Tag Archives: runs

The Simpsons Hit & Run’s Developers Are Just as Confused as Fans About Why We Never Got a Sequel – IGN

  1. The Simpsons Hit & Run’s Developers Are Just as Confused as Fans About Why We Never Got a Sequel IGN
  2. The Simpsons: Hit & Run devs respond to possible sequel revival after “bizarre” axing Dexerto
  3. Devs from The Simpsons Hit & Run say the game could’ve had four sequels, but the publisher said nah: ‘The stars [were] aligned … and then it was just: huh, I guess we’re not [making them]’ PC Gamer
  4. It’s been 20 years, and The Simpsons Hit and Run developers are just as surprised as you that the cult open-world game hasn’t got a sequel yet Gamesradar
  5. The Simpsons Hit & Run publisher ‘said no’ to a deal to make five more Simpsons games | VGC Video Games Chronicle
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Switch 2 leaks claim console runs “like a PS5”, FF7R to be launch title & more – Dexerto

  1. Switch 2 leaks claim console runs “like a PS5”, FF7R to be launch title & more Dexerto
  2. Thrilling Nintendo Switch 2 leak includes PS5-like quality for FF7R and verifiable backwards compatibility claims Notebookcheck.net
  3. Leaker says Square Enix has Switch 2 kits, is backwards compatible & has camera, Final Fantasy VII Remake launch game My Nintendo News
  4. Nintendo Switch Leak Reveals First Game, PS5 Graphics ComicBook.com
  5. Exciting Switch 2 Leak Teases Console’s Power and Possible Launch Title GameRant
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Sha’Carri Richardson runs 6th fastest 200m time EVER at USATF Nationals | NBC Sports – NBC Sports

  1. Sha’Carri Richardson runs 6th fastest 200m time EVER at USATF Nationals | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  2. Sha’Carri Richardson wins U.S. women’s 100-meter to advance to World Championships Yahoo Sports
  3. Sha’Carri Richardson wins 100m U.S. title 2 years after doping violation – ESPN ESPN
  4. Sha’Carri Richardson’s star shines brightest, winning the 100-meter dash at USATF Outdoor Championships OregonLive
  5. Sha’Carri Richardson clinches first NATIONAL TITLE with clutch rally in women’s 100m | NBC Sports NBC Sports
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Mia Brahe-Pedersen runs with the sharks, former Olympian Jenna Prandini and world-leader Sha’Carri Richardson – OregonLive

  1. Mia Brahe-Pedersen runs with the sharks, former Olympian Jenna Prandini and world-leader Sha’Carri Richardson OregonLive
  2. USATF Outdoor Championships 2023: Five sprinters to watch including Fred Kerley, Sha’Carri Richardson, Erriyon Knighton, Noah Lyles and Aleia Hobbs Olympics
  3. Schedule & Results for 2023 USATF Outdoor Championships LetsRun.com
  4. Mia Brahe-Pedersen qualifies for semifinals, finishes sixth in 1st round of the 100-meter dash at USATF Outdo OregonLive
  5. Mia Brahe-Pedersen Received Encouragement From Sha’Carri Richardson FloTrack
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Brahe-Pedersen runs with the sharks, former Olympian Prandini and world-leader Richardson at USATF Outdoor Championships – OregonLive

  1. Brahe-Pedersen runs with the sharks, former Olympian Prandini and world-leader Richardson at USATF Outdoor Championships OregonLive
  2. USATF Outdoor Championships 2023: Five sprinters to watch including Fred Kerley, Sha’Carri Richardson, Erriyon Knighton, Noah Lyles and Aleia Hobbs Olympics
  3. Schedule & Results for 2023 USATF Outdoor Championships LetsRun.com
  4. Mia Brahe-Pedersen qualifies for semifinals, finishes sixth in 1st round of the 100-meter dash at USATF Outdo OregonLive
  5. Mia Brahe-Pedersen Received Encouragement From Sha’Carri Richardson FloTrack
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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“I Just Want Him To Be Smart When He Runs” – Dan Patrick On Lamar Jackson | 05/25/23 – Dan Patrick Show

