because the game will kill you in so, so many ways: touching any single pixel of a root monster whose branches form a difficult maze; walking into a giant mushroom; stepping over an invisible pit in the ground; getting shot by a guard who zips in on a hovercraft; drowning in an underwater tunnel; getting swiped at by some kind of giant ape; not putting the glowing gem in your mouth; falling into acid; and many more. I used the word "insta-death" above, but the game is not even content with this. At one key point late in the game, a giant Aliens-style alien stalks the hallways, and if she finds you, she "kisses" you. But then she leaves! You are safe after all! Of course, if you have seen the films, you will recognize that you are not safe, but the game lets you go on for a bit before the alien's baby inevitably bursts from your chest, killing you. Game over. This is why the official hint book suggests that you "save your game a lot, especially when it seems that you're entering a dangerous area. That way, if you die, you don't have to retrace your steps much." Presumably, this was once considered entertaining. When it comes to the humor, most of it is broad. (When you are told to "say the word," you have to say "the word.") Sometimes it is condescending. ("You quickly glance around the room to see if anyone saw you blow it.") Or it might just be potty jokes. (Plungers, jock straps, toilet paper, alien bathrooms, and fouling one's trousers all make appearances.) My total gameplay time: a few hours. "By Grabthar's hammer!" I thought. "Lee was right!" When I admitted this to him, Lee told me that he had actually spent time learning to speedrun the Space Quest games during the pandemic. "According to my notes, a clean run of SQ2 in 'fast' mode—assuming good typing skills—takes about 20 minutes straight-up," he said. Yikes. What a fiendish plot! And yet The past was a different time. Computer memory was small, graphics capabilities were low, and computer games had emerged from the "let them live just long enough to encourage spending another quarter" arcade model. Mouse adoption took a while; text parsers made sense even though they created plenty of frustration. So yes—some of these games were a few hours of gameplay stretched out with insta-death, obscure puzzles, and the sheer amount of time it took just to walk across the game's various screens. (Seriously, "walking around" took a ridiculous amount of the game's playtime, especially when a puzzle made you backtrack three screens, type some command, and then return.) Let's get off this rock. Judged by current standards, the Sierra games are no longer what I would play for fun. All the same, I loved them. They introduced me to the joy of exploring virtual worlds and to the power of evocative artwork. I went into space, into fairy tales, and into the past, and I did so while finding the games' humor humorous and their plotlines compelling. ("An army of life insurance salesmen?" I thought at the time. "Hilarious and brilliant!") If the games can feel a bit arbitrary or vexing today, my child-self's love of repetition was able to treat them as engaging challenges rather than "unfair" design. Replaying Space Quest II, encountering the half-remembered jokes and visual designs, brought back these memories. The novelist Thomas Wolfe knew that you can't go home again, and it was probably inevitable that the game would feel dated to me now. But playing it again did take me back to that time before the Internet, when not even hint lines, insta-death, and EGA graphics could dampen the wonder of the new worlds computers were capable of showing us. Literal bathroom humor. Space Quest II, along with several other Sierra titles, is freely and legally available online at sarien.net—though I found many, many glitches in the implementation. Windows users can buy the entire Space Quest collection through Steam or Good Old Games. There's even a fan remake that runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux. Nate Anderson Deputy Editor Nate Anderson Deputy Editor Nate is the deputy editor at Ars Technica. His most recent book is In Emergency, Break Glass: What Nietzsche Can Teach Us About Joyful Living in a Tech-Saturated World, which is much funnier than it sounds. 14 Comments
    0 Комментарии 0 Поделились
  • Nintendo confirms some Switch 1 games will be getting free updates to improve playability on Switch 2 (separate from Switch 2 editions)

















    Atheerios
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    7,479






















    Nintendo Switch Games with Free Nintendo Switch 2 Updates - Nintendo US


    Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch 2 system will be released for selected Nintendo Switch games.




    www.nintendo.com








    Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch™ 2 system will be released for select Nintendo Switch games.


    By connecting your Nintendo Switch 2 to the internet, you can download free updates that may improve performance or add support for features such as GameShare in select games.
    The contents of these free updates will differ depending on the game.​
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    Initial games to receive updates:

    • ARMS™
    • Captain Toad™: Treasure Tracker
    • Super Mario Odyssey™
    • Super Mario™ 3D World + Bowser's Fury
    • Clubhouse Games™: 51 Worldwide Classics
    • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening
    • The Legend of Zelda™: Echoes of Wisdom
    • Game Builder Garage™
    • New Super Mario Bros.™ U Deluxe
    • Pokémon™ Scarlet
    • Pokémon™ Violet
    • Big Brain Academy™: Brain vs.
    Brain 


























    Stoof
    Uncle Works at Nintendo
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    5,487














    No Xenoblade...
    But good to see those two Zelda games there
     

























    Lotus
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    123,772
















    Atheerios said:



    Pokémon™ Scarlet

    • Pokémon™ Violet
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    Heh, all eyes on this one lol 

























    Bengraven
    Powered by Friendship™
    Member




    Oct 26, 2017


    33,524



    Florida















    Nice.
    Then I might end up finally buying Scar/Vi depending on how well they run.
     

























