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You are a mail delivering turnip with a surprisingly nice butt in Letters to Arralla, which is out now
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You are a mail delivering turnip with a surprisingly nice butt in Letters to Arralla, which is out now

by admin September 17, 2025



There are a bevy of games available in the world that let you play as what can only be described as “a little guy.” However, you can throw all of them out of the window, because I have found the game that has the perfect iteration of such a creature. It is called Letters to Arralla, and in it you quite simply play as a turnip, who has the juiciest derriere I’ve ever seen in perhaps any game ever. Yes, even more so than one of those anime gacha games, this turnip’s rump has got some serious jiggle physics.


A turnip with a pleasant dumptruck does not a game make, though, so here’s the lowdown: you deliver mail! There are plenty of equally funny “little guys” who you can bring mail to on an Australian island, with the added benefit of being able to open said mail. As the game’s Steam page notes, this is a crime – no, really, don’t read other people’s mail, it’s not allowed – but apparently in Letter to Arralla’s world it’s encouraged!

Watch on YouTube


Said pieces of mail include pictogram puzzles you have to solve, and throughout your journey you’ll also need to help the island’s inhabitants figure out personal problems. There’s no pressure to do anything at any particular time, you’re welcome to play around, “throw stuff,” and even “call your mum!”


We might be heading into autumn in this hemisphere, but Australian developer Little Pink Clouds will slowly be making their way towards summer, and that’s exactly the kind of vibe this game gives off. Summer is arguably a video game genre unto itself, with games like Super Mario Sunshine, Outrun, and Boku no Natsuyasumi all being peak examples of such a thing. I think Letters to Arralla could fit quite neatly into that, so it’s one I hope to be able to make time for. Even if it’s only to warm myself back up again.


It’s also out today! And you can pick it up on Steam right here.



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September 17, 2025 0 comments
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I Tried Apple's New AirPods Pro 3 and They Feel Surprisingly Different
Gaming Gear

I Tried Apple’s New AirPods Pro 3 and They Feel Surprisingly Different

by admin September 10, 2025


Apple was widely expected to release the next generation of its AirPods Pro noise-canceling earbuds this fall, and now it has. As part of its September “awe-dropping” event, the company debuted the AirPods Pro 3. The new buds are upgraded in several ways, including better noise canceling and sound quality, and they have heart-rate sensors like the Beats PowerBeats Pro 2. You can preorder them today for $249 and they ship on Sept. 19.

Watch this: I Tried Apple AirPods 3: First Impressions of New Features

05:00

Here are some of their key upgrades. It’s worth noting that the AirPods Pro 3 still use Apple’s H2 chip, not the rumored even more powerful H3 chip some people thought they might get. (It apparently doesn’t exist yet.) Also, the case uses a new U2 chip for advanced precision in the Find My location system. 

  • Refined design for better fit (the buds are slightly smaller)
  • New heart-rate sensors
  • New 10.7mm drivers with new multiport acoustic architecture
  • 2x better noise canceling compared to AirPods Pro 2
  • Upgraded microphones
  • Improved sound quality with better bass
  • More natural sounding transparency mode
  • New ear tips with upgraded foam on the inside (now available in five sizes)
  • New live translation feature
  • Up to 8 hours of battery with noise canceling on (up to 10 hours with transparency and hearing aid modes)
  • IP57 water-resistant and dust-resistant (AirPods Pro 2 are IPX4 splashproof)
  • Price: $249, £219, AU$429
  • Shipping: Sept. 19

The AirPods Pro 3 have heart-rate sensors like the Beats PowerBeats Pro 2.

Apple/Screenshot by CNET

I got a chance to try the AirPods Pro 3 in Apple’s demo room at the event. While they look very similar to the AirPods Pro 2, they’ve been redesigned and are slightly smaller. The angle of the buds has been altered slightly so the eartips point more directly into your ear canals. The tips themselves have also been redesigned, with new memory foam in the tips, though the exterior of the tips is still silicone. The tips now come in five sizes, including a new extra, extra small tip. While there’s no extra large tip (which I was hoping for), the large tips now fit more like XL tips. Alas, the new tips aren’t compatible with the original AirPods Pro or AirPods Pro 2. 

The buds definitely felt different in my ears than the AirPods Pro 2, and overall they seemed to fit more snugly and securely. I suspect more people will be able to get a secure, tight seal with these new AirPods, which is crucial for noise-canceling performance and sound quality.


Enlarge Image

The case is the same size, but has a new U2 chip that enhances the precision of Apple’s Find My system. 

David Carnoy/CNET

The noise canceling seemed excellent, but it was hard to tell whether it was really two times better than the noise canceling of the AirPods Pro 2, as Apple says. But the buds are supposed to do a better job across all frequencies with noise canceling, including mids and higher frequencies that can be challenging to muffle. I’ll see how they stack up to the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds (2nd gen) when I get my review sample. Those $299 Bose buds currently offer the best noise canceling in a set of earbuds.

