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

part

Naughty Dog's Debated Going Straight Into The Last Of Us Part III After Part II
Game Updates

Naughty Dog’s Debated Going Straight Into The Last Of Us Part III After Part II

by admin September 11, 2025


Naughty Dog president and The Last of Us director Neil Druckmann has seemingly revealed that The Last of Us Part III is, at the very least, an idea that’s been floated at the studio. In a new interview with Variety, Druckmann says Naughty Dog debated going straight into Part III after completing Part II, but that ultimately, the team decided to move forward on what we now know as Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet. 

While a Part III to The Last of Us seems like a no-brainer, considering how well this franchise does for Naughty Dog and PlayStation, Druckmann has given mixed signals over the years. When The Last of Us Part II Remastered dropped last year, it eventually included Grounded II, a documentary about the making of the game. 

 

Near the end of it, Druckmann said, “For years now, I haven’t been able to find that concept [for Part III], but recently, that’s changed, and I don’t have a story, but I do have a conept that to me is as exciting as 1, as exciting as 2, is its own thing, and yet has this throughline for all three. So it does feel like there’s probably one more chapter to this story.” 

But then, in a March 2025 Variety interview, Druckmann, when asked about a potential Part III, said, “I guess the only thing I would say is don’t be on there being more of The Last of Us. This could be it.” 

Now, in a new interview with Variety, Druckmann has seemingly revealed that Naughty Dog, at one point, had plans regarding a Part III game in its Last of Us franchise. 

When asked about potential Intergalactic sequels, Druckmann said, “We don’t tend to plan too much in the future, because we find – and this is something I inherited, it’s just the Naughty Dog culture – that we do our best work when it’s something we’re really excited about, really passionate about.

“Just to give you an example, when we finished The Last of Us Part II, and that was highly successful for us, we were debating whether we should just go straight into The Last of Us 3, and we had a really long period where we looked at ideas for maybe what could be in that game.” 

The team looked at Uncharted, Jak and Daxter, and its “sci-fi thing,” though, and Druckmann said what is now Intergalactic is where the team’s passion led it. 

So for now, it sounds like a third Last of Us game is on the theoretical or potential table as Naughty Dog continues work on Intergalactic. 

For more, read Druckmann’s thoughts on the casting and gameplay of Intergalactic, and then check out Game Informer’s interview with Druckmann on the set of The Last of Us Season 2. 

[Source: Variety]

Do you want Naughty Dog to make a third Last of Us game or something else? Let us know in the comments below!



Source link

September 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Universal Executive Regrets Most Hilarious, Perfect Part of 'Fast and Furious' Franchise
Product Reviews

Universal Executive Regrets Most Hilarious, Perfect Part of ‘Fast and Furious’ Franchise

by admin September 11, 2025


Before the abysmal mess that was Fast X, the ninth Fast and Furious film, F9, did the most insane thing imaginable. After literal years and years of joking about it, F9 actually sent characters to space. It was Ludacris (literally and figuratively), it was hilarious, and it was wonderful. But now, looking back, one of Universal Studios’ most powerful executives regrets it.

“I’m sorry that we sent them into space,” Donna Langley, the Chief Content Officer for NBCUniversal Studio Group, said recently, as reported by Variety. “We can never get that genie back.”

Langley is right about the second point, of course. Actually doing the most over-the-top thing imaginable in the franchise, when you still have movies to come, maybe wasn’t the right timing. Going to space would’ve been a perfect finale. But, since the fifth film, the trajectory of the series has always been increasingly wild and unbelievable. It got so crazy that this site, which only covers pop culture of a sci-fi or fantasy nature, finally dubbed the franchise io9 worthy (remember when Idris Elba played an enhanced super villain?). They had to go into space. It was inevitable.

The point being, hopefully, what Langley means isn’t that she regrets sending the franchise to space. Hopefully, it’s that she regrets sending the franchise to space so soon. Honestly, we don’t think it’s that, but it happened. It’s done. And now, the way it fits into the franchise is almost as a culmination of the franchise’s wildly unbelievable run. One through four are kind of normal and grounded. Five takes it up a notch. Then six through nine are sci-fi fantasy movies. Space is the peak that allows subsequent movies to dial back to a more grounded, street-level story, which is what franchise star and producer Vin Diesel has been teasing about the long-in-development 11th film in the main series.

