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

star

LEGO Is Going Nuts Over the 4.8-Rated Star Wars Ahsoka Tano’s Shuttle, Now Selling for Pennies
Game Updates

LEGO Is Going Nuts Over the 4.8-Rated Star Wars Ahsoka Tano’s Shuttle, Now Selling for Pennies

by admin September 24, 2025


Star Wars is the number one selling license of LEGO, even surpassing Harry Potter in fan enthusiasm. Most Star Wars LEGO sets have wonderful reviews, usually 4.8 out of 5 on Amazon and both children and adult fans enjoy them. One set that’s flying off the shelves, especially with its all-time lowest price just before Prime Day, is Ahsoka Tano’s T-6 Jedi shuttle: Now offered for $54, where it was once $79, it’s a bargain if you’re looking to revisit the galaxy far, far away adventures.

See at Amazon

Step Into the World of Star Wars Adventure

This LEGO set mimics the streamlined and signature look of Ahsoka Tano’s starship in the well-known animated TV series. With 599 pieces, the set provides a satisfying build experience that’s perfect for kids 9 and up but suitable for adult collectors who desire a displayable model as well. The shuttle includes an opening cockpit that is well-suited to house the included LEGO mini-figures.

The collection includes four detailed mini-figures: Ahsoka herself, with two lightsabers; Sabine Wren, with two blasters; Professor Huyang, with a wrench; and Marrok, with a double-bladed lightsaber.

Functionality gets its proper place in this model with two stud shooters and storage bays that can hide tools, weapons and accessories and add realism and interactive play. The landing gear folds up neatly on the shuttle, automatically placing the wings in flight mode.

What makes this offer different from the typical Star Wars attraction is the combination of quality, level of detail, and now phenomenal pricing: Dropping to an all-time low of $54, the set gives children and collectors a chance to pick up a highly rated model at a friendly price at just the right time for holiday shopping or adding to a collection.

See at Amazon



Source link

September 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Screenshots show stills from the new Star Wars movie.
Game Updates

Star Wars Fans Are Bummed About How Boring Mandalorian And Grogu Looks

by admin September 22, 2025


Our first trailer for the next Star Wars movie has arrived and it looks incredibly forgettable. Fans are picking apart a 90-second clip of The Mandalorian and Grogu and mourning the franchise’s loss of visual identity. Is Disney’s take on the sci-fi galaxy far, far away cooked, or is this just how a movie about a dude in a helmet and a green puppet is going to look in the year 2025?

Is the Mandalorian and Grogu trailer bad-looking? Yes. Is that sort of what I expected from the post-Disney+ entertainment industrial complex in the age of streaming? Also yes. Does any of this matter? Not to me. I did not stick around through three increasingly mediocre seasons of The Mandalorian for the second coming of Akira Kurosawa. I am coming to the movie to see some weird-looking aliens, goofy robots, and flashy lasers blow some stuff up. Even by those standards the teaser was a C minus, but the latest example of Star Wars mediocrity has some fans fully crashing out.

I don’t want to sound negative but this trailer makes the movie feel more like a filler episode of the TV show. Even visually it doesn’t look like an upgrade. https://t.co/UqCJyzwrcw

— Daniel Richtman (@DanielRPK) September 22, 2025

They had the opportunity make a beautiful space western set in the Star Wars universe and they cooked up abysmal dogshit instead. Movie made for the sole purpose of selling more Grogu toys. https://t.co/YwRwdxHu7M

— Barto (@bartonovopolis) September 22, 2025

Do you remember when The Mandalorian used to look like this? Where did we go wrong… https://t.co/nw6ieNXuse

— The Sietch of Sci-Fi | (@TSoS_) September 22, 2025

Couldn’t even bother to make this look like it belongs on the big screen. Disney Plus at the movies. https://t.co/gD2KPxtCOq

— Jeff Zhang 张佶润 (@strangeharbors) September 22, 2025

(This isn’t a comment on the quality)

There was a time when a new Star Wars trailer was an EVENT in itself. You would hear the rumours swirling & the fake descriptions going around. And when it dropped and we got our first NEW glimpse…it was magical.

That feeling is long gone https://t.co/GOmTwk3L4Q

— ΩStuntman MikeΩ (@Stuntman_Mik3) September 22, 2025

Mando so bad it’s fast tracking sequel redemption by like 10 years https://t.co/dHynhKAu14

— ol snokey (@snoketube) September 22, 2025

this could be fun but it really shows how much Disney have cheapened their brand that the first Star Wars movie in 7 years just looks like a more expensive episode of a TV show in every possible way https://t.co/LELjKg5Bor

— Brendan Hodges (@metaplexmovies) September 22, 2025

look what they took from us https://t.co/Xp7Cgnfj4L pic.twitter.com/XRIgr7G7ib

— Shadow Knight (@shadowknightdk) September 22, 2025

In case you think this is just an algorithmically spawned dunkfest, the vibes are similar on YouTube. “This just looks like one episode of the show,” reads one comment. “I feel like people were more excited for the 20th anniversary of Revenge of the Sith re release than for this one,” reads another. My favorite, though, is this summary: “50% of the comments: Jimmy Kimmel and the Empire, 49.9% of the comments: This Looks Like Season 4, 0.01%: Somehow Razor Crest returned!” Folks on Reddit are taking things more in stride. “Kinda looks like it’s just supposed to be fun, which I totally dig,” reads the top reaction. “Like if it’s just a movie length episode I’m down with that.”

