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

care

Pikachu looking shocked.
Gaming Gear

Pokemon Company says Homeland Security’s use of its property in disturbing promotional video was unauthorized, but DHS doesn’t seem to care: ‘To arrest them is our real test, to deport them is our cause’

by admin September 24, 2025



The Pokémon Company says the US government did not have permission to use Pikachu and other Pokémon content promotional videos for the Homeland Security and Customs and Border Protection agencies posted to X—but what it’s going to do about it, if anything, remains to be seen.

The first video, a montage of ICE agents and police blowing up doors and arresting people mashed up with music and video clips from the Pokémon TV show, was posted on the evening of September 22. It also features the words “Department of Homeland Security” spelled out in the Pokémon font. It’s the sort of thing I would not have believed could possibly be real if I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes, but there it is.

DHS followed with a series of Pokémon-style “cards” bearing images of people convicted of crimes in the US.


Related articles

But that wasn’t the end of it: A couple hours later, Customs and Border Protection got in on the act with an animated image of Pikachu, calling him “Border Patrol’s newest recruit.”

(Image credit: The Pokemon Company (via CBP))

Support for the display in replies was widespread—it’s X, after all—but there was pushback too, and calls from some for The Pokémon Company, or Nintendo, to take action against what was presumed to be unauthorized use of the property.

In a statement provided to PC Gamer, The Pokémon Company International confirmed that the US government did not have permission to use the content, but left the question of what comes next unanswered.

“We are aware of a recent video posted by the Department of Homeland Security that includes imagery and language associated with our brand,” it said. “Our company was not involved in the creation or distribution of this content, and permission was not granted for the use of our intellectual property.”

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

Nintendo, one of the owners of The Pokémon Company, is notoriously litigious when it comes to dropping the hammer on people who can’t effectively fight back. But former Pokémon Company chief legal officer Don McGowan thinks this is likely a fight it doesn’t want: The Pokémon Company International is “INSANELY publicity-shy,” he said, and perhaps more compelling in light of the US government’s recent treatment of South Korean workers at a Hyundai plant in Georgia, “many of their execs in the USA are on green cards.”

“Even if I was still at the company I wouldn’t touch this, and I’m the most trigger-happy CLO [Chief Legal Officer] I’ve ever met,” said McGowan, who became well-known for his aggressive pursuit of Destiny 2 abusers and cheaters during his post-Pokémon years at Bungie. “This will blow over in a couple of days and they’ll be happy to let it.”

For its part, Homeland Security doesn’t seem inclined to change tack. In response to an inquiry about the unauthorized use of Pokémon intellectual property, a DHS spokesperson invoked lyrics from the Pokémon theme song, saying, “To arrest them is our real test. To deport them is our cause.”



Source link

September 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Decrypt logo
GameFi Guides

Hong Kong Police Arrest Two Over Alleged Crypto Mining in Care Homes

by admin September 11, 2025



In brief

  • Two technicians were arrested for allegedly setting up eight illicit crypto mining rigs.
  • Running the hidden mining rigs inflated monthly electricity bills for care homes.
  • Illegal crypto mining has become a growing problem globally.

Hong Kong police have detained two men on suspicion of diverting electricity from care homes for the disabled to power cryptocurrency mining machines.

Police allege the pair, aged 32 and 33, used their access during renovation work to install eight devices in the suspended ceilings of two offices. The machines ran around the clock, adding as much as $1,153 (HK$9,000) to monthly power bills.

Inspector Ng Tsz-wing from Sham Shui Po’s technology and financial crime squad said the case came to light after one home noticed repeated slowdowns in its internet service. Its IT staff uncovered unauthorised equipment concealed above the office ceiling, and similar devices were later discovered in another home in Sau Mau Ping.

Police arrested the suspects last Friday in Mong Kok and Sham Shui Po on charges of “abstracting electricity.” Investigators believe the men acted alone rather than as part of a larger syndicate.



Ng urged organisations to keep close watch over contractors during renovations and to monitor electricity bills for sudden increases. He warned that concealed equipment can remain hidden for months. Under Hong Kong’s Theft Ordinance, illegally using electricity carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.

“The public should also pay more attention to electricity bills or network usage and make relevant checks and notify police in case they find some suspicious circumstances,” Ng said, according to the South China Morning Post.

Illegal crypto mining is “power theft and a safety risk,” Shanon Squires, Chief Mining Officer at Compass Mining, told Decrypt. He added that, “This activity goes against core tenets for many Bitcoiners, such as private property rights and not harming others. Engaging in electricity theft is directly taking someone’s property without permission and causing them harm by sticking them with the bill.”

Squires pointed out that the mining rigs shown by Hong Kong police “do not appear to be Bitcoin miners,” noting that, “At smaller scales, it’s possible that illegal mining is more common than generally perceived, especially for altcoin mining rather than Bitcoin, unless it’s a larger-scale operation.”