So while we kind of understand Langley’s regret, we are here to ease the blow. Fans wanted the Fast and Furious franchise to go into space. Even if they didn’t think they did, they did. It was one of those perfect acts of madness that make the films so unique. Afterwards, all I could think of was, why not go further? Let them race spaceships. Let them drift submarines. I don’t know. I don’t work for Universal. But don’t regret doing the single most hilarious, perfect thing Fast has done in a long, long time.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



Source link

September 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 Reveal Date Already Decided, Says Nomura
Game Updates

Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 Reveal Date Already Decided, Says Nomura

by admin September 7, 2025



With two games in the bag, the finale of the Final Fantasy Remake Trilogy is inevitably drawing closer. Last year saw the middle chapter of the saga, Final Fantasy 7: Rebirth, released on console and PC, and producer Tetsuya Nomura says that Square Enix knows exactly when it’ll officially reveal the game. Just don’t expect him to provide a reveal date–for the reveal date–for the game announcement just yet.

“It is going very smoothly,” Nomura said during a recent Final Fantasy 7 Ever Crisis livestream (translated by Genki JPN on Twitter/X). “The announcement timing has been decided, and we will stick to that schedule, so please rest assured and wait.”

Nomura says FF7 Remake Part 3 and Kingdom Hearts 4 are progressing well and according to schedule!
FF7R Part 3: “It is going very smoothly. The announcement timing has been decided and we will stick to that schedule, so please rest assured and wait.”
KH4: “Kingdom Hearts 4 is… pic.twitter.com/JW7uN7BJWl

— Genki✨ (@Genki_JPN) September 5, 2025

Nomura also added that work on Kingdom Hearts 4 is “progressing well and according to schedule,” but he remained quiet on any other details regarding the long-in-development game. As for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3, it remains to be seen if Square Enix will formally announce the game on its own channels or through a partner event. Final Fantasy 7 Remake was first revealed during the 2015 PlayStation Showcase during E3 2015, while Final Fantasy: Rebirth was unveiled during Summer Game Fest 2023.

Details on the game are being kept under wraps for now, but back in January, series producer Yoshinori Kitase revealed that the story scenario for it was completed by the end of 2024 and that he was “very satisfied” with it. Game director Naoki Hamaguchi also confirmed that development on the third game began right after Rebirth was completed.

While Rebirth introduced some big changes and plot twists to the established lore of Final Fantasy 7, one of the other big changes we could see is a multiplatform release for the game. The previous Final Fantasy 7 remake games were timed exclusives for PS4 and PS5, but Square Enix’s new multiplatform strategy to secure long-term growth could see the game launch the same day on PC and Xbox Series X|S so that it can reach a wider audience.

Click the button below to add GameSpot as a preferred source on Google





Source link

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kingdom Hearts 4, Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 are making "great progress", confirms director
Game Reviews

Kingdom Hearts 4, Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 are making “great progress”, confirms director

by admin September 7, 2025


Square Enix director Tetsuya Nomura still doesn’t have any specific Kingdom Hearts 4 news for us just yet, but he wants you to know that the teams are making “great progress” on both the Kingdom Hearts sequel and Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3.

Other than a sneak peek back in May, we haven’t seen or heard anything since Kingdom Hearts 4 was shown back in 2022 for the series’ 20th anniversary, which is likely why Nomura joked in a recent livestream about seeing “a lot of comments” from fans eager to know more about the game.

Kingdom Hearts 20th anniversary announcement trailer.Watch on YouTube

“I’m seeing a lot of comments asking about Kingdom Hearts 4,” Nomura said, as translated by Aitaikimochi (thanks, TheGamer). “We are making great strides and going according to schedule. So please wait for more information on that!”

Admittedly, that doesn’t give us much to go on, but it should be a relief to fans to know everything is “going according to schedule”. And as for Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3?

“[Motomu] Toriyama supposedly said we will have news around the time of the second anniversary of FF7EC,” he added. “We are making great progress on the game! And I can’t say anything else. I’m not gonna be like, ‘Well, actually…’ If I did, people would be really surprised if it’s during this FF7EC livestream.

“But we are indeed making a lot of progress with the game. We already have decided when we will make the announcement as well, and we will stick to that time schedule. So don’t worry, but please wait for it.”

Square Enix finally released fresh screenshots of Kingdom Hearts 4 back in May, giving us our first look at the game in three years. Before then, the last time the game was shown was back in 2022 for the series’ 20th anniversary, in which we were treated to Sora’s return and the expansive metropolis of Quadratum.

The day before those new screenshots, Square Enix cancelled mobile game Kingdom Hearts Missing-Link.



Source link

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
5 Things We Loved, 3 Things We Didn't About 'Wednesday' Season 2 Part 2
Gaming Gear

5 Things We Loved, 3 Things We Didn’t About ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Part 2

by admin September 6, 2025


Season 2 of Wednesday is finally available to watch in its entirety on Netflix. And while the first half introduced a solid return, the second half almost holds up before a messy to-be-continued conclusion.