That is about what I expected as well. I think it’s partly a testament to how much the Disney Star Wars shows, even when they’re bad, have looked like big-budget productions that The Mandalorian and Grogu movie just looks like a feature-length episode. I also think people are being a bit dramatic in rushing to judge a teaser for a film about back-bench characters who didn’t exist until just a few years ago against the most iconic stills across decades of original movies. It also feels like people have forgotten that Jon Favreau is directing.

What are the most memorable shots that come to mind from Elf, Zathura: A Space Adventure, and Cowboys & Aliens? I’ll wait. He’s not that type of director. The most visually arresting 60 seconds of footage he ever recorded was himself cooking a grilled cheese in Chef. He brings other virtues to his filmmaking, most of which are probably hard to get across in a 90-second teaser where almost no one talks. That is not a defense of The Mandalorian and Grogu, but it’s a point worth keeping in mind when judging the pre-release marketing for a movie about a stoic cowboy and his green muppet baby that’s literally called The Mandalorian and Grogu. 





Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Ohio State lands S Angelo Smith, brother of star WR Jeremiah
Esports

Ohio State lands S Angelo Smith, brother of star WR Jeremiah

by admin September 22, 2025


  • Eli LedermanSep 21, 2025, 09:47 PM ET

    Close

      Eli Lederman covers college football and recruiting for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2024 after covering the University of Oklahoma for Sellout Crowd and the Tulsa World.

Class of 2027 safety Angelo Smith, the brother of Ohio State star wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, has committed to the Buckeyes, a source confirmed to ESPN Sunday night.

The younger Smith is a 5-foot-10, 165-pound junior at Florida’s Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School. In addition to Ohio State, he held offers from Miami, Oklahoma State, Georgia State and Toledo. News of Smith’s pledge was first reported by Rivals.com.

Jeremiah was a three-time state champion at Chaminade-Madonna and landed with the Buckeyes in the 2024 class as one of the highest-ranked wide receiver prospects in the ESPN recruiting rankings era, which began in 2006.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

A second-team All-American last fall, Jeremiah shattered Ohio State’s freshman receiving records with 76 catches for 1,315 yards and 15 touchdowns in a starring role on the Buckeyes’ 2024 national title team. He has logged 20 receptions for 315 yards with three receiving scores over the initial three games of his sophomore campaign in 2025.

Angelo followed in his brother’s footsteps at Chaminade-Madonna, where he was credited with 40 tackles, 11 pass break ups and three interceptions as a sophomore last fall.

He now lands as the third member of Buckeyes coach Ryan Day’s 2027 recruiting class. Five-star wide receiver Jamier Brown, the No. 2 prospect in the ESPN Junior 300, has been committed to Ohio State since November. Quarterback Brady Edmunds, who gave his pledge to the Buckeyes on Dec. 2, 2024, is ESPN’s second-ranked pocket passer in the cycle.

Ohio State holds 13 ESPN 300 pledges in the program’s 2026 recruiting class, which currently sits at No. 9 in ESPN’s national class rankings for the cycle. After a bye week in Week 4, the Buckeyes remained at No. 1 in the latest AP Top 25 on Sunday ahead of a Week 5 visit to Washington on Saturday.



Source link

September 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'Dead' Star Caught Snacking on Pluto-Like Object
Product Reviews

‘Dead’ Star Caught Snacking on Pluto-Like Object

by admin September 21, 2025


Nature can get brutal. On a cosmic scale, things get even more destructive—leaving behind carnage made of stellar dust the size of an entire planet.

Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope spotted a white dwarf—the remnant of a dying star’s core—enjoying a meal of some fragment researchers later identified as coming from a Pluto-like object. According to a paper on the finding published September 18 in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, astronomers seemingly caught the dwarf near the tail end of its meal; some time ago, the dwarf’s intense gravitational pull likely snatched an icy planet from its regular orbit.

What’s more, further analysis of the doomed object revealed that its chemical composition included key elements such as carbon, sulfur, nitrogen, and oxygen—suggesting that, before its demise, the tiny planet may have held some water on its surface.

A ‘cosmic crime scene’

The atmosphere of a white dwarf typically consists of hydrogen and helium. But this particular dwarf, WD 1647+375, carried an unusual supply of volatiles, or chemical substances with low melting points. That told the researchers that something was off.

“White dwarfs act like cosmic crime scenes,” study lead author Snehalata Sahu said in a release. “When a planetesimal [small solid objects thought to form planets] falls in, its elements leave chemical fingerprints in the star’s atmosphere, letting us reconstruct the identity of the ‘victim.’”

So the team embarked on some detective work. One thing that stood out to them was the abundance of nitrogen in WD 1647+375, which the researchers explained was a “particularly important chemical fingerprint of icy worlds.” The dwarf’s oxygen gain was also much higher than it would have been had the victim been a rocky object.

“We know that Pluto’s surface is covered with nitrogen ices,” Sahu added in a Hubble statement. “We think that the white dwarf accreted fragments of the crust and mantle of a dwarf planet.”

