Tag: pictures
LG OLED TVs Promise Brighter Pictures at CES 2023 – CNET
Diddy Shares First Pictures of Baby Love Sean Combs
Diddy is giving the world its first glimpse of his bouncing baby girl.
Uniquely named Love Sean Combs, the youngster – who is the mogul’s seventh biological child – was born in October but was announced to the world earlier this month.
Now, the Bad Boy businessman has shared the first snaps of the newborn he shares with Dana Tran.
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First pictures of King Charles banknotes revealed
Lil Fizz DENIES Validity of Viral Nude Pictures, Fans INSISTS Snaps Are From His OnlyFans
Lil Fizz found himself at the center of social media discourse after alleged nude images of him hit newsfeeds.
Per those pontificating on the snaps, the intimate pics (which supposedly showcased the B2K star’s derriere) were lifted from his OnlyFans account – which he has been posting racy content to for months.
However, the ‘Bump Bump Bump’ belter is singing an altogether different tune.
The post Lil Fizz DENIES Validity of Viral Nude Pictures, Fans INSISTS Snaps Are From His OnlyFans appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.
In pictures: Bitter disappointment as Three Lions suffer World Cup heartbreak
Supercomputer Re-Creates One of the Most Famous Pictures of Earth
To re-create the swirling winds of the Blue Marble — including a cyclone over the Indian Ocean — the researchers fed weather records from 1972 into the supercomputer-powered software. The resulting world captured distinctive features of the region, such as upwelling waters off the coast of Namibia and long, reedlike cloud coverage. Experts say the stunt highlights the growing sophistication of high-resolution climate models. Those are expected to form the core of the European Union’s Destination Earth project, which aims to create a ‘digital twin’ of Earth to better forecast extreme weather and guide preparation plans.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Urban legends and modern myths: Supermassive on how The Dark Pictures Anthology ties together
A few weeks ago, I got the chance to visit Supermassive HQ for a hands-on with The Devil In Me, the fourth game in — and season one finale of — The Dark Pictures Anthology. While I was there, I also had the chance to interview three of the series leads: Tom Heaton, creative director on both The Devil In Me and Man Of Medan; Will Doyle, creative director across the whole Dark Pictures Anthology and director of last year’s entry House Of Ashes; and Dan McDonald, the studio director for the anthology.
The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me review – A thoughtful, but janky dive into the fetishisation of serial killers
The Devil in Me marks the fourth instalment in Supermassive Games’ The Dark Pictures Anthology, the finale of the anthology’s first season. You’d expect The Devil in Me to go out with some sort of bang, then, right? Sadly, this lacklustre dénouement lets itself down with performance issues, a severe lack of quality, and limited immersion (which is often essential to this series of games being as gripping as they are).
The Devil in Me follows the crew of Lonnit Entertainment as they receive an offer that they cannot refuse. As the creators of a true-crime series, the gang are looking for a season finale that’ll, hopefully, guarantee them even more time on the air. The subject for their final episode? America’s most prolific serial killer, H. H. Holmes. However, this crew hasn’t got a leg to stand on. That is, until, a mystery phone call kicks things off.
Granthem Du’Met, the supposed relative of a serial killer obsessive who has managed to build a faithful replication of H. H Holmes’ The World’s Fair Hotel, invites Lonnit Entertainment to see the peculiar landmark, writhing with grim history, for themselves. So, off they go, adhering to Du’Met’s strict, strange, rules in the hopes of ending their show on a high.
The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil In Me review: fourth time’s charming but still not a charm
Ever had a real-life experience where you’re something like 90% sure you’re actually in a horror film? Answers in the comments, please. Now, imagine that, but also someone asks you to pop your phone in a lockbox, you know, for safekeeping. Also, they say something like “You won’t need it where we’re going” and then do a murder wink at an imaginary camera. Something quite similar to this happens to our ill-fated documentary crew early in The Devil In Me. ‘Aha!’ I thought. Supermassive are being knowingly, playfully tropey again. Great. These games are best when they lean into the cheese like a drunk buffet guest, and I was pumped to watch it stumble around a schlocky murder party and get baked brie all over the elbows of its best tux.
For those yet to stick their snout into Supermassive’s truffle-trove of horror offerings, the basic premise of these narrative adventure games can best be summarised: What if shouting at the screen to try and stop idiot characters performing horror film no-nos actually worked? The formula was both invented and, miraculously, perfected in 2015’s Until Dawn. Since then, the studio have released three ‘episodic’ (although narratively independent) Dark Pictures titles, and The Quarry, all of which can best be summarised: Like Until Dawn, but not as good.