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Google announces first nuclear site to power its data centers

by admin August 18, 2025


Big Tech’s foray into nuclear power continues as Google announced the site of its first nuclear reactor today, as part of its 2024 deal with startup Kairos Power. Oak Ridge, Tennessee, will be home to the Hermes 2 plant, which will supply Google with 50 megawatts of power under a long-term purchase agreement with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA).

The Oak Ridge plant is the first in a 500-megawatt deal that comprises multiple small modular reactors (SMRs) to provide power for Google’s data centers in Montgomery County, Tennessee, and Jackson County, Alabama. The Hermes 2 is scheduled to begin operations in 2030.

In a statement, TVA CEO Don Moul said, “Nuclear is the bedrock of the future of energy security. Google stepping in and helping shoulder the burden of the cost and risk for first-of-a-kind nuclear projects not only helps Google get to those solutions, but it keeps us from having to burden our customers with development of that technology.”

Google’s deal with Kairos Power is expected to reach its full 500 MW potential by 2035 and was the first-ever corporate deal to buy nuclear power from SMRs. The financial specifics of the deal have not been released.



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Dan Clancy Twitch CEO looking into the camera
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TimTheTatman concerned Twitch is no longer a “gaming” site as IRL streams dominate

by admin June 25, 2025



Popular streamer TimTheTatMan has sparked a viral debate over the future of gaming broadcasts, saying Twitch’s Just Chatting category far outpaces people playing games.

Kai Cenat, IShowSpeed and Asmongold are some of the biggest streamers on the internet, branching out from their status as content creators to enter the mainstream media.

For instance, Kai Cenat regularly rubs shoulders with major celebrities like Drake, LeBron James, Kevin Hart and more, while IShowSpeed, who streams on YouTube, gets international recognition thanks to his viral tours abroad.

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The majority of their streams aren’t spent in front of the computer playing games (minus Asmongold, who’s known for his political commentary streamed from home). Instead, they’re out hosting award shows and taking up physical challenges against high-profile athletes.

It’s influencers like these that have fellow broadcaster TimTheTatMan convinced that the future of live streaming isn’t in gaming — it’s in IRL.

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Twitch: Kai CenatKai Cenat is one of the most popular streamers on the net, regularly hanging out with celebrities like Kevin Hart and even hosting award shows.

TimTheTatMan says gaming on Twitch is dead

Tim spoke about this growing trend during a broadcast in June 2025 after noticing that the majority of viewership on Twitch was in the site’s ‘Just Chatting’ category.

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“There were 500,000 watching Just Chatting,” he said. “And the closest video game to that was League of Legends at 100K, and Counter-Strike at 85K. I think it’s just gaming in general right now, because all the views seem to be when you go into Just Chatting and talk about drama.

“You could argue that the biggest streamers out there don’t even game that much,” he continued. “This guy Kai Cenat just hung out with LeBron. You know what I’m saying? …IRL is king now. That’s the reality.”

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TimTheTatman talks about the current state of gaming for Streamers

“the biggest Streamers don’t even game anymore, IRL is king now thats the reality” pic.twitter.com/xmWJhKEeDa

— yoxic (@yoxics) June 25, 2025

Responses to Tim’s theory are largely mixed. Some viewers agree that Kai’s motion is largely due to his interactions with celebrities and broadcasts outside the home, while others say that gaming content is in a lull until a massive title like GTA 6 drops.

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“IRL is the ultimate reality show,” one viewer said on X.

“Just not any game that’s poppin’ right now,” another argued. “Once someone drops something worth playing / watching, it’s back to normal. Nobody doing irl content when a game like GTA 6 comes out. Just not any great games right now.”

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Just not any game that’s poppin right now. Once someone drops something worth playing/watching it’s back to normal. Nobody doing irl content when a game like gta6 comes out. Just not any great games right now.

— DeaTHhly (@DeaTHhlyy) June 25, 2025

“We desperately need better multiplayer games,” another said.

While the Just Chatting category might reign supreme, a majority of Twitch’s most-subscribed streamers are gaming-focused… but content creators like TimTheTatMan aren’t convinced this will be the case for much longer.

And we can’t forget that Kai Cenat’s gaming marathons have been some of the most viral broadcasts on the net, something he’s returning to with IShowSpeed for a Mario Bros. stream.

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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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Wikipedia Is The Latest Site To Join The Daily Gaming Craze
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Wikipedia Is The Latest Site To Join The Daily Gaming Craze

by admin June 20, 2025


Newspapers have offered puzzles in some capacity for as long as anyone can remember, with crosswords being the most renowned. But when The New York Times bought Wordle at the start of 2022, things shifted up a gear. Only earlier this week, The Atlantic magazine announced it was launching daily challenges, and yesterday when I opened Wikipedia on my phone, it suggested I might want to take part in a game.

