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

replace

Fantasy football free agent pickups: Daniel Jones among top options to replace injured QBs
Esports

Fantasy football free agent pickups: Daniel Jones among top options to replace injured QBs

by admin September 16, 2025


  • Eric KarabellSep 15, 2025, 03:18 PM ET

    Close

      Eric Karabell is a senior writer for fantasy baseball, football and basketball at ESPN. Eric is a charter member of FSWA Hall of Fame and author of “The Best Philadelphia Sports Arguments”.

The second Sunday of the NFL season was kinder to fantasy football managers than the first, with six players surpassing 30 PPR points, led by three of the top wide receivers in the sport.

Well, it was kinder unless you are one who relies on Cincinnati Bengals QB Joe Burrow. While seven games featured 50 or more combined points (entering Monday night) and individual scoring was abundant, the long-term absence of last season’s No. 3 fantasy scorer among quarterbacks should have the most lingering effects to fantasy managers.

Unfortunately, the bad quarterback news isn’t limited to Burrow. New York Jets dual threat Justin Fields is in the concussion protocol and could miss Sunday’s road game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers; Washington Commanders star Jayden Daniels is dealing with a knee injury and is uncertain for Sunday against the Las Vegas Raiders; and Minnesota Vikings starter J.J. McCarthy is dealing with an ankle injury and not expected to play against the Bengals on Sunday.

Play the No. 1 fantasy game

The season has kicked off but there’s still time to start fresh with a 0-0 record. Create a league with friends and family, or join a public league. Your championship run starts today! Sign Up Now >>

Each Monday, before the current NFL week ends, we will identify players available in at least 50% of ESPN standard leagues worthy of your attention, from standard formats to deeper options. The NFL is a weekly league, and player valuation and roles seldom remain stagnant. It does not matter how you acquire players for your fantasy rosters, just that you get them.

Quarterback

Jake Browning, Cincinnati Bengals (rostered in 0.0% of ESPN leagues): We start with this career backup, but many fantasy managers can do better in single-QB formats. Browning, 29, made seven starts during the 2023 season, and he played capably, averaging 20 fantasy points per game. Burrow (toe) is expected to miss three months. Browning scored 17.74 points in Sunday’s win over the Jacksonville Jaguars, though that included three interceptions. He gets to throw to excellent WRs Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, and RB Chase Brown isn’t so bad, either. Still, he may be more for the superflex/2QB community. The Bengals play challenging opponents in Minnesota and Denver the next two weeks.

Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Rams (33.5%): If you’re going to lose a fantasy star in a standard league, let it be a quarterback. There is depth here. For example, while Stafford hasn’t registered a top-10 fantasy week yet, scoring 13.6 points against the Houston Texans in Week 1 and 17.32 Sunday against the Tennessee Titans, he is a solid player and far too available. He is playing through a back injury, but he is playing. Let him represent, for this space, numerous veteran passers that deserve streaming attention over Browning. The Rams play a revenge game (from last season’s playoffs) in Philadelphia this week, but Stafford threw for 324 yards and two scores there in January. He shouldn’t be overwhelmed.

Daniel Jones is second to only Lamar Jackson in total fantasy points this season, and he has a friendly matchup with the Titans in Week 3. Christine Tannous-USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

Daniel Jones, Indianapolis Colts (21.2%): Fantasy managers may not have bought into his Week 1 performance, when he ran for a pair of touchdowns. They wanted to see more in Week 2 against the Denver Broncos. Jones topped 20 points again, scoring his third rushing touchdown, but he also passed for 316 yards. The Colts play the Tennessee Titans in Week 3, and that is an attractive matchup. Jones may not rise all the way past 50% this week, but he appears worth relying on this week.

Mac Jones, San Francisco 49ers (0.6%): Jones filled in capably for starter Brock Purdy (toe), throwing for 279 yards and 3 TDs at New Orleans. Jones is no rookie, and certainly there are talented playmakers (and good coaching) surrounding him. He may be starting in Weeks 3 and 4 at home against the Cardinals and Jaguars. We recommend him over Browning, but then again, Browning should have the starting job for considerably longer, and that is a consideration for desperate fantasy managers, too.

Deep-league options/streamers/random thoughts

Running back

Bhayshul Tuten made the most of his 10 touches Sunday vs. Cincinnati, finishing with 15.4 fantasy points. Ian Johnson/Icon Sportswire

Bhayshul Tuten, Jacksonville Jaguars (40.0%): Starter Travis Etienne Jr. scored 16.9 points on Sunday, handling 16 touches, but the rookie Tuten earned 10, which is quite noteworthy. He turned them into 74 yards and a receiving touchdown, for 15.4 points. Most believe Etienne was the beneficiary of the Tank Bigsby trade to the Philadelphia Eagles, but it is probably the ascending Tuten, who already is quickly approaching flex status.

