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Silksong, smacking sticks and other new indie games worth checking out

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Welcome to our latest recap of what’s going on in the indie game space. Folks, it’s here. You know it’s here. So, we’ll touch on it, but briefly. Some developers and publishers opted not to delay their games out of this week (others have done that to get some breathing space from you-know-what), so there are several other newcomers to highlight.

Before we get there, there’s a sale worth mentioning on a PC storefront that does not offer Hollow Knight: Silksong. The Epic Games Store’s End of Summer Sale is running until September 18 and there are some pretty solid deals. Cyberpunk 2077 is 65 percent off for the base game and 50 percent off for the ultimate edition, which includes the Phantom Liberty DLC (which is also 30 percent off for those who have the base game already).

Other discounts of note include Red Dead Redemption 2 (75 percent off), Grand Theft Auto V Enhanced (50 percent off), Assassin’s Creed Shadows (33 percent off), The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – Complete Edition (80 percent) and Alan Wake 2 (70 percent off). A bunch of PlayStation games are on sale too, including Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 (20 percent), The Last of Us Part 1 (50 percent), Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut (33 percent), God of War (60 percent off) and God of War Ragnarok (20 percent). You’ll get 20 percent back in Epic Rewards on your purchases too.

The Epic Games Store offers totally free games every week (no need to have a subscription for those!), and the freebies tend to be for well-known games whenever there’s a major sale on the store. Right now, you can pick up an all-timer in Monument Valley for exactly zero dollars. You have until 11AM ET on September 11 to claim the classic puzzle game. When that game cycles out, Epic Games will rotate three more titles into its lineup: Monument Valley 2, Ghostrunner 2 (which I enjoy very much but am terrible at) and a strategy game called The Battle of Polytopia. Again, you’ll have a week to claim those.

Meanwhile, if you have an Amazon Prime subscription, there’s usually a solid selection in the Prime Gaming library. Games you claim here are yours to keep forever, even if you don’t maintain your Prime membership. Amazon offered up a particularly tasty one this week in the shape of Into The Breach, a hugely acclaimed strategy game, but there are plenty of others to check out. And speaking of games you can play right now…

New releases

Yes, Hollow Knight: Silksong is finally here. It’s out on consoles and PC for $20 and it’s included with Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass. It’s broken storefronts and probably some controllers that players have hurled at the wall after dying to a tough boss.

After a seven-year wait, Silksong is by some distance the highest-profile indie game to arrive in 2025 so far. Perhaps if we start mentioning another long-awaited game — say, Kingdom Hearts 4? Beyond Good and Evil 2? — it may arrive sooner rather than later. Or in, like, another five years.

I made a few attempts to play Hollow Knight, but bounced off quickly each time. I’ll be sure to give Silksong a proper go, though.

It might be the case that Silksong isn’t quite your thing. Never fear, there’s lots of other new stuff from this week for you to dive into.

If a game pops up that reminds me of The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (aka the best game of all time) in terms of looks, I’m duty bound to mention it. Fortunately, Rogue Labyrinth seems like it could be fun to play too. This action-narrative roguelite from Tea Witch Games and publisher indie.io hit Steam this week. It usually costs $15, but it’s 20 percent off with a limited-time launch discount.

Another thing that’s very much in Rogue Labyrinth‘s favor is that your weapon is a smacking stick, which you can use to turn objects (including vanquished enemies) into projectiles. The combat is a blend of bullet-hell dodging and hack-and-slash action. Being a roguelike, there’s randomization when it comes to things like the arenas, enemies and powers you’ll encounter on each run. The game is also said to feature dynamic narrative systems and you’ll forge alliances with other characters as you try to survive a lethal reality show.

Although so many other indie games scrambled to get out of the way of Silksong, Hirogami stuck to its September 3 release date. I had to chuckle when a press release with a title of “3D origami platformer Hirogami refuses to fold” hit my inbox last week. An easy pun, but I appreciated it.

Anyway, this is indeed a 3D platformer with an origami focus. You can flatten out your character into a sheet of paper so that a gust of wind can send you soaring to an elevated platform. You can transform into an armadillo to roll through enemies, an ape to explore treetops and a frog to jump higher. That seems like a real bananza of animal transformation options. Hirogami is available now on Steam, Epic Games Store and PS5.

Fling to the Finish has been out on PC for some time, and now this co-op platform racing game from SplitSide Games and publisher Daedalic Entertainment has swung over to consoles. You and a friend are tethered by an elastic rope that will inevitably snag on parts of the environment. But you can actually use this to your advantage to swing your teammate onto a ledge or send you both hurling through the air.

The obstacle-filled courses bring to mind Fall Guys, while the items that players can deploy to slow down race leaders remind me a bit of the Mario Kart games. Fling to the Finish does support solo play, as well as local and online multiplayer, where communication will be key (cross-play is available too). As was the case with Overcooked, you and your pal can play the game by sharing a single controller, which may make it easier to play the game in splitscreen if you’re with a bunch of friends.

