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Hisense 116UX review: a step forward for TV, but at a price that's too premium for most people
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Hisense 116UX review: a step forward for TV, but at a price that’s too premium for most people

by admin October 4, 2025



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Hisense 116UX review: Two minute review

The Hisense 116UX is the brand’s flagship 4K TV, and it introduces RGB mini-LED technology to the world in a 116-inch screen size. Some elements of its picture rival the best TVs, and it has a wide array of features, but its appeal is limited by key shortcomings.

With a launch price of $29,999 / £24,999 / AU$39,999, the Hisense 116UX is an expensive TV that will exceed most budgets. And while it features exciting new RGB mini-LED tech, Hisense will also be introducing RGB mini-LED in 100- and 85-inch models in the future, and more buyers are likely to gravitate to those.

The 116UX’s bold, vibrant colors take mini-LED to the next level. Textures are crisp, and the high brightness gives pictures a strong level of punch. Contrast and black levels are mostly good, but backlight blooming and inconsistent backlight control lead to a clouding effect in some dark scenes that hamper what would otherwise be a remarkable picture. Even with the TV’s large size, viewing angles are limited, with pictures losing contrast when viewed from off-center seats .

A 6.2.2-channel sound system delivers mostly solid performance, with immersive effects, impressive accuracy and clear dialogue. Bass has good impact, but the 116UX’s soundstage isn’t as wide as I’d hoped for. A screen this size deserves one of the best soundbars to match, ideally a premium option like the Samsung HW-Q990F.

The 116UX is great for gaming, with 4K 165Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, ALLM and Dolby Vision gaming all supported across three HDMI 2.1 ports. While its 14.6ms input lag time is higher than the best gaming TVs, its overall gaming performance is good enough for an enjoyable experience on a big screen.

This TV’s high price is hard to ignore, and even though the 116UX features an RGB mini-LED panel and has a gargantuan screen size, you can build a truly great home theater system with some of the best 4K projectors at this price. The 116UX will deliver better value when its price drops, but right now, it’s a big ask.

  • Hisense 116UX RGB-MiniLED TV (HDR) at Amazon for $24,999.99

Hisense 116UX review: Price & release date

(Image credit: Future)

  • Release date: September 2025
  • Price: $29,999 / £24,999 / AU$39,999

The Hisense 116UX, Hisense’s flagship 2025 TV, uses a new RGB mini-LED panel. It sits above the Hisense 110UX, U9Q, U8Q, U7Q and U6Q mini-LED TVs and is priced at $29,999 / £24,999 / AU$39,999.

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Although the 116UX had only been available for a few weeks at the time I reviewed it, the price has dropped to $24,999 in the US. I expect the TV’s price will drop even further over the coming months.

Hisense 116UX review: Specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Screen type

RGB mini-LED

Refresh rate

Up to 165Hz (4K)

HDR support

Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+, HDR10, HLG

Audio support

Dolby Atmos

Smart TV

Google TV (US), VIDAA (UK& Aus)

HDMI ports

3 x HDMI 2.1

Built-in tuner

ATSC 3.0

Hisense 116UX review: Benchmark results

Hisense 116UX review: Features

(Image credit: Future)

  • RGB mini-LED panel
  • Hi-View AI Engine X processor
  • Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ and IMAX Enhanced support

The 116UX features Hisense’s RGB mini-LED panel, which uses RGB mini-LEDs to produce a wider, more refined color gamut. HDR support includes Dolby Vision IQ and HDR10+, as well as the HDR10 and HLG formats. It also supports IMAX Enhanced and Filmmaker Mode.

Hisense’s flagship TV comes equipped with a 6.2.2-channel speaker system, totaling 110W in power. It supports Dolby Atmos, but not DTS. Alongside the usual sound presets – Standard, Movie, Sport – it also has AI sound, which adapts the sound and dialogue based on both the content showing onscreen and the viewing environment.

The 116UX’s gaming features include 4K 165Hz, VRR including AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, Dolby Vision gaming and ALLM support. All features are supported across the TV’s three HDMI 2.1 ports.

Hisense’s smart TV platform varies by region. Google TV is used in the US, while Hisense’s own VIDAA smart TV platform features in the UK and Australia. I reviewed the UK version, so I used VIDAA, which has access to popular streaming services like Netflix and Prime Video, and also UK apps such as BBC iPlayer and ITVX. If you want a review of the Google TV smart TV platform, check out our Hisense U8Q review.