    DNAbro
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    29,960














    PLEASE LET SCARLET AND VIOLET RUN WELL
     

























    oni-link
    tag reference no one gets
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    17,329



    UK

















    Stoof said:



    No Xenoblade...
    But good to see those two Zelda games there

    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    They might get Switch 2 versions instead 

























    Bio Booster Armoire
    Prophet of Truth
    Member




    Apr 21, 2020


    1,167














    That's cool.
    Now if only I could get a free fps/res bump for BOTW and TOTK instead of paying extra for some questionable app features I'll never use...
     

























    Waggles
    Member




    Oct 26, 2017


    3,767














    Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors


    well fuck 

























    Audiblee
    Member




    Mar 14, 2025


    1,316














    If only Nintendo had a platform where they could have told us all of this DIRECTly.
     

























    mrmickfran
    The Fallen




    Oct 27, 2017


    33,106



    Gongaga















    Bowser's Fury nice


    That game chugged like crazy in the final boss fight 


























    AaronMT
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    8,350



    Toronto















    • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening





     

























    Mass Effect
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 31, 2017


    19,145














    That's a nice list of games honestly for a first run.



    Lotus said:



    Heh, all eyes on this one lol

    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    Maybe it won't look like a PS2 game anymore. 

























    SludgeFarmer
    Member




    Feb 17, 2025


    133














    and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles?


    why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us 

























    Lotus
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    123,772
















    Waggles said:



    Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors


    well fuck
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel 

























    Kongroo
    Banned




    Oct 31, 2017


    3,465



    Ottawa, Ontario, CA















    Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move.
    I'm tired.
     

























    Milk
    Prophet of Truth
    Avenger




    Oct 25, 2017


    4,288














    Make TTYD 60fps PLEASE
     

























    Aleh
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    19,974














    NICE SCARLET AND VIOLET
     

























    Captain of Outer Space
    Come Sale Away With Me
    Member




    Oct 28, 2017


    14,345














    That description says they won't all be for "improved playability" but to support chat features on the Switch 2.
     

























    luminosity
    "This guy are sick"
    Member




    Oct 30, 2017


    1,639
















    SludgeFarmer said:



    and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles?


    why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    yeah, like just brute force it. 

























    Ayumu
    Member




    May 10, 2024


    944














    Free updates in Nintendo first party games? I was not expecting that lol
     


























    u_neek
    Member




    Oct 28, 2017


    1,732
















    Atheerios said:



    • Pokémon™ Scarlet

    • Pokémon™ Violet
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...

    I might finally play these.
     

























    Blindy
    Member




    Nov 16, 2017


    4,134














    Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me.
     

























    Finaj
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    5,728














    Please make Pokémon Scarlet and Violet actually playable.
    Please!
     

























    Seik
    Member




    Jan 5, 2023


    3,734



    Québec City















    Echoes of Wisdom needs that very very badly.


    Frame pacing in that game is literally headache inducing. 

























    Teenage Fansub
    Member




    May 24, 2019


    24,195














    All the paid upgrades seemed to have additional exclusive content, so hopefully there'll be a lot of these when it's a simple switch to a native version without any bonuses.
     

























    Bishop89
    What Are Ya' Selling?
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    42,625



    Melbourne, Australia

















    Atheerios said:



    Pokémon™ Scarlet

    • Pokémon™ Violet
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...

    Nice
     

























    Cronogear
    ▲ Legend ▲
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    4,910














    Scarlet and Violet will be VERY interesting to see.
    Can't wait for the DF video.
     

























    Dsezer
    Member




    Sep 22, 2020


    500














    Bayonetta 3 pls :(
     

























    NotLiquid
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    37,802














    Give me Bayonetta 3 and Astral Chain updates, and my life will be yours
     

























    Mario_Bones
    Member




    Oct 31, 2017


    3,755



    Australia















    Yeah the Scarlet and Violet upgrade had BETTER be free lmao


    Hopefully the Xenoblades and Age of Calamity get an upgrade as well 


























    Hero
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    8,816
















    Kongroo said:



    Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move.
    I'm tired.

    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    This thread is about free updates? 

























    Watershed
    Member




    Oct 26, 2017


    10,516














    Free updates are nice.
    Hopefully technical improvements all around.
     

























    bunnibuki
    Member




    Feb 18, 2024


    922














    Fuck it, give me 120fps Skyward Sword lol


    Very glad to see Link's Awakening in here.