Jetrunner is an action platformer in the vein of Ghostrunner and Neon White from Riddlebit Software and publisher Curveball Games. The folks behind it say it has “a gameplay loop that can be best described as Trackmania meets Titanfall.” So, there are lots of comparisons to make here. Ultimately, you’ll be parkouring your way through various courses while shooting targets, hooking onto grapple points and looking for shortcuts.

Finding the optimal route — and, of course, actually completing it with as few errors as possible — is the path to climbing the global leaderboards. You can race against ghost replays of your previous runs for a clear visual comparison. In addition, there’s a story mode that sees your character Nina (voiced by Sara Secora) trying to become a legendary jetrunner, with commentator Mick Acaster (Matthew Mercer) charting her progress. I’m digging the visuals here too.

Jetrunner is out now on Steam and the Epic Games Store for $20 (there’s a 10 percent launch discount on Steam). There’s a speedrun contest that’s taking place until September 11 with a $2,000 prize pool. You can snag a share if you can complete all of the campaign levels in a row quickly enough in the marathon mode and stick to the rules. It also seems that the exodus of other games this week due to Silksong helped Jetrunner gain extra visibility on Steam.

Upcoming

A rhythm RPG in which you can use your own music and manually adjust the BPM is interesting enough. But add giant, repurposed mechs to the mix, and now we’re really cookin’. In Steel Century Groove, you’ll compete in robot dance battles as you try to claim a championship. These mechanical beasts were used in warfare long, long ago. Now they’re just literal groove machines.

Steel Century Groove, which is from Sloth Gloss Games, is coming to Steam on January 28. A demo is available now, and your progress will carry over to the full game.

When I was assembling the list of games to include in this week’s roundup, I left myself a single, two-word note about The Legend of Baboo: “big floof.” The floof in question is the large, titular dog that accompanies human hero Sepehr in this third-person action adventure from Permanent Way and publisher Midwest Games.

You’ll play as both characters as you take on enemies, solve puzzles and navigate treacherous lands. When you conquer bosses, you’ll learn powerful magical attacks. Most importantly, you can zhush up Baboo with outfits and ornaments that you discover on your journey. He’s the best boy and he deserves to look and feel good. It’s also crucial to note that, as Sepehr, you can pet, ride and high-five Baboo.

A release date (or even a release window) has yet to be announced for The Legend of Baboo. It’s coming to Steam, Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S.

Dreams of Another looks quite unlike any game I’ve seen before. It uses point cloud rendering tech for its remarkably pretty visuals. This fantasy exploration game from Q-Games (under the leadership of Baiyon, the director of PixelJunk Eden) is set in a dream-like world where you create the world by shooting at it.

Dreams of Another is coming to PS5, PS VR2 and Steam on October 9, and it might just prompt me to set up my VR headset again. A demo dropped this week on Steam, but it’s only available until September 16.

Tombwater looks kinda rad. It’s a 2D pixel-art Soulslike Western from Moth Atlas and publisher Midwest Games. The developers took (another?) leaf out of FromSoftware’s playbook by pitting you against creepy eldritch horrors. This one is coming to Steam on November 12.

I always appreciate when a labor of love comes to fruition. Former Uber, MapQuest and Microsoft engineer John Lansing said that, nine years ago, “I built a Final Fantasy Tactics inspired football prototype, and 691 commits later I am proud to present the Fantasy Football Tactics Demo!” This is a turn-based RPG in which the aim is to outscore your opponents rather than taking them out in combat.

The demo hit Steam this week. There’s no release date as yet for the full game.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

5 Things About the Royal Who Died at 92 – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Getty Images

Katharine, Duchess of Kent, died on September 4, 2025, after a long and fulfilling life. The late royal, who was 92, was the wife of Duke of Kent, Prince Edward, the cousin of the late Queen Elizabeth II. Though Katharine maintained a more private lifestyle than the rest of the royal family, she was known for her interests in music and tennis.

Buckingham Palace confirmed the late duchess’ death in a statement, which read, “The King and Queen and all members of the Royal Family join the Duke of Kent, his children and grandchildren in mourning their loss and remembering fondly the duchess’s life-long devotion to all the organizations with which she was associated, her passion for music and her empathy for young people.”

Hollywood Life is remembering Katharine with five facts about her below.

Katharine Was the First Royal to Publicly Convert to Catholicism

In the mid-1990s, Katharine became the first member of the royal family to publicly convert to Catholicism since the Act of Settlement 1701, which disqualified any heir from inheriting the throne. However, Katharine was not in the line of succession, so the act didn’t affect her in any way.

Nevertheless, her religious conversion made headlines at the time. At one point, per the Mirror, she discussed her preference for guidelines, crediting the Catholic Church with having those for followers.

“I do love guidelines, and the Catholic Church offers you guidelines. I have always wanted that in my life,” Katharine previously said. “I like to know what’s expected of me. I like being told: ‘You shall go to church on Sunday and if you don’t you’re in for it!’”