Crypto mining and energy consumption

Cryptocurrency mining, the process of using specialized computers to solve complex mathematical problems in exchange for coins, is notoriously energy-hungry.

Research by Digiconomist estimates that Bitcoin mining alone generates an annual carbon footprint of more than 105 million tonnes of CO2, comparable to Belgium’s total emissions. Its electricity use is similar to Thailand’s, and its freshwater demand mirrors Switzerland’s.

The Hong Kong case is far from isolated. In Thailand earlier this year, police raided three abandoned houses in Pathum Thani province and seized 63 mining machines that were illegally connected to utility poles.

In the UK, officers in West Yorkshire uncovered an operation in Bradford where miners were running off an illicit electricity supply.

And in Central Asia, officials have also reported widespread abuse of energy grids. Tajikistan’s attorney general said illegal mining drained more than US$3.5 million worth of electricity in the first half of 2025 alone, while in neighbouring Kazakhstan, authorities discovered miners tapping into enough power to supply a city of 70,000.

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.



Source link

September 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Sonic Rush games on Nintendo DS are getting a "definitive" PC release care of boisterous fangamers
Game Updates

The Sonic Rush games on Nintendo DS are getting a “definitive” PC release care of boisterous fangamers

by admin September 2, 2025



A group of fangame developers have taken it upon themselves to make a new Sonic Rush game for PC, combining the previous Sonic Rush games for Nintendo DS into one “definitive” remastering, with extra stuff and some apparently overdue fixes. Seems bold! I missed the Rush games back in the noughties, but I do like me a Sonic. Here’s a trailer for Sonic Rush Rerun.

Watch on YouTube


“The idea behind this remaster is to take the greatest strengths of the Sonic Rush trilogy, crank them up to 11, and combine them together to bring this game formula to its PEAK,” explain the developers in the blurb. “We want to make a definitive version of Sonic Rush for PC with additional content and to fix the problems with the original game.” I assume they’re calling it a “trilogy” in light of the general conviction that Sonic Colors is an unofficial third Rush game.


I like the energy here, but I fear I must break off this report to deliver an agonising Old Man appraisal of something that has been bugging me for years. PSA game developers: the “up to 11” line is not supposed to be repeated sincerely. It comes from 1984 rock band mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap, in which there’s a scene where lead guitarist Nigel Tufnel shows off his custom amp, which has a volume setting with 11 levels, but isn’t actually any louder than an amp with 10 levels.


It’s supposed to be a joke about meaningless exaggeration. But because humans are forgetful, perishable sacks of meat, and perhaps because videogame-adjacent humans especially tend to venerate numbers like gods, I keep hearing the phrase “turn it up to 11” uttered with what sounds like full seriousness.


I don’t know if there’s some kind of central marketing authority I can appeal to, here, but please can you all knock it off, because whenever I read these words in press releases, I feel like I am taking crazy pills. If nothing else, game developers, the nature of the joke means that you don’t have to stop at 11. You can turn it up to 12! You can turn it up to 13, even! First one to turn it up to 13 in a press release gets their game an automatic 13/10. Or would do, if we had a scoring system. See, I always give myself an out.


Anyway, back to Sonic Rush Rerun. The project lead is MelohRush, who got into fan animations because he played Sonic Frontiers and thought it needed “an extra punch of style”. These youngsters! So impetuous. According to his portfolio, he’s worked on *grits teeth* 11 Sonic projects to date.


He’s joined by lead programmer Crimznraze, lead modeller Ozark and a small village of modellers, programmers, level designers, animators, sprite artists, composers, sound designers, voice actors, writers and graphic designers. It’s a tidy production. You can find some music for the game’s soundtrack on the Youtube page.


Sonic Rush Rerun has no release date. Thanks to Jeremy for spotting it and lobbing it into the friendly sausage machine that is our news Slack. As ever with fangames, its eventual launch rests on Sega’s willingness not to sue the pants off the creators for breach of copyright. Sega have proven pretty relaxed on this front, as large corporations go, and have reaped the fruits in the form of a lively community of Sonicmakers, busily engineering forms of hedgehog-based entertainment poor Yuji Naka never dreamed of in 1991. Some have gone onto work for the Blue Blur directly.



Source link

September 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Google’s Pixel Care Plus includes free screen and battery repair
Gaming Gear

Google’s Pixel Care Plus includes free screen and battery repair

by admin August 28, 2025


Google is phasing out its Preferred Care extended warranty plan for the Pixel Care Plus program. Pricing between the two is pretty similar. You’ll still pay $8 per-month, or $159 for a two-year plan on a Pixel 9. For a Pixel 10 Pro Fold, that jumps up to $339 for two years, or $18 per-month, with the optional loss and theft package for a small extra charge.

The big changes here are that screen and battery repairs are free, and service fees for other accidental damage are much lower. Under the old Preferred Care program, replacing a cracked screen would run you $29. Under Pixel Care Plus a cracked front screen or battery running at under 80-percent capacity will get swapped out for $0. Unfortunately, if you happen to mess up the internal screen on your 10 Pro Fold, you are not covered.

