Destiny Netflix animated series reportedly once in development
Destiny developer Bungie was once in talks with Netflix to develop an animated TV series based on its sci-fi franchise.
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Destiny developer Bungie was once in talks with Netflix to develop an animated TV series based on its sci-fi franchise.
In an interview with The Verge, Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney outlined his big plans for the rest of the decade, and why Epic had to lay off 16% of its workforce last year to make it happen. The top line is that Sweeney still sees promise for a «metaverse» of interoperable assets and marketplaces between Fortnite and other Unreal Engine games/initiatives, like a planned Unreal «persistent universe» owned by Disney.
The original creator of Flappy Bird has disavowed the just-announced mobile remake, connecting it to crypto and distancing himself from the project.
10 years ago, the free mobile game Flappy Bird suddenly became a viral hit - and was just as suddenly delisted when its creator began to fear that it was too addictive for its own good. Now, a group calling itself the Flappy Bird Foundation has snatched the rights under some strange circumstances and is bringing it back with a host of new features, some of which might be a little… questionable.
Nexon has released a statement concerning reports that its new looter shooter The First Descendant copied art from Destiny 2.
The First Descendant, a new free-to-play science-fiction looter-shooter, will update some of its icons and items after being accused of copying icon and item concepts from other games in the genre.
Several days after players noticed that numerous icons in The First Descendant are very similar to ones found in Destiny 2—and in some cases, virtually identical—Nexon says it will make changes to ensure the imagery «clearly reflects the unique identity of our game.»
With the Google Pixel update this month, many salient features and updates came out for Android, including the quarterly feature CVE-2024-32896 rolling out. The firmware had a major issue of high-severity vulnerability, and Google cautioned users that this weakness could be exploited by bad actors. Users were still coming around the potential threat to their phones when they were presented with another blow of one of the vulnerabilities under attack. While the Pixel Update Bulletin listed the zero-day exploit as High Severity, the U.S. government has decided to intervene and take that matter into its own hands.