Katharine Was Vocal About Her 1970s Fertility Struggles

In 1975, Katharine had a miscarriage and gave birth to a stillborn son named Patrick two years later. The latter led to depression, which she publicly acknowledged.

“It had the most devastating effect on me,” she told the Daily Telegraph in 1997. “I had no idea how devastating such a thing could be to any woman. It has made me extremely understanding of others who suffer a stillbirth. … I suffered from acute depression for a while. I think it would be a fairly rare individual who didn’t cave in under those circumstances. The baby was born dead at nine months. It was a horrible thing to happen.”

Katharine Stepped Back From Most Royal Duties in 2002

Known for defying expectations as a royal, Katharine chose to step back from her public duties in 2002. Though she didn’t avoid all related events, she did not attend Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral nor King Charles III‘s coronation.

Katharine stopped using the Her Royal Highness title, though she was still formally called HRH Duchess of Kent, as Buckingham Palace acknowledged in its announcement of her death in 2025.

Katharine Was an Avid Choir Member & Wimbledon Staple

The late Duchess of Kent performed in several choirs throughout her life as an avid singer and music enthusiast. She also became a staple at the Wimbledon Championships, presenting the Ladies’ Single Trophy to winners for more than 30 years.

Katharine Lived With a Few Health Issues Before Her Death

In addition to her miscarriage and stillbirth in the ’70s, Katharine was also hospitalized in 1978 with coeliac disease and Epstein–Barr virus, per reports from the BBC.




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

New £10m water park plans unveil outdoor pool and lazy river | UK | Travel

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Tourists could soon be plunging into fresh pools and a lazy river at a popular holiday destination. Bosses at a coastal holiday park have revealed ambitious plans for a £10.2 million transformation that includes an extra outdoor pool and a lazy river.

Unity Holidays, who operate the Unity Beach holiday park in Somerset, have unveiled their grand vision for Brean Splash. The proposals feature a lido-style section and revamped changing facilities. Planners suggest the expansion would not only elevate the experience for holidaying guests but also improve accessibility for residents throughout the county.

It means visitors and locals alike could have a “greatly enhanced facility”, according to resort director Jonny Green. He said: “Since Unity Holidays bought the business, we have always looked to improve and increase what we have to offer, which we hope attracts more people to the west coast of Somerset, thus bringing greater footfall not just in Brean but to towns like Weston-super-Mare and Burnham. It also allows us to offer jobs to local people and support local businesses.

“We recognise that this closure will cause inconvenience, particularly for those who rely on our facilities for swimming lessons and regular activities. Naturally, we apologise for this disruption, but these works are designed to ensure the long-term sustainability of Brean Splash and to provide a greatly enhanced facility for the local community and visitors alike.”

The redevelopment introduces a festival-style promenade, linking key attractions and pedestrian entrances, reports Somerset Live.

Key features of the revamp:

  • Activity Pavilions and Spaces
  • Archery areas within the Festival Gardens
  • Children’s play area
  • Ice cream parlour
  • Gourmet burger outlet
  • Dog agility course
  • Dancing water features and additional activity pavilions
  • Lido Area featuring a premium outdoor pool facility with a tots’ area, sunbed and cabana areas, integrated with existing wet play elements and water slides
  • New Lazy River: An extension of the existing Brean Splash Waterpark, enhancing the water-based attractions
  • Revamped Retail and Food and Beverage Spaces: Offering high-quality retail and dining options
  • Reconfigured Parking and Theme Park Entrance: Improved layout for efficiency and accessibility
  • New entrance from the east car park to improve connectivity

Should the green light be given, Brean Splash will shut from Monday, December 1, 2025 until Sunday, March 1, 2026, with construction planned during the quieter winter period when visitor numbers drop.

A statement accompanying the planning application states: “The proposed development will mean that the scale of ancillary facilities better aligns with the scale of accommodation on site, with existing facilities being too small and tired in their appearance. The development is considered to result in a sustainable form of development, that is consistent with the already established leisure use and is ancillary to the main caravan park.

“It will provide significant landscape planting, onsite biodiversity enhancements and the creation of positive economic impacts and benefits through additional jobs and economic investment, thereby supporting the retention of an existing leisure use used by visitors at the Holiday Park, securing the long-term economic viability of an existing local business and creating indirect knock on spend and benefits to the wider local economy and community.

“The masterplan arranges new and existing elements to optimize visitor movement and connectivity: The new promenade unifies the space, linking the south and north entrances, as well as providing a new pedestrian entrance from the new and existing car parking to the east. Key attractions are strategically placed to enhance guest experience and ease of access.

“This redevelopment will significantly enhance the visitor experience at Unity Beach Holiday Park, attracting new guests while improving facilities for returning visitors. The project will provide a vibrant, family-friendly environment that blends modern amenities with the natural beauty of the Somerset coast, ensuring the park remains a top destination for years to come.”