Tyler Allgeier, Atlanta Falcons (34.1%): Allgeier is probably overqualified to be a backup, but there is no controversy when it comes to star Bijan Robinson. Still, Allgeier topped 600 rushing yards each of the past two seasons, and he should do so again. The Falcons rushed for more than 200 yards in an impressive Sunday night road win in Minnesota. Robinson, of course, led the way. Allgeier did little in Week 1, so fantasy managers moved on. They may move him back to rosters after he earned 17 touches, a touchdown and 15.0 points.

Deep-league options/streamers/random thoughts

  • Rams backup Blake Corum (5.3%) turned one of his five touches from Sunday into a touchdown, and thus 10.4 points. Ho hum, but there really aren’t enough relevant running backs available in 50% of leagues to feature here. Many fantasy managers likely rely on a wide receiver (or even a tight end) in their flex position. Corum may become a star at some point if Kyren Williams gets hurt, but Williams is not hurt.

  • Pittsburgh Steelers backup Kenneth Gainwell (10%) gained marginally better than he did in Week 1, but still, 59 yards on 20 touches over two games are not so much. Gainwell was among the most-added running backs entering Week 2, but it is tough to make a case for him, or any other available running backs before the bye weeks.

Wide receiver

Editor’s Picks

1 Related

Romeo Doubs, Green Bay Packers (20.3%): Doubs presumably moves up a notch in the hierarchy after starter Jayden Reed fractured his collarbone last Thursday. The problem with the hierarchy is that it is possible no Packers WR breaks out of a solid, deep rotation, especially when RB Josh Jacobs earns massive volume, and TE Tucker Kraft boasts 140 receiving yards in two games. Doubs caught three passes for 28 yards against the Washington Commanders, one for a touchdown. He is readily available. In any given week, it may be Doubs leading the way, or rookie Matthew Golden, or much like last season when nary a Packer reached 60 receptions or 900 receiving yards, nobody will shine. Drop Reed, who may not play again until November, but do not assume any Packers become WR3 options, or even safe WR4s.

Elic Ayomanor, Tennessee Titans (7.7%): The Stanford rookie has caught six of 13 targets through two weeks, but he scored a touchdown Sunday, and there is room to grow with fellow newcomer QB Cam Ward. Star WR Calvin Ridley has been held to single-digit points in each game. Keep Ridley rostered, of course, but Ayomanor deserves some attention as well.

DeAndre Hopkins, Baltimore Ravens (9.7%): Hopkins has secured shiny touchdown catches in each of the first two weeks, which is great, but it probably is not sustainable unless he sees more volume. Hopkins has only four catches on four targets. That’s it. Why is he listed here? Well, people know his name, and it is possible QB Lamar Jackson will look his way more in the coming weeks. Just don’t assume you have to get Hopkins when Zay Flowers is the volume receiving option.

Deep-league options/streamers/random thoughts

  • New York Giants starter Wan’Dale Robinson (29.9%) scored 28.2 points in the loss to the Dallas Cowboys, as Russell Wilson achieved a hearty 450 passing yards. Don’t expect Wilson — and thus Robinson — to repeat the performance in Week 3 against the Kansas City Chiefs, if ever again.

  • Denver Broncos second-year option Troy Franklin (2.0%) caught eight passes and a touchdown Sunday, scoring 24.0 points, and he is clearly pushing Courtland Sutton and Marvin Mims Jr. for attention. This is a good thing. Franklin may be Denver’s top WR.

  • Jaguars WR Dyami Brown scored a touchdown Sunday, and he has 26.4 points after two weeks. Not impressed? It happens to be more points than both established star Brian Thomas Jr. and Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter. Brown probably can’t keep his production going to this level, but Thomas and Hunter investors are probably panicking.

Tight end

Postseason Baseball Challenge

Create MLB postseason brackets for FREE! $50K in prizes. Make Your Picks

Juwan Johnson, New Orleans Saints (48.2%): A repeat name from last week, Johnson has scored more than 15 points each of the first two weeks, trailing only the aforementioned Kraft for overall tight end scoring. Johnson has outscored RB Alvin Kamara. That shouldn’t continue, but it doesn’t mean Johnson can’t sustain TE1 production for a while, either.

Zach Ertz, Washington Commanders (50.0%): The wily veteran has touchdown receptions each of the first two weeks, and that is enough to make him popular in fantasy leagues with a Week 3 game against the Las Vegas Raiders looming.