  1. “I Just Want Him To Be Smart When He Runs” – Dan Patrick On Lamar Jackson | 05/25/23 Dan Patrick Show
  2. Lamar Jackson Says He’s Going To Run Less In New Ravens Offense, Which Is Good For Him But Bad For Team OutKick
  3. Rich Eisen on Lamar Jackson Getting His First Taste of the Ravens’ New Offense Under Todd Monken The Rich Eisen Show
  4. Mike Preston’s Ravens observations on Zay Flowers, Lamar Jackson, players bulking up and more | COMMENTARY Baltimore Sun
  5. Late for Work 5/25: A Full Season of Roquan Smith Is Cause for Excitement BaltimoreRavens.com
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NFL Draft 2023 home runs and head-scratchers from Day 2: Will Levis lands in a comfy spot, Bears reach on ‘D’ – CBS Sports

  1. NFL Draft 2023 home runs and head-scratchers from Day 2: Will Levis lands in a comfy spot, Bears reach on ‘D’ CBS Sports
  2. 2023 NFL Draft: Will Levis is latest victim of league’s hype machine, suffering indignity of awkward green room shots Yahoo Sports
  3. Will Levis’ attitude kicked him out of first round, Ravens need Lamar Jackson | NFL | THE HERD The Herd with Colin Cowherd
  4. Will Levis, widely expected to be picked in first round of 2023 NFL Draft, suffers awkward moments as he isn’t chosen until round 2 CNN
  5. Will Levis, after NFL draft free fall, taken in second round by Titans – ESPN ESPN
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Halo Infinite: 343’s Statement Runs Against Deep Cuts in Halo Development Team

Halo developer 343 Industries says Master Chief and Cortana are staying under its roof, but reports of deep cuts to Halo’s development staff calls into question the studio’s ability to sustainably develop future Halo content.

This saga began last week, when we learned that the Halo studio was impacted by Microsoft’s plans to lay off 10,000 people. Since the news broke, speculation has run rampant about Microsoft’s plans for its flagship franchise, including rumors that Microsoft could pass Halo development to another studio entirely, leaving 343 Industries in more of a producer role. These rumors prompted 343 Industries to speak out over the weekend to put the rumblings to rest.

343 Industries’ studio head Pierre Hintze shared a message on Halo’s official Twitter account, writing, “Halo and Master Chief are here to stay. 343 Industries will continue to develop Halo now and in the future, including epic stories, multiplayer, and more of what makes Halo great.”

But for a studio that has struggled to meet Halo Infinite release dates multiple times, can the recently downsized 343 continue to handle development of a big-budget, AAA first-person shooter franchise? It’s hard to say.

IGN reached out to Xbox’s representatives, but did not receive comment ahead of publication.

‘Hit hard’

IGN has learned that significant cuts have been made to 343’s Halo development team. One former 343 employee impacted by the layoffs estimated about a quarter of 343’s staff was impacted, although that’s not a firm statistic. We’ve also learned that around 30 people were let go from 343’s art department alone, with former employees saying 343 Industries was hit “hard with positions impacted across all disciplines.”

Meanwhile, at least one senior-level source with knowledge of 343’s internal workings, but who is no longer with the studio, has claimed to IGN that it is being reduced to to publishing team. However, based on conversations that IGN has had with knowledgeable sources, the situation at 343 appears to be ongoing, and there is a growing — if unconfirmed — conviction that 343 will no longer be Halo’s sole developer when it’s settled.

Looking through LinkedIn profiles of other laid-off employees reveals hits to folks working on Halo Infinite’s engine, presentation, VFX, gameplay, game design, and more essential departments. It’s clear that 343 is a significantly different studio compared to just seven days ago. In addition, 343 Industries was already dealing with the growing pains of launching a live service game, with a whirlwind of highs and lows over the last year since Halo Infinite’s initial release.