From Hubble’s ultraviolet signals, the team was able to deduce that the star’s meal had been ongoing for at least the last 13 years, consuming the object at a rate of around 440,925 pounds (200,000 kilograms) per second. If so, the victim at its prime would have had a minimum diameter of about 3 miles (5 kilometers).

All the evidence suggested that WD 1647+375 was snacking at an object that was once an icy planetesimal floating around the local version of the Kuiper Belt, an icy ring of debris around our solar system.

A peek into the past and future

This discovery offers a surprising window into both the past and future of cosmic systems, the researchers explained.

For instance, comets and icy planetesimals like WD 1647+375’s giant snack “deliver water and other volatiles to terrestrial planets in extrasolar systems—a prerequisite for the development of life in other worlds,” according to the paper. Now that we know such icy planetesimals do exist, this theory could be tested further with other objects, namely the recent interstellar comet visitor, 3I/ATLAS.

But WD 1647+375 itself offers a sneak peek of what’s to come for our own solar system, Sahu added. Our Sun will eventually burn out and collapse into a white dwarf like WD 1647+375. When that happens, the planets in our solar system may encounter a similar fate as this icy planetesimal.

“If an alien observer looks into our solar system in the far future,” Sahu said, “they might see the same kind of remains we see today around this white dwarf.”



Source link

September 21, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Weapons director's Resident Evil film will be "entirely original story", so don't expect Leon Kennedy to make a star appearance
Game Updates

Weapons director’s Resident Evil film will be “entirely original story”, so don’t expect Leon Kennedy to make a star appearance

by admin September 19, 2025


Zach Cregger’s forthcoming Resident Evil film will be an “entirely original story”, so won’t feature fan-favourite character Leon Kennedy.

The director of recent horror-hit Weapons spoke with Entertainment Weekly about his next film, based on Capcom’s game series.

“When you watch it, you’ll be like, ‘This is very Zach’,” he said. “It’s just [that] it takes place in the Resident Evil world. I don’t think fans of the games are gonna be bummed.”

Weapons star Austin Abrams will lead the Resident Evil film cast, with actor and professional wrestler Paul Walter Hauser also confirmed. Cregger has co-written the script with Shay Hatten.

“I’m not gonna steal Leon and put him in an original story. I think that would be presumptuous,” said Cregger. “But I respect the games enough where I’m gonna like tell a Resident Evil story in the Resident Evil canon that still leaves everything they love intact from the games, you know what I mean?”

He added: “I think that when you see it, you’ll understand how I can be obsessed with original ideas and still make a movie that is an IP-based thing. I know that doesn’t make a lot of sense now, but I hope that it will later.”

In a previous interview, Cregger stated the film “lives” in the world of Resident Evil 2 and 3, but “adheres more to the tone of 4”. What’s more, the viewing experience will be akin to the journey players take in the game, following a protagonist from A to B “as they just descend deeper and deeper and deeper into hell”.

Cregger’s Resident Evil film is set for a release on 18th September 2026.



Source link

September 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A New Look at 'Star Wars: Starfighter' Reveals an Essential Ingredient: Tight Pants
Gaming Gear

A New Look at ‘Star Wars: Starfighter’ Reveals an Essential Ingredient: Tight Pants

by admin September 17, 2025


Shawn Levy provided us with a better look at Ryan Gosling and Flynn Gray’s mysterious characters from his new ‘Star Wars’ movie.

What binds the Star Wars galaxy together? Is it the Force? The desire for injustice to be rebelled against, for the light to rise against the dark? Well, in the case of a certain kind of ne’er-do-well in pockets of the galaxy… it’s a real tight pair of pants, and now Ryan Gosling stands among their wearers.

We previously got a shadowed glimpse at Gosling’s new Star Wars character when Lucasfilm officially unveiled Star Wars: Starfighter‘s beginning of production a few weeks ago. But now director Shawn Levy has brought his star and newcomer Flynn Gray into the light with a new image shared to Instagram from filming on the island of Sardinia.

The new look gives us our best looks yet at Gosling and Gray’s character costumes, and Gosling in particular is cutting a very smuggler-vibes figure in a long-sleeved shirt, padded work gloves, and, of course, a cool belt and some swanky tight pants.

There’s no Corellian Bloodstripe to be found here like Han Solo’s legendary look, but the red panelling definitely feels evocative of trying to have this look feel cut from the same cloth. Next to Gray’s character in the baggy work pants and thick fingerless gloves, we’re getting a very good rough-and-ready Star Wars feel out of this latest tiny glimpse.

Star Wars: Starfighter is currently set to hit theaters May 28, 2027.

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



Source link

September 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Viral Labubu Grandma memes
Esports

80-year-old TikTok star Grandma Belle dies after struggling with dementia

by admin September 16, 2025



The TikTok community is mourning Grandma Belle, one half of the beloved “Jock and Belle Show,” after she died following a battle with dementia.

Belle, 80, captured hearts alongside her husband of 62 years, Jock, with lighthearted videos that pulled in more than 2 million TikTok followers. She died on September 12 after what her granddaughter Christina described as a “natural progression of disease with dementia.”

Christina confirmed the news in an emotional TikTok video, saying, “She passed earlier this morning and I honestly can’t even believe we’re here making this video.”

