Tag Archives: controversy

Apex Legend’s Big ‘Strafe Tapping’ Controversy, Explained

Screenshot: EA

Apex Legends, the battle royale movement shooter developed by Repsawn Entertainment, is no stranger to controversy. Because Apex supports crossplay, PC and Console players have been beefing for a while over the slight differences and advantages each side gets from their platform of choice. All of this set the stage for online outcry after the recent announcement that tap strafing, a PC-exclusive movement technique, would be removed from the game.

Apex Legends, as a direct descendant of Titanfall 2, prioritizes movement fluidity, chaining jumps, sprints, and slides to turn the battlefield into a canvas for expressive speed and grace. The amount of technique required makes them incredibly difficult to play at first. Entering a match of Apex Legends as a movement shooter newbie is…one hell of an experience. While you stumble around looking for anything to defend yourself with, your opponents will rocket around you, bouncing off of shit and grabbing everything within a thirty meter radius of their landing point in seconds. They will then shoot you to death.

One of the game’s higher level techniques that makes such domination possible is, or was, known as tap strafing. Tap strafing allows someone to jump into the air, and perform a full 180 while maintaining their jump momentum before hitting the ground. It combines a bunch of different movement abilities together with some unique quirks of the Source engine to create some truly wild shit. It is also only possible on PC, which is why it was taken out as of late August.

I’ll break it down into its component parts. First, it requires you to be able to bunnyhop. Bunnyhopping is the process of jumping the same frame your character makes contact with the ground in order to maintain momentum and quickly displace your hitbox making you harder to hit. Bunnyhopping is possible, but difficult on controllers because it has some pretty tight timing. It is much easier on PC, where you can bind “jump” to your scroll wheel allowing you to input dozens of jump inputs every second. It is a pretty common strategy in basically every first-person shooter.

There’s an advanced version of this technique known as strafe jumping. Moving diagonally in a video game is faster than moving forward because that’s how triangles work. You’re moving the same forward distance in the same amount of time, with added movement to the side. You can then combine this with bunnyhopping. Once you’re bunnyhopping while strafing, you can quickly move the mouse to the direction you’re strafing in to convert your sideways velocity into forward motion. This allows you to move incredibly quickly, albeit with a slight curve.

Tap strafing built upon this technique with a quirk of the Source engine. The Source engine checks for player direction and momentum every time the forward movement key is pressed. So if you were to tap forward while facing a different direction mid-jump, you could change the direction you’re going in. You could do this by literally tapping the forward movement key, or you could just do the bunnyhopping trick again and bind forward motion to your scroll wheel. Doing this allows you to radically change your direction in the air, which lets you move in some incredibly wild ways.

This movement technique is only possible on a mouse and keyboard, which gives PC players a huge advantage in a crossplay game like Apex Legends. Respawn has been trying to get its PC and console communities to play nice for a while, and it has not been going well. The removal of tap strafing is its most recent attempt to level the playing field.

While this particular situation is unsurprising given Apex’s history, it does highlight the difficulties developers will continue to face as crossplay becomes increasingly common throughout the medium. Having to balance not only weapon and character variety, but for hardware differences, presents an incredible challenge going forward.



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Kanye West brings out Marilyn Manson, DaBaby at ‘Donda’ event, stirring controversy

Kanye West made another controversial move at his latest “DONDA listening party” at Chicago’s Soldier Field.

On Thursday night, the rapper brought out Marilyn Manson, who has been accused of sexual assault by multiple women, along with fellow rapper DaBaby, also embroiled in controversy. The trio – West wore a black face covering – stood on a faux house stoop under a large cross.

West’s new song “Hurricane” – one in which DaBaby is featured – played as well as another song titled “Jail.”

After the event, a rep for West confirmed to Billboard that Manson’s voice will be featured on the upcoming album.

MARILYN MANSON SUED BY JANE DOE FOR ALLEGED RAPE, SEXUAL BATTERY IN LOS ANGELES

Manson “will continue to conceptually collaborate with Ye on the ‘DONDA’ project,” the rep said. 

From left, a masked Kanye West, DaBaby and Marilyn Manson hang out on the stoop of a replica of the house of West’s late mother Donda, at Soldier Field in Chicago, Aug. 26, 2021. (Brian Prahl/MEGA)

Ye’s decision to include Manson, real name Brian Hugh Warner, has caused a stir online as the rocker has been accused of rape and sexual, physical, and emotional assault by multiple women in various lawsuits.

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“Westworld” actress and Manson’s former fiancee Evan Rachel Wood also accused him of sexual assault and abuse. 