The scheme comes after a £15 million investment earlier this year, which witnessed the launch of the Wonky Donkey pub and restaurant, featuring an expanded pavilion, sports bar and arcade. It was officially opened in May by BBC star Alex Jones, who hosts the One Show.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

2 undervalued FTSE shares to consider in September

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Image source: Getty Images

Valuing FTSE shares is often more art than science. Ratios such as the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, price-to-book value and earnings yield can provide a useful starting point. But I think shares are too often judged by headline ratios – a deeper dive into financials can reveal hidden value.

Beyond the usual metrics, I also like to dig into the balance sheet. Debt levels, cash flows and margins all give a clearer view of how sustainable a company’s growth really is.

With that in mind, two FTSE shares I like the look of this month are Petershill Partners (LSE: PHLL) and EnQuest (LSE: ENQ). Both look undervalued relative to their earnings power, although each comes with its own set of risks.

Here, I explain why I think both stocks are worth keeping on the radar in September.

Petershill Partners

Petershill Partners is an investment firm that provides capital and strategic support to alternative asset managers. It is not a household name, yet its numbers caught my attention.

The share price is up only 7.5% over the past year, but earnings have grown 162%. That gives Petershill an eye-catching earnings yield of 25%. I could only find one other UK-listed investment trust with a higher yield. Add to that an extremely low P/E ratio of 4 and the combination looks tempting.

The market doesn’t appear to have priced in this growth just yet, so there could be potential for the share price to follow. That said, it would be unrealistic to expect earnings to continue expanding at that pace. Analysts have pencilled in a forward P/E ratio of 14, but this may also be factoring in some share price growth rather than a collapse in profitability.

One risk is that earnings from investment firms can be lumpy, especially when dependent on performance fees. Market downturns could also reduce valuations of the underlying assets Petershill manages.

What gives me confidence however, is the company’s free cash flow (FCF) margin of almost 60%. While that’s not unusual for an investment firm, it is high for one trading at such a low valuation. 

If nothing else, Petershill has ample cash to plough into fresh opportunities, so I think it’s a good stock for investors to think about in September.

EnQuest

EnQuest is a small-cap oil and gas producer operating in the North Sea and Malaysia. It became profitable again in 2024, posting earnings of £73.39m and achieving a net margin of 7.88%.

The balance sheet also looks healthier. Over the past four years, EnQuest has cut its debt almost in half, from £1.5bn to £798m. Profitability is decent, with return on equity (ROE) standing at 18.5%. Most striking is the forward P/E ratio of just 2.8, which suggests high expectations of continued earnings growth.

Expansion plans are also noteworthy. In August, EnQuest signed production-sharing contracts with the Indonesian government to enter the Gaea and Gaea II exploration blocks in Papua Barat. This followed similar agreements in July to develop the Merpati Field offshore Brunei.

Oil and gas companies are exposed to notable risks and EnQuest is no exception. It faces volatile commodity prices, regulatory pressures and geopolitical uncertainty in unstable regions.

Still, with debt trending lower and fresh projects under way, I think it is another promising FTSE share to consider this month.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

The Most Expensive ‘Star Wars’ Prop Has Been Sold for Seven Figures

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A lightsaber used by iconic Star Wars villain Darth Vader has broken the record for the most expensive prop in the sci-fi franchise. The legendary weapon used by Vader in the sequels Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, has been auctioned and sold for $3.6 million. That is a multi-million-dollar price tag for a piece of cinema history.

Per the report by People magazine, the item was sold during Propstore’s now famous sale of Hollywood memorabilia. The event, where plenty of collector’s items from famous movies are available to anyone with enough cash to secure them, ran from September 4. Other important items sold at the auction include a whip and belt used in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, one of the Sankara stones from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and a Stormtrooper helmet from Return of the Jedi.

However, the highlight of the sale was the lightsaber, the first ever Vader Hero edition to be sold. The final bid was for $3,654,000, and the precious prop landed in the hands of an undisclosed buyer. Propstore COO Brandon Alinger expressed his excitement about the sale and called the first day of the event a “landmark moment” in the history of the famous Los Angeles auction house. Alinger said the following about the lightsaber auction:

“Today’s result marks a landmark moment not just for Propstore, but for the entire world of film collecting. To see a Star Wars lightsaber – the symbol of one of cinema’s greatest sagas – become the highest-valued piece of the franchise ever sold at auction is incredibly special. It speaks to the enduring cultural power of Star Wars and the passion of fans and collectors who see these artifacts as touchstones of modern mythology.”

Darth Vader’s Lightsaber Just Became One of the Most Expensive Movie Props Ever Sold

Twentieth Century Fox

$3.6 million may seem extravagant and excessive, but we’re talking cinema history here. The lightsaber is arguably the most important item in Star Wars’ lore and owning the one used by Darth Vader himself is a dream of those who have loyally followed the franchise since its beginning. Nevertheless, at $3.6 million, the lightsaber isn’t the most expensive Hollywood memorabilia ever sold. That title is held by other items from some classic movies from cinema’s early years.

From ruby slippers worn by Judy Garland in The Wizard of Oz (sold for $32.5 million, including fees) to the sled used in Citizen Kane (sold for $14.75 million), there are other pieces that have surpassed the seven figures, and are now in the hands of mysterious millionaires.

