Who knows, maybe Yoshida-san is a huge pervert and knows exactly what he’s doing.
Who knows, maybe Yoshida-san is a huge pervert and knows exactly what he’s doing.
Dark horses
Dragon’s Dogma 2
Helldivers 2
Balatro
The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered
Hades 2
Upcoming
Dragon Age: The Veilguard
STALKER 2: Heart of Chornobyl
Metaphor: ReFantazio
The Plucky Squire
Assassin’s Creed Shadows
Life Is Strange: Double Exposure
Silent Hill 2 and Metal Gear Solid Delta
Call of Duty: Black Ops 6
800€ and it doesn0t even have Blast Processing, what a ripoff.
idbehold
Do all DuaSenses end up getting drift? I bought mine years ago to use on my pc and so far it’s fine, but now I’m worried…
If you like JRPGs and haven’t played it, Radiant Historia would be a great choice.
Next game: Hazard Of Precipitation.
I’m not sure I’m going to like this. Cold steel was when I started losing interest in the saga, and the jump to full 3D had a bit to do with it.
$190
…What?
Such a shame he couldn’t finish it. Its gameplay is quite polished and the story isn’t that bad. His games are usually very well crafted
I think they said Geralt will be in the game, but he will not be the main character anymore.
I loved Control, I’m ready for a sequel.
A game by Hideo Kojima Todd Howard
For more than two decades, criminal lawyer-turned-archaeologist Kathleen Martinez was on a quest to find Cleopatra’s tomb. The quest took her to a temple known as Taposiris Magna, located 25 miles west of Alexandria, Egypt. Her initial excavations revealed mummies with golden tongues, a cemetery of Greco-Roman style mummies, a mysterious bust, 22 coins that were believed to belong to Cleopatra’s visage, two Ptolemaic-era alabaster statues, and ceramic pots, and vessels. But in November 2022, Martinez and her team stumbled upon a colossal rock-cut tunnel beneath the temple, that they dubbed as a “geometric miracle,” reported Artnet.
Since the time Martinez came to Egypt to search for Cleopatra’s tomb, she believed that it was hidden somewhere on the outskirts of Alexandria. Once in Cairo, she contacted archaeologist Zahi Hawass, then the country’s minister of Egypt’s antiquities affairs. She rolled out her project details and requested support. Her project was approved.
Cleopatra was the last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt from 51 to 30 BC. According to Artnet, Cleopatra died by suicide after her husband, the Roman general Mark Antony died in her arms. The two were buried together. Through her excavation project, Martinez aspired to discover both tombs. While the tomb itself was not discovered, the discovery of the tunnel was significant as it could give some clues to the tomb. Representative Image Source: The Death of Cleopatra, 1785. Private Collection. (Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images) Representative Image Source: The Death of Cleopatra, 1785. Private Collection. (Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)
Among other artifacts, “The most interesting discovery is the complex of tunnels leading to the Mediterranean Sea and sunken structures,” Martinez told CNN. The Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities also announced the find in a Facebook post. As per the translated post by Artnet, the ministry described the find as a 4,281-foot tunnel, located 43 feet underground. According to The Smithsonian, a part of the tunnel is submerged underwater, probably due to several earthquakes that impacted the region between 320 AD and 1303 AD. Archaeologists believe that these massive seismic tremors caused the temple to collapse.
The tunnel is quite alike the Eupalinos Tunnel in Greece, which is considered as one of the most important engineering achievements of antiquity, Martinez told Live Science. The Tunnel of Eupalinos, located on the Greek island of Samos in the Aegean Sea, was an aqueduct that carried water for more than 1,000 years.
As for Cleopatra and Antony’s tombs, Martinez kept working to locate them. "If we discover the tomb of Cleopatra and Mark Antony, it will be the most important discovery of the 21st century. If we did not discover the tomb of Cleopatra and Mark Antony, we made major discoveries here, inside the temple and outside the temple,” Hawass said in 2009 to Heritage Key in a YouTube video.
In March 2024, Martinez shared an important update stating that the clue to Cleopatra’s mummy might be hidden in the Mediterranean waters of the submerged Alexandria, per Discover Magazine. “If there’s one percent of a chance that the last queen of Egypt could be buried there, it is my duty to search for her,” she told the Heritage Key blog in 2009.
I never got to play it back in the day, there was always something else more interesting to buy/rent. Will have to try it one day.
Way cooler than astroturfing.
I say make them public. It was like that on Kbin and it never brought trouble.
Some LP covers have enough detail to have you looking for a good 30 minutes.