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Ripple CEO Reacts to Major XRP Milestone
GameFi Guides

Ripple CEO Reacts to Major XRP Milestone

by admin May 19, 2025


Brad Garinghouse, chief executive officer at Ripple, has already commented on the much-awaited launch of CME Group’s XRP futures, claiming that the rollout of the product has marked a major institutional milestone for the token.

Earlier today, CME confirmed that XRP futures (both standard and micro versions) went live after months of anticipation. 

Institutional players will now be able to gain exposure to one of the leading altcoins without directly holding it. 

XRP futures can be traded outright, meaning that traders simply buy or sell a contract.

Traders can also agree to buy or sell XRP futures on a fixed basis to the day’s index close instead of buying them at the current price.

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It is also possible to trade XRP via block trades that allow large traders to execute large numbers of contracts. 

According to Garlinghouse, Hidden Road, the prime brokerage firm that was acquired by Ripple earlier this year for $1.25 billion, executed the very first block trade at the open. 

Despite the launch of the futures, XRP is currently down by nearly 4% over the past 24 hours. The lack of volatility is not surprising given that the launch of the futures, which were first announced in April. 

It remains to be seen how much volume XRP futures will be able to generate during the first day of trading, since it will be an important indicator of institutional momentum. 

As reported by U.Today, Solana-based CME futures debuted with a rather underwhelming volume in March. The launch of the product also had a rather negligible impact on the price action of the leading altcoin. 



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May 19, 2025 0 comments
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How to manage your bookmarks in Google Chrome
Gaming Gear

How to manage your bookmarks in Google Chrome

by admin May 19, 2025


There’s a lot to look at, watch, and listen to on the web. Fully utilizing the bookmarks feature in Google Chrome can be a real help in staying on top of everything.

Chrome is the browser I use most often, and I’ve got a huge number of bookmarked sites inside it: long reads I want to get back to once work is done, news updates to write up for work, gift ideas, apps I’d like to check out, important Slack channels, and content systems for my job… the list goes on. All synced between devices and available everywhere.

If you haven’t done a deep dive into Chrome’s bookmarks feature then you might not be aware of everything you can do with it, how it can save you time, and how you can bring some kind of order to your web browsing.

You can edit bookmarks as soon as you’ve saved them. Screenshot: Google

The star icon to the right of the address bar in Chrome on the desktop is for saving new bookmarks. Click it and the current page gets saved to the most recently used bookmarks folder. You can also press Ctrl+D (Windows) or Cmd+D (macOS), which is even easier. On mobile, tap the three dots at the top then the star icon (Android), or the three dots at the bottom then Add to bookmarks (iOS) to save the current page as a new bookmark.

As soon as a bookmark is saved, a small dialog pops up. You can use it to change the bookmark name and folder if you need to, or just click Done to move on.

More options can be found on the desktop by clicking the three dots (top right) then Bookmarks and lists. You’re able to add bookmarks from this menu, too, and there’s also a Bookmark all tabs option, which saves every open tab (which, like tab groups, is handy if you need to do something else but want to be able to get back to where you are).

On the same Bookmarks and lists menu you can toggle the bookmarks bar on and off. The bookmarks bar sits just below the address bar, and gives you another way to add bookmarks: drag the URL of the site you’re viewing down from the address bar to the bookmarks bar.

You can find your saved links in the bookmark manager. Screenshot: Google

Bookmarks become a lot more useful when they’re well organized. On the desktop you can launch the full bookmarks manager by clicking Bookmarks on the bookmarks bar, or by clicking the three dots (top right) and then Bookmarks and Lists > Bookmark Manager. You can search through your bookmarks here, and create new folders: Click the three dots (top right), then Add new folder — and yes, you can put folders inside other folders. (This is also where you’ll find the Export feature, and it’s a good idea to export your bookmarks occasionally as a backup.)

Folders are a key part of keeping your bookmarks organized, and they’re all accessible on the left of the bookmarks manager page. Click and drag bookmarks to change their order, or to move them into different folders. Right-click on a folder to rename or delete it, or drag it on top of another folder to put it inside that folder.

You can double-click any bookmark to open it. To edit it, click the three dots to the right: You’re able to rename your bookmarks and change their URLs, as well as put them in different folders. If you right-click on a bookmarks folder, you get the option to open all the links it contains in separate tabs — which may not do your computer much good if there are dozens or hundreds of bookmarks in the folder.

The bookmark manager can be accessed on mobile too, though you don’t get quite as many options to play around with. Tap the three dots at the top (Android) or bottom (iOS) of the interface, then choose Bookmarks to see the list. As long as you’re signed in with your Google account, bookmarks will sync between your devices.

Doing more with bookmarks

With some tweaks, you can get your bookmarks bar looking much more compact. Screenshot: Google

There are other ways to work with your bookmarks in Chrome.