Disney+ Pulls The Abyss Over Controversial Rat Scene — Again

And it’s a great game! Called Which Came First, it’s a slick, simple and extremely informative quiz that fully embraces the wonder of Wikipedia. But how did we get here?

Obviously, when a newspaper’s website offers such free puzzles, they exist not as some sort of altruistic form of entertainment for the masses, but as a way of harvesting your data and luring you in to their paid ecosystems. The NYT’s purchase of free web game Wordle was seen as utterly bizarre on its surprise announcement, and was inevitably followed by crappy changes and spiteful legal action, but in hindsight it was an extraordinarily canny decision. Since then, the newspaper has built a suite of daily puzzles (not all of them exactly its own ideas), with players encouraged to register accounts and indeed take out subscriptions.

It’s hard to remember just how big of a deal Wordle had become by the end of 2021, providing a much-needed daily distraction and reason to text your friends to a populace that was locked down again and facing the monstrous Omicron variant of covid. A squillion variants were born, and everyone had their little collection of Wordle clones and riffs on the concept that they’d play through each day. Other companies followed the NYT in buying the more popular versions, and the present-day result is that it’s quite normal to find your preferred news website offering a smattering of distracting puzzles, with more joining all the time.

As I mentioned, for those centrists who can’t get enough mealy-mouthed apologetics for the extremism of the right, The Atlantic announced this week it was adding a new section for what it places its spectacles on the tip of its nose and calls “Challenges. Curiosities.” These are five games, two of which are crosswords that have been running for years, one is a bought-in game called Bracket City, and two are brand new, called Stacks and Fluxis. They’re all word games, presumably launching now to try to keep some momentum after the magazine lucked out in March of this year by having its editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, added to a group chat in which the still-in-his-job Pete Hegseth was sharing top-secret attack plans.

Image: The Atlantic

Now it seems that online encyclopedia (and one of humanity’s most extraordinary achievements) Wikipedia is getting in on the action. Yesterday, when having coffee with a friend, I opened the app to try to remember what it was that the director of the extraordinary sci-fi film Primer had done that meant he wouldn’t be working again. (Accrued repeated accusations of domestic violence, if you’re wondering.) But before I could, I was asked by Wikipedia if I would like to play a game. Um, sure! So my chum and I were entirely sidetracked into playing Which Came First, an incredibly simple concept in which the app gives two short descriptions of historical events, plus sometimes a small picture clue, and asks you which happened first. That’s it. It’s great!

Which came first?

Deputies of the French Third Estate take the Tennis Court Oath.

The U.S. vessel SS Savannah arrives at Liverpool, United Kingdom. It is the first steam-propelled vessel to cross the Atlantic, although most of the journey is made under sail.

That’s the first question of today’s edition. I haven’t the faintest idea! I didn’t have a clue about any of the five questions yesterday, either. My historical knowledge is, without question, atrocious. Thankfully, Paul’s a far more rounded, smarter man than me, and was able to make educated or even informed guesses, and “we” got four out of five! Woo!

OK, so obviously this isn’t the most groundbreaking of puzzle ideas. But actually, it’s a perfect addition to Wikipedia, because it’s entirely about finding out something new. I may be sitting here wondering literally which century we’re in with that above question, but I’m also dying to know more about the “Tennis Court Oath” now! It’s also wild to realize that the United States Congress adopted the Great Seal around the same era King Louis XVI was trying to flee the French Revolution. I mean, you may say “Duh,” and deeply worry about the standard of British education in the ‘80s and ‘90s, and you’d likely be right to. If my dad were alive to hear my ignorance, he’d be immediately dead again. But, and this is a lifelong philosophy of mine, you never mock someone for not knowing something if they’re willing to learn it now.

And, with respect to that, Wikipedia’s little game offers direct routes toward some knowledge. At the end of the five questions you’re given your score and streak as you’d expect, but also a nicely presented list of all the articles relevant to the questions you were asked, and indeed dictionary definitions for specific words and terms. Today’s has an excellent 34 boxes to click on for more information, as general as “The Holocaust” and as specific as “Kazimierz Piechowski.” And indeed, I’m pleased to say, a tile for the Tennis Court Oath.

Image: Wikimedia Foundation / Kotaku

When trying to find out more information about Wikipedia’s game, not least whether I’m embarrassingly late to discovering it or one of the first to be offered it, I find there’s the weirdest lack of information out there. When I Googled the term “wikipedia games ‘which came first’,” the second result was, inexplicably, the Wikipedia page for explosive Pokémon Voltorb. The first is a two-month-old Reddit post asking if a German version of the game from two months ago can be played in English, and no one having a clue.