    Edit: Astral Chain and Bayonetta 3 better get some patches in the future, pleaseeee 

























    Berordn
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 26, 2017


    10,674



    NoVA

















    Blindy said:



    Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me.

    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...

    arceus is probably being superceded in their eyes by ZA, but it'll be a while before the next pokemon gen
     

























    No Depth
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    20,641
















    Waggles said:



    Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors


    well fuck
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...



    Entered thread for this exact thing too.

    Well fuck 

























    Lucaflowe
    Member




    Sep 26, 2018


    46














    No Age of Calamity booooo.
    Pokemon Scarlet and Violet is definitely gonna have all eyes on it
     

























    Xtortion
    One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    7,489



    United States















    Games that are already 60fps should straight up just get uncapped framerates.
    Let the enhanced grunt of Switch 2 and VRR take the wheel.
     

























    jw2727
    Member




    Aug 7, 2024


    50














    That's better.
    Hopefully more join that list, TTYD especially.



    EDIT and honestly, I would much prefer if Kirby and the Forgotten Land just got bumped to 60 without the extra shit. 

























    Teenage Fansub
    Member




    May 24, 2019


    24,195
















    SludgeFarmer said:



    and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles?


    why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us
    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...

    A hardware brute force upgrade seems to apply without patches.








    Enhanced BC confirmed for Switch 2


    As per the most recent, "Ask the Developers"




    www.resetera.com







     

























    Soul Lab
    Member




    Nov 17, 2017


    2,986














    Xenoblade X? Bayonetta ? D:
     


























    DarkChronic
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    5,652














    Love to see it - not a bad start! So pumped to see Pokemon S/V! I can't wait to play these in earnest, lol!


    Glad to see Echoes of Wisdom, as well.
    Now we just need to see Xenoblade! 

























    Bufbaf
    Don't F5!
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    15,796



    Hamburg, Germany















    gotta love how botw/totk aren't in there, so you're forced to buy the update instead of getting free 60fps.
     

























    RockmanBN
    Visited by Knack - One Winged Slayer
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    31,854



    Cornfields















    Where are my Xenoblades?
     

























    A.J.
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    21,510














    Still nothing for Xenoblade X.
    I guess that 60fps mode hidden in the code was unrelated
     

























    Rowsdower
    Shinra Employee of The Wise Ones
    Avenger




    Oct 27, 2017


    19,962



    Canada















    Pokemon Scarlet/Violet at maybe 60fps and no longer a blurry mess? Praise the lord.
     

























    Greywaren
    Member




    Jul 16, 2019


    12,989



    Spain















    Good stuff.
    Kinda softens the blow of other upgrades being paid.
     

























    Kouriozan
    Member




    Oct 25, 2017


    24,670














    That means 3rd parties can do it as well so that's good.
     

























    lucancel
    Member




    Oct 30, 2017


    1,766



    Italy















    Can i have switch 1 games docked mode on switch 2 portable? Did Nintendo Say anything?
     

























    Brodo Baggins
    Member




    Oct 27, 2017


    5,581














    No Xenoblade X
     

























    Waggles
    Member




    Oct 26, 2017


    3,767
















    Lotus said:



    Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel

    Click to expand...
    Click to shrink...

    Yeah, I'll assume a performance patch will come.


    does anyone know - did nintendo explicitly claim that "all" switch games will work on switch 2 regardless of patches or updates? i assume it'll be like microsoft's handling of BC titles - that even if they're not patched, they should still launch, even if bugs or weird behavior may be present.
    I'm hoping that games in general should see a performance boost regardless.
    Probably too much to hope for from Nintendo, honestly.

    On a similar note, I'm a little worried how the transfer between switch and switch 2 will be.
    will it reset my switch and lock me out of digital purchases and saves if I migrate to switch 2? 













    المصدر: https://www.resetera.com/threads/nintendo-confirms-some-switch-1-games-will-be-getting-free-updates-to-improve-playability-on-switch-2-separate-from-switch-2-editions.1152525/

