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years

Furi key art of white hair samurai with energy sword and tron lines dashing toward viewer
Gaming Gear

A criminally underrated action game with a soundtrack I’m still listening to 9 years later is on sale for just 2 bucks on Steam, and I already bought it again

by admin June 22, 2025



Ahead of Steam’s Summer Sale next week, The Game Bakers’ excellent 2016 bullet hell dueling game Furi is having a little sale of its own. The normally $20 game can be had for just $2, and I’m taking the opportunity to buy the dang thing again myself.

Former PC Gamer editor James Davenport gave Furi an 86% in his review at the game’s launch all the way back in 2016 (Christ alive), calling it one of the year’s “biggest surprises.” “Furi’s combat is shallow, and I mean that as a compliment,” James wrote. “All you can do is observe, react, and punish. It’s advanced Bop-It, a lighting quick series of rock-paper-scissors, the Grand Finals in fly-swatting—Furi exercises the hell out of a very small set of abilities until they feel like they were always there.”

Instead of the usual flow of levels between boss fights, Furi is one long gauntlet of nine unique duels, with just short, meditative walking sequences in-between. You play as a bad ass cyborg ninja dude with a sword and a gun⁠ (the vibe is very Hyper Light⁠), and the fights begin with top-down bullet hell shooting before transitioning into a Sekiro-style close-in melee of deflecting and dodging⁠—two years before Sekiro even released.


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Furi rules so hard, and it’s both shocking and a little bit impressive that the devs at The Game Bakers don’t seem interested in revisiting the concept, instead shifting genres with every new game.

In 2020 the studio released the romantic RPG Haven (read our review here), while PC Gaming Show editorial director Jake Tucker thinks the upcoming Cairn is the best climbing game he’s ever played. The Game Bakers made one of the best action games of the 2010s, then ambled off to do something else. Respect.

I’d be remiss if I failed to mention the soundtrack: This is Music You Can Lift Weights To, and I do. Often. Furi’s OST shares a lot of artists with the iconic Hotline Miami soundtracks, another gaming gym banger favorite, and Waveshaper’s track “Wisdom of Rage” has been a Spotify most-played for me every year since Furi came out. It all contributes to this laconic, classically cool vibe that reminds me of shows like Afro Samurai or Samurai Champloo.

But it’s been a minute since I played. Furi was an early arrival on the Switch eShop, and that’s how I first experienced it. At $2 though, it’s about time I gave it the place of honor it deserves in my Steam Library. Furi will remain 90% off until this Thursday, June 26.

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



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June 22, 2025 0 comments
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Decrypt logo
NFT Gaming

Semler Scientific Targets Hefty Bitcoin Stash Over Next 2 Years

by admin June 21, 2025



In brief

  • Purchases will be funded through equity offerings, debt financing, and operational cash flow.
  • The company appointed Joe Burnett as director of Bitcoin Strategy to execute the acquisition plan.
  • The ultimate 105,000 BTC goal by 2027 would represent 0.5% of Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply.

Semler Scientific plans to acquire up to 105,000 Bitcoin by 2027, aiming to become the second-largest corporate holder of the asset after Michael Saylor’s Strategy.

The NASDAQ-listed healthcare technology firm revealed the aggressive timeline on Thursday as part of a new three-year plan focused on expanding its treasury reserves by accumulating Bitcoin.

Since adopting the world’s largest crypto as its primary treasury reserve asset in May last year, Semler has framed the move not as a speculative play, but as a long-term balance sheet move, describing the digital asset as foundational rather than opportunistic.

The plan directs Semler to expand its Bitcoin holdings to 10,000 within the year, and to 42,000 BTC by the end of 2026, a nearly tenfold increase from its current stash of approximately 4,449 BTC. 

Semler’s plan “is a big deal not just for spot markets, but also for perps.” Michael Cameron, co-founder of Superp (formerly Vanilla Finance), told Decrypt. “As a non-crypto firm taking such a large directional bet, it can create demand shocks that ripple into perpetual markets, especially during aggressive accumulation phases.”

