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Mario Kart World's NPCs are secretly stealing cars in their own game of miniature GTA
Game Reviews

Mario Kart World’s NPCs are secretly stealing cars in their own game of miniature GTA

by admin September 19, 2025


It turns out Mario Kart World’s NPCs are basically playing their own game of Grand Theft Mario.

A video shared on social media by Supper Mario Broth explains how NPCs can actually steal a car belonging to another character.

Specifically, the video shows a green Shy Guy parking a vehicle and walking away. A Toad NPC then saunters up to the vehicle, jumps inside, and drives off, leaving the oblivious Shy Guy plodding down the road. Incredible!

Mario Kart World Review – Is It The Perfect Launch Title?Watch on YouTube

Supper Mario Broth explained there are a few scenarios for the Shy Guy after this: the NPC will either keep walking until the player leaves and they despawn; they’ll enter a building to despawn; or they’ll steal a car themselves.

In Mario Kart World, NPCs will park their cars, exit them, and walk around. However, the game does not actually keep track who each car belongs to. As such, a different NPC than the owner may drive away with a car, seemingly stealing it. pic.twitter.com/KTXsDHXwiL

— Supper Mario Broth (@MarioBrothBlog) September 16, 2025

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As much as Mario Kart World is full of these little details designed to make its open world feel alive, jacking cars seems very un-Nintendo for such a family-friendly game. Children, avert your eyes!

Have you spotted NPCs stealing cars in Mario Kart World?





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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Capcom Confirms Pragmata Isn't Secretly A Mega Man Game
Game Reviews

Capcom Confirms Pragmata Isn’t Secretly A Mega Man Game

by admin August 30, 2025


For many months now, some fans online have suggested that Capcom’s upcoming sci-fi adventure Pragmata is actually a secret Mega Man reboot. However, Pragmata’s producer says it is not, even laughing about the conspiracy theory when recently asked about it.

Fans and content creators online have spread this theory around for a while. Many point out that Pragmata’s cybergirl sidekick, Diana, shares a lot of design elements with Mega Man, with her coat lending her the robot’s signature color and her arm expanding during some moments in a way reminiscent of the Blue Bomber’s oversized blaster arm. There’s also the game’s narrative setup, which involves evil robots. But, in a recent interview with VGC, Pragmata’s producer Naoto Oyama completely denied this theory.

“Pragmata is not a Mega Man game,” said Oyama. VGC also reports he was laughing as he answered the question. He then added, “It is a completely new game from Capcom.

“I was actually one of the producers on the Mega Man Battle Network Legacy Collection as well, so I’m happy to see that people who love Mega Man are passionate about Pragmata too,” Oyama told the outlet. “From my standpoint, it’s nice to see people are being so positive about it.”

So that seems like a definitive no. However, I expect some fans will claim that Capcom is lying. That, of course, they won’t confirm Pragmata’s connection to Mega Man. It’s supposed to be a big secret, so Capcom will deny it until Pragmata launches sometime in 2026. (Remember when this game was revealed in 2020 and was supposed to be out in 2022?)

However, I’d argue that Capcom knows how much people want new Mega Man games, and if they were making one, they’d be shouting about it from the rooftops. Also, keep in mind that Capcom isn’t above referencing and hinting at other games in their new IPs. We saw this happen with Exoprimal, which many fans were convinced was a Dino Crisis game. And to fans’ credit, Capcom did include a woman with red hair in a debut trailer for the game about dinosaurs. So I’m not surprised there’s some Mega Man inspiration in Pragmata. Capcom really needs people to remember this game exists and care about it in 2026. And what better way to do that than by sprinkling a few references to something much more popular and hoping the fans take the bait.

Anyway, even if Pragmata isn’t a Mega Man game (and I really don’t think it is), the game sounds like it might be an interesting throwback to the kind of linear action games we got back in the 2010s on Xbox 360 and PS3. Here’s what our own Kenneth Shepard thought about it when he played it earlier this year:

Pragmata feels a bit like a game out of time, as its gruff old man protagonist, slow-moving enemies, and brutalist sci-fi aesthetic are all evocative of the over-the-shoulder shooters from the PS360 era. Given those seemingly bygone qualities, it’d be easy for Pragmata to feel rote and dated, but what I played was just inventive enough to feel novel. I was super impressed with it.



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August 30, 2025 0 comments
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A Dark Money Group Is Secretly Funding High-Profile Democratic Influencers
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A Dark Money Group Is Secretly Funding High-Profile Democratic Influencers

by admin August 27, 2025


“I’ve spent most of my career researching right-wing media and sounding the alarms about the collapse of our old information environment,” Ellie Langford, the director of programming at Chorus, said on a Zoom call with dozens of creators in June. “Our political systems haven’t been able to figure out a real solution, and I’ve been really excited to see you all treading the path forward. I deeply, deeply believe that the work you all are doing is what’s going to make the difference in supporting and frankly resuscitating our democracy.”