Those movies were made almost 100 years ago, so perhaps a lightsaber will be worth much more in future decades. A suit like Iron Man’s or Thor’s hammer could also become long-lost collectors pieces for the next generation – or maybe by then the idea of owning something physical from a movie will seem ridiculous in an increasingly digital world. Time does well for iconic props used in everyone’s favorite movies, so let’s hope there will always be a place for physical collectibles, and not everything turns digital in the near future.



This story originally appeared on Movieweb

Top 12 X-Men Comic Storylines Ranked: Must-Read Mutant Tales

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There are a lot of great X-Men stories, but not all of them are great all the way through. Take Ultimate X-Men, which started out with a new vision of Marvel’s mutants and ended up crashing with the trajectory of a meteor.

Here, then, are the 12 X-Men stories that are 10/10 from start to finish, and we’re starting with a potentially controversial entry…

12

Hellions Volume 2, Zeb Wells and Stephen Segovia

Collects Hellions Volume 1 #7-12

hellions art of wildchild attacking

Does this lesser-known series really belong in a list of all-time greats? Yes! While this list could just be made up of Chris Claremont stories, it’s not about how essential they are to the X-Men mythos, but how consistently great they are. By that score, Hellions did something truly great, turning a roster of D-list characters into an incredibly compelling cast.

Hellions is about a group of mutants gathered together because their powers or experiences make them dangerous to others. The villainous Mister Sinister (then working with the X-Men) is given permission to use them on missions which require excessive violence so long as he also helps them bond as a team. Of course, being an evil mastermind, he has plans of his own.

the hellions fly in mister sinister's personal jet, in x-men spin off comic
the hellions fly in mister sinister’s personal jet, in x-men spin off comic

While the first volume is good, the second really embraces the dark comedy of turning such damaged characters into a superhero team, and includes the amazing Hellfire Gala tie-in issue where Mister Sinister gets to smarmily insult Marvel’s greatest heroes while sipping champagne, delivering #1 on our list of the best insults of X-Men’s Krakoan Era.

11

X-Men: Supernovas, Mike Carey and Chris Bachalo

Collects X-Men Volume 2 #188-193

X-Men Supernovas cover art
X-Men Supernovas cover art

Every so often, X-Men needs an injection of big ideas to keep the franchise feeling fresh. ‘Supernovas’ changed the game by introducing the Children of the Vault – hyper-evolved cyborgs who are the best candidates to supplant the X-Men as humanity’s final evolution. The volume also includes a scrappy X-Men team where heroes like Rogue and Iceman have to deal with allied villains Sabretooth and Mystique.

10

Astonishing X-Men: Gifted, Joss Whedon and John Cassaday

Collects Astonishing X-Men Volume 3 #1-6

x-men gifted comic art cover
x-men gifted comic art cover

Astonishing X-Men set a new watermark for modern X-Men stories, depicting the characters as a tried-and-true team with personal relationships tempered by years of adventures. Wolverine and Cyclops have rarely felt more like people you could meet in real life, and Kitty Pryde officially graduates from being the team’s little sister. The introduction of a mutant ‘cure’ also introduces huge stakes, while Colossus gets the greatest moment of his comic career.

cyclops leading the x-men into battle
cyclops leading the x-men into battle

John Cassaday’s art shows why he’s the best in the biz, though later accusations about Joss Whedon make this a volume fans might want to skip regardless.

9

Excalibur: The Sword Is Drawn, Chris Claremont and Alan Davis

Collects Excalibur Volume 1 #1-5

x-men spin-off Excalibur comic-1
x-men spin-off Excalibur comic-1

At a time when the X-Men are believed dead, Nightcrawler, Kitty Pryde and Rachel Grey head to England and set up a new team in a lighthouse. There’s nothing before or since like Excalibur – a comedy/action/soap opera where the relationships between the heroes matter as much if not more than the threats they face along the way.

Claremont is a legendary character writer, and nails the idea of flawed heroes who fear they’re not living up to their potential. Villains like the body-stealing Warwolves introduce ideas that are still inspiring stories nearly 40 years later, and things get very werid very quickly.

8

X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills, Chris Claremont and Brent Eric Anderson

X-Men God Loves, Man Kills cover art
X-Men God Loves, Man Kills cover art

The X-Men weren’t always an allegory for bigotry and prejudice, but God Loves, Man Kills sealed the deal that those concepts would be part of the franchise’s DNA forever. Religious leader William Stryker wasn’t like the villains superhero fans had come to expect, genuinely seeing mutants as inhuman with a fiery loathing that makes even Xavier consider whether Magneto might be right.

This story holds up as an examination of the soul-decaying hatred of bigotry, and what makes the X-Men so unique as a comics franchise.