In line with those plans, Semler has appointed Joe Burnett as director of Bitcoin Strategy. Burnett previously led market research at Unchained and had been one of the most vocal proponents of holding Bitcoin as a corporate reserve ever since Saylor’s Strategy began the trend five years ago.



If executed properly, the Bitcoin acquisition plan would “place them alongside the largest institutional holders globally, potentially influencing market dynamics and institutional attitudes towards the asset,” Kevin He, co-founder of Bitlayer, told Decrypt.

Semler plans to fund its acquisition spree through three channels: equity financing, debt financing, and operational cash flow. 

Semler has already demonstrated its fundraising capabilities, securing $136.2 million through a $500 million at-the-market stock offering program launched in April.

Later that month, it upped its holdings to $314 million, with CEO Eric Semler telling investors they could “sell or stop if you don’t like what we’ve done with Bitcoin.” By June, its holdings had ballooned to nearly $472 million.

The Bitcoin Standard

Semler first began acquiring Bitcoin in May 2024, becoming the second U.S. public company to adopt what it calls the “Bitcoin Standard,” in a nod to the now-famous book by author Saifedean Ammous.

Its prospects with Bitcoin “taps the ongoing trend of business embracing Bitcoin as digital gold,”  Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at crypto and quantitative trading firm Kronos Research, told Decrypt.

Yet while “one buy won’t move markets,” the move “reinforces confidence in BTC’s role as a macro hedge,” Liu said, adding that current geopolitical tensions in the Middle East “fuel market uncertainty,” and highlight Bitcoin’s role.

The same tensions have driven even governments to “actively explore, or even adopt Bitcoin,” Jakob Kronbichler, CEO & co-founder of decentralized marketplace Clearpool, told Decrypt earlier this month when Bitcoin volatility hit a new low. 

Some do this as part of their strategic reserves, while others have recognized it as legal tender, Kronbichler explained.

Still, those moves aren’t “about choosing between competing powers,” but more about “stepping outside the binary altogether and gaining access to a financial system that’s open, permissionless, and globally accessible.”

Edited by Sebastian Sinclair

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June 21, 2025 0 comments
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28 Years Later review: an unsettling journey through an isolated Britain that’s brilliantly brutal
Product Reviews

28 Years Later review: an unsettling journey through an isolated Britain that’s brilliantly brutal

by admin June 20, 2025



28 Years Later reunites Alex Garland and Danny Boyle, and it’s everything you could hope for from this genius writing and directing duo.

It’s been more than two decades since we saw Cillian Murphy wandering around an abandoned London in the opening scene of 2002’s 28 Days Later, and the impact of that movie on the post-apocalyptic horror genre can still be seen to this day.

At the time, that movie stood out for its pioneering take on the horror staple that is the zombie, imbuing the ‘infected’ with an especially terrifying trait: they were able to run. Before this, films like Dawn of the Dead had portrayed zombies as slow-moving, imbecilic creatures, which made the idea of sprinting monsters even more petrifying.

The first sequel, 2007’s 28 Weeks Later, wasn’t made by the original filmmakers and is not now regarded as canonical, so does not factor into the plot of the new movie 28 Years Later. Instead of the infected reaching Europe, as we saw at the end of 28 Weeks Later, in this telling the ‘rage’ virus, which escaped from an animal testing lab, has been contained by quarantining Britain from the rest of the world.

A recording of Rudyard Kipling’s poem Boots features on the soundtrack of 28 Years Later, evoking parallels with Britain’s historic wars (Image credit: Sony Pictures)

28 Years Later has a more folk-horror feel compared to the original, centering on a community of survivors who’ve made a home for themselves on Lindisfarne, an island separated from the coast of northern England, and from the infected, by a gated causeway.

It’s here where we meet Alfie Williams’ (His Dark Materials) character Spike, a young boy who’s about to make what seems to be a rite of passage to manhood by accompanying his father Jamie, played by Aaron Taylor-Jonson (Kick-Ass), to the mainland for his first kill, the quarry being the infected.