Hisense 116UX review: Picture quality

Color is where the Hisense 116UX really shines, thanks to its RGB mini-LED panel (Image credit: Disney / Future)

  • High brightness and brilliant color
  • Refined detail
  • Black uniformity issues

The 116UX’s peak HDR brightness hit 5,441 nits and fullscreen HDR brightness was 1,090 nits, with both measured in Filmmaker Mode. That peak brightness result is over twice what I measured on the Hisense 110UX, a TV that uses a standard mini-LED panel.

The 116UX’s measured HDR color gamut covered 99.3% of the DCI-P3 color space, which is an excellent result for a mini-LED TV. Its BT.2020 color gamut coverage was even more impressive at 92.64%, which is the highest amount we’ve measured on a TV to date.

I first started my testing with some SDR content, beginning with an HD stream of Fight Club on Disney+. I chose Filmmaker Mode but set brightness and local dimming to medium as the picture was too dim at the default settings. I was impressed by the 116UX’s effective upscaling of textures, which gave the picture a crisper look. Even at a 116-inch size, the image was clean. Lower resolution content on YouTube didn’t fare as well, with the image looking blocky on the large screen.

Color is where the 116UX shines – literally. Watching Elemental on Disney Plus in Dolby Vision IQ picture mode, reds and oranges were vibrant and punchy, with the 116UX’s brightness adding real pop in a scene where Ember makes a vase. In Wicked on 4K Blu-ray, pink flowers in a tree in the ‘Wizard & I’ scene had a bold look, as did the greens of the Emerald City.

Image 1 of 2

The 116UX sometimes handles dark scenes well (1) but struggles with others (2), even in the same movie, as shown here with Alien: Romulus(Image credit: Future)(Image credit: 20th Century Studios / Future )

As I’ve discovered with most Hisense TVs, motion handling requires a bit of setup. I watched a stream of a soccer game on Prime Video and found that most motion presets worked, but either Standard or Custom, with Blur set to 3 and Judder set to 5, produced the smoothest image. This was also true for movie viewing, as a scene from No Time To Die where a camera pans across a rocky hillside looked much smoother with the above settings.

Textures looked consistently crisp and realistic on the 116UX, with close-up shots of people’s faces showing fine details such as marks or hair. Clothing was also true-to-life and given a 3D look.

Watching black and white scenes from Oppenheimer on the 116UX, whites looked bright and there was a good range of gray tones. Blacks were slightly raised, but they still looked solid. The 116UX also delivered good shadow detail in darker scenes, such as objects against dark walls in a scene where Strauss and Oppenheimer are in an office after their first meeting.

Dark scenes ultimately were a mixed bag on the 116UX. Blacks appeared rich and deep in some instances, such as the Spears & Munsil UHD Benchmark 4K Blu-ray’s demo footage, but they came across as more of a dark gray in movie scenes from The Batman and Alien: Romulus. While contrast was also strong in these movies, there was a clouding effect across the screen in dark sections of the image. Strangely, one exterior space shot in Alien: Romulus demonstrated good accuracy in the blacks, but another in a dark tunnel revealed the clouding effect at its worst.

The 116UX also demonstrated some backlight blooming around bright objects against dark backgrounds when viewed from off-center. Plus, the clouding issue became more apparent when viewing from more extreme angles.

I reached out to Hisense regarding dark scene viewing and the clouding effect and it said it was aware of and looking into it, but couldn’t provide a fix at this time. If there are any updates, I’ll be sure to add them to this review.

  • Picture quality score: 4 / 5

Hisense 116UX review: Sound quality

The 116UX delivers decent built-in sound, but overall a screen like this deserves a soundbar to match (Image credit: Future)

  • 6.2.2-channel speaker array
  • Clear, expansive, accurate sound
  • Only average soundstage

The 116UX comes with a built-in 6.2.2-channel, 110W Devialet sound system that supports Dolby Atmos, but not DTS. It has subwoofers built into the rear of the screen, with two speakers running down each side of its frame and height speakers positioned on the top of the TV.

Watching the Batmobile chase scene from The Batman, the 116UX accurately connected the sound to the action on screen. The overall sound was punchy with clear dialogue. The 116UX’s sound was also immersive at times, going beyond the borders of the screen and making Dolby Atmos effects, such as rain in The Batman, feel as if they’re overhead.

While the 116UX’s built-in sound system is good, at times it felt restrained. Bass in particular lacked fullness. And while there was some suggestion of surround effects, I expected a sound system like this to produce a wider soundstage.

