🚨 My kidney surgery was a success, but it came with some tough news. The tumor was larger than expected, so they had to remove more of my kidney. I'm still in a lot of pain, I'll need screenings every week or two, tough road ahead. Thanks for your support. #Recovery#FuckCancer
In addition to PlayStation recieving insane backlash from consumers, they're now becoming a meme too.
Companies are satirically mocking their physical announcement and gaining tens of thousands of likes doing so.
And just like that a Castlevania: Symphony of the Night recomp is here! The XBLA version but it works great and is infinitely modable! Now we wait for the PS1 decomp to finish so we have even more options (vid in reply) #gaming#gamingnews#retrogames#castlevania
El Grande Americano with a ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin POP in Monterrey, Mexico, holy shit.
They absolutely ADORE this man, what a f*cking run it’s been for Kaiser as this character - he’s come so far. 😭🔥
#AAANocheDeLosGrandes
This felt like the biggest match of the year.
Hope these guys got Wrestlemania-level paychecks for this.
They f*cking deserve it.
#AAANocheDeLosGrandes https://t.co/0SleMOEnAg
Tonight will be historic. The talking is done, it’s finally time for MASK VS. MASK!
Watch #AAANocheDeLosGrandes LIVE at 8PM in Mexico & LATAM on Fox One and Fox Tubi and
10e/7p on Facebook & YouTube everywhere else.
▶️ https://t.co/KNRK6xH7sN
Forget killing cancer cells. South Korea just figured out how to talk them back into being normal.
Scientists at KAIST in Daejeon have done something the world has been chasing for decades.
They found a molecular switch that flips cancer cells back into healthy cells.
No chemo. No radiation. No destroying anything.
Just… reversal.
Professor Kwang-Hyun Cho and his team caught cancer in the act. That tiny window where a normal cell is on the edge of turning malignant but hasn't fully crossed over yet. They call it the "critical transition" — the same kind of jump that happens when water hits 100°C and becomes steam.
In that split-second window, the cell is unstable. Normal and cancerous at the same time.
And that's exactly where they hit the switch.
In colon cancer trials, they targeted three master genes — MYB, HDAC2, and FOXA2 — and the cancer cells didn't die.
They went back to being healthy intestinal cells. Like nothing ever happened.
The team built a digital twin of the gene network to map every move a cell makes on its way to becoming cancerous. Then they reverse-engineered the path home.
Their paper landed in Advanced Science, published by Wiley.
It's still early. Lab trials and mice. Human treatment is years away.
But the idea of curing cancer without killing a single cell is no longer science fiction.
Source: KAIST (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), published in Advanced Science journal