It’s not included in the current list of semi-official “games” created by Wikipedians, and everyone involved seems to be very shy about it all. In fact, the game’s own “more info” link goes to an empty page! (I have, of course, reached out to Wikipedia to ask all about it.) However, I have discovered that it began on May 20, 2025, because that’s how far back the archive of daily games goes. So a month today! Hopefully you can now find it yourself by opening the updated version of the Wikipedia app on your phone. And hopefully it’ll catch on and become a whole section within the app.

.



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June 20, 2025 0 comments
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Nexus Mods founder to step away as ownership of the site "changes hands"
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Nexus Mods founder to step away as ownership of the site “changes hands”

by admin June 20, 2025


Nexus Mods founder is stepping away from his “behemoth” creation, passing the site onto new owners.

In a statement posted to the website, Robin “Dark0ne” Scott said that for both “my and the community’s best interest,” the “time has come to step back from the day-to-day running of the site.”

“I started this project back in 2001, in my bedroom, with a 56k modem, an excitement for the upcoming release of Morrowind, and with no grand ambitions or intentions. I didn’t set out to build a business, I just wanted to make a place where modders could share their work without worrying it would vanish into the internet, either the next time a fansite went offline or a publisher decided they were done with it. That idea grew legs, sprouted arms, and turned into Nexus Mods,” the statement began.

“Since then, this site has been my entire adult life. Every single day, for over two decades, I’ve been ‘on call’, whether it was fixing issues, reading feedback, pushing updates, or getting pulled into the latest bit of community drama. It’s been rewarding, sometimes chaotic, often exhausting and always personal. Somewhere along the way, I forgot to step back and breathe, or sleep properly. The dilemma of running a major social network that does not rest!”

Scott added that running the site had also been a “regular source” of anxiety and stress-related health issues, and suspected he had been “burning out,” which was impacting both the site and the “40 incredibly dedicated” people who work there.

“One of the biggest reasons I’ve been doing this for so long is that I’ve never felt that I truly found someone who really ‘gets’ the modding community the way I do. Finding a new owner who would be able to understand and respect the myriad intricacies of both Nexus Mods as a business and the wider modding community was essential,” he added (thanks, RPS). “After months of meetings, face-to-face talks, and a whole lot of soul searching, I am thrilled to say that I truly believe I have found the exact right people for the task.”

Though Scott insisted there wouldn’t be many changes from the user-side of things, he said the new owners – introduced via usernames – “have my complete trust.”

In a follow-up post, new owner “Foledinho” assured members “mods will always remain free” and ownership of the mods will continue to belong “to the creators who create them.” As for monetization?

“Monetization is hard and Nexus Mods is a complex platform,” the new owner said. “What matters most is continuing to support mod authors, delight users, and keep the lights on. We’re not changing the core model. No aggressive monetization. No paid mods. If anything, we’re aiming for fewer ads, not more. We’ll take a community-first, listening approach, and we won’t compromise on what’s made Nexus Mods special.”

In April 2025, a Japanese modder was sentenced to two years in prison. After being convicted of infringing Nintendo’s trademark and sentenced to two years in prison, suspended for three years. He was also fined around $3500.



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June 20, 2025 0 comments
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A cover for the book Era of Ruin, with artwork by Neil Roberts.
Product Reviews

Games Workshop hits the panic button, temporarily shuts down Warhammer site after scalpers descend upon it with ‘abominable intelligence’ and bots

by admin June 12, 2025



Scalpers are a menace in a lot of hobbies, not just in the realm of gaming hardware and paraphernalia. Still, they’ve been especially bad here in recent years. Flipping phantom graphics cards, snapping up special editions, and ruining cute exhibits meant for children. Games Workshop, the company behind Warhammer and Warhammer 40k, are certainly no exception to this rule: If you want to release a thing, scalpers’ll probably ruin it.

The thing in question this time is the special edition of Siege of Terra: Era of Ruin, which is the latest instalment in the Horus Heresy (now the Siege of Terra) books. Games Workshop opened up pre-orders via a queue system on its website, designed to stop scalpers armed with armies of bots spoiling the whole thing.

Then scalpers armed with armies of bots spoiled the whole thing. On the same day, Games Workshop hit the panic button and took its entire website down to stem the tide (thanks, Wargamer). As an official post on the company’s Facebook reads:


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“You might have noticed that we’ve paused Warhammer.com for a short period—here’s why:

“Today we launched our pre-order for the much-anticipated special edition of Siege of Terra: Era of Ruin anthology. Unfortunately, scalpers attempted to use bots to bypass our normal safeguards.”