Some people will be happy with the 116UX’s sound, but I feel it deserves a sound system to match its gargantuan, cinematic picture.

  • Sound quality score: 4 / 5

Hisense 116UX review: Design

Image 1 of 2

The 116UX uses metal feet to support its heavy weight (Image credit: Future)But the 116UX is surprisingly thin despite is large size(Image credit: Future)

  • Sleek, modern design
  • Weighty and cumbersome
  • Basic support feet

At 116 inches, the 116UX requires a large space. Its big screen will be too cumbersome for most living rooms and, unlike retractable projector screens of a similar size, it will dominate a space.

Hisense has done its best to make the 116UX appear as sleek as possible while still housing a substantial built-in sound system. Its frame is trim, and it’s made of a premium-looking black metal. As a result, the 116UX is an incredibly weighty 239lbs (108kg), meaning you’ll need to carefully consider installation, although there are two carry handles on the rear. The TV is supported by two metal feet, which, although plain, are expected for a TV this size.

The 116UX comes with Hisense’s solar remote, which is reminiscent of Samsung’s SolarCell remote and can be charged using the rear solar panel or by USB-C. It has a nice design with a burnished steel finish and feels more premium than Hisense’s standard TV remotes.

Hisense 116UX review: Smart TV & menus

VIDAA (Hisense’s smart TV platform in the UK) has plenty of picture settings and good app access (Image credit: Future)

  • Google TV (US), VIDAA (UK & Australia)
  • Good number of picture settings
  • Performance can lag at times

Like all Hisense TVs, the 116UX’s smart TV platform will be different based on your region. In the US, it uses Google TV, and in the UK and Australia, it uses Hisense’s own VIDAA smart TV platform. I reviewed the 116UX in the UK, so I will be focusing on VIDAA. Check out our Hisense U8Q review to read about a Google TV Hisense model.

VIDAA has access to all major streaming services such as Netflix and Prime Video, and all UK-based streaming services such as BBC iPlayer and ITVX. It also supports Freely, a service in which you can watch live TV over Wi-Fi with no need for an antenna or satellite connection.

There are a good number of picture settings on the 116UX. VIDAA’s overall look is plain and not as user-friendly as LG’s webOS, and the 116UX’s overall performance during navigation suffered from lag on occasion. VIDAA could do with a visual overhaul, as it does look dated in some of its menus.

Hisense 116UX review: Gaming

The Hisense 116UX has great gaming features and impressive picture quality for gaming (Image credit: Future)

  • 4K 165Hz, AMD FreeSync Premium
  • 14.6ms input lag
  • Three HDMI 2.1 ports

The 116UX has impressive gaming features, such as 4K 165Hz, VRR including AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, ALLM and Dolby Vision gaming, and these are all supported on three HDMI 2.1 ports. There is also a 288Hz game booster mode for PC gaming and a Game Board pop-up menu that displays useful information such as frame rate and VRR, as well as settings that can be adjusted, such as Dark Detail.

Gaming performance on the 116UX is generally smooth and responsive. Playing a demo of Dynasty Warriors: Origins on PlayStation 5, the action felt fast-paced and chaotic as expected at both 60Hz and 120Hz. I noticed during gameplay that the frame rate varied a lot in the 120Hz Performance mode, but I chalked this up to the game itself, due to its rendering of many enemies on screen.

The 116UX’s measured input lag is 14.6ms, which is higher than rivals like Samsung and TCL, but still under the 15ms threshold most gamers look for.

Hisense 116UX review: Value

The Hisense 110UXN comes with Hisense’s premium remote, which has both a USB-C port and a solar cell on the bottom rear for charging (Image credit: Future)

  • Expensive
  • Similarly priced to big-screen OLED TVs
  • Much pricier than the 110-inch 110UX

At $29,999 / £24,999 / AU$39,999, the Hisense 116UX is a pricey, premium TV. It may come with an exciting, new RGB mini-LED panel that produces superb brightness and color, but that’s still a lofty price, even for a TV this feature-packed.

At this price range, you can pick up some of the best projectors on the market, such as the JVC DLA-NZ800 ($15,999 / £15,999 / AU$24,999). It won’t have the 116UX’s brightness, but it will still produce an excellent picture. Plus, you can build an entire home theater system around it with the same budget.

The 116UX is also much pricier than the step-down 110UX ($14,999 / £18,999 / AU$24,999), and while it delivers better performance and picture quality, that’s still a significant price gap.

