Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Category:

Product Reviews

Close of up main protagonist Hinako from Silent Hill f
Product Reviews

Silent Hill f review: a bold and daring new entry in the series that overcomes some serious flaws

by admin September 22, 2025



Why you can trust TechRadar


We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Silent Hill f is one of the most imaginative, compelling, and striking experiences I’ve had this year. Neobards has also made one of the most tedious, infuriating, and badly designed survival horror games I’ve ever played. We’ve all seen fascinating ideas mired by flawed mechanics countless times in the past, but it’s been a long time since I’ve wanted to completely walk away from a game just as much as I want to press on to see what revelations it has for me.

It’s this back-and-forth that I’m struggling to reconcile when settling on what I really think about Silent Hill f. Some will despise it for its dire combat, inconsistent atmosphere, and poor execution. To others, this will be a game of the year contender, with its beguiling mythology, gorgeous cinematic direction, and audacious design choices. I support the argument from both sides.

Review info

Platform reviewed: PS5
Available on: PS5, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, PC
Release date: September 25, 2025

We play as Hinako, a young adult in 1960s Japan. She’s dealing with an abusive alcoholic father, a despondent mother, and a previously tight-knit friendship group that’s starting to show some cracks as emotions and hormones run high. The game’s themes are heavy, with gender, puberty, marriage, motherhood, family, friendship, and maturity just some of the topics that cult-favorite writer Ryukishi07 engages with throughout the story. I don’t have enough praise for the daring and uncompromising ways it engages with these big ideas.

Beautiful nightmare

(Image credit: Konami)

It helps that the outstanding performances, stellar cinematic presentation, and moody music elevate many of the game’s biggest story beats and give them the weight they deserve. Silent Hill f may sometimes look a bit plain, but it certainly knows how to frame some grotesque and gorgeous imagery or give a performance the time and attention it needs to shine, especially in the game’s original Japanese dub.

Best bit

(Image credit: Konami)

It’s hard to talk about my favorite part of Silent Hill f because it’s all to do with the game’s ending. Obviously, I won’t spoil anything here, but the strong writing, excellent performances, and big story revelations in the final few hours do so much to rescue the game from the drudgery of its repeatedly tedious combat sections. So much so that I was compelled to start a second playthrough to seek out what I’d missed.

It’s a shame the same can’t be said for all of the game’s environments, which swing from the signature foggy alleyways and disgusting visera-covered hallways of the series, to places that are too bright, too mundane, and too, well, clean.

There were brief moments where I was creeped out by the atmosphere (those scarecrows are pure nightmare fuel), but mostly I felt like a tourist taking a casual stroll through a town or temple in some inclement weather. That’s a shame for a series that has mastered creating a feeling of dread with every step so many times in the past.

Silent Hill f also mixes up the exploration with a smattering of puzzles that we’ve come to expect from these games. These range from neat little brainteasers to cryptic nonsense, sometimes actually making less sense than what’s supposed to be the easier puzzle difficulty.

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.

What also doesn’t help with the pacing is the way the game jumps between what is ostensibly the real world and a mystical otherworld throughout. Naturally, the two are intrinsically linked, but the transitions between the two are often contrived or completely unexplained, giving the game an inelegant and disjointed structure.

But these disappointing missteps are nothing in comparison to the one element that Silent Hill f gets severely wrong: the combat.

Lost in the fog

(Image credit: Konami)

The majority of Silent Hill protagonists have (intentionally) never been adept at fighting, which has led to a series of awkward and cumbersome combat systems. Most of them, though, are serviceable. Silent Hill f’s is one of the worst I’ve experienced.

It’s all melee-based and a basic light and heavy attack affair, but it layers on unnecessary system after unnecessary system to try and stretch out of its terrible combat mechanics. There’s stamina, there’s a sanity bar, there are focus attacks, there’s weapon durability, there’s perfect dodges, and counterattacks. All of this mess just to try and bolster the simple act of whacking a horrific manifestation with a lead pipe.

None of it helps. It’s painfully slow and frustratingly sludgy, like Hinako is always trying to swing through mud. Hits have no satisfying impact unless you charge up attacks every time, which you will have to do continuously, because it’s the only consistent way to stun and kill enemies with any speed.

Enemies, meanwhile, are such jittery and erratic nightmares that it’s impossible to read them, and the dodge is so janky or the window to counter so small that by the time you realise an attack is coming in, it’s too late, you’ve already been slashed or spat on or lunged at. The dodge is the most hilarious and out-of-place choice, which sees Hinako dart about six feet in a straight line in any direction in a split second, like she’s borrowed powers from Goku.

(Image credit: Konami)

Some sections thankfully make the combat far more trivial in some unique and utterly bonkers ways that I won’t spoil. Ultimately, that’s still not much better, as it’s just as unsatisfying as it’s always been; it just requires less thought to get through it.