Deep-league options/streamers/random thoughts

Carolina Panthers starter Ja’Tavion Sanders (1.0%) was an intriguing, deep-league sleeper this season, but he didn’t do much in Week 1. He did more in Week 2, catching seven of nine targets and scoring 12.4 points. Keep him in mind if your starter gets hurt.

D/ST

Deep-league options/streamers/random thoughts

  • Green Bay Packers (44.8%): It is surprising that the Packers D/ST unit remains available in more than 50% of ESPN standard leagues. It just scored 17 points in dominant wins over the offensively explosive Detroit Lions and Washington Commanders. In Week 3, the Packers face the Cleveland Browns. The Browns are not explosive. The Packers should be among the top-10 rostered D/ST units by then.

  • Indianapolis Colts (36.6%): Similarly, fantasy managers did not react to the Week 1 results by adding the Colts D/ST in many leagues. This unit scored only 1 point against the Broncos on Sunday, but in Week 3 it faces the Titans. That should be easier.

  • Kansas City Chiefs (12.4%): The Chiefs held the Eagles to 20 points, albeit with nary a takeaway. There will likely be a turnover or three this Sunday night against the Giants.



Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
How Often Should You Replace Your Mattress and Bedding?
Product Reviews

How Often Should You Replace Your Mattress and Bedding?

by admin September 14, 2025


As foreboding as it sounds, nothing lasts forever—not even your mattress, sheets, and pillows. It’s essential to know how often to replace your mattress and bedding, not just for hygiene reasons, but for ensuring you’re getting optimal support and comfort to aid in sleep. I have seen some severe cases of people using wildly outdated or damaged mattresses (think 20 years or more, or covered in duct tape), and pillows so shredded into tatters that it makes you wonder how they even resembled pillows in the first place.

Please don’t do this. I beg of you! Not only because I’m a professional mattress tester and certified sleep science coach, but also because I can tell you confidently that this is not helping your sleep.

Let’s break down the lifespan of key items in your bedroom, so that when they break down, you’re expecting it. In terms of replacements, not to worry, as we have got you covered there too. From pillows and cooling sheets to the best mattresses, we’ve tested it all.

Table of Contents

AccordionItemContainerButton

When to Replace Your Mattress

  • Photograph: Julia Forbes

  • Photograph: Julia Forbes

  • Photograph: Julia Forbes

  • Photograph: Julia Forbes

Tiami

Luxury Hybrid Mattress

You’ve probably heard this statistic before: You spend a third of your life asleep on your bed. That alone justifies the cost of a quality bed built to support you and your needs. But with nightly use inevitably comes the breakdown of materials. Think of car mileage stacking up with every drive—sleeping on a mattress isn’t too far off. The rate of deterioration will depend on factors like how many sleepers are using the bed, their respective body types, the mattress materials themselves, the surrounding bedroom temperature, and the bed frame you’re using.

Your mattress has to hold up sleepers with consistent support, and the frame needs to hold up the mattress so it can do its job. Over time, sagging can happen along the edges of the mattress or even in the middle of the bed if there’s not enough support.

This is also where the type of mattress you have comes into play. All-foam mattresses will deteriorate a lot faster than hybrid mattresses, as the interior coils of a hybrid maintain structural integrity. So when you see reinforced coils for edge support, it’s not just about keeping you supported while you sit and lie at the edge; it’s also a means of preventing edges from sagging over time.

You can expect that a new mattress will last you anywhere from eight to 10 years. If you see any premature sagging, cracking, or issues with materials before then, that is a sign of a defective product, and it would be a good idea to check your warranty.

What About Mattress Toppers?

Photograph: Kat Merck

Saatva

Graphite Memory Foam Mattress Topper

Mattress toppers are great because they give your mattress some extra support and can extend its life. They’re not infallible, though—if you’re using a topper to beef up an already past-its-prime mattress and the topper starts to lose steam, the jig is up. Since toppers are usually just a slab of foam (sometimes, microcoils), they’re going to compress rather quickly. Again, depending on your build and usage of the topper, you’re looking at anywhere from three to five years—maybe a smidge more depending on the thickness and density of the foam used. And, depending on the setting you were using your topper in (like, in a college dorm), you may want to consider retiring it immediately afterward.

