Did You Know Gaming? has come a long way. Once a blog full of Facebook-tier image macros about questionable videogame trivia, now it’s a YouTube empire with a focus on videogame history and preservation. DYKG’s latest project involved the resurrection of a lost Pokémon browser game called Pokémon 2000 Adventure, which has now been uploaded to the Internet Archive.
Originally created as a tie-in for the second Pokémon movie, Pokémon 2000 Adventure was the work of Cyberworld, a company making browser-based 3D environments as promotional tools—letting users wander around in first-person recreations of scenes from movies, comics, and so on. Hired by Warner Bros. to help market Pokémon: The Movie 2000, Cyberworld went above and beyond, making a …
ข้อตกลงของมือกาวทีมชาติฝรั่งเศสจะหมดลงในเดือนมิถุนายน ปี 2026 และการต่อสัญญาถือเป็นเรื่องสำคัญสำหรับพลพรรค รอสโซเนรี่ ที่ต้องการหลีกเลี่ยงการเจรจาที่ลากยาวไปถึงซัมเมอร์หน้า โดย เมนญ็อง จะเหลือสัญญาเพียงแค่ปีเดียวในตอนนั้น
อย่างไรก็ตาม มิลาน มั่นใจเกี่ยวกับข้อตกลงใ�…
เคียซ่า ที่ย้ายมาจาก ยูเวนตุส ในฤดูกาลนี้ ลงสนามให้ ลิเวอร์พูล ไปแล้ว 2 นัด ในพรีเมียร์ลีก และยูฟ่า แชมเปี้ยนส์ ลีก แต่เป็นสำรองที่ได้ลงเล่นรวมกันเพียง 19 นาที
สล็อต ยอมรับว่า เคียซ่า ยังไม่สามารถเล่นเต็มเวลาได้ แต่สำหรับเกมคาราบาว คัพ ที่จะพบ เวสต์แฮม ในวันพุธนี้ ตัวรุกทีมชาต�…
Intel has dropped some fresh details about its new Lunar Lake mobile CPU architecture, including some performance and power claims, but has stopped short of actually backing that up with any data. Claiming it’s not ready to show CPU performance at the moment, all we’ve got are some promises and the unexpected appearance of Microsoft Teams as a CPU benchmarking platform.
Lunar Lake represents the next generation of Intel processors for thin and light laptops and is its first modern CPU design to be made entirely outside of its own manufacturing facilities. Instead Lunar Lake chips are going to be made entirely at TSMC using the N3B node.
That’s no bad thing for the end user. After all, do we really care where the silicon is slapped together if it delivers?&n…
Hexworks’ striking (but rather unfriendly) soulslike Lords of the Fallen is unsurprisingly getting the sequel treatment. The spooky, masochistic ARPG made a pretty big impression, despite the performance issues, while its neat Umbral mechanic—which lets you shift between worlds—helped it avoid being consigned to the middling Dark Souls knock-off pile. Though I still can’t get over the fact that it has exactly the same name as its 2014 predecessor, despite not being a remake.
Lords of the Fallen 2, which is technically Lords of the Fallen 3, is simply referred to as “Project 3” in the agreement between publisher CI Games and Epic Games, the latter of which now has exclusive rights to distribute the PC version. A trademark application from earlier in the year, howe…
If you’ve got your own booth at CES it makes a whole lot of sense to fill it with some of the brightest, shiniest doo-dads right at the front to tempt passing traffic your way. While some might view this as a cynical attempt to draw attention to products that might not otherwise be worthy of note, you do occasionally get a diamond in the rough, as is the case here with MSI’s limited edition MEG Maestro 700L PZ chassis.
It’s a good-looking object in its own right, but the addition of a transparent LED crystal film display in that curved window really gives it a wow factor that makes it stand out from the pack. It’s big, beautiful and still allows you to see the internal components. And there’s something about seeing a display roll itself around that external curve that catche…