A new opening sequence for a potential ‘Duckman’ revival has been revealed.
Klasky Csupo co-founder Gábor Csupó says the team hopes CBS picks up new episodes, but is also open to bringing the series to a major streaming platform if the network passes.
The X-Men 92 Japan-only anime-exclusive opening NUMBER 2!
This is absolute madness. I would watch the sheeeeeit out of an X-Men series with this type of dynamic animation. I wonder what guys like Jim Lee and Rob Liefel thought of this.
RPCS3 has reached a huge milestone: 75% of all PlayStation 3 games are now playable on PC.
Out of 3,559 tracked PS3 games, 2,681 are rated as “Playable.” This means you can finish them from start to end without major issues, even if some still have small graphics or performance hiccups.
It’s a big achievement because the PS3 is one of the hardest consoles to emulate, thanks to its unique Cell processor.
After years of work, the RPCS3 team keeps improving more games with every update.
A few big titles still need more work, including Metal Gear Solid 4, The Last of Us, God of War III, and the Uncharted series, but the emulator is getting closer to full PS3 preservation.
We are thrilled to announce "Godzilla Minus Zero" Night at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Thursday, Sept 24 during the Dodgers vs. Padres game! ⚾️
Get ready, the first 40,000 fans score an exclusive bobblehead! Plus, don't miss an epic drone show lighting up the night sky. 🌃
Take a first look at the bobblehead below.
The Costco chicken tenders are finally arriving nationwide.
-The Tenders are GIANT.
-A little salty, but not overpowering IMO
-“Campfire sauce” was just ok
-Won’t choose it over your favorite tender spot, but a solid food court option
A guy named Jonah accidentally built the most useful website on the internet.
It's called Privacy Guides.
This is the website Google would rather you not find, Meta actively lobbies against, data brokers have tried to discredit for years, and the entire advertising industry treats as a direct threat to their business model.
It has been online since 2019. It takes no affiliate money. It runs no ads. Journalists cite it. Security researchers trust it.
Here's how it works.
Privacy Guides is a curated recommendation list. The site itself sells nothing.
It just tells you which private tool actually replaces every surveillance product in your life, tested by security researchers and updated every month, organized into 40+ categories with the exact reason each pick was chosen.
→ Browsers that block trackers and ads by default
→ Email providers that cannot read your messages
→ Search engines that do not build a profile on you
→ Password managers you can self-host
→ VPNs that accept cash and Monero and log nothing
→ Messengers with end-to-end encryption Signal-tier or better
→ Photo apps that do not scan your camera roll
→ Health apps that do not sell your data to insurance companies
→ A custom Android OS called GrapheneOS that strips Google out of your phone entirely
The site is run by a non-profit called MAGIC Grants. Every recommendation goes through a public forum review, a GitHub pull request, and criteria published on the site so anyone can audit why a tool was chosen. No company can pay to be listed. No affiliate link exists on the entire domain.
Google can't shut this down. Meta can't shut this down. Amazon can't shut this down.
The entire $600 billion surveillance advertising industry is built on the assumption that you would never spend one afternoon on this website.
https://t.co/BQJjD1jANC
"I Ain't No Hero." #WolverinePS5
Catch a brand new trailer for Marvel's Wolverine, also playing ahead of The Odyssey in select theaters in the U.S. starting today!
Pre-order now for PlayStation 5: https://t.co/YopNpOunmc
The PS3 version was impressive in 2007… but this? 🤩
Ratchet & Clank Future: Tools of Destruction on RPCS3 at 4K 60 FPS looks almost like a current-gen game.
Emulation is giving these classics the new life they deserve. 🔥
ESP32-S3-based universal remote hub with infrared, BLE, NFC, and audio streaming.
https://t.co/aE4yhpv4GQ
OpenInfrared Point lets users control compatible devices from a smartphone by scanning a QR code or tapping an NFC tag, eliminating the need for dedicated remote controls for TVs, projectors, AV receivers, air conditioners, streaming devices, and other compatible equipment.
It also features two 3.5mm jacks, one for an IR transmitter/blaster, and the other to connect audio from the source and streaming to your smartphone. The mobile app for Android and iOS looks pretty neat, and the main downside is that it's relatively pricy considering the hardware used.