When to Replace Your Pillows

Photograph: Nena Farrell

Coop Sleep Goods

Original Adjustable Cutout Pillow

Finding a comfy pillow is tricky business—one could argue even more so than a mattress. Unfortunately, they have a much shorter lifespan than mattresses. Depending once again on a pillow’s fill, two years is usually the max. Some pillow life spans may even be shorter than that, so you’ll just have to keep an eye on its appearance when you regularly wash it (that wasn’t a suggestion by the way, more like an order). Your pillow soaks up body fluids like drool and sweat, which can easily turn into yellow stains (not to mention smells) without proper cleaning and maintenance. The fill can also easily bunch up over time, especially with fillings like shredded latex and foam. The easiest telltale sign that it’s time for your pillow to go, though, is neck pain. As soon as you sense your pillow is becoming your cervical alignment’s downfall, it’s time for it to go.

When to Replace Your Sheets

  • Courtesy of Cozy Earth

  • Photograph: Nena Farrell

Cozy Earth

Bamboo Sheet Set

Sheets can be a little more slippery (and not just because of the material) when it comes to gauging how long they’ll last. And by sheets, I mean a fitted sheet, top sheet, and pillowcases—your standard sheet set. If you have a go-to set that you use and wash weekly, two to three years of use is a reasonable estimate based on how well the material holds up. The life of your sheet set can be even longer with certain weaves and materials, and by following washing and care instructions precisely as directed.

For example, my bamboo sateen Cozy Earth sheets have held up well past the three-year mark. I credit the strength of the bamboo viscose and sateen weave, and following the washing instructions with care, for this long-lasting result. Plus, if you’re spending a mint on some nice sheets, I strongly encourage you to treat them like they’re made of butterfly wings and unicorn hair anyway.



Source link

September 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AI won’t replace you, but the rigid systems around it might
GameFi Guides

AI won’t replace you, but the rigid systems around it might

by admin September 13, 2025



Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.

Every few weeks, headlines warn that artificial intelligence is coming for our jobs. The sentiment is everywhere — AI as the great disruptor, poised to reshape entire industries and render human labor obsolete. The fear is understandable, but it’s not the full picture.

Summary

  • The real issue isn’t AI vs. humans — it’s whether the systems we build enable people to thrive or reduce them to replaceable parts.
  • Efficiency-first models are brittle — built on industrial-era metrics, they optimize output but ignore adaptability, creativity, and human growth.
  • The safeguard isn’t just policy — resilient economies depend on systems that keep human adaptability at the center, letting people evolve with technology.
  • The future belongs to human-centered AI — modular, flexible systems that treat people as collaborators and co-creators, not just inputs to optimize away.

The question isn’t whether AI will replace humans. The better question is: what kinds of systems are we building, and do they allow people to thrive within them? 

Technologies don’t replace people on their own. Systems do. And the ones we’ve built so far are worryingly brittle. In our race to adopt automation, we’ve prioritized efficiency over adaptability, prediction over potential. The result is an ecosystem of tools that optimize for outputs rather than understanding the humans behind them. That’s the real threat — frameworks that don’t evolve with us, and platforms that don’t respond to who we are.

Ultimately, organizations that will lead in AI adoption are not those with the largest budgets or most advanced tools, but those that empower every employee to use AI safely and effectively. Until that foundation is in place, companies aren’t just underutilizing software; they’re leaving significant human potential untapped.

In many ways, we’re trying to solve tomorrow’s problems with yesterday’s design principles. Most current applications of AI are still framed around industrial-era thinking: reduce labor, minimize cost, increase scale. These metrics made sense when the work was physical, linear, and repetitive. But in a digital, cognitive economy, where value creation depends on adaptability, learning, and creativity, we need systems that do more than calculate. We need systems that can collaborate.

The future of work: context

This is where the conversation around the “future of work” often misses the point. It tends to swing between utopian promises of AI-enhanced lifestyles and dystopian fears of mass unemployment. But the real story is more grounded, and actually more urgent. It’s about designing systems that enable what I’d like to call human-centered growth: the ability for individuals to develop new skills, shift roles, and contribute meaningfully in evolving environments. Without that, we’re not just risking job displacement. We’re undermining the foundation of a resilient economy.

A recent reflection in the Harvard Gazette warns that if AI suddenly erodes the value of middle-class skills or displaces a significant portion of the workforce, the consequences could be catastrophic — not just economically, but politically and socially. Even well-intentioned policies may struggle to keep pace. Subsidies or tax incentives might soften the blow, but in a hyper-competitive global market, companies unencumbered by legacy labor costs will still outmaneuver those that are. This reality underscores an uncomfortable truth: we can’t policy-proof the future of work. The most durable safeguard isn’t defensive legislation alone — it’s designing systems that keep human adaptability at the center, so people can evolve alongside technology rather than be sidelined by it.

