Tag: dig
Leeds United bury petty Man Utd dig in the middle of latest announcement
SteamWorld Build is the Dig story you know and love in a fabulous new form
After four years away, SteamWorld is back. If you haven’t seen the news yet, Thunderful unveiled SteamWorld Build earlier this evening, the next entry in their genre-hopping series of games about colourful robot pals trying to make their way in the world. As the name implies, this one’s a citybuilder, and I’ve been hands on with an early build of, err, Build, to tell you all about it. No, I’m not sure what’s going on with the previously announced Headhunter right now either, but in some ways, I’m glad it’s Build that’s coming out first.
After all, it’s been a hot minute since the last SteamWorld game came out, and Build is shaping up to be the perfect reintroduction to what made this series so special. It goes right back to its roots, reframing that classic SteamWorld Dig story of mining for gold and treasure with a new, management-style eye for town-planning, while also paying homage to where it all began for these jolly old rustbuckets way, way back on the Nintendo DSi. That’s right. SteamWorld Build may be a citybuilder on the surface, but down below it’s a mining and tower defence ’em up – and having lost several hours to my demo build already, it’s really something special.
DIG: Deep In Galaxies looks like Caveblazers crossed with Broforce
I already spend a sizeable portion of my gaming time dying in roguelike platformers, and the Steam Deck has only made things worse. Now here comes DIG – Deep In Galaxies, a roguelike platformer that looks like a cross between Noita, Caveblazers and Broforce, with cosmic scale, destructible levels, double jump, a grappling hook and co-op. I’m powerless to resist.
Eamonn Holmes makes dig at ITV as he reignited feud after leaving This Morning
NFL icon Deion Sanders leaves Eli and Peyton Manning in stitches after New York Giants dig
An Archaeological Dig in Michigan Turns Up Some Surprising Artifacts – Scientific American
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Cops to dig up land after daughter claimed dad killed 70 women and made her dump bodies
Moors Murderers victim Keith Bennett’s brother fears dig is at wrong location
MOORS Murderers victim Keith Bennett’s brother fears police are digging for his body in the wrong place.
A child’s skull was said to have been found on Thursday near where the serial killers’ other victims were discovered.
Keith Bennett’s brother Alan is worried cops are digging in the wrong location for his remains[/caption]
Police are continuing the search after having to briefly pause it due to weather conditions[/caption]
But cops have yet to find Keith’s remains and Alan Bennett, who has campaigned for decades for answers, said he fears his brother was not buried there.
The forensic search on Saddleworth Moor, near Manchester, resumed yesterday after it had to be halted on Friday when winds reached 60mph.
Keith, 12, was snatched by Myra Hindley and Ian Brady — who killed five kids in the 1960s — as he walked to his grandma’s house.
He is the only victim not found.
READ MORE ON IAN BRADY
Alan, 66, wrote on Facebook: “In my last contact, I was told nothing had been found on the moor and they are about 3ft down with the excavation.
“Apart from believing this is the wrong location for Keith and all the previous graves have been shallow, why, if the police were taken to the location, has nothing been discovered?”
The dig began after amateur sleuth Russell Edwards said he had found an upper jaw.
A geologist said soil analysis had revealed signs of buried bones.
Most read in The Sun
Sick Brady never revealed where he buried Keith Bennett’s body[/caption]
Evil Myra Hindley died in jail in 2002[/caption]