7

House of X/Powers of X, Jonathan Hickman with Pepe Larraz and R.B. Silva Respectively

House of X Volume 1 #1-6 and Powers of X Volume 1 #1-6

house of x x-men cover art
house of x x-men cover art

It can’t be overstated how much these twin series – intended to be read by bouncing issue-by-issue between the two – changed the game for X-Men. In House of X, the X-Men have formed a mutant nation and become a world power overnight. Meanwhile, in Powers of X, we see how the entire future of mutantkind will play out, setting up a threat that the new mutant nation was secretly founded to defeat.

xavier and magneto being proud of krakoa
xavier and magneto being proud of krakoa

Hickman’s masterwork is incredibly rich with ideas, supporting the line-wide ‘Krakoan Era’ reboot that ran from 2019 to 2024. Villains and heroes are forced into a closer alliance than ever as the project of mutant survival is approached in startling new ways, and fans begin to wonder if Professor X was ever actually a hero.

6

X-Men Red Volume 1, Al Ewing and Stefano Caselli

X-Men: Red Volume 2 #1-5

x-men red art with storm, magneto and sunspot
x-men red art with storm, magneto and sunspot

After settling the otherworldly mutant civilization known as the Arakki on a terraformed Mars, the X-Men actually have to do the work of maintaining their alliance with this powerful new faction. Storm, Magneto and Sunspot journey to the red planet, becoming part of a new culture where self-sustenance is valued above all else and disagreements are settled by gladiatorial combat.

One of the Krakoan Era’s breakout successes, this comic unleashes the X-Men’s biggest badasses to be themselves without the constraints of a realistic backdrop, and with planetary stakes that only increase as the series goes on.

5

The New Mutants: Demon Bear Saga, Chris Claremont and Bill Sienkiewicz

The New Mutants Volume 1 #18-21

new mutants demon bear
new mutants demon bear

A work of comic art that’s rarely been equaled, the Demon Bear Saga is known as much for its art as its writing, as the X-Men’s neophyte recruits face a villain that literally embodies trauma. X-Men often uses mutant powers as a metaphor for its heroes’ inner conflicts, and ‘Demon Bear’ is the zenith of that concept.

new mutants demon bear artwork
new mutants demon bear artwork

Superhero comics are often celebrated for how they absorb other genres, and the Demon Bear Saga is a coming of age/psycholocial horror story par excellence.

4

Uncanny X-Force: The Apocalypse Solution, Rick Remender and Jerome Opeña

Uncanny X-Force Volume 1 #1-4

Uncanny X-Force The Apocalypse Solution cover art
Uncanny X-Force The Apocalypse Solution cover art

Wolverine gathers the X-Men’s deadliest killers to bring down Apocalypse, only to discover the world-ending villain has been reincarnated as a child. No-one expected X-Men to tackle ‘would you kill Hitler as a baby?’, and fewer still would imagine that story could be genuinely reflective, viscerally compelling and unexpectedly funny. Jerome Opeña’s art is museum-worthy, and Remender writes one of the few stories where Deadpool is actually funny.

x-force debate whether to kill apocalypse
x-force debate whether to kill apocalypse

While many lists recommend the later ‘Dark Angel Saga’, it’s important to be there when the team first get together and begin to clash and gel as a unit, especially because the conclusion of this story is the original sin that gives the rest of the run such compelling emotional stakes.

3

Uncanny X-Men: Everything is Sinister, Kieron Gillen, Carlos Pacheco, Jorge Molina, Rodney Buchemi and Brandon Peterson

Uncanny X-Men Volume 2 #1-4

kieron gillen uncanny x-men cover art
kieron gillen uncanny x-men cover art

Cyclops assembles a group who are part-superhero team, part-nuclear deterrent in this iconic X-Men run that’s worth reading all the way through. In the first volume, the team face off against Machiavellian geneticist Mister Sinister, in a portrayal that realized the villain’s potential as the best X-Men nemesis since Magneto.

The X-Men have never been wittier, in a story that was integral in taking Cyclops from bland boyscout to the franchise’s most compelling character.



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Justin Bieber’s ‘Swag II’: 5 things to know

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“Swag’s” sequel is upon us.

Justin Bieber released the pink-jacketed “Swag II” early Friday morning, less than two months after he dropped its black-jacketed predecessor in mid-July. (On X, the singer posted that meme of the goth and Barbie houses sitting side by side in Santa Monica.)

Like the first “Swag,” the 23-track “Swag II” arrived with only about a day’s notice; like the earlier collection, the new one — Bieber’s eighth studio LP if you don’t count it as merely a deluxe edition of “Swag” — is sure to rack up millions of streams over the weekend.

Here are five things to know about “Swag II”:

1. New album, (mostly) same swag

Bieber’s in more or less the same sound world he was in last time, laying his cooing vocals over squeaky, scratchy arrangements that pull from indie rock and ’80s R&B. It’s a dramatic shift from the glistening teen-pop production of his early hits and from the high-gloss EDM beats of his collabs with the likes of Diplo and DJ Snake. But veteran Beliebers know he’s got a soft spot for this type of music: “Swag” and “Swag II” are in a lineage with 2013’s cult-fave “Journals” and 2020’s underrated “Changes.”