Every time I had to deal with the game’s combat, I thought it would be better just to let the Silent Hill fog take me. It wouldn’t be quite as bad if you could simply run past all enemies, but the game regularly forces you to engage with it, with creatures that block your path, walls that only drop once certain enemies are killed, and entire combat gauntlets that are thematically interesting but mechanically horrid.

And that brings me back to the dichotomy that makes Silent Hill f a curiosity that’s so hard to judge. There will be staunch defenders of this game for all of the incredible work it does with characters, story, and presentation. Others will be quick to trash it as a clunky, poorly designed, and maddening experience.

As is always the case with these things, I feel that the truth is somewhere in the middle. At times, it filled me with rage, but I’d be lying if I didn’t admit that it captivated me in equal measure.

Should you play Silent Hill f?

Play it if…

Don’t play it if…

Accessibility

Silent Hill f doesn’t have an extensive list of accessibility options. There are three filters for green, red, and blue color blindness, as well as subtitle customisation options to change the font, size, and color. There are also three different controller layouts to choose from on console, but you cannot create your own custom layout or edit specific button bindings.

The game has separate difficulty settings for the combat and puzzles, ranging from a standard ‘Story’ option, a more difficult ‘Hard’ mode, and the most challenging ‘Lost in the Fog’ setting. These cannot be changed once you begin the game.

How I reviewed Silent Hill f

I played Silent Hill f for around 14 hours on a PlayStation 5 Pro on a Samsung S90C OLED TV using a DualSense Wireless Controller and playing audio through a Samsung HW-Q930C soundbar. In that time, I completed the game twice, with my first playthrough clocking in at a little over eight hours.

The game does not have different graphics modes to choose from, but performance was excellent throughout, although I got the impression that cutscenes were disappointingly locked to 30 frames per second (fps).

Silent Hill f: Price Comparison



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Hinako holds back a blind mannequin woman trying to stab her
Product Reviews

Silent Hill F would be better if the combat was less enjoyable, or if there was just less combat

by admin September 22, 2025



When the previews started coming in I was worried that Silent Hill F seemed like it emphasized the combat more than I prefer in my games of dread and slow-burn tension. What I want from a Silent Hill is an in-depth psychological portrait of someone who is deeply unwell. If I have to shoot a few mannequins to get it that’s fine, but it’s not why I’m here. I don’t want a combat system where I can master the timings and get into a flow state, I want it to be janky and panicked like it’s simulating what it would be like for an ordinary person to be handed a plank with a nail in it and thrown in a room with a monster made of nightmares.

To cut a long story short, Silent Hill F is not that kind of game. It’s the kind with an involved combat system it really wants you to get to grips with. You may be playing a teenage girl in the 1960s, but by god you’re going to have to master the blade.

(Image credit: Konami)

It’s not just a matter of “light attack, heavy attack, maybe a dodge if you ask nicely.” In Silent Hill F you can time a heavy attack right to do a counterattack, and can spend focus to broaden the counterattack window. Stay in focus mode till a bar fills up and you can launch a special focus attack. Dodge at the right time and you’ll get your stamina back, because of course there’s a stamina bar, that’s the kind of game this is.


Related articles

By the time I unlocked something called “awakened mode” I realized I’d hit the limit of combat mechanics I could be bothered internalizing. Silent Hill F keeps tutorializing new combat ideas even in its final act, well after the point where I’d bothered caring about them.

There are times when you can avoid fights, which is good. The weapon degradation system—yeah, it has one of those as well—means in theory you could end up unarmed because your crowbar, lead pipe, and kitchen knife all break while you’re in a field somewhere whomping undead scarecrows dressed as high school students. So being able to run past and around enemies is an option, but unfortunately it’s only a sometimes option.

(Image credit: Konami)

At other times you’ll need to kill someone to unlock a box holding a crest you need to solve a puzzle, or just to be allowed into the next area. This seems particularly true in the dark shrine world that is Silent Hill F’s replacement for the usual rusty chainlink hellscape otherworld. In the dark shrine world weapon degradation is disabled and you get to wield a naginata like you’re in Soul Calibur 6. But combat eventually stops being optional back in the foggy world as well, with a gauntlet of enemies who have to be killed to make skin walls go away before you’re allowed into the underwhelming finale and inevitable twist ending.