Despite a strong launch at the end of 2021 that included praise for both Infinite’s fresh take on a Halo campaign and the franchise’s first-ever free-to-play multiplayer, the cracks quickly started to show. Fans instantly pushed back against Infinite’s controversial multiplayer progression system, as 343 scrambled to fix the shop and battle pass.

Halo Games in Chronological Order

But the problems didn’t stop there, with the cancellation of split-screen co-op, lengthy delays to Forge Mode, and long content droughts during Halo Infinite’s first Seasons. Just five months after what appeared to be the start of Halo’s big comeback, the community was out of patience.

343 rapidly saw a creative exodus after launch, with 343 founder Bonnie Ross, multiplayer creative director Tom French, and lead narrative designer Aaron Linde all leaving the company in 2022.

Patrick Wren, a former senior multiplayer designer now working on Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, was unsparing in his assessment of 343’s leadership in a post on Twitter.

“The layoffs at 343 shouldn’t have happened and Halo Infinite should be in a better state. The reason for both of those things is incompetent leadership up top during Halo Infinite development causing massive stress on those working hard to make Halo the best it can be,” Wren wrote.

Along with those departures, 343 is facing another creative void at the top, with Halo Infinite director Joseph Staten leaving 343 to rejoin Xbox publishing. Staten’s return to Halo was always designed to be a temporary arrangement, but his departure is still causing concerns among the Halo faithful.

Regardless of what happens with Halo in the future, it’s clear that the initial 10-year plan for Halo Infinite isn’t playing out exactly as Microsoft had hoped. For now, Halo Infinite Season 3: Echoes Within is still set to kick off in early March, adding new maps, modes, and weapons to the game.

Additional reporting by Kat Bailey.

Logan Plant is a freelance writer for IGN covering video game and entertainment news. He has over six years of experience in the gaming industry with bylines at IGN, Nintendo Wire, Switch Player Magazine, and Lifewire. Find him on Twitter @LoganJPlant.



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Zelenskyy vows Ukraine “cannot be broken” as Russia bombs civilians into darkness, but runs short of missiles

Vinnytsia, Ukraine — Russia’s invading forces have left Kherson, but they’re still raining terror down on the southern Ukrainian city’s people.

“I hate the Russians,” said Lilia, after finding her mother’s body. Natasha was killed just a few steps from the safety of her home by a Russian missile strike. Lilia’s father died hours later, too, but she’s not alone.

“They took the most precious people in my life, but I have a son,” she said. “For him I must live.”

Survivors of Russia’s unending volley of rocket fire are left in the cold and the dark, because many of Vladimir Putin’s missiles have been aimed at Ukraine‘s power grid.


Missiles target energy grid leaving Ukrainians in cold and darkness

02:40

The Russian military is using winter as a weapon. With electricity cut, millions of families were unable to cook meals on Saturday as Ukraine commemorated the Great Famine of the 1930s, when the Soviet Union intentionally starved millions of Ukrainians to death.

“We cannot be broken,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared in an address to his nation, honoring those killed by Joseph Stalin then — and Vladimir Putin now. “Once they wanted to destroy us with hunger, now, with darkness and cold.”

People pray, lay flowers and light candles at Holodomor Genocide Museum, which commemorates the “Terror-Famine” or Great Famine, a man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine from 1932 to 1933 that killed millions of Ukrainian, on November 26, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Jeff J Mitchell/Getty


Even in the capital Kyiv, the electricity supply is unreliable. Locals have found shelter anywhere they can, including in tents. Inside one of them, we found Constantin, a videogame designer.

“We should live, we should stay, we should fight,” he told CBS News. “This is the only way of how we can actually win this war… Even if we have to sleep in a tent.”

Even in the dire circumstances, there are reasons for Ukrainians to have hope — more signs that Russian forces are taking a beating. 

The latest British intelligence assessment of the war says Putin’s army is running so short on weapons and other supplies, that it appears to be resorting to firing cruise missiles from the 1980s that have been stripped of their nuclear warheads.

