28 Years Later will revive the post-apocalyptic films as a trilogy, starting with its first installment in June.
Scientists examined data from 26 countries, finding that suicides are more likely to happen on certain days of the week and holidays.
Fathom Events is getting Luc Besson's classic 1997 sci-fi flick in theaters again for two days in November.
The Event Horizon Telescope's famous image of Sagittarius A* may depict an artifact, raising questions about the black hole's true structure.
The Scott Pilgrim alum and Coda's Emilia Jones join the Glen Powell-led film due for release in November 2025.
Netflix and Powerhouse's Tomb Raider adaptation will throw Lara into danger once more with her best friend Sam at her side.
SteelSeries' Arctis GameBuds offer great audio with a ludicrous number of EQ options, but its best feature is the slot for the 2.4 GHz dongle.
Jac Scaeffer talks Patti Lupone and THAT reveal in a spoiler-heavy discussion for Agatha All Along's seventh episode.
By keeping the livers of Tibetan minipigs functionally alive, the researchers were able to extend the window of brain resuscitation.
RIP to one of the key figureheads for two of the biggest, most impactful Star Trek shows of the old, pre-streaming era.
A USGS-developed model has shocking results for residents of California, Florida, and Massachusetts.
The legal battle between the website nHentai and publisher PCR Distributor took a weird turn this week.
The Digital Eclipse version of Tetris Forever includes 15 distinct versions of Tetris, but it does more than just recount 40 years of gaming history.
Axions—a popular dark matter candidate—may be floating around dense stellar remnants in a haze, and even be detectable to some telescopes.
Magic: The Gathering's collab boasts the "largest collection of Final Fantasy artwork ever in a single game."
Trust me, we're not happy about it either.
This week's Agatha All Along revealed the true nature of Aubrey Plaza's Rio Vidal—and her huge comic book ties to some of Marvel's biggest bads.
Hardware nerds just want to see Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt outrun a tornado. Why isn't that possible?
The U.S. Copyright Office denied an exemption from the DMCA to allow gaming historians to access out-of-print games they can’t legally get anywhere else.
Horror fans have had a great 2024 so far—and some of the year's best titles are already lurking on Shudder.