Before they leave, the pair are reminded that the rules of their society mean they won’t be rescued if they don’t return. This adds a foreboding note to their journey, setting us up for our first encounter with the now-evolved infected, which have morphed into new variants that feel inspired by The Last Of Us.

The new infected include fat, crawling bloaters, pack-like families that can still sprint, and ripped ‘alphas’ that have evolved to be much smarter and bigger than the rest – and these new leaders aren’t as easy to kill, even if Spike, like his father, is already a skilled archer.

The introduction of a baby raises a lot of questions about what this means for the lore of the film series (Image credit: Sony Pictures)

The movie soon shifts from a father and son’s fight for survival to an equally fraught mission. When Spike sees a opportunity to save his sick mother Isla, who’s played by the incredible Jodie Comer (Killing Eve), mother and son set off in search of a reclusive doctor who’s rumored to live on the mainland.

Queue perhaps of the best performance of the movie, as we meet Ralph Fiennes’ (Schindler’s List; The Grand Budapest Hotel) Dr Kelson, surrounded by skulls and bones in one of the most elaborate graveyard shrines I’ve ever seen. The introduction of Fiennes’ multi-layered character marks a turning point for the film, setting up events that will likely play a central role in the next film – 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple – that’s set to be released in January 2026.

In a lot of ways 28 Years Later is a coming-of-age story that grapples with themes of loss, grief, and survival, making it a lot different to the societal breakdown that was the focus of 28 Days Later. The themes running through both films, though, are underpinned by Garland’s unsparing exploration of what makes us human.

Much as 28 Days Later did with its flower-painting scene, 28 Years Later at times employs a dream-like aesthetic – look out for the galaxy of stars (Image credit: Sony Pictures)

Despite the time between the two films, 28 Years Later pays homage to the original by including the same lingering wide shots, and by featuring the iconic and unsettling track In the House – In a Heartbeat by John Murphy, while also setting the scene for the next chapter.

The opening scene of 28 Years Later, which shows a group of children watching Teletubbies before they have to flee an attack by the infected, may seem disconnected from the rest of the film, but it all makes sense when Spike unknowingly encounters Jack O’Connell’s (Eden Lake) character, who wears the same cross we saw one of the children being given, in the closing scene.

This sets up the film series to go forward on a much more larger scale, as it introduces us to different strands of survivors that will no doubt be a big part of the next two movies. As the first of this new trilogy, 28 Years Later is a captivating watch with multi-layered filmmaking, phenomenal performances, and a story that hits closer to home than it might, initially appear.

28 Years Later is available to watch in cinemas around the world from June 19. We don’t yet know which of the best streaming services it will be added to, or when.

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  • I saw a sneak peek of the new 28 Years Later movie, making me doubly…
  • 8 new horror movies on Netflix, Shudder, HBO Max, and more in June 2025



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June 20, 2025 0 comments
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The heroes of 28 Years Later being chased over the causeway.
Esports

28 Years Later quickly breaks 28 Days Later record after first reviews

by admin June 19, 2025



28 Years Later has been hailed as one of the best movies of 2025, and it’s already broken one of 28 Days Later’s records before its release.

The long-awaited film, directed by Danny Boyle and written by Alex Garland, picks up – you guessed it – 28 years on from the events of the first movie.

While Cillian Murphy is expected to return in the next sequel (titled The Bone Temple), this movie will follow new characters; specifically, Spike (Alfie Williams), the son of Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), and Isla (Jodie Comer). They live on a small island linked to the rest of the country by a single causeway, but they’re forced to venture back onto the mainland.

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Considering the original film is one of the best horror movies of all time (28 Weeks Later is good too), expectations have been high for 28 Years Later – and, if anything, it appears to have exceeded them.

28 Years Later is rated higher than 28 Days Later on Rotten Tomatoes

Sony/Searchlight

28 Years Later is Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes with a 94% score. That’s a big achievement, considering 28 Days Later has an 87% score.