Early on, there’s a moment where you have to get a key out of a well while being menaced by a monster who is like the Hulk wearing the flower outfit from Midsommar. You don’t actually need to fight him, though. Get him to chase you around the other well in the yard and you can buy time to turn the crank and raise the bucket, eventually getting the key you need without having to master another enemy’s precise counterattack window and perfect-dodge timing.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

I wish Silent Hill F had leaned into that style of play, but it’s just not that kind of game. It’s an action game with a horror veneer, and that’s something I go to Resident Evil for rather than Silent Hill.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Top Diseases We Choose to Stay Ignorant About, According to Scientists
Product Reviews

AI Medical Tools Provide Worse Treatment for Women and Underrepresented Groups

by admin September 22, 2025


Historically, most clinical trials and scientific studies have primarily focused on white men as subjects, leading to a significant underrepresentation of women and people of color in medical research. You’ll never guess what has happened as a result of feeding all of that data into AI models. It turns out, as the Financial Times calls out in a recent report, that AI tools used by doctors and medical professionals are producing worse health outcomes for the people who have historically been underrepresented and ignored.

The report points to a recent paper from researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which found that large language models including OpenAI’s GPT-4 and Meta’s Llama 3 were “more likely to erroneously reduce care for female patients,” and that women were told more often than men “self-manage at home,” ultimately receiving less care in a clinical setting.  That’s bad, obviously, but one could argue that those models are more general purpose and not designed to be use in a medical setting. Unfortunately, a healthcare-centric LLM called Palmyra-Med was also studied and suffered from some of the same biases, per the paper. A look at Google’s LLM Gemma (not its flagship Gemini) conducted by the London School of Economics similarly found the model would produce outcomes with “women’s needs downplayed” compared to men.

A previous study found that models similarly had issues with offering the same levels of compassion to people of color dealing with mental health matters as they would to their white counterparts. A paper published last year in The Lancet found that OpenAI’s GPT-4 model would regularly “stereotype certain races, ethnicities, and genders,” making diagnoses and recommendations that were more driven by demographic identifiers than by symptoms or conditions. “Assessment and plans created by the model showed significant association between demographic attributes and recommendations for more expensive procedures as well as differences in patient perception,” the paper concluded.

That creates a pretty obvious problem, especially as companies like Google, Meta, and OpenAI all race to get their tools into hospitals and medical facilities. It represents a huge and profitable market—but also one that has pretty serious consequences for misinformation. Earlier this year, Google’s healthcare AI model Med-Gemini made headlines for making up a body part. That should be pretty easy for a healthcare worker to identify as being wrong. But biases are more discreet and often unconscious. Will a doctor know enough to question if an AI model is perpetuating a longstanding medical stereotype about a person? No one should have to find that out the hard way.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Diminish Distractions by Setting Your iPhone to Gray Scale When You're Home
Product Reviews

Diminish Distractions by Setting Your iPhone to Gray Scale When You’re Home

by admin September 22, 2025


Phones are undeniably useful when you’re out and about in the world. Directions, photos, music, messaging the people you’re meeting up with, or even just scrolling while you’re waiting for the bus—it’s all great.

The problem with phones, in my opinion, is when you’re at home. Home is the place where you might rather spend your time reading a book, practicing an instrument, or messing around in the garden. But everything is hard, almost impossible, when your phone is so freaking interesting.

That’s why it’s important to make your phone boring on purpose. Whenever we talk about how to break your smartphone addiction, a trick that’s commonly cited is to set your phone to gray scale. The problem: making your phone black and white and gray all the time makes it less useful during the times you actually need it.

That’s why I set up an automation that sets my phone to gray scale when I arrive at home and turns it back to color when I leave my house. This gives me the best of both worlds: a fully functional phone on the road and a less distracting one at home. Even better, because I’m using Apple Shortcuts to do this, I don’t need to buy or install any apps. I don’t even need to tap a button to make it work.

Here’s how you can set this up. And yes, because these tools are specific to iOS, you’ll need an iPhone.

Step 1: Make 2 Shortcuts

To get started, open the Shortcuts app on your iPhone. We’re going to make two shortcuts, one for when you get home and one for when you leave home. Name both appropriately.

Courtesy of Justin Pot

For the first shortcut, which will trigger when you get home, search for the action Set Color Filters. Add it and make sure that the shortcut is set to turn color filters On. This will filter out onscreen colors and turn your display gray scale. For the other shortcut make sure it will turn color filters Off. You should now have two shortcuts.

Step 2: Set Up the Automation

From the main screen of the Shortcuts app, tap Automations in the bottom toolbar. We are going to set up two automations: one for when you leave home and another for when you get home.

Courtesy of Justin Pot



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
DAAPrivacyRightIcon
Product Reviews

BYD’s all-electric hypercar, the YangWang U9 Extreme, hits a record-breaking 308mph

by admin September 22, 2025


A new hypercar has dethroned Bugatti’s record for the fastest production car, and unsurprisingly, it’s an electric vehicle. During a livestream at the Automotive Testing Papenburg testing site in Germany, the YangWang U9 Extreme hit a facemelting top speed of 496.22 kmph, or around 308.33 mph. That metric edges out the previous record from the Bugatti Chiron Super Sport 300+, which achieved 304.77 mph in 2019.

