One of the most important eras of superhero TV came to an end last night, and perhaps fittingly, it did so with a mix of sentiment and absolute insanity.
A nearly eight-minute clip from the December 13 release features orcs, Rings, Helm's Deep, and maybe a ghost king.
In 2013, a fan-art project on Tumblr enlisted 768 artists to redraw every page of Akira in the style of The Simpsons—and it got its own trailer, too.
Apple quietly revealed that the robot vacuum controls in iOS 18 have been delayed.
The specialized ink could eventually replace clunky EEG wires and "potentially revolutionize" brain-computer interface devices.
A parent is suing the toy company after the URL for a porn website mistakenly appeared on packaging for Wicked dolls.
Walmart paid $2.3 billion for Vizio with its SmartCast OS along with the 19 million accounts it can advertise to.
Some parts of the website will remain free.
The damage caused by the flooding won't be repaired before 2025, a troubling pause given the Sun's current phase in its 11-year cycle.
Published in 2012 to act as a guidepost for a tech giant, the book now feels like a forgotten manifesto for a world that no longer exists.
As the show winds down its sixth and final season, the vampires still have plenty of hilarity to share—especially in this week's episode.
Yes. Yes it is. Jude Law stars in the new Amblin-inspired Star Wars show on Disney+.
New rules from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and settlements from the Federal Trade Commission would limit what information data brokers can sell and who they can sell it to.
Luckey is looking to reshape the defense industry with anime waifus, loot boxes, and Hawaiian shirts.
There is something, admittedly, in a story obsessed with vanity being Disney's latest live-action remake project.
The man had developed an unusual skin condition called phytophotodermatitis, also colorfully known as "lime disease."
Intel’s Arc Battlemage lineup includes the B580 and B570 with up to 12 GB of memory for budget-conscious gamers.
Jude Law stars in the 1980s inspired, kid-centric new Star Wars adventure show that's now streaming on Disney+.
The Invisible Raptor, starring Mike Capes, David Shackelford, and Sean Astin, opens December 6.
Plus, James Gunn is already thinking about DC riffs on his Guardians of the Galaxy holiday special.