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28 Weeks Later is widely considered to be the worst film in the series – but even then, that still has a 72% score.

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It’s also Danny Boyle’s highest-rated movie on Rotten Tomatoes, followed by 127 Hours (93%), Slumdog Millionaire (91%), and Trainspotting (90%).

In our review, we wrote: “There are moments where 28 Years Later awkwardly combines genres, with comedy and tragedy rubbing shoulders with action and horror, sometimes in the same scene. But the movie works best when telling a simple story of the love between mother and son.”

This won’t be the last record set by 28 Years Later, either. The first film grossed $84.6 million worldwide, while its sequel made $65.8 million.

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28 Years Later is practically guaranteed to make more than that. As per Deadline, it’s looking at a $56 million opening weekend. With word of mouth already strong, it could have long legs into July, though it’ll have to retain theatrical space alongside Jurassic World, Superman, and Fantastic Four.

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28 Years Later hits cinemas nationwide on June 20, 2025. Check out the movie’s ‘dark web’ website, why 28 Years Later cost nearly 10 times more than the original film, and our list of the best zombie movies of all time.

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June 19, 2025 0 comments
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Bitcoin Crashed From $17 to $0.01 14 Years Ago Today
Crypto Trends

Bitcoin Crashed From $17 to $0.01 14 Years Ago Today

by admin June 19, 2025


  • Turning $100 worth of Bitcoin into $1.4 billion
  • Mt. Gox completes payouts to creditors

On June 19, 2011, exactly 14 years ago, Bitcoin experienced a massive flash crash as it collapsed from $17 to below $0.01 level as a tremendous sell-off took place on the Mt.Gox crypto exchange, now a defunct one. This reminder was published by the popular crypto YouTuber Lark Davis on his X account.

Turning $100 worth of Bitcoin into $1.4 billion

This sell-off, which took Bitcoin a staggering 100% down the price scale, proved to be the result of a software glitch on the aforementioned trading platform. It allowed them to sell Bitcoin at negative prices and eventually caused a temporary market collapse.

Davis said that that historical flash crash gave a chance to crypto enthusiasts to get rich – if anyone had bought BTC at $0.01 for $100, by now it would cost already a staggering $1.4 billion. That would constitute a surge of 1,400,000,000%.

On this day, exactly 14 years ago, Bitcoin flash crashed from $17 to below $0.01

If you’d bought $100 of $BTC during the crash, it’d be worth $1.4 billion today. 🤯pic.twitter.com/p9lqrdUSFO

— Lark Davis (@TheCryptoLark) June 19, 2025

Similar growth is often experienced by owners of dormant wallets when they suddenly reactivate them. Whale Alert often reports that blockchain addresses that held BTC between ten and fifteen years see a massive price surge of their long-held Bitcoin and see their a few hundreds or thousands of dollars turn into millions of USD.

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Mt. Gox completes payouts to creditors

In February 2014, Mt. Gox, the largest Bitcoin exchange at that time, lost almost 850,000 BTC to a hackers. It constituted roughly 7% of all Bitcoin in circulation back then and it was worth approximately $450 million.

The hack was attributed to a vulnerability in the wallet exploited by the hackers, who managed to made consecutive Bitcoin withdrawals unnoticed. This lead to the bankruptcy of the exchange. Part of the losses was compensated to the creditors during the period of ten years. However, in 2024, approximately 200,000 BTC were found in a “forgotten” wallet which hackers did not drain out in 2014.

Repayments started off in July last year, while the trustee, Nobuaki Kobayashi was supervising the Bitcoin distribution. Creditors just got a partial recovery of Bitcoins they lost. As reported by U.Today, in late March, Mt. Gox transferred approximately $1 billion worth of Bitcoin. Another large amount of BTC was moved by the now defunct exchange in December 2024. The payouts seem to be over as of now.





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June 19, 2025 0 comments
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End of an era: Nexus Mods has change in ownership after 24 years following "stress-related health issues"
Game Reviews

End of an era: Nexus Mods has change in ownership after 24 years following “stress-related health issues”

by admin June 18, 2025


Nexus Mods has new ownership after 24 years under the stewardship of website founder Dark0ne.