Ethical AI isn’t just about safeguards and bias audits. It’s about intention at the systems level. It’s about designing for dignity, not just productivity. When we think about AI as a collaborator instead of a replacement, the focus shifts. Suddenly, the goal isn’t to build machines that can think like us — it’s to build environments where our thinking is expanded, informed, and elevated by the tools we use.

Modular approach

To do that, we need infrastructure that is flexible, adaptive, and regenerative. That means systems that learn from people, not just about them. It means treating human potential as dynamic, not fixed. And it means moving beyond the outdated notion of one-size-fits-all platforms that try to prescribe outcomes from above. In practice, this calls for a modular approach to AI: one that integrates human data across work, learning, and well-being in a secure and user-sovereign way, while offering contextual support tailored to individual goals.

We need to move toward systems that don’t just process data, but sense and respond to the full complexity of human experience. That means nurturing growth, not just tracking it. Purpose-driven intelligence must be designed to guide individuals across life stages, recognizing emotional cues like burnout, disengagement, or the need for reinvention—not as anomalies, but as part of a natural human trajectory. 

This is the paradigm shift we should be aiming for: not just using AI to optimize performance, but to accelerate success on human terms.

This isn’t about rejecting progress. It’s about rethinking its direction. Automation is coming. AI will become embedded in nearly every tool and process we use. But the impact it has on society will depend almost entirely on how we choose to apply it. If we continue to treat people as variables to be optimized, we’ll build brittle systems and anxious workforces. If instead we design with the goal of helping people flourish, we’ll unlock a different kind of productivity, one rooted in trust, adaptability, and long-term value.

None of this is theoretical. The world is already changing. Roles are becoming more fluid. And now, skillsets are evolving faster than degrees can signal. People are no longer defined by a single job title or career path, and our — ideally contextual — systems need to start reflecting that. 

This next chapter of the digital economy will not be claimed by those who adopt AI with the greatest speed, but by those who harness it with the greatest discernment. It will belong to the builders who recognize that people are not mere inputs to be optimized away, but co-creators in the unfolding evolution of intelligence. AI itself is not our adversary; it is a mirror, reflecting the priorities we encode into the systems that surround it. And it is those systems — not the algorithms alone — that will decide whether we stand empowered in this new era, or find ourselves quietly erased by its momentum.

Sunil Raina

Sunil Raina is the CEO and founder of CereBree, a cognitive infrastructure platform designed to reshape skills ecosystems — how people and organizations engage with talent, capabilities, and workforce intelligence. With over 17 years of leading digital transformation across Fortune 500 companies, Sunil now focuses on building AI systems that are context-aware, ethically grounded, and designed to enhance — not replace — human decision-making. His work bridges enterprise strategy and agentic AI to create scalable, human-aligned infrastructure for lifelong growth.



Source link

September 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Is Digitap the next superapp to replace XRP?
GameFi Guides

Is Digitap the next superapp to replace XRP?

by admin September 12, 2025



Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.

Digitap launches omni-bank fintech app merging fiat and crypto, enabling secure, low-cost, real-world global payments.

Summary

  • Digitap’s crypto-fiat superapp offers instant cash, IBANs, payroll, and DeFi tools for global users.
  • TAP staking unlocks governance rights, cashback rewards, and early access to new platform features.
  • With presale live, Digitap could 100x and disrupt the $578b digital payments industry by 2030.

Ripple faces more delays for its Spot ETF products thanks to the SEC dragging their feet, and investors are starting to wonder if it will retain its status as the top payments altcoin. New entrants offer exciting, all-rounded products that XRP will have to contend against. 

Digitap is one such exciting project. It is already disrupting the global cross-border payments industry, which is projected to cross $290 trillion by 2030. 

The combination of blockchain’s trustless and borderless nature, along with the stability and familiarity of integrated fiat systems, provides this project with a massive upside in the coming months. Users are downloading the omni-bank Digitap app in thousands on the Google Play Store to leverage the superior capabilities of this platform.

Why Digitap could destabilize established players like Ripple

Digitap has been thoroughly vetted by its core development team. It is not a concept project like some crypto startups, but instead provides a market-ready omni-bank fintech app to transform global payments. 

What Digitap does better than established crypto players like Ripple is its level of integration with the real world. It removes the silo effect that most crypto payment platforms have by providing low-cost transactions and fiat-banking rails, which can make transactions and payments simple and fast. 

Users can transact using national currencies like the USD and the EURO and swap for multiple cryptocurrencies using the power of blockchain technology and an integrated fintech app. Transfers and swaps from cards, offshore accounts, and all aspects of the fiat sector to crypto are seamless on Digitap.