Should you buy the Hisense 116UX?

The Hisense 110UXN comes at a premium price that most won’t be able to afford (Image credit: Future)Swipe to scroll horizontallyHisense 110UXN

Attributes

Notes

Rating

Features

RGB mini-LED panel with good amount of smart and gaming features

4.5/5

Picture quality

Superb color reproduction, brightness and realistic textures, but dark scene viewing can be an issue

4/5

Sound quality

Punchy, precise sound system with decent bass, but sound feels narrow at times

4/5

Design

Trim design considering size, and feels sturdy as well

4/5

Smart TV and menus

VIDAA has good number of picture settings and apps, but looks dated

4/5

Gaming

Great array of gaming features including 165Hz and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro and 3 HDMI 2.1 ports

4.5/5

Value

An exciting step forward for mini-LED, but expensive price means it remains exclusive

3/5

Buy it if…

Don’t buy it if…

Also consider

Swipe to scroll horizontallyHeader Cell – Column 0

Hisense 116UX

Hisense 110UXN

Samsung QN90F (65-inch)

Hisense U8QG (65-inch)

Price

$24,999 / £24,999 / AU$34,999

$14,999 / £19,999 / around AU$24,300

$2,499.99 / £2,499 / AU$3,499

$2,199 / £2,199 / AU$2,999

Screen type

RGB Mini-LED

Mini-LED

Mini-LED

Mini-LED

Refresh rate

120Hz (up to 165Hz)

120Hz (up to 144Hz)

120Hz (up to 144Hz)

120Hz (up to 144HZ)

HDR support

Dolby Vision/HDR10+/HDR10/HLG

Dolby Vision IQ/HDR10/HLG/HDR10+

HDR10+/HDR10/HLG

Dolby Vision/HDR10+/HDR10/HLG

Smart TV

Google TV (US), VIDAA (UK/Aus)

Google TV (US/Aus), VIDAA (UK)

Tizen

Google TV (US/Aus), VIDAA (UK)

HDMI ports

3 x HDMI 2.1

4 (2x HDMI 2.1)

4 x HDMI 2.1

3 x HDMI 2.1

How I tested the Hisense 116UX

(Image credit: Future)

  • Tested in light controlled testing room
  • Tested SDR and HDR sources for picture quality

I tested the Hisense 116UX in a light-controlled demo room at Hisense Europe HQ in Leeds, England.

I first established which picture modes I would use for my testing with some casual viewing. For my critical viewing, I used several reference scenes from both SDR (broadcast TV and streaming) and HDR sources (4K Blu-ray and streaming). I tested the 116UX’s picture for brightness, color, shadow detail and contrast, screen uniformity, upscaling and motion. I also used these same sources to test the UX116’s audio performance. To play 4K Blu-rays, I used the Panasonic DP-UB820 4K Blu-ray player.

I also tested gaming performance and features using a PlayStation 5.

Measurements for the Hisense 116UX were taken by my colleague Matthew Murray, Head of Testing at Future, at a separate event in the US.

These tests included peak (10% window) and fullscreen (100%) SDR and HDR brightness, measured on a white window test pattern.

HDR color gamut was also measured, examining the DCI-P3 and BT.2020 color spaces. Color and grayscal accuracy were measured using Delta-E values (the margin for error between the test pattern signal and what’s shown on screen).

Finally, the TV’s input lag was measured using a Leo Bodnar 4K HDMI Input Lag Tester.

For a more detailed explanation of how we test TVs at TechRadar, check out the link.

Hisense 116UX RGB-MiniLED TV: Price Comparison



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October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Actors strike
Gaming Gear

Tilly Norwood is no more an actress than ChatGPT is a person, and I’m tired of people getting this wrong

by admin October 3, 2025



The conversation in a recent TV segment was about Sora 2, a remarkable new social media platform OpenAI’s latest Sora model at its heart. It gives regular people the power to put themselves in AI videos along with their friends, often doing fantastic and unimaginable things.

Its existence prompted me to proclaim, tongue-in-cheek, “Nothing is real!” and that’s when the discussion turned to Tilly Norwood, the would-be “AI actress”.

The TV anchor I was speaking to could be forgiven for casually referring to Tilly as an ‘actress.’ After all, that’s Tilly’s description on her Instagram page: “Actress (aspiring).” But I’d been reading the criticism from real actors – people who fought with their unions to protect against just this type of AI incursion – and so I felt the need to interject, “Tilly Norwood is a thing, an it, not an actress.”