In February, Wood wrote on Instagram: “The name of my abuser is Brian Warner, also known to the world as Marilyn Manson. He started grooming me when I was a teenager and horrifically abused me for years. I was brainwashed and manipulated into submission. I am done living in fear of retaliation, slander, or blackmail. I am here to expose this dangerous man and call out the many industries that have enabled him, before he ruins any more lives. I stand with the many victims who will no longer be silent.”

Manson has denied all charges and released his own statement in February. He said in an Instagram post the allegations were “horrible distortions of reality” and that his “intimate relationships have always been entirely consensual.”

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For his part, DaBaby, 29, was swept up in a scandal earlier this summer when he made homophobic comments at a Miami-area music festival. The fallout included multiple apologies from the star and him being dropped from the lineup of the popular music festival Lollapalooza just hours before he was set to perform.

Reps for West and DaBaby – born Jonathan Lyndale Kirk – did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment.

Fox News’ Nate Day contributed to this report.



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Kevin Feige on Shang-Chi controversy, Scarlett Johansson lawsuit

Kevin Feige
Photo: Rich Fury (Getty Images)

Marvel has had an uncharacteristically tricky summer. After leaving the world with Avengers: Endgame and Spider-Man: Far From Home, it was safe to assume that their place at the top of the blockbuster entertainment heap was secure. But roughly a month after the release of their first big-screen release since Spider-Man nearly two years ago, the multi-verse is spiraling out of control. First, Scarlett Johansson sued the powerhouse for simultaneously releasing her first solo outing Black Widow in theaters and on Disney+. Then, weeks later, Disney CEO Bob Chapek referred to the upcoming Shang-Chi And The Legend Of The Ten Rings as an “interesting experiment.” Although Chapek was talking about giving Shang-Chi a 45-day exclusive theatrical release, many, including the film’s star Simu Liu, interpreted his comments as a derogatory remark about the film’s predominantly Asian cast.

Since the news of the lawsuit and Chapek’s comments broke, we’ve heard very little from Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige, the ringleader of the MCU. However, at the premiere of Shang-Chi, Feige attempted to put out the fires.

“He is not a shy man,” Feige said about Liu’s tweet. “I think in that particular tweet you can see, and I think everyone does, a misunderstanding. It was not the intention. The proof is in the movie and we swing for the fences as we always do. With the amount of creative energy we put in and the budget, there’s no expense spared to bring this origin story to the screen.”

Over the weekend, Liu tweeted in response to Chapek, “We are not an experiment. We are the underdog; the underestimated. We are the ceiling-breakers. We are the celebration of culture and joy that will persevere after an embattled year. We are the surprise. I’m fired the f**k up to make history on September 3rd; JOIN US.”

At this point, Feige is doing damage control, understandably trying to keep attention off of this controversy and on the film he’s releasing. Anyway, Feige’s two-stepping around controversy continued as he said he’s “all for amicable solutions” when it came to the ScarJo suit. Giving a milquetoast soundbite is Feige’s superpower.

[via The Hollywood Reporter]



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Kevin Feige Talks ‘Shang-Chi’ Representation and “Experiment” Comment Controversy – The Hollywood Reporter

On Monday night, the stars of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings gathered in Hollywood to celebrate the upcoming Marvel Studios tentpole. But in an unusual set of circumstances for the Disney-owned studio, the premiere came just 48 hours after its lead, Simu Liu, took aim at Disney CEO Bob Chapek, who had described Shang-Chi‘s release strategy as an “experiment” for the company.

Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige addressed the tweet during the premiere, saying of Liu: “He is not a shy man. I think in that particular tweet you can see and I think everyone does, a misunderstanding. It was not the intention. The proof is in the movie and we swing for the fences as we always do. With the amount of creative energy we put in and the budget, there’s no expense spared to bring this origin story to the screen.”

On Aug. 12, Disney CEO Bob Chapek fielded a question during an investor’s call about keeping Shang-Chi and Free Guy as theatrical exclusives rather than putting the day-and-date on Disney Premier Access, as the company had done with Black Widow, Cruella and Jungle Cruise. Chapek called Shang-Chi “an interesting experiment for us” as the film only has a 45-day theatrical window. He added, “the prospect of being able to take a Marvel title to the service after going theatrical with 45 days will be yet another data point to inform our actions going forward on our titles.”

On Aug. 14, Liu responded to that comment via a statement on Twitter. “We are not an experiment,” Liu began. “We are the underdog; the underestimated. We are the ceiling-breakers. We are the celebration of culture and joy that will persevere after an embattled year. We are the surprise. I’m fired the f**k up to make history on September 3rd; JOIN US.”