For security, Digitap deploys strategies such as multisig custody, cold wallet storage, end-to-end encryption, and secure wallet technology. These measures ensure the project’s mission of expanding financial access to the unbanked and the underbanked while ensuring users have access to efficient global payments. 

Digitap also cuts through jurisdictional regulatory bottlenecks by having a geo-responsive compliance engine for automated KYC/AML compliance while maintaining privacy features for users who prefer anonymity.

Cross-border payments ready for disruption: Will TAP pay off?

International remittance giants like PayPal still take up a significant chunk of global remittances. For larger transactions, users typically have to wait for hours, if not days, for banks to clear payments on SWIFT. Users pay significant amounts for these remittances, with costs typically being 3-6% of the amount sent. 

Ripple has not made the impact it looked to achieve at inception through its solutions like On-Demand Liquidity (ODL), which uses XRP. Despite XRP’s mega valuation, ODL penetration remains frustratingly low. 

On the other hand, Digitap superapp looks to go one better by taking crypto-fiat interoperability to another stratosphere. Its virtual and physical cards offer instant access to cash via ATMs. 

Additional business optimization tools, such as multi-currency IBANs for global operations, integrated payroll and invoicing, expense cards with analytics, and DeFi integrations, ensure that there is value for money in this platform.

Further, staking TAP provides additional opportunities such as governance participation,  priority access to new features, and cashback opportunities. 

These factors combine to justify why users are confident TAP could potentially grow 100x in the coming months. If anything, Digitap may become a crucial component of the digital payment industry, projected to reach over $578 billion by 2030, lifting TAP once trading begins after the Digitap presale concludes. Buying TAP in the now-live Digitap presale could be a steal, a proposition that smart investors are actively exploring.

Ready to learn more? Join the Digitap (TAP) presale before the next price increase.

For more information, visit the official website or the socials.

Disclosure: This content is provided by a third party. Neither crypto.news nor the author of this article endorses any product mentioned on this page. Users should conduct their own research before taking any action related to the company.



Source link

September 12, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Roblox partners with International Age Rating Coalition to replace current maturity labels
Esports

Roblox partners with International Age Rating Coalition to replace current maturity labels

by admin September 4, 2025


Roblox has partnered with the International Age Rating Coalition (IARC) to replace its current maturity labels.

Experiences will now be labelled with global rating systems, such as ESRB in the United States, GRAC in the Republic of Korea, USK in Germany, and PEGI in Europe and the United Kingdom.

“With so many families engaging with Roblox, it is hugely beneficial to provide parents with trusted and familiar ratings no matter where they live,” said IARC chairperson and ESRB president Patricia Vance.

“The globally streamlined process will provide Roblox creators with an efficient and proven process for obtaining age and content ratings, while informing parents of what their kids may experience before they play.”

Roblox will also expand its age estimation for communication to all users by the end of 2025. This comes after the platform announced it was investing in facial age estimation technology in July.

“Using a combination of facial age estimation technology, ID age verification, and verified parental consent, this process will provide a more accurate measure of a user’s age than simply relying on what someone types in when they create an account,” said Roblox chief safety officer Matt Kaufman.

“With this expansion, we’ll also launch new systems designed to limit communication between adults and minors.”

In April, the platform introduced a “Sensitive Issues” content tag on experiences “primarily themed on a sensitive social, political, or religious issue”.

Any experiences with this tag will be inaccessible to players under 13, with an option for parents to choose whether they can have access.

Last year, Roblox implemented a number of changes to its safety systems and parental controls.

This included providing parents the ability to remotely view and manage their child’s account, addition of content labels to experiences, increased moderation, and restricted access to social hangouts and free-form user creation.



Source link

September 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Transfer rumors, news: Spurs eye Sancho to replace Son
Esports

Transfer rumors, news: Spurs eye Sancho to replace Son

by admin August 29, 2025



Aug 29, 2025, 05:18 AM ET

Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho is on the radar of Tottenham Hotspur, while Newcastle have joined the race to sign Barcelona attacking midfielder Fermín López. Join us for the latest transfer news, rumors and gossip from around the globe as the window closes on Monday, Sept. 1.

Transfers homepage | Done deals | Men’s grades | Women’s grades

TOP STORIES

– Sources: Newcastle on verge of signing Woltemade in £64.9m deal
– Sources: Tottenham set to sign Simons after €60m fee agreed
– Sources: AC Milan agree €42m transfer for Chelsea’s Nkunku

Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho will leave the club this summer. Adam Davy/PA Images via Getty Images

TRENDING RUMORS

– Tottenham Hotspur are considering a move to sign Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho as a replacement for Son Heung-Min, says the Manchester Evening News. Sancho, 25, is out of favor at United and has been linked with a host of clubs from Serie A, most notably Roma, though his club could take the option to extend his contract by another year to protect his transfer value. United signed Sancho from Borussia Dortmund for €85 million in 2021, but are now looking to move him on for around €25m.