  • Here’s a clever trick for your desktop bookmarks bar: right-click on each bookmark in turn, remove the text in the Name field completely each time, and click Save. You’ll then have a compact row of bookmark icons showing only the favicons for each site (such as a purple V for The Verge). It’s a neat way to put more bookmarks within each reach, and you can still tell what each one is.
  • Something else you might want to try is to search through your bookmarks directly from the address bar. You may see some bookmark results suggested underneath as you type out your search query, and you can also force a bookmarks search by preceding your query with “@bookmarks” and a space.
  • If you want to keep bookmarks visible at all times, that’s possible too. Click the three dots in Chrome for the desktop, then choose Bookmarks and lists > Show all bookmarks. A side panel appears displaying all your bookmarks: You can search through them, create new folders, and edit your bookmarks from here (click the three dots to the side).
  • The icons in the top right corner, from left to right, let you change the order of the bookmark lists, switch between compact and visual views, and edit multiple bookmarks at once. You can shut down the panel with the X button, but if you click the pin button just next to it before you do, you get a dedicated bookmarks panel icon that stays permanently available on the Chrome toolbar, and will let you open it back up again.

This has hopefully given you some idea of what you can do with bookmarks in Google Chrome. And there’s more, so it might be worth it to take some time and look around. It’s not the most sophisticated of systems, but it does give you plenty of flexibility in terms of how you can use it and what’s possible, so you can get your folders and shortcuts set up in the ways that work best for you.





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May 19, 2025 0 comments
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We compare AllTrails versus Gaia GPS while out hiking.
Product Reviews

We compare AllTrails versus Gaia GPS while out hiking.

by admin May 19, 2025


For most of my life, I’ve relied on a paper map when I go outdoors. Then, in March, I joined my friend Rusty on the Appalachian Trail for two weeks. He told me to download FarOut.

FarOut was my introduction to the world of app-based navigation. It’s focused on thru-hikers, and has useful details, including comments that tell you whether a specific water source is flowing, and if so, how well. It took me a minute to get the hang of it — I was hiking southbound, and it defaults to northbound — but once I did, I was impressed.

FarOut works like a guidebook. But the kind of backpacking I ordinarily do is on more offbeat trails in the local national forests — not the wilderness highways FarOut specializes in. So for my first solo trip, to the Ventana Wilderness area of the Los Padres National Forest, I thought I’d try out some of the other navigation apps, as part of an absolutely transparent ploy to get my job to let me fuck off outdoors more often; there are a lot of hikes I want to do. I suspect many of our readers are connoisseurs of the great indoors, but I also know you love gadgets, and let me tell you something: so do backpackers. You would not believe the conversations I have had with absolute strangers about gear.

I do work at the phones website. We kind of specialize in having feelings about apps

Now, I’m not going to top Outdoor Gear Lab — I love their reviews, and have found them reliable guides when it comes to big purchases* — but I do work at the phones website. We kind of specialize in having feelings about apps.

I considered several options. I quickly discarded onX Backcountry when I discovered on one of my trial hikes how quickly it drained my phone battery. I also used CalTopo to prepare for the hike, but because it’s a fairly complex platform with a steep learning curve, I don’t think I’ve spent enough time with it to give it a proper review. I figured I might as well keep it simple. I already knew Google Maps wouldn’t cut it; the acquisitions Google has made over the years suggest that the company’s more interested in cars than pedestrians. Looking at the Health and Fitness category on the Apple App Store, I noticed AllTrails ranked #10, so trying the popular app seemed natural. The other app I saw frequently mentioned on hiking subreddits — besides CalTopo — was Gaia GPS. So I figured I’d start with those two.

There are a few other apps in the space I didn’t consider. The most notable are Avenza and Goat Maps. I’ve found Avenza limited, but it seems the feature set has been updated since the last time I played with it. Goat Maps is new to me, but it’s from the same team that created Gaia GPS before it was sold to Outside. (More about that in a minute.)

Because this was my first solo hike, I was not interested in doing anything especially difficult. I’ve been to the Ventana Wilderness before, and am familiar with the Pine Ridge Trail, which I viewed as the backbone of my trip. One of the things AllTrails has going for it is suggested routes — for this area, 41 possible hikes.

I had originally contemplated doing an overnight at China Camp before heading down the Pine Ridge Trail to Sykes Camp as an out-and-back, but after hiking with Rusty, I decided I could be more ambitious. I considered a few routes before settling on what AllTrails calls the Big Sur Sykes Hot Springs Extended Loop. That was partly because I’d checked in with the Big Sur Trail Map, a volunteer information repository hosted by Jack Glendening for trail conditions, and discovered a few trails I might have otherwise wanted to use were overgrown.

Once I started mapping my route, I noticed some trouble

AllTrails has user comments, which can be useful. One user told me to prepare for ticks and poison oak. Another suggested a stop at Timber Top for a meal or snack as it was beautiful, even if it was a detour, so I worked that into my agenda.

In order to get a sense of what I’d be doing, I used tools to create my routes, with different lines for each day. CalTopo, AllTrails, and Gaia all have “snap to route” tools that let you automatically follow a trail the map knows about, which makes creating a route easier. But once I started mapping my route, I noticed some trouble. AllTrails said this was a 32.8-mile hike. I had trouble getting Gaia to acknowledge the fire road that would be part of my route with its auto-route tool set; also, the app insisted I was hiking 40 miles. Both the AllTrails and Gaia “snap to route” tools were easier to use than CalTopo, and it came up with a totally different mileage count than either: a 35-mile hike.