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The conversation reminded me of how people often anthropomorphize robots, calling them “he” and “she” because they have a little bit of autonomy and react to their world, as if not a person, at least as a pet might do. That habit has, in recent years, carried over to chatbots, where, depending on the voice, people refer to Gemini or ChatGPT as “he” or “she”.

Even without faces, if something can converse with us, we imbue it with a little bit of humanity, even though we know it has none.

The advent of generative images and, especially, video, coupled with synced audio, has made this issue exponentially worse, and not just because people can confuse AI-generated video with the real thing, but because creators like Tilly Norwood and Particle6 CEO Eline Van de Velden tell us they are equivalent to the real thing.

When Van der Velden’s company unveiled Tilly back in September, it stated that it was creating AI “artists.” Van der Velden enthused to AIBusiness, “We believe that the next generation of cultural icons will be synthetic: stars who never tire, never age, and can interact with their fans.”

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It’s no wonder people, especially artists, actors, and actresses, are freaking out. Particle6 noted that Tilly was getting attention from actual talent agents, based in part on the AI-generated clips posted on her Instagram, where she has 52,000 followers.

Van der Velden has somewhat backpeddled on her excitement, posting earlier this week on Tilly’s Instagram that Tilly Norwood “is not a replacement for a human being but a creative work – a piece of art.”

What was or is Tilly?

That sounds like revisionist history to me. This was not some thought experiment. I think that AI companies (and studios) are very interested in generative bespoke characters that do not resemble anyone living or dead, that they can freely control and use in everything from commercials and print work to film.


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It will be, in the end, no different than CGI generating, say, Woody and Buzz for Toy Story, but perhaps without the benefit of a gifted voice actor behind them.

Ultimately, though, even if Tilly Norwood or some other AI does go on to star in a hit film or TV series, that will only make them popular but still not human.

Tilly Norwood will never be an actress, a person, or a human being. It will always be a thing, built out of bits, bytes, algorithms, and massively intelligent AI. Eventually, we may not be able to tell the difference between a Julia Roberts and a Tilly Norwood on screen, but only one of them will know they are real.

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October 3, 2025 0 comments
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The dog covered in blood in Cujo.
Esports

Stephen King has a message for people who cry about spoilers

by admin October 2, 2025



Stephen King has addressed the thorny subject of spoilers in a new essay, stating that he gets “impatient” with the concept, and bemoaning “the cry of spoilt people.”

It’s been a big year for Stephen King fans, as not only has he published new Holly Gibney novel ‘Never Flinch,’ but the master of horror has also had multiple movies in cinemas.

The Monkey got 2025 off to a twisted start, while Life of Chuck was a more life-affirming affair when it released during the summer. More recently The Long Walk made us cry, while The Running Man should deliver dystopian action and excitement when it hit screens in November.

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Those stories – like much of his work – feature twist and turns, and thanks to a new opinion piece, we now know that he isn’t bothered about such key moments being spoiled.

Stephen King claims “you can rarely spoil a good story”

Universal PicturesThe film version of Daphne du Maurier’s The Birds.

A new collection of Daphne du Maurier stories – titled ‘After Midnight: Thirteen Chilling Tales’ – hit shelves this week, featuring an introduction by Stephen King.

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To coincide with the release, King wrote a piece for The Guardian in which he celebrates the Rebecca author’s “unsettling genius,” stating that ” the line-by-line quality of Du Maurier’s writing is astonishing, given how prolific she was: 17 novels, six biographies, three plays and dozens of short stories.”

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He also compares the ending of The Birds movie to Du Maurier’s short story, which prompts a pretty controversial opinion from King about spoilers.

“I am impatient with the idea of ‘spoilers,’ a term that’s come into vogue along with other unpleasant side-effects of the internet in general and social media in particular,” he writes. “I find ‘You spoiled it!’ to be, typically, the cry of spoilt people. I’d argue you can rarely spoil a good story, because the joy is in the journey rather than the arrival.”

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Warner Bros.Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption movie.

Which is pretty shocking from a man whose work features twists that frequently elevate the material, most notably the big surprise at the end of ‘Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption’ – a story that’s power would be greatly diminished if readers knew what was coming.

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But King then does something of an about-turn when it comes to the concept of spoilers by adding that “Du Maurier’s stories are a notable exception to that rule. To talk about any of them at length would destroy their effect.” Meaning that maybe he’s against spoilers after all!