Tim Burton puts his whole Burtonesque business on full display with a third-act antagonist reveal that both works and doesn’t. The Addams family being at the mechanical heart of another mystery creates a lot of fun lore for Wednesday (Jenna Ortega) to discover about her parents. This time Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones) isn’t the only Addams with a dark secret; Gomez (Luis Guzmán) and Pugsley (Isaac Ordonez) are also involved.

And it all, of course, ties back to what makes Nevermore the center of the drama, both in its past and in its present. But did it all come together in a satisfying way? Very nearly, as season two’s writers room finds its footing with a good blend of diverse voices led by Miles Millar and Alfred Gough but gets mired by falling back into building an anticipation for more in season three with no solid conclusion to stand on its own.

We loved: Weems’ return

© Netflix

All hail Gwendoline Christie’s return to Nevermore. Weems is the perfect mentor-slash-foil to push Wednesday around as her guide and fight for her legacy at the school. Just speculating here, but if the writers created some woo-woo magic excuse to materialize her enough to be a visible specter, we would definitely accept her coming back as the school’s immortal principal. It’s a supernatural world; let’s do it. Season three without Weems wouldn’t be the same.

We loved: The Addams family matters

© Netflix

If the show wasn’t an Addams Family spin-off, it would be a problem, but truly I love that at the core of a lot of the mystery is Wednesday’s family. They are the drama in this world and we love the goth telenovela aspect of it all. Morticia and Gomez have had murderous haters since high school; all her killings have been in defense of those she loves. They had it coming! Nevermore’s secrets being brought to light because of Wednesday is hilarious because so many of her mysteries would have been solved quicker if she and Tish had a better relationship.

We loved: Bianca and Ajax’s friendship

© Netflix

As the show finds better ways to balance its concurrent plots, we hope to see more of Bianca and Ajax stepping up as the leaders of Nevermore. While Wednesday has no interest in being a student body leader, they most resemble the archetype to protect the outcasts that Morticia and Gomez were established to have had when they were students. We didn’t get much of Bianca and Morticia bonding over that and I hope it’s seen in later seasons of the show. Ajax babysitting Pugsley and Eugene was awesome. Plus their last act of heroics against Dort really made them the school’s real MVPs.

We loved: Weird Wednesday

© Netflix

The Freaky Friday body swap between Enid and Wednesday was a delightful way to really help them understand one another. We needed more of them bonding since the first half separated them for so long and this was the perfect way to establish why they are the balance of dark and light at the core of the show. It really worked to set up why Wednesday goes after wolfed-out Enid at the end of the season to save her. Plus seeing Ortega go polar opposite and be a girly girl was too funny.

We loved: Lady Gaga making a monster meal of a small role

© Netflix

We’re still not convinced she’s Rosaline Rotwood. Why? Because a lot has been hinted about Rosaline and Ophelia’s Raven abilities, with a particular nod to supernatural vulnerabilities that Morticia wants to protect Wednesday from. Seeing Gaga as a trickster apparition who tests her was a joy, and we wouldn’t be surprised if she was a-possessed-by-Rosaline Ophelia. That ending reveal that Grandmama is holding the missing Frump in a secret room with the same white-blond hair makes us wonder if, in addition to possibly being possessed, she can astral project. We’re obsessed and want more Gaga in this universe.

We didn’t love: The ball dance minus Wednesday

© Netflix

We needed Wednesday to join in and make this the modern-day Mean Girls “Jingle Bell Rock” dance. The song, however? It eats the dancefloor up and we can’t wait to see it recreated online. Thank you Gaga for this spooky gift.

We didn’t love: The Hydes

© Netflix

Tyler being related to the big bad this season gave off “Palpatine is my grandfather” vibes. Not everyone has to be related! We loved Tyler’s origin as a normie being a journey he could go on as he realized he had a suppressed outcast identity within. It still makes little sense to have him blindly just follow along with anyone who calls themselves his master, first Marylin Thornhill, then his mom and uncle Isaac, who try to use their family drama to pit him against the Addams and force him to be normal. The Isaac reveal as being the rest of Thing’s body therefor also Tyler’s uncle further makes the “everyone is related” trope made the big bad reveal overkill.

Thankfully we got a moment where Tyler and Wednesday break the generational chains and might get a fresh start with their own extended will-they, wont-they. We hope Tyler figures his family drama out and returns with a better sense of maybe belonging among the students at Nevermore alongside Wednesday (we can’t help but ship)—not just trying to kill them all the time

We didn’t love: Enid’s curse

© Netflix

Finally getting Wednesday and Enid back together was short-lived in order to set up season three. We have to wait a questionable amount of time to see if Wednesday can help her friend return to her human form after discovering she’s an alpha who turned herself into a werewolf to dig Wednesday out of an early grave. From a pacing standpoint, it feels forced to entice fans to watch more but really left us on a cliffhanger that might take years to pick up on.