Here’s the AllTrails route I planned. It was the easiest tool to use for routing by far

Here’s CalTopo’s route-planning; you can see I’m considering doing the route in three days, rather than four.

This is the Gaia GPS route plan. As you can see, it’s a mess, and because it was hard to edit, it was difficult to correct the mess.

Similarly, looking at elevation gain, AllTrails told me to expect 9,160 feet, CalTopo told me to expect 8901 feet, and Gaia, for some reason, was insisting on 19,000 feet. I gotta say, 19,000 feet did not seem like it was in the vicinity of right. Looking at the map I created on Gaia, I think that’s because the “snap to route” tool had given me some weird detours.

Well, what’s a couple miles and a few hundred feet of elevation between friends? I decided the smartest move would be to plan a four-day hike with three overnight stops: Sykes Camp, Rainbow Camp, and Outlaw Camp. I figured having more stops meant I could more easily absorb some unexpected miles if I had to.

AllTrails’ route-building tool was easiest to use, and the easiest to edit if I made a mistake. While I appreciated Gaia’s similarly easy snap-to-trail function, it was a profound pain in the ass to edit after I’d made a route. And CalTopo was the most finicky for route-building of the bunch, requiring painstaking clicking. But it also had the best feature set, in terms of lines, colors, and editing. It also had more base layers and overlays showing, among other things, where to expect cellphone service.

CalTopo and Gaia let you build and edit maps on a phone, but I primarily used my laptop because a big screen is better for planning routes, and a mouse is a more precise tool than my finger. Tinkering with Gaia on my phone, I found route creation buggy. AllTrails doesn’t seem to offer route creation on the iPhone at all. This didn’t matter much for me, but if you’re creating routes on the fly in the backcountry, you’re out of luck with AllTrails, and Gaia may suddenly quit working.

I harbor a deep and profound pro-paper bias. A notebook is the best organizational tool available to you. I own hundreds of paper books because they don’t have DRM and they can’t be altered post-publication, or removed from my devices. I like paper maps a great deal, and have used them as my main navigation tool for my entire hiking career.

Paper maps have downsides. They don’t respond well to water, for instance. Wear and tear can render them unusable. They may be out of date. And, of course, there are no crowdsourced comments telling you about trail conditions before your hike.

The obvious benefit of the navigation apps is the reassuring little blue dot

The obvious benefit of the navigation apps is the reassuring little blue dot that tells you exactly where you are on the trail, without requiring nearly as much work. You can pull out your phone and see how much farther you need to go before arriving at a landmark. And most of us have our phones on our hikes because they’re the most convenient way to take photos.

Gaia and AllTrails offer downloadable maps as part of a premium service — for a subscription fee, of course. That’s either $59.90 for Gaia or $89.99 for Gaia’s Outside Plus, which includes access to Outside’s assorted publications. The AllTrails Plus subscription I tested was $35.99 a year; after I went on my hike, it announced AllTrails Peak, which costs $79.99 a year and includes AI tools for route planning. (Given what I know about LLMs, I personally would not trust an AI to plan any hiking route, but I suppose your mileage may vary.) CalTopo, which offers its own set of subscription plans at $20, $50, and $100 a year, shows weather data and information about how much sunlight any part of its map gets at any hour of the day.

There are a couple downsides to these apps. They drain the phone battery, which necessitates carrying a portable charger, which means more weight. If the phone doesn’t work — because, say, you dropped it — the app won’t work either. And there are, of course, the privacy issues.

I don’t want people to know where I am at all times

My location is sensitive information; I don’t want people to know where I am at all times. AllTrails defaults to sharing your data publicly, so anyone on Earth can look up your hikes. While you can change this setting, defaults matter. “Public trail activities and community reviews are a big part of the AllTrails experience,” spokesperson Mia DeSimone in an email. I was also prompted to review my hike afterwards — part of the crowdsourced data that makes AllTrails work, I suppose.

AllTrails also shares your data. Some of that is unobjectionable — payment providers, for instance — but some of it, like sharing data with marketing partners, raised my eyebrows. “AllTrails does not process sensitive personal data, including precise geolocation, for purposes other than actual use of the AllTrails platform,” DeSimone said.

I can’t speak to the pluses and minuses of AllTrails Peak, which I haven’t experimented with. But after my hike, AllTrails also discontinued its “Advanced Conditions” feature that showed weather along a prospective route, what to expect from the ground (wet? icy?), and mosquito activity. AllTrails Peak users will get access to “Trail Conditions,” which DeSimone says is “significantly more robust and precise than Advanced Conditions.” Some AllTrails users seem unhappy about the new pricing tier.

I got this AllTrails pop-up after my hike. Reader, I did not review it.

Gaia similarly defaults to public sharing, because of “a social component designed to help users connect, share experiences, and discover trails,” said Devin Lehman, general manager of Gaia GPS, in an emailed statement. “Public sharing of hikes is the default setting to encourage this community engagement.” Gaia also shares some data, including location data, with unnamed “service providers,” but Lehman said this is done “under strict data protection agreements” and is used to “support and power specific features and functionalities.”