Article continues after ad

While she called the death “an enormous loss,” Christina added she was partly relieved Belle was no longer in pain. “She really had no quality of life, even though she was my life,” she said. “I’m glad that she’s in a better place where she deserves.”

TikTok mourns death of Grandma Belle

Belle and Jock’s joint TikTok rose to popularity when Christina began filming the couple’s daily life, capturing their banter and attempts at viral trends. Their playful chemistry made them instant fan favorites.

Article continues after ad

Article continues after ad

By summer, though, Belle’s health began to decline. Christina shared with followers in August that Belle could no longer walk and had been placed in hospice care. In early September, she revealed Belle had stopped eating.

The news of Belle’s death sparked an outpouring of condolences. One fan wrote, “️Your compassion and care for your grandparents is something truly special. Thank you for sharing Gram with us.”

Fellow TikTok creator Joe Allington added, “My heart is hurting for you, RIP Beautiful Belle. Heaven has gained another angel. Sending love to you and Jock.”

Article continues after ad

Others urged Christina to “tell Papa we all love him and are praying for you all.”

The family announced on Instagram that fans could honor Belle by planting a tree in North Carolina, calling it “a living tribute that will carry on her love for nature and life.”

Her ashes will be spread in the Blue Ridge Mountains, a place her family said she felt deeply connected to.

Article continues after ad





Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'The Long Walk' Star Garrett Wareing on His Character's Big Surprise
Gaming Gear

‘The Long Walk’ Star Garrett Wareing on His Character’s Big Surprise

by admin September 16, 2025


Now that The Long Walk is in theaters, members of its ensemble cast are free to talk spoilers. The movie, based on Stephen King’s story, revolves around a literal death march, so it’s not surprising that not all of the stars make it to the finish line. The brutal twists come with what order they go down—and at least one other surprising nuggets shared along the way.

In a new interview with Deadline, Garrett Wareing, who plays Billy Stebbins, talked about his experiences on the film as well as what happens to his character.

Eventually, it’s revealed to the audience and Billy’s fellow walkers that he is actually the illegitimate son of the Major (Mark Hamill), the cruel overseer of the titular march. He puts up a tough front, but it becomes clear Billy has got a different level of investment in the competition than the other boys.

“His dream, his goal, is to meet his father and for [his father] to be this hero that he idolized his whole life,” Wareing told Deadline. “I think that he goes into the walk thinking that this is a necessary thing, this is a good thing. And throughout the course, he begins to see the brutality that exists along something like this. And maybe he begins to see it for what it is, not necessarily [as] what it’s pitched to [be to] these young boys in the nation.”

In the book, Stebbins comes in second place. In the movie, he’s third, a twist that allows for The Long Walk‘s poignant final moments between Ray (Cooper Hoffman) and Peter (David Jonsson)—and Peter getting his wish-fulfillment part of the prize, which is killing the Major.

There’s no happy ending for Stebbins and his father, but Wareing did tell Deadline how much he enjoyed working with Hamill. And yes, Star Wars came up.

“One of the first times I interacted with Mark in the makeup trailer, he made the brilliant connection to Star Wars by saying, ‘you know, here on page 96 (or whatever page it was), there’s a bit of an “I am your father” moment when your character reveals that the Major is his father.’ And we both laughed. It was quite fitting that Luke had now become the father and in turn, I had now become Luke speaking to Vader.”

The Long Walk is now in theaters.

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



Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Facing Aaron Judge: Best stories of pitching to Yankees star
Esports

Facing Aaron Judge: Best stories of pitching to Yankees star

by admin September 14, 2025



Sep 11, 2025, 07:00 AM ET

Since Aaron Judge entered the majors near the end of the 2016 season, there has not been a more prolific — and fear-inducing — slugger than the New York Yankees superstar.

Listed at 6-foot-7, 282 pounds, Judge’s mix of size, power and patience makes him every pitcher’s nightmare. Nobody has hit more home runs than Judge’s 359 since his major league debut, and nothing else can get an entire stadium to perk up in anticipation quite like when No. 99 steps to the plate.

Although a midseason right elbow injury slowed the pace a bit on what could have been his best work yet, Judge is putting the finishing touches on his fourth season with at least 40 home runs and his fourth straight with an OPS over 1.000 while, yet again, entering the final weeks with the American League MVP award within his reach.

We asked those who have faced Judge throughout his major league career — and some who first got their first taste of his power before the reigning AL MVP was a household name — to share their best Aaron Judge stories.

‘Maybe I should start an Aaron Judge he’s-hit-a-home-run-off-me support group’

Jayne Kamin-Oncea/USA TODAY Sports

For better or worse, every pitcher who faces Judge today goes into the matchup knowing what he is up against. But there was a time when he had the element of surprise on his side as he rose through the ranks at Fresno State.

During the 2012 season, Mark Appel was the talk of college baseball. On March 2, the ace of No. 1-ranked Stanford baseball took the mound for a nonconference matchup against Judge’s Bulldogs unaware of what awaited him.

“We had very limited scouting. Video scouting was not really a widespread thing,” Appel recalled earlier this month. “So, we knew just based off of the numbers, but it was so early in the season. I don’t think he had a prolific freshman year. He was relatively unknown to us.

“I remember we went to Fresno, and they already had some fans — probably just some of his fellow classmates — that would go to the games, and they had this little chant for him whenever he came up, I can’t even remember what it was, but it’s like, ‘Here comes the Judge.'”