Wednesday is now streaming on Netflix.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



Source link

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Bitcoin (BTC) Holdings Part of Broader Treasury Stategy: Figma
Crypto Trends

Bitcoin (BTC) Holdings Part of Broader Treasury Stategy: Figma

by admin September 4, 2025



Collaborative design software company Figma (FIG) expanded its bitcoin BTC$109,962.82 holdings to $91 million in the second quarter of this year, the company disclosed Wednesday during its earnings call.

The move, revealed by Chief Financial Officer Praveer Melwani, comes as part of a larger $1.6 billion cash position. “Within the $1.6 billion, we also held approximately $91 million in our bitcoin exchange-traded fund,” Melwani said.

Figma, which went public on the New York Stock Exchange in July, has had an eventful few years. A planned $20 billion acquisition by Adobe collapsed in 2023 after regulators raised antitrust concerns. Since then, the company continued to grow its customer base, which includes 95% of the Fortune 500.

Unlike some firms that have turned to bitcoin holdings as a last-ditch effort to excite investors or pivot away from declining core businesses, Figma’s approach appears more conservative.

“We’re not trying to be Michael Saylor here,” CEO Dylan Field told CNBC, referring to the co-founder of MicroStrategy, known for turning his previously sleepy software company into a major bitcoin holder. “This is not, like, a Bitcoin holding company. It’s a design company, but I think there’s a place for it in the balance sheet and as part of a diversified treasury strategy.”

Neither the increase in bitcoin exposure nor the better-than-expected revenue boosted investor sentiment, at least in the short term. Despite beating earnings expectations, Figma shares dropped 18% on Thursday, closing at $55.96. That remains above the IPO price, but down about 50% from the frenzied IPO-day peak.

Figma’s quiet addition of bitcoin to its treasury adds another name to the list of public companies experimenting with digital assets as part of their financial infrastructure — but without the spectacle or evangelism often associated with the move.

For now, bitcoin remains a small slice of Figma’s balance sheet.



Source link

September 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Daisy Phillipson
Esports

Wedneaday Season 2 Part 2 review: Netflix hit is creepy, kooky, but only halfway spooky

by admin September 3, 2025



Wednesday Season 2 Part 2 has landed on Netflix, and though it still doesn’t reach the gothic heights of the Addams Family’s glory years, it’s a marked improvement on Part 1. Why? It remembers to have fun. 

Christina Ricci immortalized Wednesday Addams in the ‘90s, with her razor-sharp wit and disdain for normalcy showing all the outcasts of the world that it’s okay to be weird. A Gen-Z revival for Netflix shouldn’t have worked, and yet Season 1 defied our expectations, a massive reason being Jenna Ortega nabbing (and nailing) the title role. 

Article continues after ad

Despite a three-year gap, Season 2 Part 1 failed to capture the macabre magic of its predecessor. As we said in our two-star review, the “overstuffed narrative and meandering subplots” left it feeling, at times, boring.

Thankfully, Part 2 is much better. While it doesn’t fix everything, Episodes 5-8 are injected with new energy, tighter character arcs, and a few moments that feel destined to go viral. Oh, and Lady Gaga finally makes her debut. 

Article continues after ad

What is Wednesday Season 2 Part 2 about?

Following the cliffhanger ending of Episode 4, Wednesday Season 2 Part 2 picks up where we left off. Don’t fret – of course she isn’t dead (that isn’t a spoiler). However, she has picked up a new spirit guide in the form of Principal Weems, played to perfection by Gwendoline Christie.

Article continues after ad

The Willow Hall case might be solved, but Wednesday still has to find a way to stop Tyler (Hunter Doohan) and save her bestie Enid (Emma Myers). And the threat may not be solely on Enid: as is revealed in the trailer, the entire Addams Family is at risk. 

This is far from the only mystery at hand. What happens now Tyler doesn’t have a master? Who is the mysterious Willow Hall patient Wednesday saved? What is Principal Dort (Steve Buscemi) really up to? And why, oh why, does Isadora Capri’s American accent sound like that? (Just kidding on the last one, Billie Piper still does a great job). 

Article continues after ad

Article continues after ad

Netflix

All of these questions and more are answered throughout the course of Part 2. Enid also continues her journey of self-discovery, Bianca gets drawn deeper into Nevermore’s power struggles, and even Thing takes on a surprisingly pivotal role. Add in Grandmama Hester Frump, cult entanglements, and a zombie subplot, and you’ve a lot going on in just four episodes. 

On paper, it sounds thrilling, but in practice, it’s often overstuffed. Particularly in Episode 5, where it feels like the writers are trying to explain their way out of the labyrinth they built in Part 1. The biggest issue is pacing, with the Netflix show meandering from one topic to the next in a bid to fit it all in. 