The bots, which the post later calls an “abominable intelligence if there ever was one”—comparing these bots to the Silica Animus which is, and I mean this lovingly, a dunk that only people whose bedrooms smell of mini paint will get—forced Games Workshop to pull the plug.

“We’re pausing the launch of Era of Ruin and have removed it from Warhammer.com for the time being. Don’t worry, it’s still coming—we’re just absolutely determined that real fans get it. All erroneous orders are being purged. This is our number one priority.”

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

(Image credit: The Warhammer Facebook page.)

Fans looking to get a leather-bound anthology can instead sign up for an emailing list to find out when “the re-launch happens”.

The Horus Heresy is one of Games Workshop’s most prolific series, with over 60(!) books comprising the entire saga. This one in particular’s an anthology, with tales from a whole regiment of prior authors featured in the Horus Heresy—and it’s slated to come out in July. Whether anyone’ll be able to get their hands on a special edition, though, only the Omnissiah knows.



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June 12, 2025 0 comments
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An Experimental New Dating Site Matches Singles Based on Their Browser Histories
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An Experimental New Dating Site Matches Singles Based on Their Browser Histories

by admin June 12, 2025


Unlike most dating apps, which charge monthly or annual fees for their paid tiers, there is only a one-time payment of €9 to sign up granting users unlimited matches; a free option limits users to five matches. Depoorter says he doesn’t want to exploit users by having them pay on a recurring basis. When I suggest that that kind of pay model is mostly unheard of today, he pushes back. “I’m an artist, I like to do things differently.”

Early reviews and reactions have been mixed. “Super weird,” one app developer noted on X.

“This is the wildest idea,” said another user on Product Hunt. “I love the audacity.”

“Good to see the privacy focus from the start given how sensitive some of this data might be,” a programmer posted on Bluesky.

The biggest concern for users—justifiably so—is around privacy and user safety, and given the amount of personal data the Depoorter is asking people to fork over, those issues are also on his mind. The site scans up to 5,000 recent browser searches or goes back as far as search history is stored, which could be several years, but never exceeds the maximum number of entries. (Browsing data from Incognito mode sessions cannot be uploaded). Depoorter uses Firebase, Google’s open-source tool for developing AI apps, to store and manage data.

“It’s not exposed to the internet.” Depoorter says of the AI processing, which he says happens locally. “I don’t want to expose any browser history to another company.”

Already there have been complaints of lagging email verification and the site not allowing users to delete their profile; Depoorter says he has since fixed these issues. Browser Dating doesn’t currently allow for the uploading of photos, but Depoorter is working to change that, and says he plans to implement more features in the coming months, including an app for easier communication between connections and a recommendation feature that suggest possible first date locations.

The idea originally came to Depoorter in 2016 at V2, an experimental art and tech center in Rotterdam. He was hosting a workshop that explored unique connections between attendees who were familiar with his work and who agreed to share a year’s worth of their search history.

The nature of Depoorter’s art as a digital provocateur has sought to interrogate the subtext of hidden connections, taking a “critical and humorous” approach to some of the most urgent questions of his generation. Surveillance, AI, machine learning, and social media are recurring themes across his explorations. “Difficult subjects,” he says when we speak over Zoom. “But there is no big message. I want to leave that open. If anything, I want to show what is possible with technology in a playful way.”

In 2018, in a series titled “Jaywalking,” he turned live surveillance feeds into video art, forcing viewers to confront the use of public data as a means of privacy invasion. He followed that with Die With Me, a chatroom app that could only be accessed when your phone had less than 5 percent battery life; though Depoorter is quick to reject definitive interpretations of his art, it read as a comment on the value of time and how we choose to use it when one knows it’s running short. For those who can look beyond the shock of Brower Dating’s initial conceit, the question is also an urgent one: What if the curiosities we try so hard to conceal are actually the things that can bring us together?

Depoorter, 34, doesn’t claim to be any kind of dating guru. “I’m not a specialist,” he tells me. He surfed Tinder in the app’s early days but has been with his partner for 10 years. He promises that despite his work as an artist, the site is not a gimmick, and he wants to continue to scale. Already people have suggested that it might work better for matching potential friends rather than romantic partners. Depoorter anticipates there will be hurdles but doesn’t sugarcoat them; he is aware of just how difficult it may be to onboard users hesitant to share their personal anxieties and desires.

“Either people are fans of the idea or they are not,” he says. “There is no convincing them.”



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June 12, 2025 0 comments
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