    #Nintendo #confirms #some #Switch #games #will #getting #free #updates #improve #playability #Switch #separate #from #Switch #editions
    Nintendo confirms some Switch 1 games will be getting free updates to improve playability on Switch 2 (separate from Switch 2 editions)
    Atheerios Member Oct 27, 2017 7,479 Nintendo Switch Games with Free Nintendo Switch 2 Updates - Nintendo US Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch 2 system will be released for selected Nintendo Switch games. www.nintendo.com Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch™ 2 system will be released for select Nintendo Switch games. By connecting your Nintendo Switch 2 to the internet, you can download free updates that may improve performance or add support for features such as GameShare in select games. The contents of these free updates will differ depending on the game.​ Click to expand... Click to shrink... Initial games to receive updates: • ARMS™ • Captain Toad™: Treasure Tracker • Super Mario Odyssey™ • Super Mario™ 3D World + Bowser's Fury • Clubhouse Games™: 51 Worldwide Classics • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening • The Legend of Zelda™: Echoes of Wisdom • Game Builder Garage™ • New Super Mario Bros.™ U Deluxe • Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet • Big Brain Academy™: Brain vs. Brain  Stoof Uncle Works at Nintendo Member Oct 25, 2017 5,487 No Xenoblade... But good to see those two Zelda games there   Lotus One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 123,772 Atheerios said: Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... Heh, all eyes on this one lol  Bengraven Powered by Friendship™ Member Oct 26, 2017 33,524 Florida Nice. Then I might end up finally buying Scar/Vi depending on how well they run.   DNAbro Member Oct 25, 2017 29,960 PLEASE LET SCARLET AND VIOLET RUN WELL   oni-link tag reference no one gets Member Oct 25, 2017 17,329 UK Stoof said: No Xenoblade... But good to see those two Zelda games there Click to expand... Click to shrink... They might get Switch 2 versions instead  Bio Booster Armoire Prophet of Truth Member Apr 21, 2020 1,167 That's cool. Now if only I could get a free fps/res bump for BOTW and TOTK instead of paying extra for some questionable app features I'll never use...   Waggles Member Oct 26, 2017 3,767 Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck  Audiblee Member Mar 14, 2025 1,316 If only Nintendo had a platform where they could have told us all of this DIRECTly.   mrmickfran The Fallen Oct 27, 2017 33,106 Gongaga Bowser's Fury nice That game chugged like crazy in the final boss fight  AaronMT Member Oct 27, 2017 8,350 Toronto • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening   Mass Effect One Winged Slayer Member Oct 31, 2017 19,145 That's a nice list of games honestly for a first run. Lotus said: Heh, all eyes on this one lol Click to expand... Click to shrink... Maybe it won't look like a PS2 game anymore.  SludgeFarmer Member Feb 17, 2025 133 and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us  Lotus One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 123,772 Waggles said: Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck Click to expand... Click to shrink... Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel  Kongroo Banned Oct 31, 2017 3,465 Ottawa, Ontario, CA Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move. I'm tired.   Milk Prophet of Truth Avenger Oct 25, 2017 4,288 Make TTYD 60fps PLEASE   Aleh Member Oct 27, 2017 19,974 NICE SCARLET AND VIOLET   Captain of Outer Space Come Sale Away With Me Member Oct 28, 2017 14,345 That description says they won't all be for "improved playability" but to support chat features on the Switch 2.   luminosity "This guy are sick" Member Oct 30, 2017 1,639 SludgeFarmer said: and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us Click to expand... Click to shrink... yeah, like just brute force it.  Ayumu Member May 10, 2024 944 Free updates in Nintendo first party games? I was not expecting that lol   u_neek Member Oct 28, 2017 1,732 Atheerios said: • Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... I might finally play these.   Blindy Member Nov 16, 2017 4,134 Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me.   Finaj Member Oct 25, 2017 5,728 Please make Pokémon Scarlet and Violet actually playable. Please!   Seik Member Jan 5, 2023 3,734 Québec City Echoes of Wisdom needs that very very badly. Frame pacing in that game is literally headache inducing.  Teenage Fansub Member May 24, 2019 24,195 All the paid upgrades seemed to have additional exclusive content, so hopefully there'll be a lot of these when it's a simple switch to a native version without any bonuses.   Bishop89 What Are Ya' Selling? Member Oct 25, 2017 42,625 Melbourne, Australia Atheerios said: Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... Nice   Cronogear ▲ Legend ▲ Member Oct 27, 2017 4,910 Scarlet and Violet will be VERY interesting to see. Can't wait for the DF video.   Dsezer Member Sep 22, 2020 500 Bayonetta 3 pls :(   NotLiquid One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 37,802 Give me Bayonetta 3 and Astral Chain updates, and my life will be yours   Mario_Bones Member Oct 31, 2017 3,755 Australia Yeah the Scarlet and Violet upgrade had BETTER be free lmao Hopefully the Xenoblades and Age of Calamity get an upgrade as well  Hero One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 8,816 Kongroo said: Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move. I'm tired. Click to expand... Click to shrink... This thread is about free updates?  Watershed Member Oct 26, 2017 10,516 Free updates are nice. Hopefully technical improvements all around.   bunnibuki Member Feb 18, 2024 922 Fuck it, give me 120fps Skyward Sword lol Very glad to see Link's Awakening in here. Edit: Astral Chain and Bayonetta 3 better get some patches in the future, pleaseeee  Berordn One Winged Slayer Member Oct 26, 2017 10,674 NoVA Blindy said: Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me. Click to expand... Click to shrink... arceus is probably being superceded in their eyes by ZA, but it'll be a while before the next pokemon gen   No Depth Member Oct 27, 2017 20,641 Waggles said: Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck Click to expand... Click to shrink... Entered thread for this exact thing too. Well fuck  Lucaflowe Member Sep 26, 2018 46 No Age of Calamity booooo. Pokemon Scarlet and Violet is definitely gonna have all eyes on it   Xtortion One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 7,489 United States Games that are already 60fps should straight up just get uncapped framerates. Let the enhanced grunt of Switch 2 and VRR take the wheel.   