Officially, the fastest production car record is factored from the average of runs in both directions, whereas the U9 Extreme only reached its 308 mph top speed one way. That’s not to minimize this achievement, whose pivotal moment from the livestream was highlighted by CarNewsChina, since Bugatti’s record was also a one-way run. Although it’s not surprising that the U9 Extreme was able to push these limits since it’s packed with four motors that produce just under 3,000 horsepower. The electric hypercar also runs on one of the world’s first 1,200V platforms, which offers better performance and efficiency, along with some weight reduction.

Like the Chiron Super Sport 300+, the U9 Extreme is going to be extremely limited with production capping at 30 units. There’s no price yet, but looking at those specs, this EV will likely have a high cost to match. However, with this latest achievement, the YangWang U9 Extreme shouldn’t have any trouble selling out quickly.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Product Reviews

Wix Logo Maker review 2025

by admin September 22, 2025



Why you can trust TechRadar


We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Although Wix is best known as one of the best website builder platforms on the market, it also offers a host of other helpful business tools to its users, including an easy to use logo maker.

The Wix Logo Maker is an AI-powered tool that helps businesses and individuals create professional logos without needing graphic design skills. By answering a few quick questions about your brand, the tool generates logo options that you can customize to match your vision.

Accessing the Wix Logo Maker is easy — you can find it on the official website and the mobile app. The tool is free to try, so you can make unlimited edits before purchasing. Plans range from basic logo downloads to full branding kits that include extras like business cards and social media assets – you may be able to save when you buy by using one of our Wix promo codes.

Features

Wix Logo Maker offers a range of features that make logo design easy and efficient. Its standout feature is the AI-driven design process, which generates logo suggestions based on your business name, industry, and style preferences. This ensures logos are tailored to your brand, though the initial designs can sometimes feel generic and may require extra customization to stand out.

The platform’s customization options are another strong point. With a drag-and-drop editor, you can easily adjust fonts, colors, icons, and layouts. You can even upload custom fonts or images to give your logo a personal touch. It’s a really versatile tool, especially compared to competitors like Tailor Brands, which offer fewer editing tools.

Another key feature that I really liked is the ability to download high-resolution files, including scalable vector formats (SVG), perfect for both digital and print use. Wix also provides mockups that show how your logo will appear on merchandise or marketing materials before finalizing it. Recent updates have made SVG files available in basic plans, a significant improvement and not something I expected to see.

The tool also integrates seamlessly with the broader Wix platform, allowing you to align your logo with websites, social media kits, and business cards. This all-in-one approach helps create cohesive branding. But the AI recommendations could be improved by offering a wider variety of icons and style options upfront to give users more diverse starting points.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

Ease of use

Wix Logo Maker is easy to use, making it a great choice for beginners or those with no design experience. The onboarding process is straightforward: answer a few questions about your brand’s name, industry, and style, and the platform generates logo suggestions for you. But while quick and efficient, the initial designs often need some tweaking to fit specific needs.

The drag-and-drop editor is intuitive and offers plenty of customization options without being too complicated. Features, like undo/redo buttons and side-by-side comparisons, make it easy to experiment with different styles. However, some users may feel overwhelmed by the number of design options at first, especially if they’re new to design principles.

For accessibility, Wix includes features like keyboard navigation and screen reader compatibility, ensuring the platform is usable for people with different needs. While these tools are mainly aimed at website design, they demonstrate a commitment to inclusivity and ease of use.

Overall, Wix Logo Maker strikes a good balance between simplicity and functionality. It’s user-friendly enough for beginners to create polished designs while offering enough tools for those who want more control over their logos.

Wix Logo Maker strikes a good balance between simplicity and functionality. (Image credit: Wix.com)

Customer support

Wix Logo Maker offers a solid range of customer support options to help users resolve issues quickly. Self-help resources include a detailed Knowledge Base, covering common topics like logo creation, customization, and file downloads. Step-by-step guides and FAQs are also available through the Wix Support Center.

For personalized help, Wix provides live chat support in multiple languages during set hours and a callback service for more complex issues. These support options can be accessed directly from your Wix account dashboard for a smooth experience.

Wix also has active social media channels where users can ask questions or get advice. The community forum is another useful tool, allowing users to share tips and solutions. However, one downside is that making edits to a purchased logo comes with an extra fee, which some users may find frustrating.

Compliance

Wix Logo Maker provides full commercial usage rights once you purchase and download your logo files through any paid plan. This means you can legally use purchased logos for all business applications, websites, marketing materials, merchandise, and print advertising without any additional licensing fees.

However, there’s an important caveat that sets Wix’s tool apart from traditional design services. Logo elements (icons, fonts, colors, and other design components) are provided on a non-exclusive basis to all users of the platform. According to Wix’s terms of use, that means the company cannot guarantee that your Wix Logo will not be similar, or even identical, to other companies using the tool.