While such missiles “will still produce some damage” just with their impact any unused fuel they slam down still carrying, the U.K. said they were “unlikely to achieve reliable effects against intended targets.”

“Whatever Russia’s intent, this improvisation highlights the level of depletion in Russia’s stock of long-range missiles,” according to the British assessment.



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Clock runs out on efforts to make daylight saving time permanent

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Early this Sunday morning, Americans will engage in the annual autumnal ritual of “falling back” — setting their clocks back one hour to conform with standard time.

If some lawmakers had their way, it would mark the end of a tradition that has stretched for more than a century. But a familiar story unspooled of congressional gridlock and a relentless lobbying campaign, this one from advocates that some jokingly call “Big Sleep.”

A bill to permanently “spring forward” has been stalled in Congress for more than seven months, as lawmakers trade jabs over whether the Senate should have passed the legislation at all. House officials say they’ve been deluged by voters with split opinions and warnings from sleep specialists who insist that adopting permanent standard time instead would be healthier, and congressional leaders admit they just don’t know what to do.

“We haven’t been able to find consensus in the House on this yet,” Rep. Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) said in a statement to The Washington Post. “There are a broad variety of opinions about whether to keep the status quo, to move to a permanent time, and if so, what time that should be.”

Pallone, who chairs the House Energy and Commerce committee that oversees time-change policies, also said he’s wary of repeating Congress’ previous attempt to institute year-round daylight saving time nearly 50 years ago, which was quickly repealed amid widespread reports that darker winter mornings led to more car accidents and drearier moods.

“We don’t want to make a hasty change and then have it reversed several years later after public opinion turns against it — which is exactly what happened in the early 1970s,” Pallone said.

With lawmakers having hit the snooze button, there is little chance of the legislation being advanced during the lame-duck period that follows next week’s election, congressional aides said.

The bill’s quiet collapse puts an end to an unusual episode that briefly riveted Congress, became fodder for late-night comics and fueled water-cooler debate. The Senate’s unanimous vote in March to allow states to permanently shift their clocks caught some of the chamber’s own members by surprise — and in a reverse of traditional Washington dynamics, it was the House slowing down the Senate’s legislation.

Key senators who backed permanent daylight saving time say they’re mystified that their effort appears doomed, and frustrated that they will probably have to start over in the next Congress. At least 19 states in recent years have enacted laws or passed resolutions that would allow them to impose year-round daylight saving time — but only if Congress approves legislation to stop the nation’s twice-per-year time changes, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

“This isn’t a partisan or regional issue, it is a commonsense issue,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who co-authored the Sunshine Protection Act, which passed the Senate in March, said in a statement. Senate staff noted that a bipartisan companion bill in the House, backed by 48 Republicans and Democrats, has been stalled for nearly two years in an Energy and Commerce subcommittee chaired by Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.).

“I don’t know why the House refuses to pass this bill — it seems like they are rarely in session — but I will keep pushing to make this a reality,” Rubio said, taking a swipe at his congressional counterparts.

Rubio and his colleagues’ gloomy mood this fall is a stark contrast from their sunny celebrations when the Senate abruptly passed their bill two days after the “spring forward” clock change, with still-groggy lawmakers campaigning on it as a common-sense reform.

“My phone has been ringing off the hook in support of this bill — from moms and dads who want more daylight before bedtime to senior citizens who want more sun in the evenings to enjoy the outdoors to farmers who could use the extra daylight to work in the fields,” a fundraising email sent in March by Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) said.

But behind the scenes, the bill’s forecast was almost immediately cloudy.

Some senators told reporters they were surprised the bill was passed through a parliamentary procedure known as unanimous consent, which eliminates the need for debate or an actual vote count if no senator objects to a measure, and wished there had been a more traditional series of hearings and legislative markups. Sleep experts and neurologists urgently cautioned that shifting away from early-morning sunlight would harm circadian rhythms, sleep-wake cycles and overall health. Groups such as religious Jewish people complained that moving the clocks later in the winter would prevent them from conducting morning prayers after the sun rises and still get to work and school on time.