Last year, Gaia began requiring sign-ins, catching a few people who were on multi-day trips by surprise. “To ensure minimal disruption, we implemented a ‘snooze’ option allowing users to defer login for up to 28 days if prompted during an active trip,” Lehman wrote. “Users entirely offline (airplane mode or zero cell service) would not see the prompt at all. However, we understand some users in areas with intermittent service did encounter unexpected prompts. We’ve taken user feedback seriously and continue refining our app experience to better support uninterrupted outdoor adventures.”

Its parent company, Outside, also jacked up the cost of subscriptions, and on April 14th this year, it removed access to the National Geographic Trails Illustrated maps. “While we understand some subscribers valued the National Geographic Trails Illustrated maps, these maps offered limited regional coverage and lacked the global scope and dynamic functionality our growing user base needs,” Lehman wrote. He says Gaia “substantially expanded” its offerings in the last few years, and the price increase reflects “the ongoing investment required to maintain and continuously improve Gaia GPS.”

Be that as it may, I’ve got several friends who are disgruntled Gaia subscribers looking around for another option. And I personally do not have faith in Outside’s management of Gaia, or its other properties, in the long run.

Run away with me! Elizabeth Lopatto

Because I was uncertain about my mileage, I decided to track myself several ways: AllTrails, Gaia, and my Apple Watch Series 6. The Apple Watch isn’t really an ideal fitness tracker for outdoors enthusiasts — it’s flimsy and its battery drains too fast; even the Ultra 2 only gives you 72 hours in low power mode. What it does have going for it is that I already own it, and there are other pieces of gear that were more important to upgrade after my experience on the AT. The Big Four in pack weight are your tent, sleeping bag or quilt, sleeping pad, and pack itself. Updating my tent and quilt, both expensive, also meant I lost about 5 pounds of weight from my pack immediately. Since this wasn’t a long hike and I was already carrying a battery, the Apple Watch’s propensity to drain quickly, even with both low power mode and theater mode on, didn’t seem too terrible.

I set out from the trailhead Monday morning, and turned on tracking for AllTrails, Gaia, and my Apple Watch. As with all tracking, there are opportunities for user error — I am of course capable of forgetting to turn this stuff on, or pausing it and then never unpausing it. I mention this because there was user error: I paused the AllTrails tracker and then never unpaused it, so as far as it’s concerned, I hiked 3.7 miles that first day.

See? I really did walk some number of miles. Perhaps 11, who knows!

I was more successful with my watch and Gaia. I started my watch late — looking at the map, I seem to have missed at least a mile before I started it; it recorded 9 miles of walking. I did start Gaia at the beginning of my hike, and it recorded I hiked 11.6 miles. Both watch and app recorded about 2,400 feet of ascent, a little less than what CalTopo told me to expect (2,600 feet of elevation gain) and significantly less than what AllTrails told me to expect (3,000 feet).

I arrived at Sykes Camp, alongside the Big Sur River, a little after 4PM, and set up my tent. It was close enough to dinnertime that I decided to eat. As I was hunched over the stove, a woman walked by, so I said hello. She was looking for the hot spring, and continued walking upriver. About 45 minutes later, she returned. She hadn’t found it.

The hot spring wasn’t listed on the AllTrails map, the CalTopo map, or either of my paper maps. But it was on Gaia, and after dinner, I found the hot spring, a half-mile hike on a somewhat overgrown path downriver, and soaked blissfully for about half an hour. I’d post a selfie, but this is the internet, and I know better than to post feet for free.

If this isn’t nice, I don’t know what is. Elizabeth Lopatto

The next morning I packed up and headed off to Rainbow Camp around 8:45AM. This, I knew, would be an up-and-down day of ridgeline hiking; AllTrails had a helpful elevation map telling me roughly what to expect. Unlike Sykes, Rainbow Camp was likely to be a place I’d be alone. Most of the people I’d spoken to the day before were doing an out-and-back, with Sykes as their only stop. But this ridgeline hike was spotted with wildflowers.

I’d planned for this to be a fairly short day, only about 7 miles. I pulled into Rainbow Camp around 2PM and was underwhelmed — it was buggy and not especially scenic. So after eating lunch and refreshing my water supply, I decided to push on to Cold Spring Camp. The AllTrails map suggested it would only be 5 miles more. It was uphill, though, about 2,000 more feet of climbing. Even if I dragged along at 1 mile an hour, I’d still arrive before sunset.

I’d thought about camping at Cold Spring before I set off, and had shied away from it both because of the climb and my uncertainty about the actual mileage of my hike. But I was feeling good, and I’d used my Garmin InReach Mini to check in about my change of plans, so I shoved off.

According to my trackers recording my actual route — Gaia and AllTrails — it was more like 6 miles, not 5. Gaia tracked 4,884 feet of climb over a total distance of 13.6 miles; AllTrails suggested I’d climbed 5,213 feet over 14.6 miles. (Did I miss a mile somewhere on Gaia? I don’t see a gap in the recording, so I’m not sure how to account for the difference.) My Apple Watch said I’d gone 11.5 miles, also with 4,884 feet of climb — but its battery died before I made camp. I set up camp at Cold Spring, and watched the sun go down over the ocean as I ate dinner.