Multiple businesses could theoretically end up with nearly identical logos if they select similar design elements during the creation process, which could pose challenges for brand differentiation and potential trademark registration. Wix also explicitly states that users “may or may not be able to register or use your Wix Logo as a trademark.” It’s always better to consult with an attorney regarding trademark availability.

Moreover, using the tool means you waive the right to legally challenge the validity or registration of similar logos created by other users using the same logo elements. Also, purchased logos cannot be modified after download (creating a derivative work requires purchasing a new logo), and individual logo elements cannot be used independently outside of the complete logo design.

All of this stuff is pretty standard for any similar logo generator you find on the internet, including most competitors. That said, you might want to do some research and consult an attorney if you want to use your generated logo for legal purposes.

Competition

Wix Logo Maker competes with other popular tools like Looka, Tailor Brands, and Canva.

Compared to Looka, Wix offers more customization, allowing users to adjust fonts, colors, and layouts in greater detail. Tailor Brands offers an all-in-one branding suite but doesn’t match Wix when it comes to customization.

Canva is another strong competitor with its beginner-friendly interface and huge library of templates. While it is better for creating a wide variety of marketing materials, Wix stands out for its seamless integration with its website builder and branding tools.

Generally speaking, Wix offers more control than most other logo designers, which is ideal for users who want to fine-tune their logos. However, the associated learning curve may confuse new users, which is especially perilous given that edits cost extra.

Pricing

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Plan

Price

Payment Type

Key Features

Just Logo Plans

Row 0 – Cell 1 Row 0 – Cell 2 Row 0 – Cell 3

Basic Plan

$49

One-time fee

High-resolution PNG files, commercial usage rights, standard logo files

Advanced Plan

$99

One-time fee

Everything in Basic, plus scalable SVG files, 40+ social media formats, brand guide, favicon

Logo + Website Bundles

Row 3 – Cell 1 Row 3 – Cell 2 Row 3 – Cell 3

Value Plan

$11/month

Annual billing

Logo design, commercial usage rights, free domain (1 year), Wix Combo website plan

Professional Plan

$16/month

Annual billing

Everything in Value, plus resizable logo files, social media assets, business cards, Wix Unlimited plan

Deluxe Plan

$24/month

Annual billing

Everything in Value, plus priority customer support, optional graphic designer touch-ups

Wix Logo Maker has two main pricing options: Just Logo plans and Logo + Website bundles.

Just Logo Plans:

– Basic Plan ($49 one-time fee): Includes high-resolution PNG files for online use.

– Advanced Plan ($99 one-time fee): Adds scalable SVG files and formats for social media and print.

Logo + Website Bundles:

– Value Plan ($11/month): Includes a logo design, commercial usage rights, one free domain for a year, and Wix Combo website features.

– Professional Plan ($16/month): Adds resizable logo files, social media assets, and business cards.

– Deluxe Plan ($24/month): Includes priority support and optional graphic designer touch-ups.

Wix’s plans are competitively priced compared to platforms like Looka or DesignEvo. However, extra fees for post-purchase logo edits can be a drawback unless you upgrade to a higher-tier plan, like “Brand Plus.” Additionally, subscription plans renew automatically each year, so users should keep an eye on renewal dates to avoid unexpected charges.

Final verdict

Wix Logo Maker is an AI-powered tool that helps individuals and small businesses create professional logos easily. It offers customization options, high-resolution files, and seamless integration with Wix’s branding tools. While its initial designs can feel generic and some pricing aspects may be restrictive, it’s a great option for startups and entrepreneurs seeking an affordable, quick, and professional branding solution.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A skeleton doing a trick on a skateboard
Product Reviews

Five new Steam games you probably missed (September 22, 2025)

by admin September 22, 2025



On an average day about a dozen new games are released on Steam. And while we think that’s a good thing, it can be understandably hard to keep up with. Potentially exciting gems are sure to be lost in the deluge of new things to play unless you sort through every single game that is released on Steam. So that’s exactly what we’ve done. If nothing catches your fancy this week, we’ve gathered the best PC games you can play right now and a running list of the 2025 games that are launching this year.

Megabonk

Megabonk Release Trailer – YouTube

Watch On

Steam ‌page‌ ‌
Release:‌ September 19
Developer:‌ vedinad

Vampire Survivors is brilliant but I’m not super interested in any of its pretenders. Megabonk is a big exception, though, not only because it looks completely stupid (in a good way), but also because it borrows a lot from Risk of Rain 2. The general rhythm of the game is overly familiar by now: you commandeer a character through sprawling slaughter maps, circle strafing around the mobs and collecting XP, all the better to upgrade your abilities with every level increase. The longer you survive the better. What Megabonk brings to the formula is a slapstick approach to failure, and a PS1-influenced art style that really suits the addictive simplicity of its gameplay. Also, the skeleton can ride a skateboard.