Article continues after ad

Instead of letting the Addams’ oddities breathe, the dialogue often feels like a Wiki page being read aloud. You can’t look away for fear of missing a vital line of lore, and yet it’s hard to care when the stakes are constantly diluted by subplots.

Article continues after ad

Episode 6 is Wednesday at its best 

Netflix

Still, buried amongst the clutter are moments that remind you why this show became a hit in the first place, and it’s well worth sticking with, especially Episode 6 (no spoilers, but it’s the most fun the show has ever had). 

Article continues after ad

Enid’s arc in general is stronger here, salvaging what looked like a baffling detour in Part 1 and turning it into a moment of growth. Ortega and Myers are still the beating (and snarling) heart of Wednesday, and Episode 6 proves just how good the show can be when it leans into their chemistry.

Elsewhere, Evie Templeton shines as Agnes, whose storyline feels both earned and engaging, and there’s a brief but welcome turn from Lady Gaga that reminds you the show can still pull off a celebrity cameo without it feeling like stunt casting. 

Article continues after ad

The wider ensemble – Luis Guzmán, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Fred Armisen, Joanna Lumley, Piper, Buscemi, and more – are all back, and though there are almost too many to keep track of, they all give fantastic performances. 

Article continues after ad

Season 2 is another Tim Burton feast for the eyes 

Netflix

Visually, Wednesday remains untouchable. Every set piece has director Tim Burton’s fingerprints all over it, from baroque interiors to mist-choked graveyards, and the costume department goes ham when the cast aren’t in their Nevermore uniforms, decking them in renaissance ballgowns during one notable event. 

Article continues after ad

And yes, there’s another dance scene destined to go viral on TikTok – Netflix clearly knows what its audience wants. The same goes for the horror elements, which are ramped up in Part 2 with some genuinely spooky (and gruesome) scenes. 

The finale also deserves credit: it ties up loose ends, delivers some satisfying pay-off, and even plants a genuinely intriguing twist. It’s a neat hook for Season 3, even if the road to get there was shaky. 

Article continues after ad

Wednesday Season 2 Part 2 score: 3/5

Wednesday isn’t dead on arrival anymore, but it’s not quite alive either. Part 2 is an improvement over Part 1 – funnier, more confident, and great to look at. But it’s still a muddle of competing tones and overloaded storylines. 

Article continues after ad

Thankfully, Ortega and Myers raise the experience, and the finale at least wraps the many subplots up in a satisfying way. Here’s hoping Season 3 can resurrect the show for good (preferably without the three year wait).

Article continues after ad

Wednesday Season 2 is streaming on Netflix now. You can also read about why Xavier doesn’t return and check out what else is coming up with our 2025 TV show release calendar.



Source link

September 3, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Mike Clay's Playbook, Part 3: How to manage your fantasy football team post-draft
Esports

Mike Clay’s Playbook, Part 3: How to manage your fantasy football team post-draft

by admin September 2, 2025


  • Mike ClayAug 28, 2025, 06:51 AM ET

    Close

      Mike Clay is a senior writer for fantasy football and the NFL at ESPN. Mike is a member of the FSWA Hall of Fame. His projections power the ESPN Fantasy Football game, and he also appears on “Fantasy Football Now” and the Fantasy Focus Football podcast.

OK, so your fantasy football draft is in the rearview mirror. Your team looks great. There’s no way you’re losing this title. Your work here is done, right? Wrong.

I’m in a lot of leagues, and most are against industry experts, but I’m also in a few long-running, casual leagues with college friends, family and neighbors. In both situations, there are extremely active managers and there are extremely lax managers. Some (like me) are rarely content and are tinkering with trade offers and waivers often in an attempt to get one step closer to a title. Others attack waivers only when needed (injuries and bye weeks) and are the strongest bet to commit the most heinous act of all: ignoring trade proposals (more on this later!).

As you might imagine, the active managers win at a much higher rate than the casual ones. Is it possible to simply hit on nearly every draft pick and compete for a league title? Of course. In a high-variance game like fantasy football, it happens.

Fantasy Football Gridiron Gauntlet

FREE to play. Become ESPN fantasy football’s ultimate champ. Sign Up | Find out more

In fact, that reminds me of the infamous 2007 season in my long-running 16-team, family and friends dynasty league. With zero fantasy football acumen and only Minnesota Vikings, New England Patriots and Miami Hurricanes fandom at his disposal (the perfect storm, as it would turn out), my 13-year-old brother Matt drafted Patriots Tom Brady, Randy Moss, Wes Welker and Stephen Gostkowski, as well as Adrian Peterson and Kellen Winslow II. So, yeah, the top-scoring QB, WR and K, as well as the WR11 (Welker) and top-5 finishers at RB and TE. Matt never (or, at least, very rarely) checked his team and still started 9-0. The funny part of the story was Week 10 when the Patriots were on a bye: Matt, whose team otherwise averaged 105.3 points per week, didn’t check his lineup and lost 69-9. Having relied only on his draft while failing to add complementary producers during the season, he went on to lose in the semifinals.