It was hard to judge sound quality in the noisy demo room, even with the noise canceling on, but I got a chance to try them briefly in a quieter area and came away impressed. The bass seemed slightly deeper and better defined and the treble clarity seemed slightly improved. The new multiport acoustic architecture allows for more airflow in the buds (the vent on the bud is significantly larger), which is important to improving sound quality and bass performance.

Watch this: AirPods Pro 3: Everything Apple Just Announced

03:42

I wasn’t able to make any calls, but supposedly voice-calling performance is improved with even better noise reduction and voice clarity. Transparency mode is also supposed to sound even more natural and Apple has enhanced the hearing aid feature — battery life is improved to 10 hours when in hearing aid mode.

Heart-rate monitoring is new to the AirPods, though, as noted, it’s already available with the PowerBeats Pro 2. I’ll be testing that feature as soon as I get my hands on a review sample along with Apple’s new live translation feature, which will also be coming to the AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods 4 series (it’s coming to any AirPods with the H2 chip). Note that live translation only works with iPhones that support Apple Intelligence, including iPhone 15 Pro models, as well as all iPhone 16 and iPhone 17 models.

While we didn’t get a new H3 chip or a touchscreen LCD in the charging case, we got a lot of what we were expecting with the AirPods Pro 3, and the buds do seem like a nice upgrade over their predecessor for the same price. That wasn’t a given, as the Trump administration’s tariffs seem to be affecting the prices of premium Bose and Sony headphones. Look out for my full review in the coming weeks with comparisons to other premium earbuds in this price range.



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September 10, 2025 0 comments
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A Spaceship Crew Faces Doom in This Surprisingly Tender Sci-Fi Story
Product Reviews

A Spaceship Crew Faces Doom in This Surprisingly Tender Sci-Fi Story

by admin September 5, 2025


io9 is proud to present fiction from Lightspeed Magazine. Once a month, we feature a story from Lightspeed’s current issue. This month’s selection is “Last Meal Aboard the Awassa” by Kel Coleman. Enjoy!

Last Meal Aboard the Awassa

by Kel Coleman

Gardener ladled dark-purple porridge into her primary digestion sac, staring absently out the viewport at black space and the distant smudge of the planet they had come to study. The simple meal and the gesture it represented soothed her after a long, thorny morning in a section of the growth bay that was in full flower and had needed hand pollinating. Though the other crew members around the mess made do with the usual break time assortment, Cook had steamed and spiced osard grains just for her before going off shift to nap in their rooms.

When the two of them joined the crew as a couple, roughly four solars ago, Gardener had worried the special treatment shown to her from the kitchen would lead to resentment. She had heard it could get lonely on a long haul if you made a bad impression, especially on a tiny ship where everyone knew each other’s families, had vid night sleepovers in the observatory, and could count at least a handful of birthdays and Endless Nights aboard. But unlike Gardener, this hadn’t been Cook’s first long haul and she’d soon researched the crew’s home planets and ports, tracking down family recipes, popular street food, and festival treats. The crew of the small science vessel were immediately smitten with her, and Gardener found herself warming to them as a result.

She finished her porridge, scraping the bowl clean, but lingered at the table to—

The speakers mounted around the mess blared three urgent tones.

The other crew members scattered at tables and behind the serving counter dropped what they were doing and moved to readiness. For Gardener, like many bipeds, this meant standing with her limbs at her sides. She turned toward the nearest screen, which had already switched from Union news to video from the bridge.

The captain’s wings were tucked close to their thorax, their five eyes reddened and rapidly blinking. In all four solars of her time aboard, Gardener had never before seen them fearful.

“Crew of the Awassa, this is your captain speaking.”

Gardener’s sensitive hearing picked up all the ear dots around the room overlaying the words with translations. Her own ear dots not only translated the captain’s words but amplified things like pitch changes so she would be less apt to mistake one tone for another. They were frightened, but with a tinge of anger perhaps?

“As some of you may already know, we lost contact with the team sent to Gulsan-6 two hours ago. This happened shortly after they sent a probe into the gas giant. Following review of footage, scans, and probe data, we can conclude with high certainty that Gulsan-6 is, rather than a planet, an unknown species. It is capable of surviving and navigating the vacuum of space. And since exiting dormancy, its size has become incalculable as its shape is ever-changing. It is capable of reducing matter to its smallest units, and I regret to inform you your crewmates Engineer Ulli and Physicist Andel, along with their shuttle, were consumed by the alien. With equal regret, I must inform you the alien is now on a course to intercept and consume the Awassa as well.”