Related articles

Deadeye Deepfake Simulacrum

Deadeye Deepfake Simulacrum: Release Date Trailer – YouTube

Watch On

Steam‌ ‌page‌
Release:‌ September 19
Developer:‌ nodayshalleraseyou

This cyberpunk roguelike shooter is the real deal: not only does it have a gorgeous ASCII-inspired art style perfectly in step with its surreal sci-fi setting, but its ability to generate increasingly bizarre stories positions it close to something like Caves of Qud. Due to severe debt you’re forced to live the life of a mercenary, which means breaking into corporate headquarters, stealing intel, and murdering anyone who gets in the way. That makes it sound like a fairly rote genre exercise but Deadeye Deepfake Simulacrum has no interest in sticking within the confines of cyberpunk: there is some truly weird stuff here. Nor is it eager to just be a shooter: this is closer to an immersive sim, in the way it rewards thinking outside of the box.

Henry Halfhead

Henry Halfhead – Out Now! – Trailer – YouTube

Watch On

Steam page
Release:‌ September 16
Developers:‌ Lululu Entertainment

As the name implies, Henry Halfhead is about Henry, who has (or is?) half a head. You might think this puts him at a severe disadvantage when it comes to moving through the world (or doing anything, really) but Henry is blessed with the ability to inhabit objects. So if he wants to make himself some toast, all he needs to do is become the knife to slice the bread, and then become the bread to enter the toaster, and then enter the toaster to toast the bread… you see where this is going (though I do wonder how one eats toast with only half a head). I adore the idea: probably the funniest puzzle concept since Baba is You.

Town to City

Town to City | Launch Trailer – YouTube

Watch On

Steam page
Release:‌ September 17
Developer:‌ Galaxy Grove

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

The city builder revival continues apace with Town to City, which is about building voxel-based 19th century Mediterranean settlements. While it has the cosy veneer of something like Tiny Glade, Town to City also has some very light sim elements, such as attending to the needs of your town’s inhabitants and growing the economy. Nevertheless, the focus here is definitely on zen-like creation, and despite being an early access affair it already has nearly a thousand “Overwhelmingly Positive” reviews on Steam. It’ll launch into 1.0 in “around 6-8 months”.

Pigface

PIGFACE | Early Access Out Now! – YouTube

Watch On

Steam‌ ‌page‌ ‌
Release:‌ September 19
Developer:‌ titolovesyou

Here’s another early access launch, this time about “a terrible woman whose awful past has finally caught up to her”. Someone has planted a bomb in her head, and if she doesn’t do their bidding that bomb will explode. A tough break, but I guess there’s got to be a reason for all the killing that happens in Pigface, which despite its retro-stylings leans more towards a tactical shooter than the more popular, circle strafing and bunny-hopping boomer variant. It has an appealingly vicious atmosphere too, kinda reminiscent of Dusk.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
SoftBank technology trial
Product Reviews

SoftBank beams 5G to phones from the sky in successful stratospheric test flight

by admin September 21, 2025



SoftBank successfully delivered end-to-end 5G connectivity to standard smartphones using an airborne base station, in a live field trial conducted in June, above Hachijō Island, Japan. The company used a light aircraft flying at 3,000 meters to simulate a high-altitude platform, linking ground infrastructure to devices via a 26 GHz feeder connection and a 1.7 GHz service link.

Unlike most “direct-to-device” projects that rely on satellites in low Earth orbit, SoftBank’s approach uses High-Altitude Platform Stations (HAPS) that hover in the stratosphere, about 20 kilometers up. That altitude brings big advantages like lower latency and fewer of the power and Doppler challenges that present challenges to orbital links. According to SoftBank, the service link in the trial operated on the 1.7 GHz band, which is already supported by most 5G phones sold around the world.

(Image credit: SoftBank)

The aircraft-mounted payload used beamforming to create six directional cells fixed in place on the ground, even as the aircraft flew a circular holding pattern overhead. The system automatically shifted beam coverage every 60 degrees of rotation, emulating the behavior of a future stratospheric platform while proving that stable cellular coverage is possible with real-world mobility.


You may like

(Image credit: SoftBank)

SoftBank’s radio stack links a mmWave backhaul from ground to aircraft with a sub-2 GHz link from aircraft to user, stitching together the entire 5G core chain. That design means HAPS nodes can act as intelligent base stations, not just repeaters or relays. The company also validated Doppler correction, automatic power control, and adaptive beam tracking, all of which are required for commercial service in the sky.

