Tag Archives: Labyrinth

Soar through the ‘Labyrinth of Night’ — a Martian canyon the size of Italy — in thrilling new satellite video – Livescience.com

  1. Soar through the ‘Labyrinth of Night’ — a Martian canyon the size of Italy — in thrilling new satellite video Livescience.com
  2. See Mars’ Grand Canyon, The Labyrinth Of Night Giant Freakin Robot
  3. Fly across Mars’ ‘Labyrinth of Night’: Incredible video reveals what it would be like to soar over the surface Daily Mail
  4. Mars probe captures stunning ‘bird’s eye’ footage flying over Martian ‘maze’ and reveals ‘ancient secret’… The US Sun
  5. Amazing Flyover Reveals What Soaring Across Mars Would Look Like ScienceAlert
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Fly across Mars’ ‘Labyrinth of Night’: Incredible video reveals what it would be like to soar over the surface – Daily Mail

  1. Fly across Mars’ ‘Labyrinth of Night’: Incredible video reveals what it would be like to soar over the surface Daily Mail
  2. See Mars’ Grand Canyon, The Labyrinth Of Night Giant Freakin Robot
  3. Mars probe captures stunning ‘bird’s eye’ footage flying over Martian ‘maze’ and reveals ‘ancient secret’… The US Sun
  4. Breathtaking views of Mars’ Labyrinth of Night and colossal valleys shared by ESA IndiaTimes
  5. Amazing Flyover Reveals What Soaring Across Mars Would Look Like ScienceAlert
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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White Day: A Labyrinth Named School coming to PS5

Publisher PQube [264 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/pqube”>PQube and developer SONNORI” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/sonnori”>SONNORI will release survival Horror [78 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/horror”>horror game White Day: A Labyrinth Named School (2015) [1 article]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/white-day-a-labyrinth-named-school-2015″>White Day: A Labyrinth Named School for PS5 [2,763 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/playstation/ps5″>PlayStation 5, according to a newly posted Target listing. It is listed with a September 30 release date and $39.99 price.

The PlayStation 5 version will include over 30 costumes originally released as downloadable content.

PQube recently teased a White Day-related announcement for May 31. A sequel, White Day 2: The Flower That Tells Lies [1 article]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/white-day-2-the-flower-that-tells-lies”>White Day 2: The Flower That Tells Lies, is also in development. It is currently unclear whether the PlayStation 5 version of the original game is the only announcement planned for May 31, or if it will accompany further information about the sequel.

White Day: A Labyrinth Named School is currently available for PlayStation 4, PC via Steam, iOS via App Store, and Android via Google Play.

Here is an overview of the game, via PQube:

About

Steel your nerves for a Korean horror without equal! Step into the shoes of student Hee-Min Lee and brave the terrors of Yeondu High School in a terrifying survival horror game filled with puzzles, secrets and—of course—deadly ghosts.

Story

Prepare yourself for one of the most chilling games ever created! On the eve of gift-giving holiday White Day, new Yeondu High School student Hee-Min Lee slips into school to hide a box of candies for the girl of his dreams. But when the school shutters slam shut, he finds himself trapped in the building overnight, hunted by a killer janitor and haunted by the troubled souls of the dead.

Playing as Hee-Min Lee, can you remain hidden, solve the clues and uncover the dark secrets of the building’s past to survive the deadly threats? Or will the after-class horrors claim your life before you can escape? With no weapons to defend yourself there’s zero room for error in this tense, Stealth [9 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/stealth”>stealth-based scarefest brimming with secrets and multiple endings.

Key Features

  • A Classic Horror For A New Generation – The notorious 2001 first-person Korean survival horror considered by original fans to be one of the scariest games ever made returns by popular demand. Completely rebuilt for modern gamers, and finally localized for a western audience, White Day: A Labyrinth Named School is a true videogame nasty.
  • Spine-Tingling Story – Trapped inside your school at night, you and your fellow classmates must carefully explore the twisting corridors by torchlight, hiding from possessed stalkers and running from evil spirits as you try to escape. With branching dialogue, collectable ghost stories hidden scares, White Day: A Labyrinth Named School demands to be played with headphones on and the lights off.
  • Multiple Endings – Your Action [393 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/action”>actions determine where the story goes! Shape your relationship with the other students trapped inside the school to save or sacrifice your friends on the way to unlocking the nine different endings.
  • Mind-Bending Puzzles – Thanks to an environment filled with classically-styled survival horror puzzles, White Day tests your brain as much as your run button. Collect items, solve riddles and race against the clock to save your friends from certain doom and unpick the secrets of the school.
  • Cheaters Never Prosper – This school’s wise to those who want to take shortcuts! Puzzle solutions change every time, so pack away all thoughts of skipping the scary bits with a guide.
  • Innovative Dynamic Scare System – Want to just absorb the story? Play on Very Easy to enjoy the Adventure [281 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/adventure”>adventure without the challenge. Eager to prove your bravery? Increase the difficulty setting to ramp up the scares and ghost activities, with hauntings ready to spring when you least expect it.
  • Traditional Survival [50 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/survival”>Survival Horror Mechanics – Resource-based save points and limited healing items guarantee an edge-of-your-seat thrill ride that takes no prisoners.
  • New Features – As well as all-new visuals and audio effects, discover a brand-new character, scenario, reimagined ghosts and special endings created specifically for this remake.