jw2727 Member Aug 7, 2024 50 That's better. Hopefully more join that list, TTYD especially. EDIT and honestly, I would much prefer if Kirby and the Forgotten Land just got bumped to 60 without the extra shit.  Teenage Fansub Member May 24, 2019 24,195 SludgeFarmer said: and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us Click to expand... Click to shrink... A hardware brute force upgrade seems to apply without patches. Enhanced BC confirmed for Switch 2 As per the most recent, "Ask the Developers" www.resetera.com   Soul Lab Member Nov 17, 2017 2,986 Xenoblade X? Bayonetta ? D:   DarkChronic Member Oct 27, 2017 5,652 Love to see it - not a bad start! So pumped to see Pokemon S/V! I can't wait to play these in earnest, lol! Glad to see Echoes of Wisdom, as well. Now we just need to see Xenoblade!  Bufbaf Don't F5! Member Oct 25, 2017 15,796 Hamburg, Germany gotta love how botw/totk aren't in there, so you're forced to buy the update instead of getting free 60fps.   RockmanBN Visited by Knack - One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 31,854 Cornfields Where are my Xenoblades?   A.J. Member Oct 25, 2017 21,510 Still nothing for Xenoblade X. I guess that 60fps mode hidden in the code was unrelated   Rowsdower Shinra Employee of The Wise Ones Avenger Oct 27, 2017 19,962 Canada Pokemon Scarlet/Violet at maybe 60fps and no longer a blurry mess? Praise the lord.   Greywaren Member Jul 16, 2019 12,989 Spain Good stuff. Kinda softens the blow of other upgrades being paid.   Kouriozan Member Oct 25, 2017 24,670 That means 3rd parties can do it as well so that's good.   lucancel Member Oct 30, 2017 1,766 Italy Can i have switch 1 games docked mode on switch 2 portable? Did Nintendo Say anything?   Brodo Baggins Member Oct 27, 2017 5,581 No Xenoblade X 🥺   Waggles Member Oct 26, 2017 3,767 Lotus said: Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel Click to expand... Click to shrink... Yeah, I'll assume a performance patch will come. does anyone know - did nintendo explicitly claim that "all" switch games will work on switch 2 regardless of patches or updates? i assume it'll be like microsoft's handling of BC titles - that even if they're not patched, they should still launch, even if bugs or weird behavior may be present. I'm hoping that games in general should see a performance boost regardless. Probably too much to hope for from Nintendo, honestly. On a similar note, I'm a little worried how the transfer between switch and switch 2 will be. will it reset my switch and lock me out of digital purchases and saves if I migrate to switch 2?  المصدر: https://www.resetera.com/threads/nintendo-confirms-some-switch-1-games-will-be-getting-free-updates-to-improve-playability-on-switch-2-separate-from-switch-2-editions.1152525/ #Nintendo #confirms #some #Switch #games #will #getting #free #updates #improve #playability #Switch #separate #from #Switch #editions
    WWW.RESETERA.COM
    Nintendo confirms some Switch 1 games will be getting free updates to improve playability on Switch 2 (separate from Switch 2 editions)
    Atheerios Member Oct 27, 2017 7,479 Nintendo Switch Games with Free Nintendo Switch 2 Updates - Nintendo US Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch 2 system will be released for selected Nintendo Switch games. www.nintendo.com Free updates to improve playability on the Nintendo Switch™ 2 system will be released for select Nintendo Switch games. By connecting your Nintendo Switch 2 to the internet, you can download free updates that may improve performance or add support for features such as GameShare in select games. The contents of these free updates will differ depending on the game.​ Click to expand... Click to shrink... Initial games to receive updates: • ARMS™ • Captain Toad™: Treasure Tracker • Super Mario Odyssey™ • Super Mario™ 3D World + Bowser's Fury • Clubhouse Games™: 51 Worldwide Classics • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening • The Legend of Zelda™: Echoes of Wisdom • Game Builder Garage™ • New Super Mario Bros.™ U Deluxe • Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet • Big Brain Academy™: Brain vs. Brain  Stoof Uncle Works at Nintendo Member Oct 25, 2017 5,487 No Xenoblade... But good to see those two Zelda games there   Lotus One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 123,772 Atheerios said: Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... Heh, all eyes on this one lol  Bengraven Powered by Friendship™ Member Oct 26, 2017 33,524 Florida Nice. Then I might end up finally buying Scar/Vi depending on how well they run.   DNAbro Member Oct 25, 2017 29,960 PLEASE LET SCARLET AND VIOLET RUN WELL   oni-link tag reference no one gets Member Oct 25, 2017 17,329 UK Stoof said: No Xenoblade... But good to see those two Zelda games there Click to expand... Click to shrink... They might get Switch 2 versions instead  Bio Booster Armoire Prophet of Truth Member Apr 21, 2020 1,167 That's cool. Now if only I could get a free fps/res bump for BOTW and TOTK instead of paying extra for some questionable app features I'll never use...   Waggles Member Oct 26, 2017 3,767 Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck  Audiblee Member Mar 14, 2025 1,316 If only Nintendo had a platform where they could have told us all of this DIRECTly.   mrmickfran The Fallen Oct 27, 2017 33,106 Gongaga Bowser's Fury nice That game chugged like crazy in the final boss fight  AaronMT Member Oct 27, 2017 8,350 Toronto • The Legend of Zelda™: Link's Awakening   Mass Effect One Winged Slayer Member Oct 31, 2017 19,145 That's a nice list of games honestly for a first run. Lotus said: Heh, all eyes on this one lol Click to expand... Click to shrink... Maybe it won't look like a PS2 game anymore.  SludgeFarmer Member Feb 17, 2025 133 and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us  Lotus One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 123,772 Waggles said: Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck Click to expand... Click to shrink... Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel  Kongroo Banned Oct 31, 2017 3,465 Ottawa, Ontario, CA Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move. I'm tired.   Milk Prophet of Truth Avenger Oct 25, 2017 4,288 Make TTYD 60fps PLEASE   Aleh Member Oct 27, 2017 19,974 NICE SCARLET AND VIOLET   Captain of Outer Space Come Sale Away With Me Member Oct 28, 2017 14,345 That description says they won't all be for "improved playability" but to support chat features on the Switch 2.   luminosity "This guy are sick" Member Oct 30, 2017 1,639 SludgeFarmer said: and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us Click to expand... Click to shrink... yeah, like just brute force it.  Ayumu Member May 10, 2024 944 Free updates in Nintendo first party games? I was not expecting that lol   u_neek Member Oct 28, 2017 1,732 Atheerios said: • Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... I might finally play these.   Blindy Member Nov 16, 2017 4,134 Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me.   Finaj Member Oct 25, 2017 5,728 Please make Pokémon Scarlet and Violet actually playable. Please!   Seik Member Jan 5, 2023 3,734 Québec City Echoes of Wisdom needs that very very badly. Frame pacing in that game is literally headache inducing.  Teenage Fansub Member May 24, 2019 24,195 All the paid upgrades seemed to have additional exclusive content, so hopefully there'll be a lot of these when it's a simple switch to a native version without any bonuses.   Bishop89 What Are Ya' Selling? Member Oct 25, 2017 42,625 Melbourne, Australia Atheerios said: Pokémon™ Scarlet • Pokémon™ Violet Click to expand... Click to shrink... Nice   Cronogear ▲ Legend ▲ Member Oct 27, 2017 4,910 Scarlet and Violet will be VERY interesting to see. Can't wait for the DF video.   Dsezer Member Sep 22, 2020 500 Bayonetta 3 pls :(   NotLiquid One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 37,802 Give me Bayonetta 3 and Astral Chain updates, and my life will be yours   Mario_Bones Member Oct 31, 2017 3,755 Australia Yeah the Scarlet and Violet upgrade had BETTER be free lmao Hopefully the Xenoblades and Age of Calamity get an upgrade as well  Hero One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 8,816 Kongroo said: Paid 60fps patches is such a Nintendo move. I'm tired. Click to expand... Click to shrink... This thread is about free updates?  Watershed Member Oct 26, 2017 10,516 Free updates are nice. Hopefully technical improvements all around.   bunnibuki Member Feb 18, 2024 922 Fuck it, give me 120fps Skyward Sword lol Very glad to see Link's Awakening in here. Edit: Astral Chain and Bayonetta 3 better get some patches in the future, pleaseeee  Berordn One Winged Slayer Member Oct 26, 2017 10,674 NoVA Blindy said: Scarlet & Violet getting performance upgrades but not Arceus is wild to me. Click to expand... Click to shrink... arceus is probably being superceded in their eyes by ZA, but it'll be a while before the next pokemon gen   No Depth Member Oct 27, 2017 20,641 Waggles said: Cntrl + F Hyrule warriors well fuck Click to expand... Click to shrink... Entered thread for this exact thing too. Well fuck  Lucaflowe Member Sep 26, 2018 46 No Age of Calamity booooo. Pokemon Scarlet and Violet is definitely gonna have all eyes on it   Xtortion One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 7,489 United States Games that are already 60fps should straight up just get uncapped framerates. Let the enhanced grunt of Switch 2 and VRR take the wheel.   jw2727 Member Aug 7, 2024 50 That's better. Hopefully more join that list, TTYD especially. EDIT and honestly, I would much prefer if Kirby and the Forgotten Land just got bumped to 60 without the extra shit.  Teenage Fansub Member May 24, 2019 24,195 SludgeFarmer said: and is there a base upgrade that makes stuff run better regardless of updates to specific titles? why isn't this stuff in the hour long sales pitch you just showed us Click to expand... Click to shrink... A hardware brute force upgrade seems to apply without patches. Enhanced BC confirmed for Switch 2 As per the most recent, "Ask the Developers" www.resetera.com   Soul Lab Member Nov 17, 2017 2,986 Xenoblade X? Bayonetta ? D:   DarkChronic Member Oct 27, 2017 5,652 Love to see it - not a bad start! So pumped to see Pokemon S/V! I can't wait to play these in earnest, lol! Glad to see Echoes of Wisdom, as well. Now we just need to see Xenoblade!  Bufbaf Don't F5! Member Oct 25, 2017 15,796 Hamburg, Germany gotta love how botw/totk aren't in there, so you're forced to buy the update instead of getting free 60fps.   RockmanBN Visited by Knack - One Winged Slayer Member Oct 25, 2017 31,854 Cornfields Where are my Xenoblades?   A.J. Member Oct 25, 2017 21,510 Still nothing for Xenoblade X. I guess that 60fps mode hidden in the code was unrelated   Rowsdower Shinra Employee of The Wise Ones Avenger Oct 27, 2017 19,962 Canada Pokemon Scarlet/Violet at maybe 60fps and no longer a blurry mess? Praise the lord.   Greywaren Member Jul 16, 2019 12,989 Spain Good stuff. Kinda softens the blow of other upgrades being paid.   Kouriozan Member Oct 25, 2017 24,670 That means 3rd parties can do it as well so that's good.   lucancel Member Oct 30, 2017 1,766 Italy Can i have switch 1 games docked mode on switch 2 portable? Did Nintendo Say anything?   Brodo Baggins Member Oct 27, 2017 5,581 No Xenoblade X 🥺   Waggles Member Oct 26, 2017 3,767 Lotus said: Would be surprised if it's not included later, it's gotta be one of the more infamous ones, and it's getting a sequel Click to expand... Click to shrink... Yeah, I'll assume a performance patch will come. does anyone know - did nintendo explicitly claim that "all" switch games will work on switch 2 regardless of patches or updates? i assume it'll be like microsoft's handling of BC titles - that even if they're not patched, they should still launch, even if bugs or weird behavior may be present. I'm hoping that games in general should see a performance boost regardless. Probably too much to hope for from Nintendo, honestly. On a similar note, I'm a little worried how the transfer between switch and switch 2 will be. will it reset my switch and lock me out of digital purchases and saves if I migrate to switch 2? 
    0 Комментарии 0 Поделились
  • RFK Jr. Takes Grandkids for a Swim in Toxic Sludge