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The Long Walk is in cinemas now, The Running Man hits screens on November 14, 2025, and you can head here for our list of best Stephen King movies ever.



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October 2, 2025 0 comments
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BTC Longs on Bitfinex Rise 20%, Prices Drop Below 100-Day Average
NFT Gaming

Onchain Asset Management is Booming; Here’s Where People Are Investing

by admin September 25, 2025



Crypto trading firm Keyrock says onchain asset management is having a breakout year.

In a new report, the firm estimated that assets under management (AUM) have surged 118% in 2025 to $35 billion, driven by growth across automated yield vaults, discretionary strategies, structured products and credit.

Keyrock predicts that the sector could nearly double again by 2026, reaching $64 billion under a base case scenario, or as much as $85 billion if this year’s growth momentum continues.

Discretionary strategies were the standout in 2025, up 738% year-to-date, as onchain investing evolves into a credible alternative to traditional finance, the report said.

Keyrock’s report highlighted that three protocols, Morpho, Pendle and Maple, now control 31% of the industry’s AUM, underscoring both scaling leadership and protocol concentration risk.

Yield vaults remain the main entry point for allocators, commanding $18 billion in deposits.

While smaller wallets dominate in number, whales and dolphins provide the overwhelming majority of liquidity, the report noted, contributing 70%–99% of capital across strategies.

Performance has matured, with net returns competitive with traditional markets but no longer uniformly higher, the firm said. Automated yield vaults outperformed their TradFi peers by roughly 186 basis points after fees, while structured products and onchain credit lagged slightly once costs were factored in.

Discretionary strategies delivered hedge fund-like results with the added benefits of liquidity and transparency, the report added.

The Brussels-based firm recently expanded into asset and wealth management with the acquisition of Turing Capital, a Luxembourg-registered fund manager.

Read more: Crypto Trading Firm Keyrock Buys Luxembourg’s Turing Capital in Asset Management Push



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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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silicon valley
Crypto Trends

Thanks to Bitcoin 40% More People are Millionaires as Crypto Market Hits $3.3 Trillion

by admin September 24, 2025



The global population of crypto millionaires has reached 241,700, up 40% in the past year, according to the Crypto Wealth Report 2025 by Henley & Partners.

The surge coincides with a broader rally that lifted total digital asset market capitalization to $3.3 trillion in June, a 45% increase year-on-year, the report, featuring data from global wealth intelligence firm New World Wealth, said.

Bitcoin remains the main driver of wealth creation in the sector.

Holders with portfolios above $1 million in BTC climbed 70% to 145,100 year-over-year. At the upper end, 450 individuals now hold at least $100 million in crypto, while 36 billionaires control even larger stakes.

The report points to a shift in how digital assets are used, with Bitcoin increasingly treated as collateral rather than a speculative play. This evolution, observers say, is transforming the token into the base layer of a parallel financial system.

“Bitcoin is becoming the foundation of a parallel financial system, where [it] is not merely an investment for speculation on fiat price appreciation, but the base currency for accumulating wealth.” Philipp A. Baumann, founder of Z22 Technologies, said in the report.

Bordeless wealth

Crypto’s decentralized nature is also redrawing patterns of global wealth. Analysts note that investors are pursuing citizenship and residency programs to navigate regulatory uncertainty while securing access to banking and tax-efficient jurisdictions.

Henley’s annual Crypto Adoption Index ranks Singapore, Hong Kong, the U.S., Switzerland, and the UAE as the top five destinations for digital asset investors.

With over $14 trillion in wealth moving across borders last year, the report argues that crypto’s portability—secured by little more than a seed phrase—marks a fundamental break from centuries of place-based financial systems.

“Today, cryptocurrency has made geography optional — with nothing more than 12 memorized words, an individual can secure a billion dollars in Bitcoin, instantly accessible from Zurich or Zhengzhou alike,” said Dominic Volek, Group Head of Private Clients at Henley & Partners.



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September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Scientists have worked out why some people invert video game controls, so which side is correct?
Game Reviews

Scientists have worked out why some people invert video game controls, so which side is correct?

by admin September 19, 2025


When you push the right controller stick forwards, do you expect a game camera to move up or down? Whether players use “normal” or “inverted” camera controls has long been a point of debate.

Now, though, it’s part of a scientific study. As reported by The Guardian, Dr Jennifer Corbett and Dr Jaap Munneke at Brunel University London initiated a study during lockdown into the neuroscience of human-computer interactions using remote subjects, speaking with players to research controller inversion.