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From Kartik Aaryan and Kiara Advani’s labyrinth, Tabu emerges victorious

STORY: Ruhan Randhawa (Kartik Aaryan) is a baby-faced crook and yet, the formidable Thakur clan falls for his rookie black-magic tricks, especially the well-sheltered scion Reet Thakur (Kiara Advani). In spite of being the sequel to a smash hit—although independent—Anees Bazmee’s ‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2’ (BB2) doesn’t succumb to external pressures. Instead, it holds on its own… one voodoo doll at a time.

REVIEW: Remind us again, what is it that they say about women and disgruntlement? Oh, yes, “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.” Down there at the ‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2’ camp, for writer Aakash Kaushik and director Anees Bazmee, that aphorism takes a life of its own. Yes, we all have our thoughts and feelings about this sequel but separate yourself from the memories of Akshay Kumar’s debut instalment for a bit and allow the latest rendition to introduce itself. This story begins with a shot of a sand dune somewhere—clue: Rajasthan—and traces back to when Reet was a baby girl clinging to her pyaari bhabi Anjulika. Cut to scene two, the wealthy family leaves their vast mansion for one of their own has rolled over to the other, darker side of metaphysical existence: Manjulika, the wench. After devouring eight of their family members, the Thakurs are assured Manjulika has been bottled up and holed in a deplorable room, at their abandoned manor. But, how did a charming little punk like Ruhan find himself amidst this family mess? In comes lovely, naïve Reet. ‘Bhool Bhulaiyya 2’ is nothing like its tale of origin, and that is its secret magic spell.

Bazmee, in no way new to the genre of comedy; some may even go on to call him a master, knows all too well that, in India, two things constitute the content-consumption palate of our viewers—sex and satire. Here, Bazmee harps on the latter. Elaborating further on what was mentioned initially (about uniqueness in tone and treatment), ‘BB2’ invests heavily in physical and situational comedies; add witty dialogues, quick humour and expressionism to the grind, the output that you get is, well, ‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2’.

Put pre-conceived notions to rest, for this film has nothing you HAVE seen before: if you know you know. Although it would be criminal to compare Aaryan to Kumar—the former must have felt the pressure down to his last bone given Kumar’s level of success with it, back in 2007—but there’s a constant humming sound that plays like a broken record while you are watching the film: it’s the breadcrumbs of a star. Especially his signature head-nod-and-squishy-eyes move, which was replicated (perhaps as a ‘nod’ to Kumar’s nod; an ode to a senior) by Aaryan. Its not the same, but he tries. With that out of the way, let’s decode Kartik Aaryan the un-star in the movie. For Ruhan, the actor imbibes an everyman candour that glides effortlessly well with his chill-easy vibe. Kartik Aaryan brings Kartik Aaryan on set, to this film, and he delivers a personable performance. His chemistry with Kiara Advani—who’s nothing short of a Rajasthani princess; attire-wise—falls flat. There’s the quintessential flirting and frolicking, kissing and dancing, but the sum total of it all is an uncomfortable, unflattering PowerPoint presentation. Like two people, who have met only once before, pretending to be friends.

Others, however, bring their A game to the table: say Tabu. Versatility should really be Tabu’s middle name. If it is already, then she has got that one just about right. ‘BB2’ sees her in her element—those big and curly locks, gajras, overdrawn kohl and an elegance that cannot be acquired through training. At this point, it is frustratingly impossible to get into the magnitude of her greatness without being a loud-mouth about it. So, we shall refrain. Hold on, hang in there, and let this mean something to you: a certain human emotion, one that is rampant and screams rage, typifies Tabu’s spirit.

Also, in a bid to retain some of the high-selling points of its stand-alone predecessor, Bazmee brings a few old players back into the game, among them, Rajpal Yadav, as chhote pandit, is class apart. Next in line are Bollywood veterans Sanjay Mishra and Rajesh Sharma. A child artiste, too, leaves his stamp on the movie, Siddhant Ghegadmal as Potlu.

‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2’ is an agglomeration of grief and the grieving, a desi (more gleeful) answer to the old adage that life is, indeed, ‘the biggest tragedy’ of all—which navigates black magic and prods along an even gloomier subject: the human nature—and it sticks for the most part, and the bits that don’t, they must be lost in the labyrinth of life.

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Martian Labyrinth Sliced by Cliff-Like Structure Looks Like an Alien Scar

At first glance, it appears that something left a deep scar on an alien planet’s face. It’s an image you’d expect to see in a sci-fi movie, but it’s real, and it comes from our neighbor: Mars. What you’re actually looking at is a Martian cliff edge rising above the surface.

This image was taken by the Exomars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), a spacecraft that is currently orbiting Mars, mapping its surface and providing not only incredible pictures of it but also a complex inventory of the planet’s atmospheric gases.

