Tag: mask
Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – Where To Get Majora’s Mask
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom may be a direct sequel to the ever-beloved Breath of the Wild, but there are references to the franchise’s long history scattered throughout this game’s version of Hyrule, too. Among them is a wearable version of Majora’s Mask, the titular headpiece from one of the series’ most divisive entries, that fans will no doubt want to get their hands on. If you’d like to score Majora’s Mask for yourself, read on.
Where to get Majora’s Mask in Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
Majora’s Mask is found in the Floating Coliseum, which itself is located deep down under Hyrule in the Depths. Inside the Floating Coliseum, you’ll find that you must face off against five Lynels–individually, not at once, thankfully. However, due to the difficulty of this showdown, it’s recommended you tackle this challenge late in the game when you’ve got plenty of health, some good armor, and the Master Sword.
When you’re ready, though, enter the coliseum and take down the Lynels. The first four will be relatively simple if you’ve fought any of these beasts elsewhere already, but the final Lynel sports some hefty armor that will require some bashing with heavy attacks from a big weapon. Regardless of when or how you decide to take the Lynels down in the Floating Coliseum, you’ll be rewarded with a chest you can open to reveal Majora’s Mask.
Mask of the Rose marries romance and murder in the apocalypse
Rejoice, delicious friend, for our descent into the Neath is at hand. It’s been four long years since the release of Sunless Skies, and while Failbetter Games’ speculative steampunk future of Fallen London left the station with a triumphant billow of steam, it’s been a long time since we’ve stumbled over the gaslit cobbles of the doomed city itself. Enter Mask of the Rose, a visual novel that promises to bring Fallen London into stark, often unnerving focus. To cut to the heart of the matter, we caught up with Failbetter Games senior producer Stuart Young at WASD 2023 to talk love, death, and bats. So many bats.
Failbetter’s gothic dating sim Mask Of The Rose delayed to June
There’ll be all kinds of horrors present in Fallen London’s spin-off, Mask Of The Rose: green-tentacled creatures, underground Londoners, and most frighteningly, love. Sometimes two or more of these horrors intersect, and by that I mean you can romance that tentacled man in this gothic, alternative-history dating sim. Spooky suitors will need to wait a while more, though, as Mask Of The Rose has been delayed to June 8th – previously slated for April.
Mask of the Rose, my most-anticipated game of 2023, just got delayed
Fatal Frame: Mask of the Lunar Eclipse review: a frightfully frustrating flashback
Fatal Frame: Mask Of The Lunar Eclipse plunges players into the dreadful past of Rougetsu Island as three (Young women? Girls? I have no idea how old they are supposed to be and for some reason that’s not surprising.) survivors and a stalwart detective revisit the ruins of a hospital that was once home to a haunting ceremony. They all have amnesia, of course, because that’s a low-effort way to generate an air of mystery. Well, except the detective, who is just confused because he never really figured out what was going on in the first place.
Overall, it’s a thoroughly okay game from 2008 that’s been papered over with some hazy lofi graphics to justify selling it at full price in 2023. It’s up to you if you think that’s worth it – I bought the Mass Effect remaster, so I’m hardly one to judge – but while the graphics have been thoroughly airbrushed, that’s no cure for Fatal Frame’s dated gameplay and undead pacing.
The Real-Life Hauntings that Inspired Fatal Frame: Mask of the Lunar Eclipse
Track Your Sleep in a Whole New Way With Somalytics’ Sleep Mask – CNET
Simon Cowell’s new skincare secret revealed as star uses £25 face mask
I made a breast milk face mask – it’s liquid gold for anti-aging but trolls say I’m ‘selfish & vain’
THIS mom has raved about an anti-aging breast milk face mask she uses, but trolls slammed her saying that she’s “selfish and vain.”
Si-Si Hoffman is a skincare enthusiast who shares lifestyle tips on her Instagram, along with photos of her children.
In one of her videos, the creator shared a beauty secret that she called “liquid gold.”
“You may think…SHE IS CRAZY…for applying that to her face…” she wrote, as she rubbed colostrum onto her skin.
She explained how she used colostrum to rejuvenate her dull skin.
According to Cleveland Clinic, this is the milk that is released by the mammary glands after giving birth.
It’s nutrient-dense to support a newborn’s immune system and changes to breast milk within 2 to 4 days after a baby is born.
“Attention all mamas and mamas to be…it’s called liquid gold for a reason,” Hoffman wrote in the post.
Hoffman listed all the perks from the face mask, including how “it’s magically anti-inflammatory.”
“It stimulates the production of normal healthy skin bacteria, which will fight any problematic bacteria,” she wrote.
“It can topically help any hormonal imbalances when applied on the skin,” she added.
“It naturally contains growth factors which essentially make the skin regenerate,” Hoffman said.
However, viewers were quick to shame the mother.
One person commented: “Selfish for not giving your baby the colostrum…very vain.”
“It is way more important for your baby to have it than for selfish beauty needs,” another said.
Hoffman pushed back in the comments, clarifying: “I’ve harvested my colostrum if you look on my grid.”
According to Coveteur, colostrum sourced from cows is a popular skincare ingredient.
Celebrities and skincare experts have used this natural hack to stay radiant.
Fitness influencer and entrepreneur Tammy Hembrow used colostrum on her skin shortly after giving birth to her daughter, Posy, in June.
According to Perth Now, Hembrow raved about the mask. “Oh my god, my skin after I washed it off was so smooth, like, I swear I’m gong to be using my breast milk, like, everyday on my skin,” she said.