As her hearts’ paces fell out of harmony, Gardener found she could no longer sort out the emotions behind the words. On the faces around her, though, she read the captain’s pragmatic hopelessness regarding the situation. As they continued speaking, a time-to-intercept countdown appeared in the bottom of the screen. They ordered three senior crew members to the bridge and told everyone else to call their loved ones. So . . . there was nothing useful for her to do except find Cook.

• • •

Cook was in the hydroponics row, pinching leaves off of herbs and dropping them into a handwoven basket. Her dark, smooth skin was riddled with planet-orange hives and her voluminous whiskers were drooping.

“Cook?”

She didn’t stop pacing or look up.

“Nailo? Did you see the captain’s—”

“Of course,” Cook said. She gestured at the herbs and fruits tumbling around in the basket like that was explanation enough.

And for Gardener, it was. The two of them needed few words.

Cook would do what she loved until the end. She was already gliding around the corner to the next row, and if she had been the same species as Gardener, she might’ve heard her utter a term of endearment, one that didn’t translate well to many other fleet languages.

An endearment close to meaning beloved, one her caretaker had called her often. An endearment that had journeyed with her when she left her lush world for Outpost Nine. An endearment that kept her and her seedlings warm despite the miserable cold outside the outpost greenhouses. An endearment that had come with her on a vacation where she got crater-sloshed with a slick-skinned traveling chef in the backroom of a Meat Meet Meat. An endearment that had accompanied the both of them to the Awassa, where they were swept up in all the drama and mutual care of a large family that Cook had missed and Gardener discovered she could tolerate when she wasn’t flat-out loving it—the shift-change gossip, the hugs, the too-loud music shoving through thin walls, her first spacewalk accompanied by Engineer Ulli . . .

Her hearts skipped.

She pulled herself out of her ruminative state and joined Cook in another section of the bay, where she was snipping blue flowers from climbing dewdrops. Gardener gently took the shears from her. “My job,” she said. “Just tell me what you need.”

• • •

When they were finished with harvesting, Cook agreed to give prep over to uninitiated but enthusiastic crewmates so she could call her family. Gardener lay in bed, blankets holding down her jumpy limbs, and tried to block out Cook’s murmurs two rooms away. She set the updates from the bridge to a volume high enough that it caused her some pain.

The bridge crew had learned a lot about “the vapor” and how it consumed the team and the shuttle. They were able to collect this data when the vapor altered its course to eat the second probe they sent to analyze it. They still couldn’t stop it or outrun it, but they estimated that they could buy several additional hours with the remaining probes as decoys.

When she got off the call, Cook was weirdly pleased with the news. “More time to cook,” she explained. A few minutes later, with bottles of something clear she’d been “saving for a special occasion” cradled in her arms and a nuzzle against Gardener’s cheek, she was off to make a feast for their crew, their beloveds.

• • •

Gardener didn’t often record videos unrelated to her duties. She smoothed down the fur around her eyes and cleared her throat.

“This is Gardener Ketri,” she began. “A hostile member of an unknown species is bearing down on my ship, the Awassa, and I don’t have anyone to say goodbye to who isn’t in the same boat . . . except you, I guess, whoever sees this.”

The dread dripped steadily through her bloodstream now, but she imagined the people who would watch this, especially the younger ones, and she didn’t want them to feel afraid for her.

“Instead of goodbye, though, do you mind if I tell you what it’s like to be a gardener on a long-haul science vessel?” She found a smile, showing silver-specked herbivore’s teeth. “It’s incredible. I love my job. Every day, I coax things to life. I help them grow. I spend my shifts with dirt under my feet and light on my skin. Sometimes my partner, Cook Nailo, brings me a germination challenge, usually a special request from a crewmate missing home cooking, and sometimes I get the water and light and nutrients just right on the first try. Not often, but those are good days.”

She could already hear music thumping from the observatory. Scientists that they were, everyone wanted to watch the vapor’s approach. It was an undeniably cool way to die: eaten by a space monster. There would be papers written about it for decades, and they only regretted they wouldn’t be the ones to write them.

“If you’re considering joining the fleet, go for it. Don’t let our bad luck stop you.”

• • •

By unspoken agreement, they all followed the dress code for vid nights, which had no requirements but personal comfort. Several crewmates had moved empty crates from the storage bay to make a long table for a “family-style” meal. Gardener wasn’t familiar with family-style, but it seemed to mean an impossible amount of food being passed around chaotically until everyone proved, under threat of more heaping spoonfuls, that they were physically incapable of eating another bite.

The meal was a showstopper, of course.

