Palworld on Sale on Steam & PlayStation Store!
To celebrate the 1.0 launch, we're offering Palworld at its lowest price ever: 30% OFF!
Don't miss the perfect opportunity to start your journey on the Palpagos Islands! Grab it now!
Instagram decided to roll out a new “Muse AI” feature, that lets users create AI images based on people’s Instagram photos.
Then they opted in EVERYONE with a public account
To opt out:
Click your profile picture
3 bars in the top right
scroll down to "Sharing and reuse"
Toggle off for both Posts and for Reels
Meta has enabled a setting that allows anyone to use your public Instagram photos to create AI-generated images of you unless you opt out.
To opt out, click your profile -> 3 bars in the top right -> scroll down to "Sharing and reuse" and toggle off for both Posts and for Reels.
The Panthers ask how their fans are doing right in the offseason before something significant.
June 21, 2026 - traded for Brady Tkachuk.
June 26, 2026 - the NHL draft.
…what are the Panthers up to now?
John Krasinski insisted the opening of A QUIET PLACE (2018) show the rules instead of explain them.
The studio pushed back, but he kept it. One small sound, one devastating consequence, and the film never has to explain itself again.
Rn on steam $80 is enough money to buy
$9 for all of the Batman Arkham Games
$4 The Witcher 3 Wild Hunt
$20 Mina The Hollower
$10 Mortal Kombat 1
$2 Sonic Mania
$5 Titanfall 2
$18 Cyberpunk 2077
And you’d still have enough for a baconator combo at Wendy’s
This game ain’t worth it
@Dexerto This “tipping” culture is an entitlement mentality, it should be banned.
Tipping should be done if the seller or employee goes an extra mile. It shouldn’t be demanded, it should be earned.
The biggest scam in sports is NFL teams getting billions of dollars in taxpayer money to build a new stadium, then turning around and raising hundreds of millions more by forcing fans to buy PSLs before it even opens.
Rob Gronkowski signed a $4.4 million rookie contract, because he knew an NFL career could be over any day. He lived on $50k during his early years & invested the rest. He got so used to the habit he never spent any of his NFL money & lived off endorsements. It's a mindset 100%
Assume the movie had flopped and the director lost his entire $750,000 investment. How many crew members would have voluntarily returned their fees to help offset his loss?
This is the fundamental asymmetry in risk and reward. When someone puts up their own capital and shoulders the real financial risk especially in a high-failure industry like entertainment they alone bear the downside.
Yet the moment the project succeeds, suddenly everyone who was paid upfront wants a bigger piece of the pie. The same people who would not have shared in the loss now feel entitled to share disproportionately in the upside.
If you accept payment for your work regardless of outcome, you’ve already been compensated for your risk (or lack thereof). Why should the person who risked everything not be allowed to reap the rewards when their gamble pays off?
When you're raised in a high-trust society, free from third-world migration, and a culture where right-from-wrong is clearly taught to you from a young age, this is what you get.
Matthew McConaughey says love isn't a 100-watt bulb, it's a 30-watt bulb
"I don't see how the honeymoon period lasts forever. The honeymoon is all on hope and the possible. We don't know each other as well as we're going to. Now we're getting into real stuff. Real pains, real pleasures, real fatigue, real wins together"
"If you try to hold onto that 100-watt bulb to be the light all the time, you're Wonder Woman, I'm Superman. It seems humanly impractical to live up to and unfair to each other"
"There's a preacher who said love is more like a 30-watt bulb. Dim the light a little bit. It'll last longer. Not as bright, but it'll illuminate longer. It's more realistic. It's more human"
Obsession and Backrooms are not the same situation. Obsession was made off the grid and that director had to completely fend for himself on peanuts. Backrooms was well funded and supervised by a studio with seasoned pros. I like both, but only Obsession is true the "low budget" of the two. $10 million on Backrooms is actually a big budget for the "small horror movie" space.