News

The Thursday letters page admits to preferring third person Resident Evil, as a reader asks which are Suda51’s best games.
Google is facing a world in which it might need to open Google Play to other app stores, hand over advertising data to competitors, license its search index, and even sell the Chrome browser.
Google is developing an AI-powered meme generator called Meme Studio for Gboard. Users can create memes using base images and captions, with built-in AI generating options. The feature aims to ...
As a proud Gen-Zer, I enjoy memes quite a lot, so when I found out that Google is working on an AI-powered meme generator for Gboard, I was excited to try it. The feature promises to take a prompt ...
Daily Deals: Resident Evil 4, LEGO Super Mario, College Football 25, and More Start saving. The weekend is officially here, and we've rounded up the best deals you can find!
Google made more than $300 billion last year, most of it from advertising it sells using content it did not create or pay for. Meanwhile, local journalism is struggling to survive.
What ‘He’s sart of like an evil porson’ has to do with Barry Keoghan and Sabrina Carpenter my brain to me during my period: Aimée Lutkin Posted on August 2 2024 11:31 am CDT @joelgolby/X ...
Shark Tank's Anupam Mittal, whose Shaadi.com app was removed by Google, took to X on Monday to raise concerns about the tech giant's treatment of Indian app developers.
And I’m inclined to agree. The ROMhack swaps out the standard camera from Super Mario Kart and replaces it with a Resident Evil -like static camera system.
You can find MrL314's full description of the ROM hack below: Welcome to Resident Evil Kart! This is a troll hack I decided to make while researching how the camera system in Super Mario Kart works.
Apparently Wapeach was considered for Mario Tennis on N64 - the game where Waluigi first appeared - but didn't get this visual design until the development of Mario Power Tennis on GameCube.
So, like others I share memes. The meme has become a sort of refuge for many of us in these times. A way to make sense of something far too horrendous to consider.