Feige also noted that Shang-Chi‘s premiere had a similarly impactful feel to that of Black Panther‘s celebrations. “When you have the opportunity to showcase a hero that looks like a huge segment of the globe that feels like they haven’t been showcased, the magic can happen if you deliver. I think Destin (Daniel Cretton) and Simu have delivered for this movie.”

Feige added that he noticed a superhero quality in Liu after “a lot of reads, a lot of auditions” adding “there’s no magic formula” in finding the right person for a Marvel hero. “It’s a feeling. It’s a sense of both the ability to be relatable and grounded and, at the same time, take your place in that pantheon of heroes should everything go so well in an origin story they will end up with the other pandemic heroes.”

As for what could potentially be next for Liu’s Shang-Chi, Feige noted “there is a direct line of where he heads to next.”

Shang-Chi is a barrier-breaking film for Marvel, as it is the studio’s first to star a largely Asian cast. It also stars Tony Leung, Awkwafina, Michelle Yeoh, Fala Chen, Meng’er Zhang, Florian Munteanu and Ronny Chieng.

Liu’s comments came as another Disney star was at odds with the company, which is in the midst of a bombshell lawsuit with Black Widow star Scarlett Johansson, who is suing over Disney’s decision to release the Marvel title simultaneously in theaters and on Disney+ Premier Access. The actor claimed the move hurt the box office in favor of juicing Disney’s streaming service.

Marvels’ Feige addressed the lawsuit at the premiere, noting he is “all for amicable solutions.”



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Controversy surrounding additional dose for J&J COVID-19 vaccine recipients – Good Morning America

  1. Controversy surrounding additional dose for J&J COVID-19 vaccine recipients Good Morning America
  2. J&J Covid vaccine recipients can get supplemental Pfizer or Moderna dose in San Francisco CNBC
  3. San Francisco hospital offering ‘supplemental’ COVID-19 vaccine to people who received J&J shot Fox News
  4. After White House weighs in, SF doctor defends decision to offer booster shot for J&J recipients KGO-TV
  5. COVID-19 vaccine tracker: A growing gap in Leon with 44% fully vaccinated with Florida at 61% Tallahassee Democrat
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sneaker controversy explodes after ‘best race in Olympic history’

Karsten Warholm’s gold medal did not ease his anger.

The 25-year-old men’s 400m hurdle champion expressed frustration that his rival, silver medalist Rai Benjamin, “had those things in his shoes, which I hate,” allowing him to run “on air.”

“Those things” are an innovative thick slab of Pebax foam in sprint spikes, dubbed the “super spike” running shoe found in Nike’s Air Zoom Victory and Dragonfly models.

Mo Farah, Letesenbet Giday, Joshua Cheptegei and Sifan Hassan broke records last fall while wearing Nike Air Zoom Dragonflys on their runs.

“I don’t see why you should put anything beneath a sprinting shoe,” Warholm said. “In middle distance I can understand it because of the cushioning. If you want cushioning, you can put a mattress there. But if you put a trampoline I think it’s bulls–t, and I think it takes credibility away from our sport.”

Karsten Warholm (left) beat Rai Benjamin in the 400-meter hurdles at the Olympics.
Xinhua News Agency via Getty Ima

In what many are calling the best race ever, Warholm (Norway) and Benjamin (United States) broke the world record, which had stood for 29 years prior to Warholm breaking it last month in Oslo.

Benjamin himself declared it the “best race in Olympic history.” 


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Warholm – who ran a 45.94 Monday before letting out a celebratory scream, ripping his uniform in half and dropping to his knees in astonishment – works with Puma and the Mercedes F1 team to create his own spikes, which feature an upper carbon plate in the soul and weigh only 135 grams. But they are not the same as the “super spike,” according to Warholm.

“Yes, we have the carbon plate,” Warholm said. “But we have tried to make it as thin as possible. Because that is the way I would like to do it. Of course technology will always be there. But I also want to keep it down to a level where we can compare results because that is important.

Karsten Warholm (left) and Rai Benjamin after their 400-meter battle.
AFP via Getty Images

“I’ve always said that the perfect race doesn’t exist. But this is the closest I think I’ve come to a perfect race.”

Benjamin gave credit to the track – not his shoes – when discussing his second-place performance.

“It’s a very good track. It’s soft, it has a lot of give,” he said. “it’s a phenomenal track. People say it’s the track, the shoes, and the conditions were really good.

“But I could wear different shoes and still run fast. No one will do what we just did, I don’t care who you are. Could be Kevin Young, Edwin Moses, respect to those guys, but they cannot run what we just ran just now. It’s a really fast track, it felt good, the conditions were really good.”

