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.
What happens when a fascist billionaire makes something you like?
Executive producer Matt Reeves teased the possibility in a new interview about his HBO show.
The No Way Home actor returns in a new film from Shang-Chi director Destin Daniel Cretton.
After a year-long effort, a father-daughter duo decoded the simulated extraterrestrial message from another planet.
Newspaper endorsements don't matter much, it's the principle of management stopping them that matters.
The handmade Xbox handheld includes the console’s original motherboard, and soon it may even connect to Xbox Live.
Director Dan Trachtenberg has two Predator movies coming out next year and we think we know what the second one is.
The comedian is cast against type in Apple TV+'s chilling new 10-episode drama.
The billionaire has been chatting with Russia's authoritarian leader for years while he stumps for Trump and commands huge government contracts.
You just need to wait for Monday (iOS 18.1's release) to use them.
Xiaomi's SU7 looks like a Porsche, starts at just $30,000, and is selling like hotcakes in China.
A skeleton found in a well in 1938 appears to be the exact individual mentioned in a centuries-old text, complicating researchers' understandings of the genetics of southern Norwegians.