The extra mileage meant I could plausibly make it home the following day. Sure, there were several camps available if I was too tired to do the rest of the hike, but depending on which tracker I used as my source of truth, I had somewhere between 11 and 13 miles left, a fairly easy day of hiking, particularly since it would all be downhill.

The third day opened with ridgeline views; I was above a thick ceiling of clouds hiding the ocean. There were, of course, more wildflowers. When I turned off the dirt road onto Terrace Creek Trail, I met a day hiker going the other direction, who warned me about ticks on the grassy descent toward a redwood grove. (Maybe because he went through just before me, or maybe because of the permethrin I’d used on my clothes, I didn’t see any.)

I made it back to the parking lot a little after 4PM. I’d had some user error with my Apple Watch — forgetting to start it again after breakfast at Timber Top, so there was an hour and a half gap in its data — and it recorded 11 miles. AllTrails crapped out at some point between when I set off from Cold Spring and breakfast, so it didn’t record my entire hike. Still, it got 11.63 miles. Gaia also had a gap in its recording (something wrong with my phone?) and put me at 12.7 miles.

I thought the hike would settle how long the route was. It did, in a way — certainly the hike was longer than the 32.8 miles AllTrails had promised. If we take Gaia’s tracking, which was the most complete of the bunch, as the source of truth, I’d hiked 38 miles, 39 if I added the hike to the hot spring.

Conclusion… of some sort

While I had my paper maps (and compass) with me, the point was to test the apps, and they worked well enough that I didn’t have to refer to my “real” maps at all. But I also didn’t come away with a single clear winner, whether AllTrails or Gaia was best. AllTrails offered better route-planning features, while Gaia was more reliable on the trail. Both had worrisome inaccuracies in their data, which meant in practical terms that I lugged around another day of food in extra weight because I wasn’t totally sure how far I’d be climbing or walking. That’s consequential — food and water are usually the heaviest things a hiker carries.

I certainly wouldn’t recommend relying on either of these, particularly without a backup map, and I’m not sold on how they handle my privacy. AllTrails seems to be aimed at people who are more casual hikers than I am. I don’t think Outside has been a good steward of Gaia (or of Outside Magazine). I also hesitate to recommend pricey subscriptions to these apps, given the issues I had with them. In fact, as I was writing this, I realized the most useful app in planning the trip was the one I hadn’t downloaded maps from: CalTopo.

I haven’t tested CalTopo in the backcountry yet, so consider this a cliffhanger. Please feel free to pop over to the comments to demand I be allowed to go backpacking for work sooner rather than later, so you can hear more about my map-related misadventures. I’ve been eyeing the Tahoe Rim Trail for later this summer, and if I’m testing gear, it doesn’t count as vacation time, right? Right?

* Except in the case of bras. Outdoor Gear Lab’s top bra recommendation’s largest size is a C cup, and the reviews are written primarily for teeny tatas. That’s an astounding editorial failure. Not only do athletes of big titty experience have a harder time finding bras at all, we are more likely to experience boob pain — which is a major reason women quit sports. Breast tissue is dead weight, so bra structure is crucial. A bra that’s stretchy enough to fit over your head won’t keep the girls in place during high-impact exercise. Some other rules of thumb: racerbacks press on your traps; thin straps cut into your shoulders; a thick, tight band is a must for weight distribution. A low-cut bra means an astonishing amount of cleavage, but a high neckline will make your gazongas look even bigger, so pick your poison, I guess. (Also, a high-cut bra worn for a long time will incubate a real banner crop of cleavage zits and, in some cases, chafing.)

For running, I like Enell’s High Impact Bra — it’s the only one I’ve tried that’s kept my rack from bouncing. (It’s also recommended by Swole Woman Casey Johnston.) I’m still on the lookout for the best backpacking bra; the Enell one is too binding for all-day wear.





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May 19, 2025 0 comments
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Lego Bionicle Fan Game Shutdown After 8 Years Of Development
Game Reviews

Lego Bionicle Fan Game Shutdown After 8 Years Of Development

by admin May 19, 2025


An open-world, third-person Bionicle fan game that had a lot of hype in the community and which has been in development for nearly a decade has allegedly been canceled by the Lego Group just a few months before the project’s first big demo was set to release.

This Narrative Adventure About Doomed Teenage Dinosaurs Feels Too Real

Bionicle was a popular line of buildable action figures created by the Lego group in 2001. The line was the first original transmedia franchise created by Lego, featuring a deep amount of lore and stories told in comics, books, and animated movies. It was planned to run for 20 years but, due to low sales, was ended in 2010. It was revived in 2015, but old fans didn’t embrace the reboot and the revival ended in 2016. Despite a decade having passed since Lego made new Bionicle sets, fans still love the weird franchise featuring bio-organic super robots and sci-fi magic. And for the past eight years, a growing group of fans known as Team Kanohi have been developing their dream Bionicle game, Masks of Power, but have been forced to stop after Lego demanded it.

On May 17, Team Kanohi announced that the Lego Group requested that the team shut down the project completely and remove Masks of Power from the internet.

“We’ve been transparent about the hardships our team has faced over the past year as we’ve worked to release the first look at Bionicle: Masks of Power: the ‘FREE THE BAND’ demo,” said Team Kanohi. “After many years of hard work, our team was in the final stages of bugfixing and polishing for the demo’s release. We had planned to shadowdrop the demo on August 10th, 2025.”