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Judge entered that day with no home runs nine games into his sophomore season — after hitting just two his freshman year — but took Stanford’s ace deep twice in a stunning 7-4 upset.

And the legend of Judge was born.

Appel: We kind of walked in there — I think we were No. 1 in the country — like we’re just gonna kind of steamroll these guys, you know? And we did not. We did not.

We were so dumbfounded. We were like, ‘What is going on right now?’ I think I had just come off of a game [against Texas] where I threw seven innings, 10 punches, one run maybe. I was just dominant, you know? And then we go to this, a .500 Fresno State team, and they put up a seven spot on me.

Pretty sure that year I gave up only three home runs, and two of ’em were in that game to Aaron.

Erick Fedde, Milwaukee Brewers (UNLV, 2012-14): Back then, he obviously still had that presence of a big human. I guess I didn’t have that expectation of a perennial All-Star, best hitter, MVP caliber player, but you obviously knew he had power.

Appel: I had a big fastball, especially for college. So, I think Fresno State’s game plan against me was like, ‘Hey, look for the fastball, get on it early and just try to put a barrel on it.’ I left one just kind of middle-in, right in Aaron’s sweet spot, and he just — I mean, it was one of the hardest-hit balls I’ve seen. It got out in a hurry.

Matthew Boyd, Chicago Cubs (Oregon State, 2011-13): The first year of the BBCOR bats … I just remember we were taking BP, and we were complaining because we thought the Nike BBCOR bats just stunk. And then when we go watch Fresno State, they’re swinging Easton bats, and this one freshman was just peppering the scoreboard. Just hearing this metal bang on the scoreboard every time and it’s like, ‘Oh, we’re complaining [to Nike] about the bats.’ And then come to realize it’s not the bats. That was Aaron Judge as a freshman.”

Fedde: I saw him hit some home runs off [my UNLV] teammates that were some of the farthest balls I’ve ever seen hit.

Appel: A year later, he gets drafted in the first round … my teammates are like, ‘He’s got you to thank for that. You’re the one that put him on the map.’ And now, in hindsight, I’m like, ‘OK, guys. Turns out this guy’s a generational kind of player. I think he’s proven that he was way better than me.’

When I got called up in 2022, every day it was the Aaron Judge Home Run Tracker. We are watching history here, and so I was like, ‘Man, this is cool.’ In some ways, I felt connected to him just because I was maybe part of the origin story of Aaron Judge.

Maybe I should start an Aaron Judge he’s-hit-a-home-run-off-me support group. Maybe that’s how I get to hang out with some cool dudes.

‘He just turned on it, hit it — I mean it had to be 500 feet’

Courtesy of Brewster Whitecaps

After jumping on the national radar with his feats against Appel at Fresno State, Judge firmly planted himself on MLB draft boards with his performance in the prestigious Cape Cod League the following summer.

The nature of the showcase league had Judge going up against future major league aces and other collegiate pitchers nearing the end of their careers.

Frederick Shepard now manages hedge funds in San Francisco and Anthony Montefusco is a tech salesman in Orlando, Florida. Neither has pitched in a decade, but both can still quickly recall their stories of pitching to Judge that summer.

Montefusco was coming off his sophomore year at George Mason and came out of the bullpen for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox to face Judge in the eighth inning on June 28, 2012. Montefusco attempted to run a fastball inside, caught too much of the strike zone and watched his pitch sail over the left-center-field fence never to be seen again.

“He just turned on it, hit it — I mean it had to be 500 feet, to the tops of the trees in their place at that point,” Montefusco recalled earlier this month.

Courtesy of Brewster Whitecaps

Shepard, who pitched at Division III Amherst College, was a starting pitcher for the Wareham Gatemen that summer. On July 8, they visited Brewster, and his then-girlfriend Kristina Ballard was able to ride her bicycle to watch Shepard pitch from where she was working on the Cape.

That afternoon, she saw Aaron Judge turn on a pitch from her future husband and hit a home run that cleared the enormous trees that sat beyond the center-field fence, leaving an entire ballpark in awe.

Shepard: [Kristina] tells this story to this day — to anyone who will listen. She thinks it was so cool.

Montefusco has heard about his moment just as frequently because he grew up in New Jersey among a family of die-hard Yankees fans. His mom’s favorite player? Aaron Judge.

Montefusco: I’m like, ‘How can you be after that home run?’ But it’s also hard not to be an Aaron Judge fan.

I remember getting him to two strikes. [Coach] called fastball inside, which … a physical specimen in the box, it’s always, ‘Get this ball in,’ but you don’t want to hit him. And I threw a decent pitch; he fouled it off.

Coach called fastball in again, and I was like, ‘Make sure you get it in,’ and left it kind of middle-middle, middle-third … Yeah, missed my spot, but he didn’t miss it.

ESPN ‘Sunday Night Baseball’

Catch the biggest names and the best teams in baseball on ESPN all season long.

Sunday, 7 p.m. ET: Yankees-Red Sox

Sean Manaea, New York Mets (Hyannis, 2012): I saw Aaron in the Cape, too, so I’ve really seen him all over the place.

