The Witcher 3’s next-gen update has added detailed vaginas to female monsters, apparently by mistake–

Well, here’s an article that future acquaintances will find when they Google my name for the rest of my life. You remember that Witcher 3 next-gen update? The one that polished the 2015 game to a mirror-sheen, finally added a fast travel point to Crow’s Nest, and integrated a bunch of popular mods into the base game? Well, it looks like one of those mods has added some searingly detailed genitals to the game’s more, ah, feminine monsters (thanks[?] Kotaku).

Now, the original Witcher 3 was plenty risqué as it is. The war that ravaged Temeria may have killed thousands, but it didn’t defeat anyone’s Woodstock spirit. All manner of characters cheerily greeted Geralt with their delicates on parade, but what makes this update odd is the characters it applies to and how perfectly manicured it all is.

So let’s drop the evasiveness, Kotaku’s fearless investigation turned up exhaustively-modelled vulvae on four characters in particular: The Crones of Crookback Bog (in their…

This Radeon RX 6600 XT is a great budget option for $100 under MSRP-

Newegg has an RX 6600 XT GPU on sale for $259.99, the cheapest we’ve seen it since its launch, and about $120 below than its original MSRP. Not a bad option if you’re looking for a budget GPU for an AMD build. 

The ASRock Challenger D RX 6600 XT should provide solid 1080p gameplay, slightly passing the RTX 3060 in performance and just a hair under the RTX 3060 Ti, which retails for around $400.

It was initially hard to recommend this RDNA 2 GPU because it was priced too high compared to the RTX 3060 Ti at launch, with its MSRP of $379. At this price, however, the RX 6600 XT is a strong choice for a 1080p GPU to stuff into a budget build, with good cooling and power efficiency.

We also like this graphics card over Intel’s affordable A750 GPU, which it beats at 1080p performance and sometimes even at 1440p. 

AMD’s FSR upscaling tech can give you a nice frame rate boost (sometimes 2.4x, according to AMD) on supported games, too. Like Nvidia’s DLSS tec…

Today’s Wordle answer for Sunday, June 9-

Let’s finish the weekend with a win. You can go straight for the answer to today’s Wordle if you like—it’s only a quick click away, after all. Or maybe you’d rather spend some time with a fresh clue written especially for the June 9 (1086) game instead? However you want to win, we can help.

Wordle really made me work hard to find today’s answer, although “find” is perhaps too strong a word. It was really more of a “please let this be right, I’ve got nothing left to offer and all the letters I wanted to use have already turned grey” kind of scenario. Let’s hope Monday’s game is a little more relaxing.

Wordle today: A hint

Wordle today: A hint for Sunday, June 9

The answer today is the name of the tenth letter in the Greek alphabet as well as a mythical being from Japanese folklore that lives near ponds and rivers.  

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Is there a double letter in Wordle today? 

Yes, there are two lots of doub…

Today’s Wordle hint and answer #671- Friday, April 21-

The answer to today’s Wordle is waiting just below, alongside a wide range of handy tips and tricks, as well as a clue written especially for the April 21 (671) puzzle. Take your pick—you’re in complete control.

It took far too long today to pin that first green down, and in the end, it didn’t matter anyway because that green didn’t help me half as much as I’d hoped it would, solving one problem and leaving four others as mysterious and unsolved as they were before. I’d like to tell you I scraped by with a victory right at the end, but this was one of those days where today’s Wordle really didn’t come together for me at all.

Wordle hint

A Wordle hint for Friday, April 21

This word’s the name of a narrow boat with pointed ends, propelled along by a double-ended paddle. There’s only one vowel to uncover in this palindrome. 

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Is there a double letter in today’s Wordle? 

Yes, a vowel is used twice in t…

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 ollies its way onto Steam after 3 years in the Epic Games slammer-

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 is a (admittedly confusingly-named) remake of the first two entries in the hit skating series, smashing the first two games into one new shiny package. It’s also unexpectedly dropping onto Steam October 3, as announced by the game’s official Twitter account.

A brush-up of the 1999 and 2000s classics, the game feels like a bit of an apology letter after the disaster of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 5. Justin Towell gave it a 86 in his review when it was released in 2020, but it might’ve passed you by if the Epic Games store isn’t really your jam.

For a remake of a game from the early 2000s heyday of Ska music and pogs, it doesn’t seem to have bailed when it comes to the nostalgia factor. As Towell writes: “Crucially, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 feels like the series did in its heyday, even if the games aren’t exactly the same as the originals.”

