In spite of Facebook's history of fudging figures, the company promises that this report is totally transparent and totally factual. Totally.
Pokémon Legends: Arceus is going to make trainers fight Pokémon themselves if they want to win.
Collisions in orbit have the potential to be disastrous. Currently, some 900,000 artificial objects from 0.4 inches to 4 inches wide are zipping around Earth.
The U.S. withdrawal has given rise to fears of retaliation by the new Taliban government
The white, red, and black invasive bugs are taking over the East Coast. Officials say you should kill them.
Hopefully, Marvel's Falcon and the Winter Soldier star heard the news somewhere besides his local grocery store this time.
Despite a stated commitment to keeping vaccine misinformation of its platform, TikTok's algorithm frequently promotes videos featuring health hoaxes and lies.
The brain organoids developed optic structures that reacted to light, but they're not conscious.
The Energy Department has proposed rolling back a Trump-era rollback on gas-powered water heaters, furnaces, and boilers.
Outside-the-box thinking, but bungled planning and execution.
Emilia Clarke's orphan-turned-Galactic crime boss leads a new Marvel series from Charles Soule.
Though Naegleria fowleri brain infections are rare, they're nearly always fatal.
In a page ripped right out of the '90s, Microsoft reminds us that it's still engaging in the browser wars.
Twenty years after it was published, The Bones of Giants is making the leap back to Hellboy's home medium.
If you don't have $300,000 to drop on this crypto-collectible, you can also download the original clipart for $0.
The Nazis used defensive trenches originally dug by the Polish Army to bury their victims, according to new research.
That whole Thanos thing? The Avengers were left on read, basically.
Leaky sewage pipes in Baltimore are likely spilling thousands of doses of pharmaceutical drugs into the bay each year.
Hex's security kit uses wifi to detect movement, though it still feels like a concept rather than an ecosystem.
The new tool will enable Pinners to sort hair search results by six different patterns: protective, coily, curly, wavy, straight and shaved/bald.