The first thing is the size. It’s very hard to not notice that. He’s a very large human being. If I’m looking up to you, you’re a very big person because I’m a pretty big person. I remember shaking his hand and I was like, ‘Wow, that’s a pretty large hand.’ And obviously the baseball skills have been there for as long as I can remember.

Shepard: There’s nothing like standing there on the pitcher’s mound and Aaron Judge stepping to the plate, being all the way back in the box, all the way out, and you can’t pitch him anywhere. His bat reached the other batter’s box, and you couldn’t pitch him in because he was already off the plate as much as he could be. It was impossible.

Manaea: Funny story: I was throwing a no-hitter. I think into the seventh, eighth or ninth, something like that. And I hear a, one of their teammates in the dugout, is like, ‘Hey, let’s break up the no-hitter here!” And I’m like, ‘What?’ And then Judge was up, and he broke up the no-hitter.

Montefusco: It was one of those home runs that you give up and you’re not even that mad at, because of how far it was. I turned and watched it, and then my teammate from George Mason, he was on the team. I looked at him and he was laughing with his jaw on the floor.

‘He’s definitely the focal point, right? His name stands out’

Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire

The challenge of facing Judge comes in two parts.

There’s the pitcher vs. slugger showdown that fans see on the field: A locked-in Judge standing 60 feet, six inches away, waiting to turn the slightest mistake into a souvenir for a fan seated 400-plus feet away in the outfield bleachers.

The mental battle begins long before that, starting in the pregame preparation when a pitcher realizes his task includes navigating a lineup with the sport’s premier long ball threat looming in the middle of it.

Max Fried, New York Yankees: I mean, he’s definitely the focal point, right? When you look at the lineup, you look at it and say, ‘You don’t want this guy to beat you.’

His name stands out so it’s definitely something you’re paying attention to and you know when he’s starting to come up or when his spot in the order is coming up.

Where Judge ranks since 2017

StatJudge’s TotalMLB RankAVG.29412OBP.4132SLG.6161OPS1.0291HR3551Runs8414RBIs80432017 = Judge’s first full MLB season

Ryne Stanek, New York Mets: People pitch him scared and then have to come back, as opposed to being super aggressive. And I think that happens to a lot of other really good hitters. People are always super cautious and then have to go back at ’em and then they’re in such an advantage and it doesn’t work, especially when you’re facing really good hitters.

Manaea: From just the outside looking in, it’s not like he’s trying to hit home runs. It’s like he’s just trying to be a great hitter, which he is. And you could see that in the way he covers the fastball. He recognizes spin. He doesn’t strike out like a whole crazy amount.

Stanek: He doesn’t wildly chase, and he knows where he’s trying to hit the ball … he knows he doesn’t have to overswing to do damage, and he’s just got to put barrel on the ball.

Martin Perez, Chicago White Sox: We’re always talking about ‘Why you throw me this pitch’ but you have to be careful because he’s a powerful hitter. Anything he touches with the bat, it could be a homer.

Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers: “I haven’t quite figured out [how to prepare for him]. If I had it figured out, his numbers wouldn’t be what they are.”

Stanek: I think guys that know they have enough juice to get it out of anywhere and they don’t overswing, it minimizes holes. I think that’s one thing that he’s done a really good job of over the course of his career. He knows who he is, and he knows what he’s trying to do.

Fried: You know if you leave a ball over the plate, it’s going to go a long way.

‘I mean 6-foot-8, the visual’s already like, “Oh s—“‘

Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire

Once the plan of attack is in place, the only thing left for a pitcher to do is step on the mound and execute — which is easier said than done.

Few players have more experience toeing the rubber against Judge than two-time Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell. The two arrived in the majors at the same time in the same division and immediately became stars on contenders. They have also developed a close friendship over the years.

Judge’s career vs. pitch types

Pitch TypeHome RunsOPSFour-seam
fastball1451.175Sinker621.130Slider61.864Changeup34.834Cutter231.004Curveball19.854Knuckle curve7.958Splitter5.604

That tight bond has led to some unique interactions around their matchups — but Snell is far from the only one who recognizes the unique challenge in facing the game’s tallest slugger.

Snell: I’m either going to strike him out or walk him. So, when he swings, that’s when he gets into trouble — because it’s not going to be in the zone. And I tell him that. He thinks I’m messing with him. He’s the only person I talk to like that.

I’ve told him since even before the big leagues: ‘Don’t swing.’ I mean 6-foot-8, the visual’s already like, ‘Oh s—t.’ He connects with it; he can hit something hard back at you.

Manaea: The intimidation of just how big he is and when he steps into the box, you really feel that … Just based off the fact of him stepping into the box and his presence … I feel like he leans into that, which he should.

Aaron Civale, Chicago Cubs: He’s a lot taller than the average hitter. The area you can throw the ball in the strike zone is a lot bigger, but he has a lot of coverage. There seems to be a lot of space to throw to, but he covers in and out of the zone.

Spencer Strider, Atlanta Braves: It looks like the zone is huge, but it’s still hard to throw him a strike. I’d say that’s the different visual, given how tall he is … It seems like you have all the space to work with but that’s the misleading aspect of it. He can cover all of it.

Matt Strahm, Philadelphia Phillies: I try to [block] out [the hitter] and throw whatever pitch the catcher calls. But I’m not going to lie, you can feel when someone 6-foot-6 gets in the box.

