A bloke who enjoys the dark-sided things in life... A Transformers/Skeleton Warriors/Toy Collector, Metal Head, fan of Mythology, the Supernatural, Art & Kaiju.
Always dropping surprises for you guys!
GET READY FOR THIS ONE!
TimeSplitters Rewind (2025)
[DOWNLOAD BELOW]
A complete remake of the original 3 games, A free 'greatest hits' revival of the classic PS2 trilogy in one game.
Controls and gameplay have been updated and improved and there is a TON of content!
Early Access has TS1 full story (online/offline co-op), 28 maps, 96 characters, 41 weapons, 51 arcade leagues, 32 challenges + multiplayer modes like Team Elimination.
HAPPY FRAGGING!
Can't believe the news today, the demo is out and you've gotta play 👀Get ready for SiN-day, bloody SiN-day with a brand new gameplay trailer for SiN: Reloaded!
Check out the playable demo on Steam, available now! ☣️
Six ancient writers described a building in Egypt so vast they said it outdid the pyramids, and one of them walked through it himself.
Herodotus counted 3,000 rooms across 12 courts, half of them below ground, and the keepers let him see the upper floor but refused to take him down into the rest.
🔹3,000 rooms in all
🔹Named by 6 ancient writers
🔹A vast stone foundation Petrie found
🔹Now sealed beneath rising groundwater today
🔹And the level beneath it has never been excavated
What Petrie did find was a single stone platform around 1,000ft long, a footprint so big he reckoned it once carried a building larger than the temple of Karnak.
Above ground almost nothing is left, because the stone was carted off and reused over the centuries until only the base and a field of limestone chips remained.
Petrie also chased a corridor cut into the bedrock under the pyramid until the water beat him, and he marked it down as a passage that simply led nowhere.
This is not a rumour of a lost city, the foundation is mapped, the site is named, and the water is what keeps us out.
We are not looking for it, we are just leaving it under the water.
So why, after all this time, has nobody pumped out the water and dug the level below?
In the American tropics 3,000 years ago there were no wheels, no horses and no oxen.
The Olmec still moved basalt heads of up to 40 tons through 60 miles of swamp and jungle.
Logistics is the quietest mystery in archaeology.
The Colossus fell, the Lighthouse crumbled, and the Hanging Gardens cannot even be located.
Of the Seven Wonders, the only survivor is the oldest, built by the people furthest removed from us in time.
Sit with that for a moment.
Metallica covering Black Sabbath’s ‘Sabbra Cadabra’/‘A National Acrobat’, NY, 1998
1 min 10 seconds in is a thermo nuclear drop, that massive ‘A National Acrobat’ Iommi riff rises like Frankenstein’s Monster, lurching forward, heavy & reborn!
No wonder they chose to cover this!
What an unbelievable honour to receive an MBE! Music has been my life and I’ve been very lucky to share this journey with many amazing people and fans, and I’m very grateful for all the support along the way. It's been a privilege doing something I love and then to see that music connect with so many over the years. And, to be able to help raise money for charities close to my heart has meant the world to me. Thank you, Tony (MBE!)
👇👇 Link in the replies 👇👇
It's gonna be a month-long wait for Halo: Campaign Evolved. So why not experience the classic halo games with my repacks of Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2, which is compatible with modern systems and even multiplayer support (only H2 with the help of Project Cartographer Mod). Not just that, but bonus materials such as OSTs, Strategy Guides, Novels, Web Series and many more are included as well. All you gotta do is Extract and Enjoy 😄😄😄
Around 65,000 years ago, people crossed the sea to reach Australia, tens of thousands of years before the first farms or cities.
Australia was never joined to Asia by land, not even when the ice age dropped the seas, so however they island-hopped the gaps, the route still meant crossing open water.
🔹Reached only by sea
🔹Never a continuous land link
🔹A whole chain of separate sea hops
🔹Some legs run with no land in sight at all
🔹More than one separate crossing got people through
Even on the shortest island-hopping route, at least some of those gaps were wide enough that they pushed off toward land they could not yet see on the horizon.
Simple craft are clearly capable of long sea journeys, since much later seafarers like the Polynesians crossed huge stretches of open Pacific, though that came tens of thousands of years afterwards.
Argue all you like about whether they aimed or drifted, but what makes this impossible to dismiss is that there is no version where they walked, every route onto that continent crossed water.
No boat survives, and the only proof is that they arrived.
So how does a people who put to sea 65,000 years ago still get called primitive?