Game

The Sunday Papers | Paper gun

Sunday is for watching your microwave food spin. Before you stare, read this week’s best article about the game.

PC Gamer miss their best, funniest memories of Skyrim, now the 10th Anniversary version of the game is out. I heard there is fishing! I wonder what the 20th Anniversary edition will bring.

Jacob Ridley, Senior Hardware Editor: I was in college when Skyrim came out, and my only real memory of that hazy time is having a ‘we bought Skyrim’ party. Really remember that more than anything happened in the game. Haven’t finished it yet.

On Polygon, Yussef Cole wrote about Call Of Duty: Vanguard and how it continues the trend of asthma and coding.

However, some things cannot be denied. Activision Blizzard’s workforce is about 80% male, and the majority remains white. It’s weird to play a game like Vanguard, which proudly carries the diversity of its cast up its sleeve, with this in mind. Vanguard’s story spends a lot of time and energy addressing the unexplored cultural shortcomings that plague the world’s “Last Good War.” However, as is often the case with side stories told by outside voices, there are glaring flaws that reveal a developer’s point of view, if meaningful.

For Kotaku, Isaiah Colbert wrote about How deleting his ex’s Animal Crossing save data helped him move on from them.

I was greeted by Tom Nook under a spotlight as he guided me through the process. Despite the game’s frankness about the seriousness of a resident’s island data deletion, one final point is to have a live chat with Nook when I delete my ex’s save data. In an almost laughable frankness, Nook tells me the decision is for adults, not children. Upon deleting their data, my original islanders who were once attached to our relationship will no longer remember them.

For The Guardian, Rosanna McLaughlin wrote about How NFTs are shaking up the art world.

While the people – like Jones – who successfully steered the NFT wave are busy counting their crypto dollars, over the past year the conventional art world has been in decline. During the pandemic, with audiences unable to attend exhibitions and fairs, art dealers have struggled to make online viewing rooms interesting or lucrative. As a result, global sales of artwork fell 22%. To rub salt in that wound, millions of dollars in crypto have exchanged hands for an original digital art form. “This technology builds on the existing art world,” said Noah Davis, an expert at Christie’s New York. “It’s an art form that doesn’t need a gallery.”

Finally, The New York Times has put together a short documentary about the daily life of a live stream star in China. Honestly, it’s an exhausting and heartbreaking watch.


This week’s music is the Dream I Had of the Completely Extinct Dinosaurs. This is YouTube link and Spotify Link. One nodded and the other was amused.

Is me. Have a nice Sunday everyone!

Source link

news7g

News7g: Update the world's latest breaking news online of the day, breaking news, politics, society today, international mainstream news .Updated news 24/7: Entertainment, Sports...at the World everyday world. Hot news, images, video clips that are updated quickly and reliably

Related Articles

Back to top button