– Newcastle have joined the race to sign Barcelona attacking midfielder Fermín López, according to El Chiringuito. As they close on an €80m deal for VfB Stuttgart and Germany striker Nick Woltemade, the Magpies are prepared to make an offer worth €100m to sign the 22-year-old Fermin and are willing to quadruple his salary. Previous reports have indicated that the Blaugrana would be willing to accept €90m for the transfer of their La Masia academy graduate, who has been capped by the Spain senior national team on two occasions. He has also recently been linked with Chelsea.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

– PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma could soon get his move to Manchester City, as the European champions have lowered their demands over his fee to €30m, according to RMC Sport. Donnarumma, 26, is set to leave Paris after the club signed Lucas Chevalier as his replacement, but has a contract which expires in 2026. City are waiting on Éderson to depart for Galatasaray before moving for the Italy international, but this one could rumble on until January.

– Juventus are keeping tabs on the situation of Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson, says Gianluca Di Marzio. The Bianconeri are keen to add a forward before the transfer window closes, and they have lined up a move for the 24-year-old as a potential alternative if they fail in their pursuit of Paris Saint-Germain’s Randal Kolo Muani. It is reported that Bayern Munich are leading the race for Jackson amid reports that a loan deal to the Allianz Arena has been agreed.

– Al Ittihad midfielder N’Golo Kanté is looking to return to Europe, according to L’Equipe. The 34-year-old’s representatives are reportedly in talks with Ligue 1 sides Monaco and Paris FC, who have “not closed the door” on a potential swoop for him. Kante made the switch from Chelsea to Saudi Arabia in the summer of 2023, but despite scoring four times in 31 Pro League matches last season, he is yet to secure a call up to the France senior national team this year.

CONFIRMED DEALS

– West Ham have signed midfielder Mateus Fernandes from Southampton for a fee of £8m, plus £2m in add-ons.

– Shakhtar Donetsk have signed 18-year-old Brazilian attacking midfielder Isaque Silva from Fluminense for €10m.

– Australia and Tottenham winger Hayley Raso has signed a contract with Eintracht Frankfurt until 2027 for an undisclosed fee.

EXPERT TAKE

play

2:05

What can Newcastle expect from Nick Woltemade?

Archie Rhind-Tutt explains what Stuttgart striker Nick Woltemade could provide Newcastle amid links to the Premier League side.

ESPN’s resident scout Tor-Kristian Karlsen on what Nick Woltemade could bring to Newcastle.

In his breakthrough season, Woltemade scored 10 Bundesliga goals after January and then exploded onto the international scene with a sensational European Under-21 Championship for Germany where he finished as the tournament’s top scorer (6 goals), registered the most assists (3) and key passes (3.0 per 90 minutes).

His all-round offensive abilities are impressive but standing taller than Sesko at 6-foot-6, Woltemade is notably less mobile, which limits his threat in transitional moments. Also, curiously for someone of his size, he won just 33% of his aerial duels in 2024-25 — which is 17% lower than Sesko (50%).

That said, Woltemade’s recent goal return and remarkable shot accuracy (62% of his efforts land on target) suggest he could make a real impact.

OTHER RUMORS

play

1:44

What signings do Manchester United need before the transfer deadline?

Ian Darke and Rob Dawson believe Manchester United still need to sign at least two players as the end of the summer transfer window approaches.

– Liverpool are preparing to go “all-in” to sign Newcastle striker Alexander Isak. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Talks are ongoing between Liverpool and winger Cody Gakpo over a new contract, (Eindhovens Dagblad)

– Newcastle set to make a third bid of £60m to sign Wolves striker Jorgen Strand Larsen, but it will be rejected. (Telegraph)

– Discussions are continuing between former Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy and Serie A side Cremonese over a free transfer. (Corriere dello Sport)

– After Real Madrid midfielder Dani Ceballos put the brakes on a move to Marseille, he can either stay, move to another club, or “wait for the miracle” that boyhood club Real Betis find a way to sign him. But Betis would struggle to make a deal work financially, both in terms of wages and a transfer fee, as they work elsewhere trying to bring back Antony from Manchester United. (Diario AS)

– Atletico Madrid would only accept an offer of over €42m to sign midfielder Conor Gallagher, with Tottenham interested. (Marca)