The duo have now published their findings in their paper “Why axis inversion? Optimising interactions between users, interfaces, and visual displays in 3D environments”. And the results are all about how your brain perceives objects in 3D space.

“Many people told us that playing a flight simulator, using a certain type of console, or the first game they played were the reasons they preferred to invert or not,” said Corbett. “Many also said they switched preferences over time. We added a whole new section to the study based on all this feedback.”

Participants were given a questionnaire and tasked with experiments around spatial awareness. “They had to mentally rotate random shapes, take on the perspective of an ‘avatar’ object in a picture, determine which way something was tilted in differently tilted backgrounds, and overcome the typical ‘Simon effect’ where it’s harder to respond when a target is on the opposite v the same side of the screen as the response button,” Corbett explained.

“It turns out the most predictive out of all the factors we measured was how quickly gamers could mentally rotate things and overcome the Simon effect. The faster they were, the less likely they were to invert.”

Yet while inverted players were the slowest on the tasks, they were also more accurate.

Ultimately, while players think they choose controls based on their first exposure, it’s more likely due to your brain’s perception of objects in 3D space.

Corbett even suggested players should try the opposite way to what they’re used to. “The most surprising finding for gamers [who don’t invert] is that they might perform better if they practised with an inverted control scheme,” said Corbett. “Maybe not, but given our findings, it’s definitely worth a shot because it could dramatically improve competitive game play!”

What’s more, the research could have implications outside of gaming. “This work opened our eyes to the huge potential that optimising inversion settings has for advancing human-machine teaming,” says Corbett. “So many technologies are pairing humans with AI and other machines to augment what we can do alone. Understanding how a given individual best performs with a certain setup (controller configuration, screen placement, whether they are trying to hit a target or avoid an obstacle) can allow for much smoother interactions between humans and machines in lots of scenarios from partnering with an AI player to defeat a boss, to preventing damage to delicate internal tissue while performing a complicated laparoscopic surgery.”

Personally, inverting camera controls is the first thing I do when booting up a new game. I always presumed it’s because that’s how I learned to play as a kid – just as Corbett said – but perhaps it’s actually my brain after all.

Are you an inverter or non-inverter for gaming controls? Let us know in the comments.



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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Escape From Tarkov's Steam release comes with a snag for people who already own it
Game Updates

Escape From Tarkov’s Steam release comes with a snag for people who already own it

by admin September 18, 2025



It’s that time of the year folks. The weather’s getting colder, the days are getting shorter, and Escape From Tarkov is getting Tweeted and Skeeted about again because of a controversial decision. This time, it’s because the game is coming to Steam, which in and of itself is a perfectly fine, perhaps even smart thing to do. The thing that’s being called into question however, is the answer to a question on the Steam release’s FAQ page about whether or not you’ll have to buy it again.


“To play Escape from Tarkov through Steam, you must purchase any edition of the game on Steam,” the FAQ page explains. “You can then link your existing Battlestate Games account with an active copy of the game to your Steam profile. If the editions differ, it will automatically use the higher edition of the two when launching the game through Steam.”


It then provides an example, noting that if you buy the standard edition on Steam, but your Battlestate Games account has the Unheard Edition, that’s the one you’ll be able to play on Steam. That’s… something? I just can’t see any particular reason you’d want to buy the game again aside from Steam Deck functionality, except the FAQ also notes that “Battlestate Games [have] no plans to support a version of the game for Steam Deck,” so you can throw that reason out of the window. There will be Steam achievements if that’s something you care about?


All of your character progress will carry over to the Steam version of the game as well, once you’ve linked your Battlestate Games account, and you’ll still be playing on the same servers as people who bought the game on its official website.


I have no idea how easy it would be to guarantee every single person who owns the game a copy on Steam as well, but it still feels like an odd choice in general. In any case, after being in early access for close to a decade, the full version of the game launches in a couple months’ time on November 15th.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Two women use their smartphones while wearing kimono in Japan.
Esports

Japan sets new record with nearly 100,000 people over 100 years old

by admin September 14, 2025



Japan has hit a staggering new milestone, with its government confirming the number of citizens aged 100 or older has climbed to nearly 100,000.

The figure marks the 55th consecutive year that Japan has broken its own record for centenarians, driven by the country’s high life expectancy and long-standing reputation as home to the world’s oldest living people. In the 1960s, only 153 Japanese citizens were aged 100 or older, now that number is 99,763.