2. Same swaggy team of producers

Though streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music didn’t immediately publish the album’s credits, a press release from Bieber’s label Def Jam said he made “Swag II” with much of the same team behind “Swag,” including Carter Lang, Dylan Wiggins, Dijon, Mk.gee, Daniel Chetrit and Eddie Benjamin. Also in the mix this time: Mike Will (better known as Mike Will Made It).

3. The features? Swag-tastic

Guest appearances on the album come from Benjamin; Bakar; Lil B, who also made a cameo on “Swag”; the Nigerian singer Tems, with whom Bieber teamed in 2021 for a remix of Wizkid’s “Essence”; and Hurricane Chris, the Southern rapper known for his 2007 teen-rap hit “A Bay Bay.”

4. His skit swag is missing

No Druski! The internet comedian appeared in a handful of very cringe skits on “Swag” in which he encourages Bieber to smoke Black & Mild cigars and tells the singer that, although his skin is white, his soul is Black. (“Thank you,” Bieber responds.) This time he went without.

5. His family man swag is still strong

As on “Swag,” Bieber has marriage, fatherhood and religion on his mind here. In “Better Man,” he offers up a horny Spider-Man reference to match the one in the earlier album’s “405,” while “Mother in You” recounts the wee-hours moment when his young son “looked right through me like you really knew me.” “Swag II” closes with “Story of God,” a nearly 8-minute track in which Bieber narrates the tale of the Garden of Eden against a backing of churchy keyboards and reverbed gospel wailing.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

SoundExchange Appeals SiriusXM Royalties Lawsuit Dismissal

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A major court ruling last month found that SoundExchange doesn’t have the power to collect royalties through litigation. Now, the organization has launched an appeal in hopes of preserving this enforcement strategy.

SoundExchange’s notice of appeal on Friday (Sept. 5) challenges an August federal court ruling that dismissed its $400 million lawsuit against SiriusXM. Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald held in her decision that SoundExchange, a nonprofit designated by the Copyright Royalty Board to collect performance royalties for artists, does not actually have the right to sue anybody under federal law.

Related

This ruling was the first to weigh in on SoundExchange’s standing to collect recorded royalties via lawsuits, and the implications are big. For more than a decade, the organization has regularly used litigation to secure hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties from radio broadcasters like SiriusXM and music streamers such as Slacker and Napster.

Already, music companies are trying to use Judge Buchwald’s ruling in their favor. Just weeks after the decision came down, Sonos told a court that it will file a motion to dismiss its own pending SoundExchange royalties lawsuit based on the rationale in the SiriusXM case.  

Faced with the possibility of losing a key enforcement strategy, SoundExchange is standing firm and using an appeal to go on the offensive. The group wants the Second Circuit Court of Appeals to reverse Judge Buchwald, calling the decision an “erroneous ruling and flawed interpretation” of the Copyright Act in a statement on Friday.

“As Congress surely realized in creating the statutory license, some licensees will seek any available means to avoid paying artists for the full value of their work to maximize profitability,” said SoundExchange in the statement. “For the statutory license to function properly, SoundExchange fully believes Congress intended that the ‘enforcement’ power clearly granted in the statute must necessarily include the ability of its administrator to bring litigation claims when digital music services fail to meet their obligations under the law.”

“In the meantime,” continues the statement, “SoundExchange will continue in its mission of securing fair compensation for artists and rights owners and looks forward to arguing its case in court.”

A rep for SiriusXM did not immediately return a request for comment on the appeal.

The SoundExchange lawsuit against SiriusXM, brought in 2023, accused the satellite radio giant of “gaming the system” with manipulative bundling to withhold more than $150 million in performance royalties up to that point.

SoundExchange says SiriusXM has continued to apply this “faulty methodology” in the years since and now owes more than $400 million to artists and labels. SiriusXM denies all of SoundExchange’s claims.



This story originally appeared on Billboard

Mariah Carey at the MTV VMAs (Also on CBS), ‘Walking Dead’s Daryl and Carol See Europe, Mark Ruffalo in HBO’s ‘Task,’ Sunday Night Football and U.S. Open Finals

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Ethan James Green

MTV Video Music Awards

SUNDAY: The queen of pop, Mariah Carey, returns to the VMA stage for the first time in 20 years to accept the coveted Video Vanguard Award and perform a medley of her hits as the VMA ceremony expands its footprint with its first simulcast on CBS. LL Cool J hosts from New York’s UBS Arena, where a performance-heavy lineup includes a special hard-rocking tribute to the late Ozzy Osbourne, featuring Steven Tyler and Joe Perry from Aerosmith with YUNGBLUD and Nuno Bettencourt. Special honorees Ricky Martin (Latin Icon Award) and Busta Rhymes (MTV VMA Rock the Bells Visionary Award) will also perform, on a roster including Sabrina Carpenter, Jelly Roll, Doja Cat, Post Malone, Tate McRae and many more.