Aaron Nola, Philadelphia Phillies: You face hitters all around the league, but when you face Judge, it looks weird, because he’s bigger than everything around him.

Robbie Ray, San Francisco Giants: The zone kind of changes with him. The fastball up has to be on. A fastball up to a Cody Bellinger or a Paul Goldschmidt, isn’t as high as it is for an Aaron Judge. The fastball up has to be up. Almost to eye level of somebody else.

Strahm: It’s almost like he casts a shadow over your target. I don’t want to say intimidating, but his presence is just known.

Charlie Morton, Detroit Tigers: As an opposing player or opposing pitcher, it’s like, ‘Man, here comes Aaron Judge.’ He’s one of the best in the league. But I also just really appreciate what he’s done for baseball. How he carries himself. How he goes about his business is great.

Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins: He’s the captain and everything. It’s real. I never met Jeter, but it feels like they recreated Jeter in a lab or something for the modern era. He’s a beast out there.

‘I could’ve sworn that ball was 60 rows deep’

AP Photo/Julio Cortez

No matter the plan going into the at-bat, giving up long home runs is an occupational hazard those who face Judge have come to accept — and those mammoth blasts stay with a pitcher forever.

Perhaps no pitcher has a more remarkable story to tell of Judge’s prestigious power than reliever Jason Adam’s lasting memory of a time he was sure he had surrendered a tying home run at the crack of the bat.

The then-Rays closer immediately bent over on the mound with his hands on his knees, not even bothering to look to see where the ball landed. When Adam did finally turn his head, he was pleasantly surprised by the sight of outfielder Jose Siri catching the towering fly ball at the warning track. Big sigh of relief. Game over.

All of ESPN. All in one place.

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

Adam: I could’ve sworn that ball was 60 rows deep. And I was like, ‘No way.’ I mean, he smacked it. But it was high.

That was a hilarious moment because I was like, ‘I just blew the game.’ And then I look up and I see Siri camping. I was like, ‘No way.’ And then I looked at him and he was laughing. So, yeah, that was a fun moment.

Other pitchers haven’t been quite so fortunate.

Chris Sale, Boston Red Sox: He got me at Fenway, dead center, like 2017 or 2018, it was pretty early on. Pretty sure it was a fastball. It was one of those off the bat, forget about it. It was a solo home run, and we were winning by a lot, so it didn’t bother all that much. But right off the bat, it was like ‘I’m getting a new ball.’

Boyd: He had raw power at all times. I remember he hit a homer off me in High-A Tampa, and it was one of those ones where I felt like I tried to flinch for a line drive, and it went out over the center-field wall. It was that hard.

Pitchers Judge has dominated

PitcherJudge’s OPSRobbie Ray2.100Cole Irvin2.029Joe Biagini1.969Tyler Alexander1.700Matthew Boyd1.643Matt Andriese1.625Marcus Stroman1.608T.J. Zeuch1.555Dean Kremer1.535Lance Lynn1.515Minimum 10 plate appearances

Kyle Freeland, Colorado Rockies: You got to respect it. The one in Colorado earlier this year, we kind of had a pretty decent battle in his first at-bat. And I want to say we were up around eight, nine pitches in the at-bat, threw a well-located fastball down and away, and he put a really good swing on it, went backside into our bullpen.

The other one was in New York last year. Again, I want to say it was a pretty decent battle of an at-bat, and we went hard fastball in off the plate, and he was able to keep his hands in and put the barrel and hit it.

Shane Baz, Tampa Bay Rays: It was the third pitch. I threw a cutter right down the middle and he hit it out. It stayed right over the heart of the plate. … He’s just very talented. He stays back well.

Skubal: He’s got power to all fields so it doesn’t really matter where it’s going. If he’s hitting it hard, it has a chance to leave the yard. The one last year was a sinker to right field so it was — that’s what I’m saying, he’s got power to all yards.

Boyd: One year in Scranton, Buck Farmer and I and the wives were out to dinner. We were pitching Game 1 and 2 of the series and we were at dinner and Aaron saw us and picked up our check. That meant a ton.

We weren’t making much money back then and even got dessert. I was like, ‘Oh, that was really cool.’ He said hi on the way in and didn’t even tell us. Just picked it up and left.

And the next day Buck started, he hit two homers off Buck and the next day after I started, he hit a homer off me. … He did something nice for us and still hit a homer off me.”

Freeland: Getting to face guys like Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman — those big-name superstars in our game. Those are guys you want to be facing. You want to match up against those guys. You remember those. You remember when you punch their ticket, and you remember when they get a big hit off you for a home run.

Skubal: He’s the game’s best. That’s the beautiful part about this game. You get to compete at the highest level and you tip your cap when they do things like that because that’s special. You’ve got to be a special player to be able to do stuff like that and he’s one of those guys.

‘He’s not seeing this. Keep throwing him this pitch’

Baseball is a game of failure for even the best sluggers and many pitchers have their own tales to tell of the times they’ve gotten the best of Judge.

Having sustained success against him is rare though, and Chris Sale has had as much as anyone over the years — having struck out Judge 17 times in 27 at-bats while limiting him to a .185 batting average.

“You have to be locked in, that’s for sure,” Sale said. “The back of his baseball card speaks for itself. You know that any mistake can be costly, especially if there are runners on.”