Nexus Mods stands as the largest hub for video game mods for PC users, with a library of 716,500 mods across 3,768 games.

In an official blog post Dark0ne, who founded Nexus Mods back in 2001, explained what will change as well as why he decided to step away from the modding giant, linking “stress-related health issues” with his ownership.

Here’s our video on some of the best Oblivion mods you can’t live without.Watch on YouTube

“I realised that I have been burning out and this started to have an impact on my staff and Nexus Mods as a whole,” wrote Dark0ne. “So, I firmly believe that the best thing for the future of Nexus Mods is for me to step aside and bring in new leadership to steer the business forward with renewed energy to make Nexus Mods the modding community we all truly deserve.”

In a section titled “What Changes Now?” Dark0ne stated not much will differ for users, and introduced new owners Victor, Marinus, and Nikolai as the trio who’ll be steering the ship going forward. The blog only links to their Nexus Mods accounts page, rather than any information on previous business experience.

This post led some users to dig in a little further. RandomlyRandom67 on ResetEra did some digging and found the Linkedin profiles of several Danes who share the names of those mentioned in the blog post. This group works at a growth-focused gaming company called Chosen. On Marinus Elgaard’s Linkedin page, he wrote “Working closely with teams at NexusMods and beyond to build meaningful, sustainable experiences” under his experience history at Chosen

Looking at Chosen’s Linkedin page, four staff named Victor, Marinus, Nikolai, and Nikolaj can be found, further confirmation that Chosen is the company seemingly now in charge of Nexus Mods’ future.

This has worried Nexus Mod users, not only due to the growth-focused mission statement at the heart of Chosen, but prior statements from Chosen’s Victor Folmann on monetisation. This LinkedIn post champions the merits of in-app purchases, sponsorship, and more.

On an attached monetisation “cheat sheet” in that same post, a play-to-earn monetisation model is listed as an approach, which spooked some users. However Victor, in response to a comment on the monetisation post stating, “If you add NFTs or crypto to Nexus, you’ll kill the culture and community”, replied “100 percent agree – not happening”.

As an interesting aside, that fourth name on Chosen’s Linkedin page is especially interesting. Nikolaj is none other than Nikolaj Nyholm! One of the stars of the Danish Dragon’s Den, and founder of Danish esports team Astralis, best known for its Counter Strike team. Astralis isn’t doing especially hot right now, and is reportedly looking for buyers and investors. Nyholm’s involvement in Chosen is one of a founder and investor, as he puts the world of esports in his back pocket. The one without any money in it.

So it’s all a little doom and gloom right now in the world of modding. Concerns stem from the involvement of a growth-focused company, involvement which could lead to changes that impact the users of gaming’s biggest mod platform, in spite of Dark0ne’s sentiment in his farewell post. The ball is in Chosen’s court, to keep the website on the straight and narrow, aligned with the legacy of Nexus Mods, or ultimately prove the critics right.



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June 18, 2025 0 comments
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Thailand exempts crypto capital gains tax for 5 years
NFT Gaming

Thailand exempts crypto capital gains tax for 5 years

by admin June 18, 2025



Thailand has announced a five-year exemption on capital gains tax for crypto transactions, aiming to boost tax revenue and position the country as a global digital asset hub.

Thailand’s Ministry of Finance has approved a new tax measure aimed at promoting the country as a global digital asset hub. Deputy Finance Minister Julapun Amornvivat announced on Jun. 17 that the measure will exempt personal income tax on capital gains from the sale of digital assets made through licensed digital asset businesses — including exchanges, brokers, and dealers — under the 2018 Royal Decree on Digital Asset Businesses. This exemption will apply from Jan. 1, 2025 to Dec. 31, 2029.

Julapun stated that this tax reform is expected to boost the domestic digital asset market and related sectors, contributing to economic growth and generating at least 1 billion baht in medium-term tax revenue.