Compared to satellite-to-cell systems like AST SpaceMobile’s LEO-based platform, which previously demonstrated a 5G call from space, HAPS can cover wide areas with lower path loss and better spectrum reuse. And thanks to recent ITU decisions at WRC-23, operators like SoftBank can now deploy HAPS in terrestrial mobile bands, including 700 MHz, 850 MHz, 1.7 GHz, and 2.5 GHz.

SoftBank’s work could lead to 5G service in places where towers don’t reach, like disaster zones, offshore waters, or remote islands. The company hasn’t said when it will scale this to a full commercial launch, but the technical foundation is here, at least in theory.

Follow Tom’s Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

Get Tom’s Hardware’s best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.



Source link

September 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Photo: Drew Angerer
Product Reviews

Trump Hints at the Murdochs Joining the TikTok Deal

by admin September 21, 2025


The details keep trickling in on the American takeover of TikTok, though whether they actually provide clarity or just muddy the waters further is debatable. The latest tidbit offered by Donald Trump: Conservative media magnate Rupert Murdoch and his son Lachlan might be a part of the group of American investors who will be buying the social media platform from Chinese ownership at ByteDance.

In an interview on Fox News’ “The Sunday Briefing,” the president offered details in about the least certain way imaginable. First, he said, “A man named Lachlan is involved.” Luckily, there aren’t that many Lachlans with access to “Buying TikTok” money, but Trump did specify that he was indeed speaking of Lachlan Murdoch. He went on to say that the Murdoch men are “probably gonna be in the group,” then said, “I think they’re going to be in the group.” Sounds like a sure thing on a deal that has been short on details for some time now.

Trump lumped the Murdochs in with some other players who are believed to be involved in the deal to buy TikTok, including Oracle CEO Larry Ellison and Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell. Ellison has been the most consistent name tied with the American-ized TikTok, and he’s had close ties to Trump dating back to his first administration. Ellison and his son also own a huge stake in Paramount, which has been rapidly turning CBS into a Trump-aligned news network, including reportedly preparing a major deal to bring in Bari Weiss. Michael Dell is a newer name in the mix, but perhaps not a surprising one given that the CEO has been talking up some of Trump’s policies in recent months.

Trump didn’t make specific mention of Marc Andreessen or his venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, nor investment firm Silver Lake, both of which the Wall Street Journal previously reported were expected to be involved in buying TikTok. He did say there were others involved, who Trump described as “really great people, very prominent people.”

The involvement of the Murdochs is certainly of note, though. Trump and Rupert Murdoch haven’t been on the greatest of terms, given that the Wall Street Journal, owned by Murdoch, has been leading the way in reporting on Trump’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein. The two are currently involved in a lawsuit over the Journal’s reporting, but they also recently traveled to the United Kingdom together and have a much longer history than just this current spat.

It’s not hard to imagine why Murdoch wants in on the deal: his media conglomerate currently counts primarily on the extremely old audience that watches Fox News. TikTok provides an opportunity to serve his preferred brand of conservative slop to a younger generation.



Source link

September 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
25 Key iPhone Settings to Change (2025)
Product Reviews

25 Key iPhone Settings to Change (2025)

by admin September 21, 2025


Apple’s software design strives to be intuitive, but each iteration of iOS contains so many additions and tweaks that it’s easy to miss some useful iPhone settings. Apple focused on artificial intelligence when it unveiled iOS 18 in 2024 and followed it with Liquid Glass in iOS 26 (the name is now tied to the following year), but many intriguing customizations and lesser-known features lurk beneath the surface. Several helpful settings are turned off by default, and it’s not immediately obvious how to switch off some annoying features. We’re here to help you get the most out of your Apple phone.

Once you have things set up the way you want, it’s a breeze to copy everything, including settings, when you switch to a new iPhone. For more tips and recommendations, read our related Apple guides—like the Best iPhone, Best iPhone 16 Cases, Best MagSafe Accessories—and our explainers on How to Set Up a New iPhone, How to Back Up Your iPhone, and How to Fix Your iPhone.

How to Keep Your iPhone Updated

AccordionItemContainerButton

These settings are based on the latest version of iOS 26 and should be applicable for most recent iPhones. Some settings may not be available on older devices, or they may have different pathways depending on the model and the software version. Apple offers excellent software support for many years, so always make sure your device is up-to-date by heading to Settings > General > Software update. You can find the Settings app on your home screen.

Updated September 2025: We’ve added a few new iPhone tips and updated this guide for iOS 26.

Table of Contents

AccordionItemContainerButton

Enable Call Screening

Apple via Simon Hill

Make cold-calling pests a thing of the past with Apple’s new Call Screening feature. Go to Settings, Apps, and select Phone, then scroll down to Screen Unknown Callers and select Ask Reason for Calling. Now, your iPhone will automatically answer calls from unknown callers in the background without alerting you. After the caller gives a reason for their call, your phone will ring, and you’ll be able to see the response onscreen so you can decide whether to answer. You should also make sure Hold Assist Detection is toggled on, so your iPhone detects when you are placed on hold, allowing you to step away, then alerting you when the call has been picked up by a human.