Pitchers with success vs. Judge

PitcherJudge’s OPSCorbin Burnes.091Seth Lugo.182Cristian Javier.263Miguel Castro.273Danny Duffy.311Drew Rasmussen.322Frankie Montas.385John Means.388Michael Wacha.393Brayan Bello.400Erick Fedde.404Minimum 10 plate appearances

Some pitchers are eager to share their tales of glory — while others prefer to keep their tricks tucked away for the next time they need them.

Ryan: I’ve made some good pitches, kept him off-balance, maybe kept him guessing a little bit. Those are the main things.

[Former Twins teammate] Nick Gordon was breaking it down after I faced him. ‘He’s not seeing this. Keep throwing him this pitch.’ I kept doing it. It worked a little bit.

Fried: I remember the ones from last year. I threw a fastball that kind of beat him at the top of the zone, and I threw a 2-2 curveball.

Genesis Cabrera, Minnesota Twins: I attacked the zone. I threw a couple curves really well, that’s why he missed it.

Adam: You know his weaknesses; you know his strengths. He knows what I throw him. So, there’s an element of just trying to maintain unpredictability.

He’s the best in the world, but good pitches will still typically get him out, so you just try to make good pitches and trust the odds are still in your favor.

Perez: I can’t tell you the spot to get him out. I might be facing him [again]. For me it’s location. It’s not about velocity.

Of course, against Judge, success is measured a little differently.

Fried: You just have to really be careful of making the pitches and I think there’s also an element of “If you walk him, it’s not the end of the world.”

Snell: The rest of the team I’m going to challenge and all that. But him? I’m not going to let him be the one to get me.



Source link

September 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Looking back at Super Mario Galaxy, the Nintendo game that landed from another star
Game Updates

Looking back at Super Mario Galaxy, the Nintendo game that landed from another star

by admin September 13, 2025


Editor’s note: With the news that Nintendo is bringing back Super Mario Galaxy 1 and 2 for the Nintendo Switch 2 next month – and releasing a Super Mario Galaxy movie next year – we thought we’d resurface a lovely piece of retrospective writing on the original, from former Eurogamer Editor-in-Chief and Birdo superfan, Martin Robinson. The original context for a look-back here was Super Mario Odyssey’s impending release – gosh, how time flies. Now we have an excuse to revisit this Wii classic once again.


It’s only natural that a game set in the heavens would feel like something that’s landed from a distant planet. Super Mario Galaxy, Tokyo EAD’s dizzying spin on the Nintendo mascot’s mainline series, is renowned for many things: for being a highlight of the Wii’s catalogue, the follow-up to Super Mario 64 that particular trailblazer deserved and for being the very best of its generation. Yet, coming up to a whole ten years since it first launched, the whole thing still feels like a dream.

Of course the Mushroom Kingdom has always felt like a colourful slice of slumberland, with its chatty toadstools, weaponised turtles and candy cane countryside. Galaxy, though, goes a step beyond – here’s a video game that doubles down on the reveries of the semi-conscious, in which falling can feel as fantastic as flying as you place yourself at the whim of this game’s own eccentric gravity. In Super Mario Galaxy, the chasms you may well have avoided in other platform games beg to be leaped into, just so you might see where they take you next.

Super Mario Galaxy 2 might put up the sterner challenge and may well be the better game, but I’ll take its predecessor any day for the coherence of its own particular dream world. The hub world ties its disparate planets together, the soaring, beautiful soundtrack stirs the soul as does the storybook – a gently melancholic tale of how the enchantress Rosalina made her way to the stars – which slowly unfurls throughout the adventure. It all comes together to create a richly emotive Mario game.

Watch on YouTube

Put that down, in no small part, to director Yoshiaki Koizumi, a man who got his break by weaving a now beloved dream. Koizumi made his name at Nintendo when he was drafted in to write the manual for Link’s Awakening, and upon finding there wasn’t much there to work with let his imagination fill in the bountiful space he’d been left; the dream world, the concept and the island were all his doing. Super Mario Galaxy, somewhat surprisingly only Tokyo EAD’s second project after the deliciously unorthodox Donkey Kong Jungle Beat, was also infused with that same wistful magic. Koizumi revelled in sneaking story into Mario; at night after work had finished, Koizumi would stay late to personally draft the storybook himself until it was ready to present to his mentor, Shigeru Miyamoto.

The results are spectacular, and as surprising – in their own way – as Super Mario 64 before it. There’s a cruelty to how the Mario game between those two – the quirky, lopsided but still loveable Super Mario Sunshine – has been written off as an odd offshoot, though while that game deserves its own plaudits there’s no doubting which is the true successor to 64. There’s the simple fact that Galaxy’s genesis, and the idea of spherical worlds, came from the Mario 128 demo at SpaceWorld 2000 – and then there’s its incredible ability to awe the player with new ideas at every turn.

Super Mario Odyssey, of course, looks like it’ll match the open sandbox design of 64 with the sheer inventiveness of Galaxy, but will it match its brilliant ambiance and style? Not long to find out, but no matter where Odyssey lands in the pantheon of Mario greats, I’ll always have soft spot for this, a strange and wonderful game beamed in from another star.



Source link

September 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 6

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (772)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada

    October 10, 2025
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5

    October 10, 2025
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

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

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

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