The orbiter represents a collaborative project between the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Roscosmos, and its goal is to help scientists trace signs of biological or geological activity and look for water-rich locations.

The orbiter does its job with the help of several scientific instruments. One of them is the Stereo Surface Imaging System (CaSSIS) camera, which the spacecraft uses to capture high-definition images of the Red Planet from 400 km (248 miles) up.

The picture that you’re seeing here (click main photo to enlarge) was taken over the eastern part of Noctis Labyrinthus, a region that features a labyrinth of valleys and plateaus. It’s located near Valles Marineris, which is the grand canyon of Mars.

The entire network stretches for around 1200 km (746 km), roughly the length of the Rhine River on Earth. It’s a fascinating place that actually looks like wood eaten by termites when viewed from above.

The cliff-like structure that appears to slice the image in the center is part of a “horst-graben system,” ESA says. It resulted from the tectonic processes that pulled the planet’s crust apart, creating raised ridges (horst) and sunken valleys (graben). There’s also rockfall nearby, as well as traces left behind on the cliff face.

Patches of linear ripples formed by the wind can also be seen on the right side of this stunning image. A few minor impact craters appear on the planet’s surface as well.

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Psychonauts 2 Loboto’s Labyrinth Collectibles Guide: Everything To Find In The First Level

Like the original, Psychonauts 2 is brimming with collectibles hidden throughout its many locales–both in the real world and in the minds of its characters. Uncovering all of them helps you to level up Raz more quickly, gaining new powers and learning more about each of the people whose minds you’ll explore. But finding everything hidden in the depths of the psyche can be tough.

We’ve been combing through every lobe and synapse of Psychonauts 2 to discover all that’s hidden within the game, with the aim of making it a little easier to discover everything. The guide below will walk you through the game’s first level, Loboto’s Labyrinth, to help you uncover all that’s hidden within Dr. Loboto’s mind.

Stay tuned for more Psychonauts 2 coverage and guides, and don’t forget to check out our Psychonauts 2 review.

Loboto’s Labyrinth Collectibles

  • Nuggets of Wisdom: 2
  • Memory Vaults: 2
  • Emotional Baggage: Hat Box, Steamer Trunk, Suit Case, Purse
  • Figments: 80

Much of Loboto’s Labyrinth is a tutorial for the rest of Psychonauts 2, with your powers slowly unlocking during the course of the level. Those powers then usually allow you to access nearby collectibles, so be aware that you might need to backtrack a bit to get everything you need. We’re marking each collectible as it appears during the course of the level, but some will require you to return to the stage at a later time.

Memory Vault: Look for this first collectible to the left of the first Loboto portrait you find, just as you enter the central office after following him.

Duffle Bag Emotional Baggage: In this same room, you can spot the blue Duffle Bag on a small table to the right of the Dental Door where Coach stands. You’ll need a tag to open the bag, though–look for the Duffle Bag Tag near the desks further to the right when facing the Dental Door.

Hatbox Emotional Baggage Tag: You’ll next enter the Conference Room, which has a long, winding table in the center. The Hatbox Tag is beside it. You’ll find the Hatbox later in the level.

Suitcase Emotional Baggage: You can’t access this one the first time you enter the Conference Room, but you’ll likely hear it. It’s hidden behind the poster on the left wall. You need Pyrokinesis to burn down the poster, but you won’t get it until later in the level. The Suitcase Tag is also located at a later point, so you’ll need to replay the level to unlock this one.

Steamer Trunk Emotional Baggage Tag: Up ahead is the Dental Void area, in which you’ll have to jump between dental mirrors serving as platforms. The Steamer Trunk Tag is on the distant platform you can’t reach, past the sink where you exit the area. You’ll need the Mental Connection PSI power to get to it, which means you’ll have to come back to this level again later.

Nugget of Wisdom: Further on, you’ll enter a room themed on a trash can. Look for a tooth zipper, which hides the Nugget of Wisdom–use Telekinesis to open the zipper.

Hatbox Emotional Baggage: Keep going until you burn through a poster on the wall to reveal a path forward. Keep moving past the pools of water (er, hope that’s water) until you’ve nearly reached the last one. Burn the Loboto portrait on the left wall before the last pool to reveal the Hatbox behind it.

Purse Emotional Baggage: Keep moving until you hit a hallway with another watery canal, this one filled with teeth that sink as you jump from one to the next. At the end of the hall is a room where bookshelves flank both sides and a big portrait of Dr. Loboto waits in the center. Don’t burn it yet–first, look for the Purse on top of the shelf on the left. You won’t be able to open it yet, as the Purse Tag is further in the level, requiring you to return a second time for this one. Burn the portrait to continue.

Memory Vault: This one requires a new power you won’t have your first time through: Mental Connection. Look for the Memory Vault in the Asylum area, after you climb the spiral staircase into a tower.

Steamer Trunk Emotional Baggage: The same platform that holds the Memory Vault in the Asylum section of the level also contains the Steamer Trunk. You’ll need Mental Connection to reach both, so don’t worry about these your first time through.

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