Women account for an overwhelming 88% of the total, with experts pointing to low obesity rates, healthier diets rich in fish and vegetables, and daily physical routines like Radio Taiso group exercise as major factors. The oldest living person in Japan is Shigeko Kagawa, 114, while Kiyotaka Mizuno, 111, is the country’s oldest man.

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Japanese centenarian stats released ahead of Elderly Day

The announcement comes ahead of Japan’s Elderly Day on September 15, a national holiday where new centenarians receive a congratulatory letter and silver cup from the prime minister. This year alone, more than 52,000 people became eligible for the tradition.

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Japan’s centenarian population has grown steadily since the government began tracking it in 1963, when the count was just over 150. That rose to 1,000 in 1981, 10,000 by 1998, and now stands just short of 100,000.

While some studies question whether global centenarian figures are fully accurate, Japan’s record underscores its status as the world’s fastest-aging society, and shows no signs of slowing down.

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September 14, 2025 0 comments
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microsoft toilet
Esports

Public toilets in China are making people watch ads for toilet paper

by admin September 12, 2025



China’s latest “smart” public toilet upgrade has gone viral, and it might be the most dystopian one yet.

Clips circulating across Chinese social media show new dispensers in the country that only release toilet paper if you watch an advertisement or pay a small fee.

In a viral video shared by China Insider, a woman is seen scanning a QR code with her phone and being forced to view an ad before the machine finally spits out a strip of paper.

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According to the outlet, users can either watch an ad or pay 0.5 yuan (about $0.07) per strip. Officials claim the system was introduced to reduce waste, claiming that some people had been taking excessive amounts of free toilet paper.

New toilets make users watch ads to get toilet paper

This isn’t the first time China’s bathrooms have made headlines. Back in 2017, facial recognition dispensers were installed at tourist spots, rationing out one 60-centimeter strip per scan every nine minutes.

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By 2019, new dispensers extended the wait to ten minutes per person.

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Like most ad-based systems, the reaction has been overwhelmingly negative. “I’m walking with my own paper everywhere just in case,” one user wrote. Another remarked, “China is more capitalistic than USA.”

“Ok, this is the first actually dystopian thing I have seen,” someone else said.

Others suggested just watching the ad while doing your business to get some “entertainment” while on the can.

There’s also one pretty big flaw: if someone’s phone is dead or they don’t have spare change, they could have a really gross situation on their hands – literally.

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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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A party of runescape adventurers
Gaming Gear

In tribute to a player’s departed baby son, Old School RuneScape players turn out in ‘hundreds’ to pay respects to his namesake: ‘It was so overwhelming seeing so many people at Zeke’s shop’

by admin September 10, 2025



MMOs tend to function, more or less, as enormous mechanisms for competition. PvP, being the first to a particular raid, pulling off troubling works of deception in EVE Online—this is what I associate with the phrase ‘massively multiplayer’. But sometimes, the stars align and players come together to do something truly nice for each other.

A Reddit user and Old School RuneScape player going by Gr3g1n4t0r posted to the game’s community subreddit yesterday that it had “been a year since my son, Zeke, has passed away.” The player’s son had been born prematurely, but “held on for almost 4 months until he sadly passed away.”

To pay tribute and mark a year since their son’s passing, the player announced they would be making a trip to see Zeke, owner of the store Zeke’s Superior Scimitars, in World 388 shortly after the post went up.


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And then, well, you can probably guess what happened next: players turned out in impromptu throngs to join Gr3g1n4t0r in their tribute to their child.

Numerous screenshots posted to Reddit show great crowds of people gathered around Zeke’s store using the Redemption prayer—which triggers a large green heart to manifest above your avatar’s head. Meanwhile, chat abounded with messages like “Hell yeah Zeke lives on,” and “Here for you and Zeke <3”. Even a Jagex staff member—Mod Sarnie—turned up.

Thank you guys for honoring our Zeke from r/2007scape

“Thank you for hosting,” wrote another player on Reddit. “Hundreds of people came to support your beautiful tribute. My condolences, and I hope this community brought you some happiness.”

In a post after the event, Gr3g1n4t0r wrote their thanks: “Thank you to everyone who saw the post and paid their respect. It was so overwhelming seeing so many people at Zeke’s shop. It was so nice to hear your stories as well. We have such an incredible community with the biggest hearts.”

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

In a separate post, they wrote “The community is the best in the world. Love you Zeke ❤️”.



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September 10, 2025 0 comments
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