There also are regional differences in who would most benefit from permanent daylight saving time. Lawmakers in Southern states such as Florida argue it would maximize sunshine for their residents during the winter months — but some people who live in the northern United States or on the western edge of time zones, such as Indianapolis, would not see the sunrise on some winter days until 9 a.m.

And in the House, lawmakers and staff working on the issue pointed to surveys that show deep divides in public opinion about how to proceed. While 64 percent of respondents to a March 2022 YouGov poll said they wanted to stop the twice-per-year changing of the clocks, only about half of the people who favored a change wanted permanent daylight saving time, while about one-third supported permanent standard time and others were unsure.

“We know that the majority of Americans do not want to keep switching the clocks back and forth,” Schakowsky said in a statement to The Post, adding that she had received calls arguing in favor of both sides. Permanent standard time advocates don’t want children to wait in dark winter mornings for a school bus; permanent daylight saving time proponents want to help businesses enjoy more sunshine during operating hours, she said.

A congressional aide who has been working on the issue put it more bluntly: “We’d be pissing off half the country no matter what,” said the aide, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal deliberations.

The White House has avoided taking a position on the legislation, and in interviews, administration officials said the issue was complicated and affected matters of trade and health.

Pallone and other lawmakers have said they’re waiting on the Transportation Department, which helps govern enforcement of time zones, to review the effects of permanently changing the clocks. While the transportation agency in September agreed to conduct a study, the due date for that analysis — Dec. 31, 2023 — suggests that the issue may not get serious consideration in Congress again until 2024 at the earliest.

And while the lobbying efforts around clock changes pale next to the tens of millions of dollars spent by advocates for so-called Big Pharma or Big Tech, some congressional aides joke that the debate has awakened “Big Sleep”: concerted resistance from sleep doctors and researchers who issued advocacy letters that warned against permanent daylight saving time, traveled to Capitol Hill to pitch lawmakers on permanent standard time instead and significantly ramped up their lobbying spending, according to a review of federal disclosures.

For instance, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, or AASM — which in recent years had focused its advocacy on issues such as improving care for sleep apnea — this year included new priorities in its federal filings: lobbying lawmakers on the Senate’s Sunshine Protection Act and “issues relating to seasonal time changes.”

AASM also nearly doubled its lobbying spending from $70,000 in the third quarter of 2021 to $130,000 in the third quarter of 2022, and added a lobbyist who specializes in health-care issues and used to work for Schakowsky.

The daylight saving time debate roused the sleep-medicine academy’s attention, an official confirmed.

“When the Sunshine Protection Act was passed by the Senate last spring, we determined that advocacy for the establishment of permanent standard time needs to be an immediate priority,” Melissa Clark, the AASM’s director of advocacy and public awareness, wrote in an email.

Clark added that AASM had met with the offices of dozens of legislators to advocate for permanent standard time. “It’s an issue that is relevant to everyone,” she wrote.

It’s also an issue that resonates abroad. Mexican lawmakers passed legislation last month to end daylight saving time in most of their country, a measure that the nation’s president swiftly signed into law.

But not everyone agrees that a change — any change — is necessary.

Josh Barro, a political commentator who has repeatedly argued to preserve the current system, said that neither permanent daylight saving nor permanent standard time make sense.

“I think we have the system we have for good reason … we have a certain number of daylight hours in the day and it’s going to vary depending on the axial tilt of the earth. And we need a way to manage it so that we wake up not too long after sunrise on most days,” Barro said. “It’s really the government solving a coordination problem.”

Beth Ann Malow, a neurologist and sleep medicine researcher at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, stressed that she continues to favor permanent standard time, a position she testified about in a congressional hearing earlier this year. But even Malow says that the United States may end up needing a compromise — moving the clock by 30 minutes, and then staying that way permanently.

“I know that the permanent standard time people and the permanent daylight saving time people will be disappointed because they didn’t get what they wanted, and we will be out of sync with other countries,” Malow said. “But it’s a way to stop going back and forth.”

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