The Steam page is already up, so you can go ahead and wishlist it if you’d like—you can even g…

China redefines CPU water cooling with an huge 130,000 ton data center under the sea-

You know those dystopian notions of seas boiling over thanks to climate change? Well, China has a neat idea to accelerate a process which is already giving us the warmest sea surface temps on record. Heating up the oceans directly with computers.

OK, that’s rather facetious; there have been numerous studies into such an endeavour, with Microsoft running a similar setup for two years near the Orkney Islands just off Scotland with some ecological success. But China has reportedly begun construction on what’s claimed to be the world’s first undersea data center. Allegedly, once complete the facility will have the computing power of “six million conventional personal computers.”

It’s unclear exactly what that means or what the hardware involved comprises. But it will be made of of no fewer than 100 of the huge looking “nodes” pictured above, each of which weighs an incredible 1,300 tons. However, you slice it, then, it’s a lot of kit being submerged 35m under water off the c…

Warhammer 40k- Rogue Trader gets a ‘gargantuan’ patch that makes over 1,800 changes to the game, in an overhaul so drastic it gives you a free shot at respeccing your party-

I was excited about Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader when I previewed it in 2022, but the final product left a lot to be desired, according to Jody’s review. The game’s sweeping sci-fi drama was undermined by tedious combat in which “there’s never one interesting tactical battle when there could be three samey ones to grind down your resources,” he lamented, while the experience was further hobbled by an infestation of bugs.

Yet Jody notes in that same review, “if you played Owlcat’s previous RPGs at launch, you’ll be familiar with the feeling you’re playing the worst version of the game” and “it’s not impossible that Rogue Trader could get a significant overhaul.” Well, that overhaul has just arrived. Yesterday, Owlcat issued the mother of all patches. In fact, it’s less of a patch and more a whole new pair of trousers, an overhaul so extensive that the developers have added a special item into the game that lets you respec your characters.

Described as “gargantuan” by Ow…

Narrative cooking game Venba may cause biryani cravings, tears-

A lot of cooking games are designed to be stressful: By getting you to cook while jumping in between portals or making you deal with hangry hordes, they change a normally peaceful daily activity into something harried and intense. Not so with Venba, a cooking puzzle game slash visual novel that released on Steam this week. It’s about an Indian family that moves to Canada, and instead of lines of screaming customers, you’ll prepare meals for your family by solving puzzles and unlocking the memories of a woman trying to make a new home.

Each level of the game is tied to a dish, and a year in the life of the family. According to Polygon’s Nicole Carpenter, each dish is presented as a puzzle from the family’s cookbook, which is missing pieces from ripped pages or smudged recipes. By solving the puzzles, players connect Venba with her memories of home and help to connect her family with their heritage… while making dishes that I wish I could pull out of the screenshots and e…

Wordle today- Hint and answer #919 for Monday, December 25-

Win Wordle your way every single day with our help. There’s a whole range of general tips and advice ready to go, as well as a handy clue for the December 25 (919) puzzle, and, as always, today’s Wordle answer in easily accessible form just in case you need it.

Wait, that letter goes where? Are you sure, Wordle? And today of all days, when I’ve got my own body weight in potatoes to peel before the sun rises and a forgotten present to wrap (Happy Christmas if you’re celebrating, by the way)? A messy win’s still a win though, isn’t it, even when I’m kicking myself for not seeing the pattern as soon as I should have done. 

Wordle today: A hint

Wordle today: A hint for Monday, December 25

The word you need to find today is one that can describe something that might bring up a particular thought or a specific response. The smell of a family member’s cooking might _____ a fond childhood memory, for example. 

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Wordle now requires a New York Times account to view your stats-

The days of precariously storing your Wordle history in your browser’s cache are over: You now need a free New York Times account to see your stats.

I know this because I am one of the holdouts who never connected their Wordle history to an account. Since the start, my Wordle record has been tied to the Chrome profile I use for work. (Please don’t make me explain why it’s my work profile.) 

However, when I finished today’s Wordle—the 1,000th Wordle puzzle—the bar graph of my guess distribution that I’ve been seeing for years was absent. In its place was an invitation to see my stats by making a free New York Times account. NYT purchased Wordle from creator Josh Wardle in 2022. (Yes, the Wordle guy is named Wardle.)

In a 2022 GDC talk, Wardle attributed Wordle’s success in part to players sharing results on social media, and said that he didn’t actually invent the idea: he turned the emoji block recaps into an automated feature after he saw a player…