Candela Saitta as Justina, Melissa McBride as Carol Peletier, Norman Reedus as Daryl Dixon, Hugo Arbués as Roberto — 'The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon' Season 3

Manuel Fernandez-Valdes/AMC

The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon

SUNDAY: There’s no place like home, but it’s going to take a while still for Walking Dead stalwarts Daryl Dixon (Norman Reedus) and Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) to find their way back. As the third and penultimate season of the spinoff gets underway, the duo emerges from their hallucinatory trip in the Chunnel to discover the surreal urban landscape of a deserted London, overrun by walkers. Comic actor Stephen Merchant guest-stars as “the last Englishman in England,” who offers a lifeline of escape, though most Dead fans know their journey is going to take them next to Spain. “Let’s keep never giving up,” Daryl tells his constant companion, a sentiment that applies to the undying horror franchise.

Mark Ruffalo in 'Task'

HBO

Task

SUNDAY: Relentlessly grim yet ultimately redemptive, befitting a crime drama whose hangdog hero used to be a priest, the harrowingly suspenseful Task (from Mare of Easttown‘s Brad Ingelsby) tells the parallel story of two men with deep sorrows. A melancholy Mark Ruffalo stars as FBI agent and former chaplain Tom Brandis, returning to fieldwork in Philadelphia after a devastating family tragedy, leading a hastily assembled task force to find the culprit who’s been burglarizing gangland drug trap houses. His target: Robbie Prendergrast (Ozark‘s soulful Tom Pelphrey), a working-class family man raising his two kids with his dead brother’s grown daughter (CODA‘s Emilia Jones) while pursuing a mission of retribution against a violent motorcycle gang. Forgiveness is a recurring theme in this bloody fable of flawed men on a fateful collision course. (See the full review.)

Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills

Elsa/Getty Images

Sunday Night Football

Are you ready for some … who are we kidding, most everyone is. Network TV’s top-rated sports franchise returns for its 20th season, with a Divisional Playoff rematch of the Buffalo Bills and the Baltimore Ravens at Orchard Park, N.Y.’s Highmark Stadium. NFL MVPs Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson face off, capping a weekend of NFL action, with much more to come.

Aryna Sabalenka celebrates after defeating Jessica Pegula of the United States during their Women's Singles Semifinal match on Day Twelve of the 2025 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 4, 2025 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City.

Matthew Stockman/Getty Images

US Open Tennis

SATURDAY & SUNDAY: The tennis classic, which completes the 2025 Grand Slam cycle, ends with two highly anticipated matches. The women’s final on Saturday pits powerful No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka against the USA’s Amanda Anisimova, the No. 8 seed fresh off her thrilling comeback win against Naomi Osaka. The men’s final on Sunday stages a rematch of the Wimbledon final, with No. 1 seed and last year’s Open champ Jannik Sinner facing the dazzling No. 2 seed, Carlos Alcaraz, who won the Open in 2022.

INSIDE WEEKEND TV:




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

Internet Reacts to Hailey Bieber Flaunting Her Abs in Denim Jacket

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Hailey Bieber once again proved why she’s a fashion favorite with her latest social media post, sporting a chic denim jacket while flaunting her abs that instantly caught netizens’ attention. The model and entrepreneur kept her look effortlessly cool while pairing the timeless piece with her signature modern flair. Whether it’s streetwear or red-carpet glam, Bieber’s fashion choices always spark conversation, and this latest look is no exception.

Hailey Bieber stuns in denim jacket and fans are talking

On Wednesday, September 3, 2025, the Rhode founder was seen captivating her fans in a blue denim jacket.

During her latest campaign photoshoot, Hailey Bieber posted a photo carousel on Instagram, showcasing her impressive abs that took the internet by storm. The series of images highlights her latest collaboration with DKNY for their new fall collection campaign.

Upon closer inspection of Bieber’s latest photos, she can be seen in a two-piece denim ensemble, a black jacket, and jeans, along with a black cut-sleeve half tank top. Additionally, the images feature her representing DKNY by wearing the brand’s accessories, including the Chana small hobo black handbag and their Faux leather Moto Jacket in black.

The model captioned the post as “@dkny fall campaign.” Following this, fans quickly flooded social media with compliments. Many admired her relaxed yet stylish outfit and acknowledged her effortless trendsetting abilities.

Furthermore, the comment section was filled with praises for Bieber, with a fan writing, “GO HAILEY!!!!!” Meanwhile, a second fan wrote, “Your husband is a lucky guy. Love you”, while a third commented, “Mamacita?!”

Hailey Bieber was recently chosen as DKNY’s premier global brand ambassador, becoming the face to proudly represent their brand recognition. Her personal fashion sense also resonates well with DKNY’s new fall collection.

Additionally, DKNY elevated Bieber by sharing clips from their ad campaign on Instagram, captioning it as “A modern day muse. A force of nature. @haileybieber takes center stage as the global face of DKNY. Photographed by Mikael Jansson.”

Originally reported by Ayesha Zafar on Mandatory.




This story originally appeared on Realitytea