    This weekend, Robert F.
    Kennedy Jr., America’s new health czar, once again demonstrated his general lack of qualifications for the job by taking his grandchildren swimming in a toxic Washington D.C.
    waterway.
    Kennedy, who is Trump’s new director of the Department of Health and Human Services, inscrutably decided to take his grandkids for a dip in Rock Creek, a tributary near the nation’s capital that has been officially deemed not suitable for human activity.

    “Mother’s Day hike in Dumbarton Oaks Park with Amaryllis, Bobby, Kick, and Jackson, and a swim with my grandchildren, Bobcat and Cassius in Rock Creek,” Kennedy posted on X, over the weekend.
    This pastoral scene might be endearingly folksy, were it not for the fact that Rock Creek is the unfortunate dumping ground for the region’s sewage discharge.
    As such, the government has officially banned area residents from swimming, or even wading, in the creek.



    “Swimming and wading are not allowed due to high bacteria levels,” the National Park Service has said, of the creek.
    “Rock Creek has high levels of bacteria and other infectious pathogens that make swimming, wading, and other contact with the water a hazard to human (and pet) health.
    Please protect yourself and your pooches by staying on trails and out of the creek.
    All District waterways are subject to a swim ban – this means wading, too!” In the photos shared online by Kennedy, the HHS director can be seen dunking his grandson into the bacteria-laden water.
    Gizmodo reached out to the HHS for more information about this photo-op.
    The HHS director happily dunking his head in a poop-polluted creek seems like an apt visual metaphor for national health policy right now.
    Indeed, Kennedy and the rest of the Trump administration seem to be doing everything in their power to make more areas of America like Rock Creek—that is, polluted and uninhabitable by humans.
    Over the past few months, the Trump administration has sought to drastically cut environmental regulations across the board—including for water and air safety.
    At the same time, the HHS, under Kennedy, has attacked vaccine programs and laid off thousands of federal workers at the Food and Safety Administration and other parts of the federal health workforce.
    At the same time, Kennedy has leaned increasingly into unproven conspiracy theory rhetoric, signaling a willingness to spend federal money and resources on his own personal preoccupations and fringe science.