He added that the measure promotes transparent and traceable digital asset trading through entities overseen by the Anti-Money Laundering Office, following international standards set by the Financial Action Task Force. Additionally, Thailand’s Revenue Department is working on adopting the OECD’s system for automatically sharing digital asset information with other countries, which will make transactions even more transparent.

The development follows Thailand’s recent regulatory crackdown, which saw several global crypto exchanges— including Bybit, OKX, CoinEx, XT.COM, and — blocked due to the lack of local licenses, effective from June 28. This move aligns with the country’s broader effort to promote crypto trading within a regulated framework overseen by the Thai Securities and Exchange Commission.

On the other hand, crypto exchange KuCoin has taken a compliant route, launching a fully regulated local subsidiary in Thailand after securing an SEC license last Friday, joining a competitive field that includes eight other licensed exchanges.

Thailand’s crypto sector is among the most active in Southeast Asia, fueled by progressive regulation— now bolstered by the 5-year capital gains tax exemption — and growing adoption, most notably a recent pilot program allowing tourists to make payments with crypto.

By exempting capital gains on crypto income, Thailand joins a group of offshore jurisdictions—including the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Vanuatu, and the Bahamas—that already do not levy capital gains tax on cryptocurrency. Similarly, countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, and the United Arab Emirates also provide capital gains tax exemptions for individual crypto investors.

In Europe, residents of countries like Germany and Portugal can avoid paying capital gains tax altogether, provided they hold their cryptocurrencies for over a year.



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June 18, 2025 0 comments
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johnny somali with laptop
Esports

Johnny Somali under investigation for another crime as he faces up to 46 years in jail

by admin June 17, 2025



Investigators in South Korea have reportedly opened up yet another investigation into streamer Johnny Somali as he’s on trial for numerous charges.

Johnny Somali, real name Ramsey Khalid Ismael, is on trial in South Korea for a series of on-stream antics in the Asian country.

The American content creator, who rose to infamy in 2024 on Kick when he terrorized Japan and Israel with his behavior during broadcasts, and continued the mayhem when he visited Korea.

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Unlike Japan and Israel, however, South Korea is throwing the book at him. Of his charges, Ismael is looking at a maximum of 36 years behind bars. So far, he’s pled guilty to three Obstruction of Business charges and two counts of violating the minor crimes act. He also pled not guilty to a couple of deepfake charges.

On June 17, YouTuber Legal Mindset, who has been covering information about the Somali case, revealed that there is now another investigation into Somali that could put him behind bars for even longer.

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Johnny Somali could be in jail for 46 years

According to Legal Mindset, this new investigation began after a criminal complaint was made against Somali.

The investigation is in regard to an alleged violation of the child welfare act, something Somali was investigated for before.

On September 30, Somali streamed from the theme park Lotte World and played text-to-speech claiming he wanted to engage in inappropriate acts with children.

“They did indeed decide not to bring this to trial,” Legal Mindset said. “But at that point they didn’t have all the information. They didn’t have all the evidence.”

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Now, however, it would seem like things have changed. Ismael’s alleged actions could be in violation of Article 17 of the child welfare act which includes, “Committing sexual harassment against a child that may make him or her feel sexually ashamed.”

The consequences for such actions, if guilty, is a maximim of 10 years imprisonment with labor or a fine of up to 50M Won ($36,200 USD).

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Not only that, but Legal Mindset also said there could be multiple counts of violating the child welfare act, so the punishment could be even more severe.

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If Ismael ends up being charged, it would add at least ten more years to his maximum sentence, pushing it to 46 years total.

Somali’s next trial date is scheduled for August 13, 2025 and will be a full day of testimony.



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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How Sonic went from “fighting to survive” to being a global megastar in 10 years: Sega’s Sonic series producer tells all
Game Reviews

How Sonic went from “fighting to survive” to being a global megastar in 10 years: Sega’s Sonic series producer tells all

by admin June 17, 2025


Sonic the Hedgehog has been on a redemption arc.