“Unfortunately, it seems that will no longer happen. The LEGO Group has asked our team to shut down our project in its entirety, and remove Bionicle: Masks of Power from the public eye.”

Despite not being able to release the demo or finish the game, Team Kanohi has put out a two-hour video showing off the unfinished demo for the Bionicle game. The group says it’s still “incredibly proud” of what it has made and I have to agree. This looks awesome, and I’m not even a Bionicle fan.

So why did the Lego Group shut down this project? According to the dev team, they have been in contact with the company for years and have followed all of the rules surrounding fan-created content. Masks of Power was going to be released for free, and included disclaimers that made it clear this was a fan project. Lego has also officially called out and supported other Bionicle fan games in the past. However, it seems like Masks of Power was starting to look too official for Lego lawyers.

“Unfortunately, it seems like the LEGO Group’s stance on fan-created media has changed. While we can only speculate as to the exact reason why they have asked us to remove the game at this time, what we suspect is that our project was too easy to mistake for an official product,” said the devs. “At the time of writing, searching ‘Bionicle game’ on Google lists the Steam page for Bionicle: Masks of Power within the first couple of links.”

“An average person seeing our game for the first time could easily think that it was an official game at first glance. And no amount of disclaimers we could put up would be able to change that.”

It’s not all sad news, though, as the team behind the now-cancelled fan game has announced plans to develop a new game—Project Rustbound—built off the work they put into Masks of Power. Hopefully this project gets to see the light of day.

.



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Decrypt logo
Crypto Trends

Solana Meme Coin Ponke Set to Release Collectibles, Apparel Via JCorp Spinout

by admin May 19, 2025



In brief

  • Ponke has partnered with 223, a spinout of JCorp, to produce adult-focused products and showcase concept designs at the Las Vegas Licensing Expo.

  • The team is exploring the opportunity to create blind box collectibles, high-end toys, and products in the cannabis industry.

  • New products will include NFC chips that will potentially offer token rewards, additional physical merchandise, or an NFT proof of authenticity.

Top 25 Solana meme coin Ponke has announced a partnership with 223, a spinout venture of licensed accessories firm JCorp, to create a range of adult-focused collectibles and apparel.

Official products have yet to be confirmed, but the Ponke team told Decrypt they’re exploring the possibility of producing blind box collectibles, novelty and high-end toys, as well as other products aimed at countercultures like the cannabis industry. 

As part of this partnership, Ponke will present a dozen concept products at this week’s Las Vegas Licensing Expo, alongside some of JCorp’s global IPs including Disney, Star Wars, and Marvel. The Ponke team claims to already be in discussions with a number of big name brands for future collaborative co-branded products, with the Licensing Expo representing a major opportunity to expand its network.

New products created as part of the 223 partnership will include NFC tags, small wireless chips that interact with mobile phones, which will enable Ponke to add a number of different extra functionalities to their products.

By scanning an NFC chip the Ponke team is considering adding an NFT proof of authenticity, granting token rewards, or offering digital keys for loot boxes on partner site Looty.fi, which may reward people with merch, tokens, and more. 

“We view Ponke as an onboarding vehicle to the larger crypto landscape,” a Ponke representative told Decrypt. “We’re not necessarily going to always be extremely crypto forward in the memes, video content, or products we create. But, we want to welcome people into the club of digital ownership through token rewards and token gated experiences.”

Ponke already offers a range of clothes and a few accessories, like stickers and playing cards, on its official website. However, it is a fairly limited range and the products are quite pricey with a t-shirt costing $110.

The 223 partnership will see Ponke’s offerings expand, 223 will also look to “overhaul” Ponke’s website, simplify the existing product line and distribution channels, as well as bring Ponke products into physical retailers, although no store is confirmed as of yet.

“This partnership marks a turning point for Ponke—it transforms our brand from a viral internet phenomenon into a scalable consumer business.” A Ponke representative explained that, “With 223’s licensing infrastructure, retail relationships, and global reach, we now have the tools to drive real, sustained revenue across physical products, phygital collectibles, and new markets.”

The Ponke team claims that revenue generated will be put into scaling “the brand, the community, and the experiences that make Ponke special.” There are currently no plans to offer Ponke token holders discounts or exclusive opportunities to buy products, but the representative confirmed that it is possible to implement in the future.

223 is a spinout venture of JCorp, a major supplier of apparel, accessories, and merchandise for some of the world’s biggest IPs including Sega, Atari, and Coca Cola. The company’s founder Cole Gurman explained that the spinout leverages some of JCorp’s infrastructure to aid with design, manufacturing, and distribution—hence why the partnership will result in Ponke being presented at the Licensing Expo alongside JCorp IPs.

Ponke isn’t the first project to branch out into physical products through licensing deals. In 2023, Ethereum NFT project Pudgy Penguins teamed up with global toy brand PMI Kid’s World, in a partnership that led to over $10 million worth of Pudgy Toys being sold in less than a year across stores including Walmart.

But while Pudgy Penguins focused on a kid-friendly audience, a Ponke representative stressed that its new venture will be much more adult-focused.