Already, creators in the program are creating content together. In a new weekly series titled “Good News in Politics,” six creators in the program shared a collaborative video running through political wins. “Follow these creators bringing you hope instead of doomscrolling: @sander_jennings, @eorlins, @jesscraven101, @tono.latino, @gemma_talks, @thezactivist,” they posted.

While some creators have been eager to work with Chorus, others distrust the organization. This spring, Chorus faced a wave of backlash from prominent content creators whose images were included in the firm’s fundraising decks without permission. “I was included on some [of Chorus’] decks like, ‘We have access to V,’ when you do not,” said V Spehar, a liberal content creator with over 3.5 million followers on TikTok.

The faces of several well-known influencers were featured prominently on the Chorus website beneath a giant DONATE button. However, users who clicked the button were taken to a fundraising page for Chorus instead of anywhere their dollars would go directly to the creators featured.

Progressive YouTuber and former Media Matters staffer Kat Abughazaleh, who’s running for Congress in Illinois, was pictured on Chorus’ website and included in fundraising decks without her consent. She asked that her image and name be removed and no longer used for fundraising purposes.

Spehar and other content creators have accused Chorus of attempting to establish themselves as a gatekeeper to Democratic political leaders. “What we need is for people to invest in independent media, and that doesn’t necessarily mean investing in a consulting group that is going to become a middleman for independent media,” says Spehar.

Several influencers who doggedly defended Chorus throughout that controversy, including Elizabeth Booker Houston, a Democratic comedian and content creator on Instagram, and Allie O’Brien, a progressive creator with more than 600,000 followers on TikTok, were involved in membership talks for the highest-paid tier in Chorus’ new creator incubator program. (Houston did not respond to requests for comment; O’Brien declined to comment.)

Still, some creators heard about The Sixteen Thirty Fund and Chorus funding initiative and applied to join.

One creator named Chesko, who goes by @thespeechprof online, applied to join the program because he viewed it as an “opportunity to get access to people that have funding or backing and actual research that I could use,” he says.

Ultimately, he wasn’t accepted and received an email on June 26 rejecting his application. “We are planning to bring more creators into the Incubator program in the near future,” Chorus wrote.





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August 27, 2025 0 comments
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Ryan Gosling looking worse for wear looking up lit by purple light
Product Reviews

Chicago man sues Home Depot, alleging it’s secretly using AI facial recognition at self-checkout

by admin August 24, 2025



If you’re shopping at Home Depot, you might want to watch out for facial recognition at the check-out counter. Benjamin Jankowski, a resident of Chicago, Illinois, is taking Home Depot to court after spotting the hardware store’s self-checkout kiosks using facial recognition without customers’ consent.

The class action lawsuit, filed on August 1, claims that Home Depot is violating Illinois’ 2008 Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), and asks the court for up to $5,000 in damages from Home Depot for every violation. Considering there are 76 Home Depot locations across Illinois, those fines could total well into the millions if Jankowski wins the case.

On June 22, Jankowski visited his local Home Depot in Chicago and had to use a self-checkout kiosk since no cashiers were available. While checking out, Jankowski noticed a camera and display above the kiosk, where his face was surrounded by a green box, a common sign of facial recognition. Jankowski took a photo of the display, noting that there were no signs or notices around the store to warn customers that Home Depot was collecting biometric data.


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That goes against the requirements of the Biometric Information Privacy Act, which is designed to protect Illinois residents’ biometric data from collection and misuse by businesses. BIPA requires businesses to get written consent to collect or disclose biometric identifiers, destroy that biometric data at a certain point, and store it securely in the meantime.

A 2019 case, Rosenbach v. Six Flags, set the precedent for Illinoisans to sue companies just for unlawfully collecting their biometric data based on BIPA. In that case, a mother sued Six Flags for taking her son’s fingerprints without BIPA-compliant notice and consent. Even though Six Flags didn’t cause “actual injury” by misusing that biometric data in some way, the court still found that it committed a “technical violation” of BIPA worthy of awarding damages to Rosenbach.

That was a similar situation to what Jankowski is claiming happened during his visit to Home Depot. Both cases highlight the importance of getting people’s permission before even collecting their biometric data, regardless of how it’s used. Home Depot’s VP of Asset Protection, Scott Glenn, emphasized in a 2024 interview that the company’s use of computer vision is for security purposes, specifically stopping theft.

Even so, many people may be uncomfortable with their biometric data getting collected without their knowledge or permission. After all, if that data is somehow compromised, people have no way to change biometrics like you would change a stolen password. Of course, almost any store you go into these days could be collecting your biometric data, but as Jankowski’s case highlights, shoppers have a right (at least in Illinois) to get a fair warning about that data collection.

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



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August 24, 2025 0 comments
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