Other accidental damage fees vary depending on model, ranging from $49 on some older models like the Pixel 8a and 9a, to $99 on the Pixel 10 Pro Fold. On average they’re lower though, with service fees reaching $129 for the Pixel 9 Pro and Fold models. The new loss and theft option, which adds $1 or $2 a month to the plan, also varies per model with deductibles ranging up to $149 on the high end.

The new plans bring Google more inline with the likes of Samsung, which ditched screen replacement fees under its new extended coverage plans back in January.



Source link

August 28, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Unknown Worlds sues former leadership team for breach of employment and "fiduciary duty of care"
Esports

Unknown Worlds sues former leadership team for breach of employment and “fiduciary duty of care”

by admin August 21, 2025


Unknown Worlds is suing its former leaders Charlie Cleveland, Adam McGuire, and Ted Gill for breach of equity purchase agreement, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of employment agreement, and breach of “fiduciary duty of care” in their capacity as directors.

Parent company Krafton sent GamesIndustry.biz a link to a heavily redacted copy of the filing in which the three former leaders of Unknown Worlds are accused of “openly threaten[ing] Krafton with litigation, and expressly demanding and prioritizing a release date for Subnautica 2, writing: “they demanded the Earnout, not the early access release that would best entice the gaming community into the Subnautica 2 world. Personal (not Company) goals were the priority for [them].”

Details of the legal complaint against Krafton, Inc. by the former leadership of Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds became public last month. The complaint concerns a $250 million bonus payout tied to revenue targets for the 2025 Early Access release of Subnautica 2, which the former shareholders of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, represented by Fortis Advisors LLC – allege owners Krafton, Inc. sought to avoid paying out by delaying the game using “pressure tactics”. The publisher said it had “requested a delay” in releasing the highly-anticipated sequel in early access to “safeguard the quality of Subnautica 2 and maintain player trust.”

This subsequent lawsuit accuses the three former leaders of then threatening to self-publish Subnautica 2, “releasing it without Krafton’s backing, marketing, promotion, or distribution.” This, Krafton claims, left it with “no choice but to terminate their employment.”

The company also alleges that McGuire, Gill, and Cleveland downloaded tens of thousands of “company files” and emails in the lead up to these terminations. “These downloads were, by far, the largest downloads for each of the three Key Employees at any time since at least 2022,” Krafton added, and said the former leadership “refused” to return “or at the very least confirm” what devices and confidential information remained in their possession.

“When pushed, the Key Employees threatened to delete files and again refused to provide access to their devices containing Confidential Information for inspection,” the publisher added.

The 74-page complaint also reiterates Krafton’s former position that Cleveland and McGuire had “checked out” of developing Subnantica 2, leaving Gill unable to “overcome to complete abdication of the Subnautica 2 creative and technical leadership team.”

Read our timeline of the former Subnautica 2 leads versus Krafton here.



Source link

August 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
What Is the Electric Constant and Why Should You Care?
Gaming Gear

What Is the Electric Constant and Why Should You Care?

by admin August 18, 2025


It’s fun to think about the fundamental physical constants. These are special values used in our models of the physical universe. They include things like the speed of light, the gravitational constant, and Planck’s constant, and they’re “fundamental” in the sense that we can’t derive them theoretically, we can only measure them.

We use these in solving physics problems all the time, so it’s easy to take them for granted. But why are there such numbers in nature, and why do they just happen to have those specific values? Because, listen, if they were only slightly different, the universe might be incapable of supporting life. Did some cosmic clockmaker set these parameters? Isaac Newton thought so.

One of the most basic of these numbers is the electric constant, k. It’s a value that lets us calculate the forces between electric charges. That’s a big deal when you consider that all matter is made of just three things—electrons, neutrons, and protons, two of which have an electric charge. The interaction between electrons is what forms molecules to create you and everything around you. Otherwise it would all be just some undifferentiated soup.

But how do we know the value of the electric constant? Also, what does it have to do with other fundamental constants? And for that matter, is it really fundamental? Let’s investigate.

Coulomb’s Law and Constant

When we say something has an electric charge, we mean it has a different number of protons and electrons. If your clothes dryer removes some electrons from your socks, they become positively charged. If they gain electrons, they’ll be negatively charged. (Note: You can’t take away protons, since they’re in the nucleus of the atom. It would involve a nuclear reaction, which nobody wants.)

If you have two objects with opposite charges, they attract. If they have the same charge, they repel. Here’s a demo you can do yourself: Take a piece of clear tape and place it on a smooth table. Then put a second piece on top of that one, and pull them off together. Now, if you separate them, one will be positive and one will be negative; hold them in proximity and they will bend toward each other.

If you repeat the process, you’ll have two positive and two negative tapes. Hold two with similar charges near each other, and you’ll see that they repel, like in the picture below:





Source link

August 18, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

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