Rather than producing a line of fluffy toys, the meme coin is ideally looking to create a range of “high-end” collector items akin to the Kaws art figure sets and explore products that cater to crypto-adjacent counter-cultures, with weed certainly being one of those.

The partnership “streamlines the path from concept to creation, allowing us to design and deliver merchandise in a matter of weeks,” a Ponke representative told Decrypt, adding that in the coming months, “we’ll bring both physical and digital drops to life with the intention of enriching the Ponke brand and ecosystem.”

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GRASS crypto dips over 9%, but analysts believe it could be poised for a breakout
NFT Gaming

GRASS crypto dips over 9%, but analysts believe it could be poised for a breakout

by admin May 19, 2025



Grass, the decentralized web crawling and AI infrastructure token, has seen its price drop over 9% today, trading at $1.96. 

Despite this pullback, analysts are suggesting that the token may be primed for a breakout, given its strong technical indicators and growing network activity.

Grass (GRASS) aims to democratize access to internet-scale data by creating a decentralized network of over 3 million active nodes. 

Users contribute unused bandwidth to help scrape and index the web, building an open, user-owned knowledge graph. 

This data is then made available for AI training and other applications, challenging the dominance of tech giants in web crawling and data aggregation.

GRASS crypto’s technical analysis suggests a breakout  

The project has achieved significant milestones, including the recent Sion upgrade, which enhanced its ability to process multimodal web data—text, images, and 4K video—at scale.

The upgrade introduced advanced scraping algorithms, horizontal compute scaling, and increased the network’s data handling capacity to over 1 petabyte per day 

Technical analysis indicates that GRASS may be entering a consolidation phase before a potential breakout, according to past surges in GRASS’s price. 

Despite the recent dip, the project’s fundamentals remain strong. The network has scraped over 109.7 million IP addresses and indexed 4.47 billion URLs since its inception, according to past crypto.news reporting. 

Moreover, the community’s commitment is evident, with 30% of claimed tokens being staked, reflecting a long-term belief in the project’s vision.



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Gaming Gear

Apple-Alibaba deal raises concerns over data access with US lawmakers

by admin May 19, 2025



  • The US has expressed concerns about Apple’s AI deal with Alibaba in China
  • Around one in five of Apple’s sales are in China – its second-largest market
  • Apple has also been slammed for manufacturing in India, not the US

The Trump administration and Congress are concerned about Apple’s deal with Alibaba to power some of the AI features on iPhones in China, noting potential privacy concerns (via The New York Times).

Worries about data sharing and national security implications have been raised, with the potential legal requirements for Apple and Alibaba to adhere to Chinese regulator rules central to the discussion.

Moreover, only Alibaba has publicly confirmed the agreement, with Apple remaining silent – this could indicate potential uncertainty or an unfinished deal, or it could just be a typical Apple move of keeping developments under tight wraps until the final moment.


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The deal is being scrutinized amid ongoing US-China tensions, with concerns about aiding China’s AI development and improving Chinese military AI capabilities both noted.

“Alibaba is a poster child for the Chinese Communist Party’s military-civil fusion strategy, and why Apple would choose to work with them on A.I. is anyone’s guess,” Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois proclaimed.

Apple has already dropped a deal with Chinese chipmaker YMTC over pressure from the US, and the Cupertino tech giant is also facing challenges from the trade war-induced tariffs and supply chain shifts out of China, with industry experts warning of sharp price hikes for consumers partaking in the next refresh cycle.

However, China is the company’s second-largest market, accounting for around one-fifth of its sales, highlighting the importance of a deal so as not to miss out against local smartphone makers.

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The US administration has considered restricting US companies from doing business with the likes of Alibaba and other Chinese firms, but no details have been confirmed.

Although the company has sought to diversify its supply chain, President Trump has criticized Tim Cook for increasing production in India, urging domestic US manufacturing instead – one of the President’s ultimate goals.

Ultimately, Apple risks issues whichever way the deal swings, either missing out on millions of Chinese sales or potentially serious implications within the US. Apple had a 13% smartphone market share in China during the first three months of 2025 (via Canalys), putting it several paces behind Xiaomi, Huawei, OPPO and vivo.

“The US smartphone market is expected to experience considerable volatility over the next two to three quarters, impacted by inventory corrections and weakening consumer confidence,” Canalys Research Manager Le Xuan Chiew explained.

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Picture showing Timeskip Oigawa in Volleyball Legends performing Rainbow serve.
Esports

How to get Timeskip Oigawa in Volleyball Legends

by admin May 19, 2025


The Timeskip Oigawa in Volleyball Legends is one of the latest secret styles that you can have on your character, but you have to act quickly before it leaves the game. 

Like any other style, Roblox’s Volleyball Legends features characters from the popular anime and manga Haikyuu. This time, players have Tōru Oikawa, a third-year student at Aoba Johsai High and a popular setter for the team, known for his amazing serves. 