– Tottenham are also interested in Manchester City defender Nathan Ake, 30. (GMS)

– Aston Villa have made a €15m offer to sign Paris Saint-Germain attacking midfielder Marco Asensio, which is short of PSG’s €20m valuation. (L’Equipe)

– Villa are also looking at West Ham’s Lucas Paqueta, 28, as a potential replacement for Morgan Rogers should he leave Villa Park, but any deal is expected to require an offer worth at least £60m. (Footmercato)

– Wolves are in advanced talks with Genk regarding a move to sign striker Tolu Arokodare. (Mirror)

– West Ham are closing in on signing two midfielders, with the Hammers hopeful of getting deals over the line for Southampton’s Mateus Fernandes and Monaco’s Soungoutou Magassa. (Guardian)

– Negotiations between Lyon and Villarreal are underway over the signing of signing Georgia international striker Georges Mikautadze. (L’Equipe)

– Free agent defender Cesar Azpilicueta is set to sign for Sevilla, with a medical scheduled on Friday. He has agreed to a one-year contract. (Diario AS)

– A loan deal has been sanctioned by Tottenham Hotspur for 18-year-old defender Luka Vuskovic to join Hamburg. (Daily Mail)

– Clubs in the MLS, as well as Wrexham, have seen their interest in defender Andrea Carboni dismissed by Monza. (Nicolo Schira)

– Bournemouth are closing in on a move to sign AC Milan defender Alex Jimenez. (Gianluca Di Marzio)

– Talks are ongoing between Leeds United and Brighton regarding a loan move for attacking midfielder Facundo Buonanotte. (Ben Jacobs)

– An enquiry has been made by Lyon for Internazionale striker Mehdi Taremi. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Multiple Premier League clubs as well as Sevilla are interested in Eintracht Frankfurt midfielder Junior Dina Ebimbe. (TEAMtalk)



Source link

August 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Treyarch says it uses AI "not to replace, but streamline" human-created art
Esports

Treyarch says it uses AI “not to replace, but streamline” human-created art

by admin August 19, 2025


Treyarch is using AI to “streamline” human-created art, “not replace” it.

That’s according to associate creative director Miles Lesile, who told IGN that while the team does use AI, it’s utilized “as tools to help the team.”

“We live in a world now, where there are AI tools,” Leslie said. “I think our official statement we said last year, around Black Ops 6, is that everything that goes into the game is touched by the team a hundred percent. We have generative AI tools to help us, but none of that goes in-game.

“And then you’re going to say, ‘Yeah, but it has.’ I’ll say it has by accident. And that was never the intention,” Leslie added. “We’ve come out and been very clear that we use these as tools to help the team, but they do not replace any of the fantastic team members we have that are doing the final touches and building that content to put it in the game.

“So everything you play: human-created and touched. AI tools in the world we live in: it’s how do we streamline it? That’s really the goal. Not replace, but streamline.”

Activision Blizzard reportedly approved the use of generative AI tools including Midjourney and Stable Diffusion for producing concept art and marketing materials back in July 2024.



Source link

August 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (739)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 will receive new update with “a bit of whee and a bit of whoo”, as studio celebrates new sales milestone
  • LEGO’s Final Prime Day Generosity, Star Wars Ahsoka Ghost and Phantom II Spaceship Hits Lowest Price
  • Broken Sword sequel gets Reforged treatment after last year’s “reimagining”, out next year
  • Samsung Offloads Its Old T7 External SSDs, Now Selling for Pennies on the Dollar at Amazon
  • Voila! Nintendo quietly shares new details on Samus’s motorbike in Metroid Prime 4

Recent Posts

  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 will receive new update with “a bit of whee and a bit of whoo”, as studio celebrates new sales milestone

    October 8, 2025
  • LEGO’s Final Prime Day Generosity, Star Wars Ahsoka Ghost and Phantom II Spaceship Hits Lowest Price

    October 8, 2025
  • Broken Sword sequel gets Reforged treatment after last year’s “reimagining”, out next year

    October 8, 2025
  • Samsung Offloads Its Old T7 External SSDs, Now Selling for Pennies on the Dollar at Amazon

    October 8, 2025
  • Voila! Nintendo quietly shares new details on Samus’s motorbike in Metroid Prime 4

    October 8, 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

  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 will receive new update with “a bit of whee and a bit of whoo”, as studio celebrates new sales milestone

    October 8, 2025
  • LEGO’s Final Prime Day Generosity, Star Wars Ahsoka Ghost and Phantom II Spaceship Hits Lowest Price

    October 8, 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