On the other hand, my team (this was before my fantasy analyst days, by the way) started 0-7, leading me to shake up my roster with a few trades. I won six in a row, somehow made the playoffs and went on to win the league title. His team was way better, but (A) It’s a weekly game, and (B) fantasy points come in all shapes and sizes.

Matthew “lucked” himself into a stacked roster, but post-draft negligence cost him what should’ve been a surefire league title. How do you avoid a similar fate? Let’s take a look at strategies you can use on the trade and waiver market.

Working the trade market

Team building. Whether it’s a season-long, dynasty or keeper league, it’s an ongoing process. Many fantasy managers don’t maximize their chances at a league title because they are too content with their roster and afraid to shake things up with a trade.

Trading in fantasy is one of the most polarizing aspects of the game, as most managers seem to either be extremely aggressive or extremely quiet in the department. If you’ve been playing against the same leaguemates for a long time, I imagine you could place each of them in one of those two categories within seconds of contemplation. Understanding the philosophies, tendencies, skill levels, etc. of your leaguemates is an edge you can use when evaluating the trade market. This could be as simple as getting a Lions fan (like Daniel Dopp) to overpay for Detroit players, or as thorough as noticing that a leaguemate consistently overreacts to Week 1 and agrees to ill-advised trades.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

There are countless ways in which knowing your competition can help your cause, and sometimes it’s as simple as identifying which ones respond and which ones don’t. Or which ones are open to trading and which ones are afraid to make a move with a crippling fear of the possibility that it won’t work out. This is very real, and these managers overvalue their players so much that it’s not worth your time to even negotiate.

I mentioned that managers are generally either aggressive/active or conservative/quiet on the trade market, and I’m, without question, the former. I love trading. I love throwing out offers. I love fielding offers. The only thing better than a trade proposal alert is a trade accepted alert. Perhaps my offer gets declined, but now that manager is on the league page and maybe he/she counters, makes a waiver move or makes an offer to someone else. An active league is a great league.

One drawback to throwing out trade offers is that you’re sure to rub some people the wrong way. The fun of fantasy is that we don’t all value players the same way. Unfortunately, it’s very easy for managers to become offended — sometimes infuriated — if they believe you’re trying to rip them off. Sometimes this person will simply ignore the offer, others will reply with an “LOL,” and others will lose their cool and go on an expletive-laden tirade in the group chat. We’ve all seen it, and I’m asking you right now — please don’t be that person.

Look, if someone keeps sending you “Antonio Gibson and Brenton Strange for Nico Collins” offers, fine, I get the irritation. But in most scenarios, even if you don’t like the offer, it’s not hard to understand where the other person is coming from. Even if I get an offer I’m not considering, I’m excited by the idea of someone being open for business. If someone is higher than I am on a player on my roster, perhaps I can take advantage with a counteroffer and improve my squad. Also, the first offer is rarely the best offer. I mean, why would it be? That’s Negotiating 101. Your first offer should be fair and sensible, but it can also be a starting point. How many of you have thrown out an initial trade offer that gets accepted within minutes? Your reaction is almost always: “Oh no! What have I done? Did I just rip myself off?” We’ve all been there.

If someone tries to rip you off in a trade for Nico Collins, don’t be mad. Just be happy for the inquiry and keep the lines of communication open for future deals. Tim Warner/Getty Images

In conclusion, here are a couple tricks I use when making/considering offers:

1. When making an offer, don’t just consider what the other manager can do for you. Look closely at their roster and see if there is a void you can help them fill. Strong at wide receiver, but you need a quarterback? Instead of randomly offering deals for Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson, scroll through each league roster until you find a team with two decent QBs that has a need at receiver. It makes that manager a natural trade partner and a deal significantly more likely.

2. Put yourself in the other manager’s shoes. This next one relates to my first point but focuses more on the “fairness” of your offer. Once you have a trade proposal in mind, flip the script, imagine you’re on the other side of it and think about whether you’d accept it, consider it or laugh off the offer. If it’s the latter, adjust the deal. If you think you’d at least consider it, hit that “send” button!

Your League, Your Rules

Create a league and customize league size, scoring and rules to play in the league you want to play in.

Create a league today!

3. Pick your spots. A beat writer tweets that “Player X” is unstoppable in camp and looks like he’s in line for a breakout. The initial inclination will almost always be to make a trade offer for that player, but now is not the time. Even if you’re buying the hype, wait a week or so until the industry is buzzing about someone else before making the move. On the other hand, if there’s a negative report on a player and you’re not buying it, that is the perfect opportunity to make an offer.

