Review: Viewfinder (Switch) - Reality-Shifting Puzzler Is A Chilled, Mind-Bending Experience

The brass balls on these guys: OpenAI complains that DeepSeek has been using its data, you know, the copyrighted data it’s been scraping from everywhere

OpenAI, the company behind the internet-scraping ChatGPT large language model (LLM), has complained that the new Chinese AI assistant DeepSeek has been copying its models. The emergence of DeepSeek, an AI LLM that was apparently developed at a fraction of the cost of other models but boasts comparable performance, has sent shares in AI-focused tech…

Read More

Nintendo says that post-launch content for Animal Crossing New Horizons might shift due to the coronavirus pandemic

Animal Crossing: New Horizons has been a great help to people that have had to socially distance themselves and self-quarantine due to the coronavirus pandemic. So far, the impact that the pandemic has had on Nintendo‘s 2020 release schedule has been minimal, but that may change. Animal Crossing New Horizons director Aya Kyogoku and producer…

Read More

Shovel Knight developer Yacht Club Games will be in serious trouble if its next release isn’t a hit: ‘It’s make-or-break for sure’

Shovel Knight was a major indie hit, with more than three million copies sold, an “overwhelmingly positive” rating on Steam, and a brand so recognizable it’s spawned spinoffs and crossovers with games ranging from Bloodstained to For Honor. But in the 10 years since Shovel Knight first appeared, developer Yacht Club Games has struggled to…

Read More

Dawn of the Hunt is Path of Exile 2’s most contentious update, but it’s also the most fun I’ve had with ARPG necromancy, well… ever

Dawn of the Hunt hasn’t been the smoothest update for Path of Exile 2. Whether it’s the nerf-a-geddon that hit just about every build in the game, or its newfound grindiness as you butt your head against boss after boss, where previously you would’ve sailed through without too much difficulty. Damage is lower, enemies are…

Read More

Intel’s ex-CEO said he bet the company on the 18A node but now a new report claims Intel is pushing customers to next-gen 14A instead

Another one bites the dust. According to a new report from Reuters, Intel’s customer foundry business could largely give up on its all-important 18A node. Instead, Intel will retain 18A as an internal node for chips like its upcoming Panther Lake laptop CPU and shift the focus to promoting its 14A for external customers. If…

Read More