Turn on RCS

The texting experience with Android owners (green bubbles) got seriously upgraded last year when Apple decided to finally support the RCS messaging standard (rich communication services). RCS has been around for several years on Android, and allows for a modernized texting experience with features like typing indicators, higher-quality photos and videos, and read receipts. Group chats may still be wonky, but they’re still a significant improvement. However, on a new iPhone, RCS is disabled by default (naturally).

Make sure you turn it on for the best messaging experience. Head to Settings > Apps > Messages > RCS Messaging and toggle it on.

Customize the Control Center

Apple via Simon Hill

Swipe down from the top right of the screen to open the Control Center, and you’ll see it’s more customizable than ever. You can tap the plus icon at the top left or tap and hold on an empty space to open the customization menu. Here you can move icons and widgets around, remove anything you don’t want, or tap Add a Control at the bottom for a searchable list of shortcut icons and widgets you can organize across multiple Control Center screens. You can also customize your home screen to change the color and size of app icons, rearrange them, and more.

Change Your Lock Screen Buttons

Apple via Simon Hill

Screenshot

You know those lock screen controls that default to flashlight on the bottom left and camera on the bottom right? You can change them. Press and hold on an empty space on the lock screen and tap Customize. Tap the minus icon to remove an existing shortcut, and tap the plus icon to add a new one. You can also change the weather and date widgets, the font and color for the time, and pick a wallpaper. One of the clocks will even stretch to adapt to your wallpaper.

Extend Screen Time-Out

Apple via Simon Hill

While it’s good to have your screen timeout for battery saving and security purposes, I find it maddening when the screen goes off while I’m doing something. The default screen timeout is too short in my opinion, but thankfully, you can adjust it. Head into Settings, Display & Brightness, and select Auto-Lock to extend it. You have several options, including Never, which means you will have to manually push the power button to turn the screen off.

Turn Off Keyboard Sounds

Apple via Simon Hill

The iPhone’s keyboard clicking sound when you type is extremely aggravating. Trust me, even if you don’t hate it, everyone in your vicinity when you type sure does. You can turn it off in Settings, Sounds & Haptics by tapping Keyboard Feedback and toggling Sound off. I also advise toggling off the Lock Sound while you’re in Sound & Haptics.

Go Dark

Apple via Simon Hill

Protect yourself from eye-searing glare with dark mode. Go to Settings, pick Display & Brightness, and tap Dark. You may prefer to toggle on Automatic and have it change with the sun setting, but I prefer to be in Dark mode all the time.

Change Your Battery Charge Level

Apple via Simon Hill

If you’re determined to squeeze as many years out of your iPhone battery as possible, consider changing the charging limit. You can maximize your smartphone’s battery health if you avoid charging it beyond 80 percent. The iPhone’s default is now Optimized Battery Charging, which waits at 80 percent and then aims to hit 100 percent when you are ready to go in the morning. But there’s a slider you can set to a hard 80 percent limit in Settings, under Battery, and Charging. If it bugs you, this is also where you can turn Optimized Battery Charging off.

Turn On Adaptive Power Mode

Apple via Simon Hill

If you get worried about running out of battery, go to Settings, Battery, and scroll down to select Power Mode, where you can toggle on Adaptive Power. This mode will detect when you are using more battery life than normal and make little tweaks, like lowering display brightness or limiting performance, to try and get you through to the end of the day.

Set Up the Action Button

Screenshot courtesy of Simon Hill

20-Setting_Action Button 1_Photo SOURCE Simon Hill

Screenshot

Folks with an iPhone 15 Pro model, any iPhone 16 model, or any iPhone 17 have an Action Button instead of the old mute switch. By default, it will silence your iPhone when you press and hold it, but you can change what it does by going to Settings, then Action Button. You can swipe through various basic options from Camera and Flashlight to Visual Intelligence, but select Shortcuts if you want it to do something more interesting. If you’re unfamiliar, check out our guide on How to Use the Apple Shortcuts App.

Customize Camera Control

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

The iPhone 16 series debuted Camera Control, a physical button that sits below the power button and triggers the camera with a single press. When you’re in the camera app, pressing it will capture a photo, and a long-press will record a video. Pressing and holding Camera Control outside of the camera app triggers Apple’s Visual Intelligence feature (sort of like Google Lens). But what I find most annoying is Camera Control’s second layer of controls: swiping. You can swipe on the button in the camera app to slide between photography styles, zoom levels, or lenses. It’s neat in theory, but way too sensitive.



Source link

September 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • …
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • …
  • 96

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (772)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada

    October 10, 2025
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5

    October 10, 2025
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close