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Controversy equals cash for Greene, Gaetz

Reps. Marjorie Taylor GreeneMarjorie Taylor GreeneGOP efforts to downplay danger of Capitol riot increase The Memo: What now for anti-Trump Republicans? Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says she’s meeting with Trump ‘soon’ in Florida MORE (R-Ga.) and Matt GaetzMatthew (Matt) GaetzCalifornia venue cancels Gaetz, Greene’s ‘America First’ rally Gaetz campaign hired law firm used by Jeffrey Epstein, campaign filing shows Britney Spears thanks fans after judge rules in favor of lawyer request MORE (R-Fla.) are among the top-ranked fundraisers in the House, according to new Federal Election Commission filings, with each bringing in more than $1 million.

Greene, who was stripped of her committee assignments earlier this year after expressing support for violence against Democrats, raised more than $1.5 million. Greene has also come under criticism from Republicans for remarks about the Holocaust.

Gaetz has been mired in controversy as investigators examine whether he violated federal sex trafficking laws. But he took in $1.4 million despite having to refund 50 campaign donations.

Those numbers are smaller than what the top House GOP leaders raked in but are a reflection of how controversy is paying off for some lawmakers who match inflammatory words with high-profile presences on cable news and social media.

“Even though they aren’t necessarily the most powerful members of Congress, they have a very high profile on social media, and that enables them to reach potential contributors,” said John J. Pitney Jr., a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College. “Before social media, before online contributions, it would have been very, very difficult for backbenchers to get that kind of visibility and raise that kind of money.”

Pitney also said that lawmakers such as Greene are taking advantage of a “permanent” campaign process in which they are constantly asking for people to donate to them, often off of their own controversies.

“The more visibility she has, the more money she can raise, and the more money she raises, the more she can buy ads,” he said, referring to Greene’s purchasing patterns.

“Outrage equals visibility,” he said.  

Green and Gaetz are among the top 10 fundraisers in the House GOP conference for the second quarter.

Rep. Jim JordanJames (Jim) Daniel JordanTop House antitrust Republican forms ‘Freedom from Big Tech Caucus’ Cheney reportedly told Jim Jordan ‘you f—— did this’ during Jan. 6 riot McCarthy, GOP face a delicate dance on Jan. 6 committee MORE (R-Ohio), a former leader of the conservative House Freedom Caucus and vocal supporter of former President Donald TrumpDonald TrumpFormer surgeon general says CDC guidance on masks ‘premature’ and ‘wrong’ Biden calls on Congress to pass voting rights bills on anniversary of John Lewis’s death Cuba, Haiti pose major challenges for Florida Democrats MORE who also has an active presence on Fox News, raised more than $1 million as well. 

Minority Whip Steve ScaliseStephen (Steve) Joseph ScaliseHouse Republicans post record fundraising ahead of midterms GOP divided on anti-Biden midterm message Defense contractors ramp up donations to GOP election objectors MORE (La.) and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthyKevin McCarthyEx-Trump official: ‘No. 1 national security threat I’ve ever seen’ is GOP Top House antitrust Republican forms ‘Freedom from Big Tech Caucus’ The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Goldman Sachs – Schumer sets firm deadline on bipartisan infrastructure plan MORE (Calif.) were the House GOP’s top two fundraisers, bringing in $3.7 and $3.4 million respectively.

Another big winner was Rep. Dan CrenshawDaniel CrenshawWhite House and Congress would be wise to heed Cotton’s Navy report White House backs Gwen Berry’s right to protest amid GOP backlash Meghan McCain suggests Olympian turning away from flag gives Putin propaganda MORE (Texas), who is among the most high-profile House Republicans on cable news and social media.

He raised $3 million in the second quarter, a huge total for a rank-and-file House member, and closed the month with almost $3.9 million in the bank.

Crenshaw and other Republicans with piles of cash sank money into Facebook and other social media platforms to fundraise.

Crenshaw’s campaign paid for Facebook ads nearly every day of April and May, totaling approximately $80,000 across the quarter. A smaller $1,207 was spent on Google ads.  

Greene sank $15,000 into digital advertising on the conservative social media network Parler and $41,000 into Facebook.

Jordan raised nearly $1.6 million and has $7.3 million on hand.

First-term Rep. Lauren BoebertLauren BoebertGOP vaccine resistance poses growing challenge in pandemic fight The Memo: COVID-19 spike raises stakes for Biden, GOP Newsmax issues statement in favor of vaccines after host says they’re ‘against nature’ MORE (R-Colo.), who has won headlines and controversy recently with criticisms of federal vaccination efforts, raised nearly $1 million. 

Some Republicans who have criticized Trump also banked cash.