How to get and use Timeskip Oigawa in Volleyball Legends

Get him before he leaves the game! Screenshot by Dot Esports

To get Timeskip Oigawa style in Volleyball Legends, make your way to the in-game lobby and click on the Styles option. Now, you have to use your spins by spending your in-game currency, but you have a very small chance of 0.01 percent, which is very low. Rolling the secret style will take ages, so you should use the lucky spins, which increase the chance to 0.5 percent, which is slightly better odds for you. You can obtain the lucky spins by using codes or by purchasing them with Robux.

As your odds of obtaining the Timeskip Oigawa are low, your best bet is to use the Secret Luck Weekend, where the Secret Pity is halved to just 100 lucky spins to have a guaranteed secret style, and the rolling chances are also increased to one percent, which is amazing. However, if you miss this 48-hour event, you’ll need to hit 200 lucky spins to get a secret style. 

Unlike the regular styles, the Timeskip styles aren’t permanently added to Volleyball Legends and can only be obtained for a limited amount before they’re removed from the game. For the Timeskip Oigawa secret style, players have time until 10:30 am CT on 31 May. 

If you manage to get the Timeskip Oigawa secret style, his setting and jumping are maximum, allowing you to set the ball for your team and even jump high, which synergizes with his serving. His serving has a special ability called Rainbow Serve, where if the player can charge his serve power to maximum, he gets to perform that iconic serve from the anime, where if it hits a player, it breaks their stance and makes it very hard for the team to recover. He can single-handedly score points to dismantle the enemy using this ability. 

While he has decent points in his speed, spike, he doesn’t have the best stats in defence attributes like blocking and bumping. Therefore, you want him in your backline to hit those powerful serves and answer back in a long rally. 

Next up, you can read our guides on Hirakumi and Maia Twins’ style in Volleyball Legends.

Dot Esports is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy



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Game Updates

Hideo Kojima’s next espionage game Physint won’t be out for a few years yet

by admin May 19, 2025


Hideo Kojima’s forthcoming espionage game Physint won’t be released for quite a few years yet.

Kojima’s next game, Death Stranding 2, is on the cusp of release, but Physint is already in development alongside Xbox horror game OD.

He even wants to create a film as well, but these game projects are a priority first. “Besides Death Stranding 2, there’s Physint in development,” Kojima told French magazine Le Film Français (via ResetEra). “It’ll take me another five or six years. But maybe after that, I could finally decide to tackle a film.”

8 Things You Need To Know About Death Stranding 2: On The Beach – Hands On Preview, New Gameplay. Watch on YouTube

He continued: “I grew up with cinema. Directing it would be a kind of homage to it. Besides, I’m getting older, and I’d prefer to do it while I’m still young.”

Kojima is now 61 years of age, meaning Physint won’t be released until he’s into his late 60s and, at this rate, a film won’t be likely until he’s in his 70s.

And with a few years to go until Physint, does that mean it could release on Sony’s next console? Back in 2022, a confidential document suggested the company wouldn’t expect a PlayStation 6 until at least 2027. Of course, that may have changed to even later now.

Kojima first announced Physint in 2024, describing it as “the third, new original IP since the establishment of Kojima Productions” and a “completely new ‘Action Espionage’ for the next-generation”. Many fans are expecting it to rival Metal Gear, the series Kojima is most known for.

“PHYSINT (working title)” will be the third, new original IP since the establishment of KOJIMA PRODUCTIONS. It is a completely new “Action Espionage” for the next-generation. It will be created using cutting-edge technology and the best talents from around the world, both from… pic.twitter.com/0vnMXJbGNz

— HIDEO_KOJIMA (@HIDEO_KOJIMA_EN) January 31, 2024

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Death Stranding 2 certainly has more than a shade of Metal Gear to it, both in its expanded combat options and its story themes.

At a recent preview for Death Stranding 2, Kojima mentioned the desire from fans for a new Metal Gear game inspired Physint.

“Of course, I have lots of new ideas that I want to create,” he said. “But when I became sick during the pandemic, I realised that a lot of people wanted me to make something like Metal Gear. That’s when I had the idea for a new espionage game. I reflected, and thought the idea was good. I took it to Sony and they were incredibly supportive. We explored many options, and we agreed on doing Physint.”

Still, he told Edge Magazine he’s not “interested in appealing to the mass market”, after test reviews for Death Stranding 2 came out positively.

“Sony is pleased, of course, but I do wish it was a bit more controversial,” said Kojima. “Blockbuster films need an 80 percent approval rating – I don’t want to make games like that. I’m not interested in appealing to the mass market, or selling millions of copies. That’s not what I’m aiming for.”





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JPMorgan CEO Says He Will Allow Clients to Buy Bitcoin
GameFi Guides

JPMorgan CEO Says He Will Allow Clients to Buy Bitcoin

by admin May 19, 2025


Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer at JPMorgan, has stated that the banking giant would allow its clients to purchase the leading cryptocurrency. 

At the same time, Dimon has clarified that the bank itself would not engage in custody of their crypto.

Dimon has also reiterated that he himself is not a fan of the mercurial cryptocurrency.

In 2017, the JPMorgan boss famously stated that he would ban any employee from trading Bitcoin. 

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The famous banker has not warmed up to the leading cryptocurrency since then, but he insists that he cannot prohibit its clients from toying with it.  

Dimon is also not sold on the underlying technology. Most recently, he has stated that blockchain does not matter as much as you think. 



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