Dewdrop blossoms stuffed with fungus, tied closed with the plant’s delicate vines, and fried to midnight blue. Thick, smoked leaves used as wraps and plates to enhance flavor. A fruit platter with everything from extra bitter, underripe kio to sweet, waterlogged berrymelon to sour, gritty seeds Gardener hadn’t even known were edible before today. Roasted frog and tomatillos inside corn patties, served with yellow rice. Raw tentacles, sliced thin, alongside a dry dip that was such an angry red she knew it would send her to the med bay if she touched it. A vivid, purple gradient of osard, from the light uncooked grains still on the stem—good for digestion—to the steamed kind perfect for lunch to a nearly black pile of pebbly bread rolls. Smoking papers packed with calming herbs and tightly hand rolled. And those bottles of suspiciously clear liquid. And more. And more. Something, a gift, for each member of the crew.

What followed was a night of dancing, imbibing, embracing, some prayer, more eating, the revelation of juicy ship secrets, and four rounds of “Lunar Penny” by everyone with the parts to sing or stomp or howl.

Halfway through the night, they watched the last probe disappear into the vapor. Gardener was at Cook’s side, resting a furred cheek on her smooth shoulder, their hands clasped tightly enough to cut off circulation.

Someone cheered awkwardly, intoxicated. A few more cheers went around the group like nervous laughter. Then it was silent . . .

Gardener surprised herself by shakily starting another round of “Lunar Penny.” The crew joined her heartily, turning away from the end and back to their party.

About the Author

Kel Coleman is an Ignyte-nominated author whose fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in FIYAH, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Solarpunk Magazine, The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2022 and 2024, and others. Kel is a Marylander at heart, but they currently live in Pennsylvania with their family, a stuffed dragon named Pen, and a collection of strange and frivolous collections. They can be found online at kelcoleman.com.

© Adamant Press

Please visit Lightspeed Magazine to read more great science fiction and fantasy. This story first appeared in the September 2025 issue, which also features short fiction by Jake Stein, Cadwell Turnbull, Filip Hajdar Drnovšek Zorko, Bogi Takács, C.Z. Tacks, Isabel J. Kim, Stephen S. Power, and more. You can wait for this month’s contents to be serialized online, or you can buy the whole issue right now in convenient ebook format for just $4.99, or subscribe to the ebook edition here.

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.



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September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Google Investors Surprisingly Chill About Major Data Breach
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Google Investors Surprisingly Chill About Major Data Breach

by admin August 31, 2025


The stock of Google’s parent company ended Friday’s trading session relatively unchanged, as investors digested news of a major data leak and broader market developments.

Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)’s shares closed at $213.53, up slightly from the day’s prior end price, despite Google‘s global security alert advising its 2.5 billion Gmail users to update their information following a data breach involving one of its Salesforce databases.

The company immediately issued a network-wide alert telling users to change their password immediately.

Despite all that, investors in Google had either not fully digested the news during Friday trade, or were watching see what fallout might continue over the weekend, before pricing in any hit to the company’s value.

So what was affected in the breach?

Though consumer Gmail and Cloud accounts were not directly compromised, the incident has triggered an aggressive wave of phishing and impersonation attacks targeting users across the platform.

The leak, which exposed hundreds of thousands of sensitive documents and personal data, has underscored growing concerns about cybersecurity risks facing major tech firms.

Still, despite major data breaches at all the tech giants, seemingly in an endless game of round robin, investors continue to believe the potential of these companies outweighs most security concerns.

Alphabet said in a statement it is investigating the breach and implementing additional security measures, but the incident has added to scrutiny of data management practices across the industry.

“The safety and privacy of user data are paramount,” it read. “We are working diligently to address these issues and prevent future incidents.”

Cybersecurity concerns ramp up

Meanwhile, investors are still nervously cautious about signs of economic slowdown and Federal Reserve signals hinting at future interest rate cuts.

Despite the turbulence, Alphabet’s stock maintained its position, reflecting investors’ ongoing confidence in the company’s core advertising and cloud businesses. But questions about data security continue to cloud its outlook.

As the debate over digital privacy and cybersecurity intensifies, Alphabet’s response and its ability to restore trust will be closely watched by shareholders and regulators alike. Google sought this week to reassure consumers and investors.

The breach exposed thousands of sensitive records, including personal details, corporate documents, and government information.

The leaked data spread across multiple sources and was easily accessible via search engines. It includes confidential information such as legal files, financial records, and private communications.

Company data policies under new scrutiny

Experts warn that such exposure not only jeopardizes individual privacy but also heightens the risk of corporate espionage, identity theft, and national security threats.

In its statement, Google emphasized that it is actively investigating the incident and has deployed additional security measures to identify and mitigate the breach’s impact.

Cybersecurity analysts warn that the proliferation of data leaks reflects broader systemic issues in how companies handle sensitive information, as the industry remains largely unregulated and prone to cyberattacks. The incident serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need for stronger data protection standards and increased transparency around data management practices.

As consumers and businesses grapple with the potential fallout, authorities worldwide are calling for stricter oversight of data security protocols to mitigate the risks posed by such breaches in an increasingly interconnected world.



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August 31, 2025 0 comments
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