Rep. Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyCan we please have an authoritative definition of RINO? The Hill’s 12:30 Report – Presented by Facebook – Manchin on board with spending deal How Trump can win again: Become the calm, moderate candidate MORE (R-Wyo.), who was removed as a House GOP leader over her criticisms of Trump, pulled in about $1.9 million and closed the quarter with more than $2.8 million in the bank, according to the filings. 

“Trump is a tremendous motivator of campaign contributions,” Pitney said. “People give to support Trump, and they give to oppose Trump. A year ago, Liz Cheney probably wouldn’t have raised a lot of money from anti-Trump folks, but recent events have drawn a lot of money her way.” 



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Disney’s Jungle Cruise Ride Updated Amid Controversy, Loses ‘Natives’



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Tucker Carlson livid after Rep. Matt Gaetz tries to rope him into controversy, source says

“It pissed him off,” the person familiar with the matter explained to CNN on Wednesday.

Gaetz, who has strongly denied allegations that he had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl and paid for her travel with him, seemed to attempt to draw Carlson into the controversy during a bizarre Tuesday night interview.

The Florida lawmaker first referenced a previous allegation of sexual misconduct against Carlson, which the Fox News host has denied, saying that he was “not the only person on screen right now who’s been falsely accused of a terrible sex act.”

Then, and more interestingly, Gaetz suggested Carlson had met a woman involved in the recent controversy related to the sex allegations. Gaetz said that woman was threatened by the FBI to tell people he was involved in a “pay to play scheme.”

A person familiar with the DOJ investigation told CNN that the probe is part of a broader probe into trafficking allegations against another Florida politician. Gaetz has not been charged with a crime.

“You and I went to dinner about two years ago,” Gaetz told Carlson. “Your wife was there, and I brought a friend of mine, you’ll remember her.”

Carlson immediately denied knowledge of the dinner.

“I don’t remember the woman you are speaking of or the context at all, honestly,” Carlson said.

After the interview concluded, Carlson described it as “one of the weirdest” he’s “ever conducted.”

A representative for Fox did not offer a comment. Gaetz’s office also did not respond to a request for comment.

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Seth Rogen Reveals What Really Happened With Emma Watson On This Is the End Set

Seth Rogen has confirmed what really happened during This Is The End’s set during production. This Is the End is an absurd and outlandish horror-comedy that goes to extremes for laughs, but Rogen confirmed that one comedic setup went too far for Watson and the Harry Potter alum chose to remove herself from the scene. Rumors about this moment have circulated for years, and now Rogen has given fans a sense of what really transpired between him and Watson during filming. The truth, as Rogen tells it, is much less dramatic than previous reports would have audiences believe. Rogen says he understands why Watson chose to leave at that moment and notes that she came back to finish her work on the film the next day.

“I mean, I don’t look back on that and think, ‘How dare she do that?’ You know? I think sometimes when you read something, when it comes to life it doesn’t seem to be what you thought it was,” Rogen confirmed to GQ. “But it was not some terrible ending to our relationship. She came back the next day to say goodbye. She helped promote the film. No hard feelings and I couldn’t be happier with how the film turned out in the end.”

The premise of the film was that a group of celebrities found themselves together at a party as the apocalypse began to unfold, with the stars all playing at least somewhat exaggerated versions of themselves. The scene in question saw Danny McBride (as himself) becoming a cannibal, leading a horde of scavengers, which included a leather-clad Channing Tatum on a leash.

Earlier in the film, Watson is confirmed to be one of the only celebrities to survive this rapture, but ultimately resorts to surviving the wasteland independently.

Rogen admitted, “She was probably right. It was probably funnier the way we ended up doing it.”

Before becoming a feature-length film, the concept existed as a short film, featuring Rogen alongside Jay Baruchel staving off an apocalypse in their apartment. With This Is the End also starring the likes of James Franco, Craig Robinson, and Jonah Hill, fans would surely enjoy seeing the cast reunite for a project, with Baruchel previously hinting that such a reunion isn’t out of the cards.

“The closest that I’ve heard, and this is a Seth and [director/co-writer] Evan [Goldberg] question more than a me question, but the last time I heard was Evan saying something to the effect of, ‘What I would like to see is you five or six dudes in a bunch of different settings,’ so not sequels, but basically This Is the End in ancient Rome and then This Is the End in the American West and then all this whatever, but I don’t know where it could possibly go,” Baruchel confirmed with ComicBook.com. “I know I’d be well up for it. But I guess we get kicked out of heaven or something. [No talks] beyond, ‘It would be interesting to see you and Jonah hate each other in a different time period.'”

Stay tuned for details on a possible This Is the End reunion.

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