4. In terms of accepting offers, cure crippling trade fear with this simple trick: If someone offers you “Player A” for your “Player B” and you can’t decide what to do, imagine you already had “Player A” and were being offered “Player B.” Would you accept the deal now? I realize how simple and obvious this might seem, but it’s no secret that we’re all guilty of overrating our own players. In fact, it’s human nature. Specifically, it’s a cognitive bias called the endowment effect, in which we value an asset more when it’s in our possession than we would if it wasn’t.

5. Don’t get mad about trade offers! Even if you don’t like the offer, just be happy you have someone in your league unafraid to keep the league active by making offers.

Making the most of waivers

Last year, Sam Darnold was among the surprising waiver-wire pickups who helped fantasy teams to successful seasons. AP Photo/Abbie Parr

Waivers can be a tedious process when you manage 15 or so fantasy football teams like I have for the past decade. And yet, I still put the time into making claims in every single league.

Why? Because if I don’t, I’m putting myself at a disadvantage. Every single week, there is at least a player or two on waivers who is well worth adding to your roster, if not your starting lineup (one big injury can really shake things up in a hurry). And that goes for the weeks leading up to the season as well.

The 2024 season was actually a bit of a down year for league-winning waiver adds, but there were still plenty of needle-movers, including Jordan Mason, Bo Nix, Sam Darnold, Jauan Jennings, Wan’Dale Robinson and Zach Ertz, as well as Baker Mayfield (47.0% of teams with him on their roster made the playoffs), Jonnu Smith (42.7%) and Tyrone Tracy Jr. (41.8%). Some of you also scooped up Chase Brown (48.5%) following his extremely slow start to the season. It’s those types of players who give you a gigantic edge in your league, and you’re simply playing at a disadvantage if you fail to remain active on waivers.

Besides the common-sense “drop my worst player and add the best available player” waiver strategy, one trick you can use during the season is to drop your kicker and/or D/ST and instead hold a skill position player for a few extra days. In fact, as someone who often streams both positions, I’ll just drop my kicker and D/ST when the week is complete so they are added to the available player pool, which slightly increases my chances of getting who I want off the wire.

All of ESPN. All in one place.

Watch your favorite events in the newly enhanced ESPN App. Learn more about what plan is right for you. Sign Up Now

For example, let’s say I use the Denver Broncos D/ST in Weeks 1-2 against the Tennessee Titans and Indianapolis Colts this season but have no interest in using it against the Los Angeles Chargers, Cincinnati Bengals and Philadelphia Eagles the following three weeks. I’ll cut bait right away on Tuesday. This way, one of my leaguemates might place a claim on the Broncos D/ST instead of a free agent I have on my radar.

In this scenario, unless there is an available D/ST with a terrific short-term matchup, I’d likely use the roster spot on a skill position player in an uncertain situation heading into the week. Let’s say Saquon Barkley hurt his toe two days earlier and is questionable for the upcoming week. Instead of grabbing a dime-a-dozen D/ST, I’ll go after backup Will Shipley. If Barkley plays, I just cut Shipley for a defense on Sunday. If Barkley is ruled out, I just found myself a potential starter and can place him in an IR spot (if there is room) or cut someone else for a D/ST. I most certainly use this hack more often with my kicker slot, since we know there is a ton of randomness with that position. As long as you remember to check your lineup Sunday morning, the strategy is a no-brainer.

I recommend this during the period between your draft and the start of the season, too. Even if forced to draft a kicker and D/ST, I’ll just drop them immediately afterward (assuming league rules allow it) and instead grab a high-upside insurance RB or other skill position player to keep rostered until closer to Week 1. There’s little to lose and a lot to gain (speaking as someone who fondly recalls dropping Chris Boswell and adding the legend that is James Robinson in the week leading up to Week 1 back in 2020). By the way, guys like Robinson in 2020 and Kyren Williams in 2023 are not alone: There are players like them available late in drafts or on preseason and early-season waivers every single year. If you’re active, you can butcher your draft and still claw your way to a title.

Final thoughts

Once your draft concludes, be active. Monitor NFL news and be ready to make savvy waiver moves and trade offers to load up your bench with upside. The reality is that you can do it all in 15 or so minutes per week. That might sound overly simplified, but like almost anything else in life, hard work will pay off in the long run.



Source link

September 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Coffee convos, demonic detectives, and cow life simming are part of a pro-Palestine charity bundle coming to Itch.io
Game Updates

Coffee convos, demonic detectives, and cow life simming are part of a pro-Palestine charity bundle coming to Itch.io

by admin August 28, 2025


A bundle of games aiming to raise money to aid the United Nations’ Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in their efforts to help Palestinian refugees is set to go on sale via Itch.io next week. Just over 380 games are part of it, including the likes of Coffee Talk, Lucifer Within Us, and a cow life simulator that features an alligator who’s really into arson.