It might not feel like the blue blur has ever really left us – and that’s because he hasn’t – but sometimes you need to reach the summit to survey that which has come before. It’s only when we consider Sonic’s current position when directly compared to years prior that the disastrous depths the world’s favorite hedgehog plunged becomes truly clear.

Sega knows it, too. For Takashi Iizuka, the Sonic series producer who first worked on the franchise just two years into his career, fresh out of university, he naturally ties the memories – and comparisons – to different periods of his life.

“Ten years ago, I moved from Tokyo to Burbank. At that time, the Sonic brand was not in a very positive space. A lot of people were bashing on the brand. They really weren’t happy with the things coming out,” Iizuka recalls.


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He’s right, of course. On the timeline he presents, he moved to the states after a bumpy time for Sonic. There was the decent Colors and Generations, yes. But then there was also the diabolical Sonic 4, the middling Lost World, and the infamously broken and unfinished Sonic Boom (which did at least produce a genuinely highly underrated cartoon, but even that struggled to find an audience). Times were rough.

It was in the wake of projects like this that Iizuka made his move. He ended up splitting his time between managing Sonic Team back in Japan and taking care of product development at Sega of America.

“When I moved over from Tokyo to Los Angeles, it was like an ‘oh my god’ moment,” Iizuka admits. “Like, we need to save the brand, or this brand isn’t going to be around for much longer.”

What began was a herculean fight back. The charge was led by a smart decision to pivot to the fans. That gave us Sonic Mania, where Iizuka supervised a team of folk who’d spent decades ripping apart the best Sonic games to reverse engineer them. Mania ended up the highest-scoring non-racing Sonic game in fifteen years.

Then the train kept rolling. Sonic Forces was a little shaky, but it laid groundwork for Sonic Frontiers, a bizarre but nevertheless compelling vision of video game open worlds interpolated through the traditions and tropes of Sonic.

Perhaps the confidence in the franchise is best represented, though, in the release of The Murder of Sonic the Hedgehog, a free visual novel released on April Fools Day 2023 that is actually, er, really good?! This is the sort of thing a Japanese publisher would never usually greenlight for a beloved cash cow mascot. But Sega is now thinking differently.

Yes, this is a real screen from a real game. | Image credit: Sega / Eurogamer

Then come movies, and Netflix, and even something of a creative renaissance for the long-running Sonic comics with a shift in publisher. In fact, as a British-based website we are contractually bound to note that the only true tragedy remains the continued dormancy of the comic’s excellent UK iteration, which died alongside Sega’s hardware-publishing aspirations.

British woes aside, this is now a sprawling transmedia franchise – and more importantly a critically and creatively successful one – with Iizuka at the heart of it. The thinking is now not just about games, but beyond – which perhaps explains why Sonic Racing Crossworlds is plying crossover shenanigans to let Sonic mix things up with some of the biggest brands in games – and, if leaks are to be believed, outside them.

Sure, Sonic is only the third highest grossing video game movie. But y’know what the second is? Minecraft. There ain’t a Minecraft racing game – but Minecraft stuff is in Sonic Racing Crossworlds. The strategy seems clear. Back in the 90s, Sega used to like to tout the dubious claim that Sonic was more internationally recognizable than Mickey Mouse. Even as a Sonic-obsessed 80s kid, I doubt that was ever true – but in Crossworlds, Sonic can at least have as many famous mates as Mickey.

There are still challenges, of course. At Summer Games Fest, Iizuka is quietly contending with an absolutely enormous leak of pre-release assets from Crossworlds, seemingly revealing unannounced crossovers and DLC plans for the game, which isn’t due out until September.

“This isn’t specifically in regard to Crossworlds,” Iizuka cautions when I ask about leaks. “But when the team is making a game, when I’m making a game, a lot of effort goes not just into the creation of the content – but also effort is made with publishing teams and marketing teams into how we’re going to present the game. There’s tons of planning. There’s tons of ideation on how to best present each title.”