    Source: https://gizmodo.com/rfk-jr-takes-grandkids-for-a-swim-in-toxic-sludge-2000601192
    #rfk #takes #grandkids #swim #toxic #sludge
    RFK Jr. Takes Grandkids for a Swim in Toxic Sludge
    This weekend, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., America’s new health czar, once again demonstrated his general lack of qualifications for the job by taking his grandchildren swimming in a toxic Washington D.C. waterway. Kennedy, who is Trump’s new director of the Department of Health and Human Services, inscrutably decided to take his grandkids for a dip in Rock Creek, a tributary near the nation’s capital that has been officially deemed not suitable for human activity. “Mother’s Day hike in Dumbarton Oaks Park with Amaryllis, Bobby, Kick, and Jackson, and a swim with my grandchildren, Bobcat and Cassius in Rock Creek,” Kennedy posted on X, over the weekend. This pastoral scene might be endearingly folksy, were it not for the fact that Rock Creek is the unfortunate dumping ground for the region’s sewage discharge. As such, the government has officially banned area residents from swimming, or even wading, in the creek. “Swimming and wading are not allowed due to high bacteria levels,” the National Park Service has said, of the creek. “Rock Creek has high levels of bacteria and other infectious pathogens that make swimming, wading, and other contact with the water a hazard to human (and pet) health. Please protect yourself and your pooches by staying on trails and out of the creek. All District waterways are subject to a swim ban – this means wading, too!” In the photos shared online by Kennedy, the HHS director can be seen dunking his grandson into the bacteria-laden water. Gizmodo reached out to the HHS for more information about this photo-op. The HHS director happily dunking his head in a poop-polluted creek seems like an apt visual metaphor for national health policy right now. Indeed, Kennedy and the rest of the Trump administration seem to be doing everything in their power to make more areas of America like Rock Creek—that is, polluted and uninhabitable by humans. Over the past few months, the Trump administration has sought to drastically cut environmental regulations across the board—including for water and air safety. At the same time, the HHS, under Kennedy, has attacked vaccine programs and laid off thousands of federal workers at the Food and Safety Administration and other parts of the federal health workforce. At the same time, Kennedy has leaned increasingly into unproven conspiracy theory rhetoric, signaling a willingness to spend federal money and resources on his own personal preoccupations and fringe science. Source: https://gizmodo.com/rfk-jr-takes-grandkids-for-a-swim-in-toxic-sludge-2000601192 #rfk #takes #grandkids #swim #toxic #sludge
    GIZMODO.COM
    RFK Jr. Takes Grandkids for a Swim in Toxic Sludge
    This weekend, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., America’s new health czar, once again demonstrated his general lack of qualifications for the job by taking his grandchildren swimming in a toxic Washington D.C. waterway. Kennedy, who is Trump’s new director of the Department of Health and Human Services, inscrutably decided to take his grandkids for a dip in Rock Creek, a tributary near the nation’s capital that has been officially deemed not suitable for human activity. “Mother’s Day hike in Dumbarton Oaks Park with Amaryllis, Bobby, Kick, and Jackson, and a swim with my grandchildren, Bobcat and Cassius in Rock Creek,” Kennedy posted on X, over the weekend. This pastoral scene might be endearingly folksy, were it not for the fact that Rock Creek is the unfortunate dumping ground for the region’s sewage discharge. As such, the government has officially banned area residents from swimming, or even wading, in the creek. “Swimming and wading are not allowed due to high bacteria levels,” the National Park Service has said, of the creek. “Rock Creek has high levels of bacteria and other infectious pathogens that make swimming, wading, and other contact with the water a hazard to human (and pet) health. Please protect yourself and your pooches by staying on trails and out of the creek. All District waterways are subject to a swim ban – this means wading, too!” In the photos shared online by Kennedy, the HHS director can be seen dunking his grandson into the bacteria-laden water. Gizmodo reached out to the HHS for more information about this photo-op. The HHS director happily dunking his head in a poop-polluted creek seems like an apt visual metaphor for national health policy right now. Indeed, Kennedy and the rest of the Trump administration seem to be doing everything in their power to make more areas of America like Rock Creek—that is, polluted and uninhabitable by humans. Over the past few months, the Trump administration has sought to drastically cut environmental regulations across the board—including for water and air safety. At the same time, the HHS, under Kennedy, has attacked vaccine programs and laid off thousands of federal workers at the Food and Safety Administration and other parts of the federal health workforce. At the same time, Kennedy has leaned increasingly into unproven conspiracy theory rhetoric, signaling a willingness to spend federal money and resources on his own personal preoccupations and fringe science.
    0 Комментарии 0 Поделились