Organised by Junch and the South East Asian Games for Good initiative, the bundle’s dubbed Play for Peace – Games for Palestine. It’s taken over 10 months to come together. The result’s a 382-game strong bundle that includes a huge variety of creations that contain not a whiff of AI or NFTs.

“The people of Palestine continue to be subjected to hostility, destruction of homes, critical infrastructure, and devastasting loss of lives,” reads the Play for Peace bundle’s freshly-published Itch listing. “We, as a games community, will bring together our incredible games from across the world, for a charity bundle with proceeds that go directly to Palestine aid and relief.

“We are partnering with UNRWA USA, who will receive the funds and grant them to UNRWA (UN agency) in support of direct humanitarian aid in Palestine. Together, the game dev community and UNRWA USA will raise awareness on the situation in Gaza, spotlight our communities, and the devs participating in this charity drive.”

In addition to the games I mentioned in the intro – the cow life sim’s definitely worth checking out – the bundle includes everything from lesbian devil-hunting action, courtesy of fittingly-named boss rusher Bossgame, to tabletop adventures like Stirring the Hornet’s Nest at Het Thamsya. A couple of others that’ve caught me eye are Street Cleaning Day: Rat’s Revenge, a wave-shooter about a rodent fending off soapy bubbles, and I Get This Call Every Day.

The latter’s a point-and-click simulation of its creator’s experience working in a call centre, featuring “terrible art [which] conveys a terrible work environment” and the choice of whether to “lose politely or lose spectacularly”.

We’re excited to announce the Games for Palestine charity page is now LIVE on Itch.

Over 300+ games with proceeds going to UNRWA USA in support of Gaza relief. Thank you to everyone for your support. The bundle launches on Sept 2nd 9am PST.

Link: https://t.co/QfK0ekUjAd pic.twitter.com/KIaZNj2f1P

— SE Asian Games for Good (@seagamesforgood) August 27, 2025

To see this content please enable targeting cookies.

Manage cookie settings

If that brutal reality isn’t for you, there’s also Fit For a King, a Henry VIII simulator that offers the chance to marry everything, execute everything, and/or spend it all. “While Fit For A King could have been full of lazy, bargain bin Blackadder jokes, it’s got a wonderfully dadaist edge to its humour instead, and an indefinable atmosphere I could only call early 2000s web game energy,” former RPSer Nate Crowley wrote of that one. Or, there’s Virtua Blinds, which looks like it could be the greatest thing I’ve never played.

As the bundle’s curators wrote: “All of it represents the creative expression of artists and developers who want to help raise money through their art for one of the most important causes of our time – freedom and the ending of genocide in Palestine.” The Play for Peace – Games for Palestine bundle will be on sale from 5PM BST/12PM ET/9AMPT/6PM CEST on September 2nd, and will cost $8.





Source link

August 28, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Part of the team behind EA's cancelled Black Panther game joins Wizards of the Coast
Esports

Part of the team behind EA’s cancelled Black Panther game joins Wizards of the Coast

by admin August 27, 2025


Speaking to GamesIndustry.biz, Wizards of the Coast president John Hight has revealed that a team of developers that were formerly working on EA’s cancelled Black Panther game has joined the company to work on a new title.

The team is led by veteran creative director Michael de Plater, who was a key figure at Monolith Productions, and director of 2014’s Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor. He previously worked on games like Tom Clancy’s EndWar and Rome: Total War.

Hight says that along with de Plater, Wizards of the Coast has welcomed a number of other developers from Cliffhanger Games, the EA subsidiary that was revealed in 2023 to be working on Black Panther. But the project was cancelled and the studio shuttered in May this year.

“We were actually able to bring him and 14 key people that he’s worked with there – and many of them at Monolith – to incubate a new game for us,” says Hight.

“He’ll be starting concept development on something very cool and new – and that part I can’t tell you yet.”

The new project is still in the early design phases. “We want to give him time,” Hight says about de Plater’s work on the new title. “We’ll go through a fairly lengthy concept process where they’re going to look at a lot of different ideas.”

Hight says it will be a similar process to what Wizards of the Coast has recently been doing with Stig Asmussen, the director of Star Wars Jedi: Survivor. The company is working with Asmussen’s new studio, Giant Skull, on an unannounced title.

“We’re super excited to have him as part of the team,” says Hight about de Plater’s arrival, adding that at some point de Plater will be “rooming with all of us” in the Seattle area, home of the Wizards of the Coast headquarters.



Source link

August 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

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

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

@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