Blue unto others as you’d have them blue unto you. | Image credit: Sega

“When people go online and say things about the game, when they spoil things, or when they give disinformation – it destroys that planning. It ruins a lot of people’s work, people who spend a lot of time setting things up in order to make people excited.

“Also, sometimes there may be deals going on with other partners or other people that fall through because people are out there saying things about a title that maybe are true, maybe are not – but true or not, it’s now associated with the title. So as a creator, I’d appreciate everyone not messing with it, and allowing the professional teams to do their jobs and present the product how they want to.”

I get Iizuka’s point. To be honest, those Crossworlds leaks aren’t the sort of thing we’d print on Eurogamer anyway. For one, it’s a load of copyrighted material that Sega doesn’t want out there, and a legal nightmare. But second, and more importantly, I’m not really convinced that spoiling something that we’re all going to see anyway in a few months is really capital-J journalism. But I do put a theory to Iizuka: that such leaks are in part a sign of Sonic’s revitalization. The Sonic fandom never went away, it’s true – but more people care now than a decade ago, which leads to more rabid fans digging out and sharing whatever information they can find.

In a sense, it all comes back to Sonic being back on track. What a difference a decade makes.

Miku’s joining the party alongside, well… who are we to say? | Image credit: Sega

“When I think about, like, ten years ago, what was happening ten years ago and what’s happening now? I can’t really believe some of the things that have changed,” says Iizuka.

“As a game creator, I was previously inside of Sega, working on games and managing teams, then everything started changing. Now we have Netflix content that’s being created, we have movies that are coming out… Instead of just looking at games, it’s like there’s 150% more stuff coming in.”

Iizuka is a charismatic guy. Like many bilingual developers he takes my questions in English, nodding enthusiastically, and then answers them in his native tongue to ensure clarity and comfort. When he answers about his games, he’s ever diligent and thoughtful – but talking about the success and upheaval of the last few years, even on day two of a presumably brutal gauntlet of media interviews, he beams.

“What I do at work has changed, the people I meet have changed… Even with things like working inside the entertainment industry… y’know, we’re all from the game industry, but now we’re working with movie industry people. They’re a completely different industry in the way that they think, that they act. How they create content is completely different. And then I got to walk on the red carpet for a movie premiere…!

“There’s so many things that are new. Ten years ago, I don’t think any of us could’ve believed this could become the normal reality. Thinking of it now, and us being successful… compared to ten years ago, it is like… 180 degrees. We were fighting to survive. It’s totally different now.”



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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Breaking: Gemini Accuses Cftc Of Abusing Power For 7 Years
Crypto Trends

Gemini Accuses CFTC of Abusing Power for 7 Years

by admin June 17, 2025



Crypto exchange Gemini Trust, led by the Winklevoss twins, has filed a strong complaint against the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), alleging that the Enforcement Division of the agency has been misusing its authority for the previous seven years.

Gemini Filing

In the filing, Gemini says that instead of going after actual bad actors, the CFTC wrongly targeted them. The complaint claims the agency built its case using false statements from a discredited former employee and has no real evidence of any intentional wrongdoing by Gemini.

Gemini describes the CFTC’s internal culture as “toxic.” The filing also said, “Lawyers were driven by a selfish desire to advance their careers by misusing their offices to obtain a high-profile ‘win’ against Gemini Trust.”

The exchange argues that the CFTC’s lawyers misused a key law, Section 6(c)(2) of the Commodity Exchange Act, to file unfair charges. They also accuse the legal team of violating due process, damaging Gemini’s reputation, and wasting taxpayer money on a weak case.

Gemini says its case isn’t a one-time issue but part of a bigger problem inside the CFTC. They point to public comments by Acting Chair Caroline Pham, who also called for major reforms, to show that the agency has ongoing internal issues. 

In the filing to Inspector General Christopher Skinner, Gemini lists several CFTC staff members by name and blames them for pushing forward a biased and unfair legal campaign.

Also Read: Gemini and Coinbase to Tap EU Market With MiCA Licenses



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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