Connect with us
DAPA Banner

NewsBeat

Chorlton’s Wunmi Mosaku pays emotional tribute as she wins Bafta Film award

Published

on

Manchester Evening News

The actress was awared for her perfomance in Michael B Jordan’s Sinners

Chorlton’s Wunmi Mosaku paid an emotional tribute after she won a Bafta Film award for her work in Sinners on Sunday evening (February 22).

Advertisement

Mosaku, who emigrated from Nigeria to Manchester with her family when she was just one-years-old, rose to prominence in 2009 for her role as Joy in the BBC Two miniseries Moses Jones.

The 39-year-old attended the Trinity Church of England High School in Hulme and Xaverian Sixth Form College in Rusholme before moving to the capital at 18 to study acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA).

She quickly landed a string of roles in various hit TV shows, including in ITV’s Vera, HBO’s Lovecraft Country and the hit series Luther, where she acted alongside Idris Elba.

Since then, she has appeared in ITV’s Vera, HBO’s Lovecraft Country and the hit series Luther – starring Idris Elba. She won her first Bafta in 2017, taking home the Best Supporting Actress for her role as Gloria Taylor in the TV film Damilola, Our Loved Boy.

Advertisement

The TV movie told the story of 10-year-old schoolboy Damilola Taylor, who was stabbed in the leg and left to die in a south London stairwell in November 2000.

Recent years have seen her playing the character Hunter B-15 in the Marvel Cinematic Universe Disney+ series Loki before reprising the role in the film Deadpool & Wolverine in 2024.

On Sunday night, Mosaku was joined by a host of Hollywood A-listers at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall in London for the 2026 Baftas. She was up for the Best Supporting Actress award for her work as Annie, the estranged wife of Michael B. Jordan in Ryan Coogler’s vampire click sinners.

Advertisement

It was one one of the most stacked awards of the night with Marty Supreme’s Odessa A’zion, Sentimental Value’s Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, The Ballad of Wallis Island’s Carey Mulligan, One Battle After Another’s Teyana Taylor and Hamnet’s Emily Watson all nominated. In the end it was Mosaku who took home the award.

The British-Nigerian actress, who is heavily pregnant, said: “Thank you Bafta for this incredible honour. To my daughter, you are my greatest teacher. I am so proud of you, everything begins and ends with you.”

Referencing her role in Sinners, Mosaku said: “I found a part of myself in Annie, a part of my hopes, my ancestral power and connection, parts I thought I had lost or tried to dim as an immigrant trying to fit in.”

Addressing director Coogler, who also directed Black Panther and Creed, she told him: “I felt the presence of the ancestors’ pride and joy daily on your set.”

Advertisement

Mosaku will be hoping to replicate her major accomplishment next month at the 98th Academy Awards in Los Angeles. In one of the hardest awards to predict, she is nominated once again alongside Lilleaas and Taylor, with Sentimental Value’s Elle Fanning and Weapons’ Amy Madigan also nominated.

The precursors have been unable to split the pack, with Madigan the initial frontrunner until Taylor took home the award at the Golden Globes last month.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

Man, 18, in court after serious assault in Scarborough

Published

on

Malton woman assaulted five people including police officers

An 18-year-old man was remanded in custody to appear in court at 9.15am today (Friday, April 10).

It came after North Yorkshire Police were called to reports of a disturbance in Victoria Court, Scarborough, at approximately 11.50am on Thursday (April 9).


Recommended reading:

Advertisement

A force spokesperson said: “On arrival, officers found the victim who had sustained several injuries.

“During initial enquiries, the suspect was spotted by officers in the West Square area and was subsequently arrested and taken into custody for questioning.

“He was later charged with wounding with intent, possessing an offensive weapon and criminal damage, and was remanded in custody to appear at York Magistrates’ Court at 9.15am today (10 April).

“Swift action and great work by all the officers involved.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Ambulance service warns protesters not to ‘impede’ emergency vehicles during NI fuel demonstrations

Published

on

Belfast Live

Calls on social media are urging everyone “from HGV drivers to farmers” to take part in a “day of action” on April 14

The Northern Ireland Ambulance Service is urging protesters not to block emergency vehicles as demonstrations over fuel prices are set to target key roads.

In a statement issued on social media, NIAS said they were “aware” protests are likely to take place “at a number of locations” across the region on Tuesday, April 14.

Advertisement

“The safety of both staff and patients remains our priority, and we would ask that emergency service vehicles are not impeded by any protests,” a spokesperson said.

READ MORE: Urgent appeal for missing pregnant woman last seen in Co AntrimREAD MORE: Man who skipped bail extradited from Germany to face NI court

The announcement from the ambulance service comes after a post shared on Facebook has called for everyone “from HGV drivers to farmers” to take part in a “day of action” at 2pm, on Tuesday, April 14.

The post reads: “Join us as we bring the country to a stop and make our voices be heard.”

Advertisement

The protest is expected to take place at several locations including Larne, the Westlink, Lisburn, Nutts Corner, Mallusk, Ballygawley and Omagh.

In their statement issued on Friday, NIAS said: “The Northern Ireland Ambulance Service is aware that protests are likely to take place at a number of locations across Northern Ireland on Tuesday 14th April.

“NIAS would like to reassure the public that every effort is being made to maintain health and social care services as far as possible.

“If there is any disruption to services, then local providers will advise patients and service users accordingly.

Advertisement

“The safety of both staff and patients remains our priority, and we would ask that emergency service vehicles are not impeded by any protests.”

Meanwhile, a PSNI spokesman said: “Police are aware of posters online calling for protests at various locations across Northern Ireland and we will be monitoring the situation.”

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Trump has handed JD Vance his most difficult mission yet

Published

on

Trump has handed JD Vance his most difficult mission yet

“If it doesn’t happen, I’m blaming JD Vance,” Trump joked, drawing laughter at last week’s East Room event attended by senior administration officials including the vice-president, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. And “if it does happen,” Trump added, “I’m taking full credit.”

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Nintendo GameCube is my favourite console even though I know it’s not the best – Reader’s Feature

Published

on

Nintendo GameCube is my favourite console even though I know it’s not the best - Reader's Feature
How do you feel about the GameCube? (Nintendo)

Despite its flaws, in terms of hardware and software, a reader explains why the Nintendo GameCube is his mostly fondly remembered video game console.

My love of Nintendo GameCube is weird. I’m not going to deny that the Nintendo GameCube is my favourite games console ever. But it was the first console that I felt was truly my own, because my brothers didn’t play it. It was bought for my 10th birthday in 2002 and it was situated in my bedroom – so I could play it whenever I wanted to. Yet beyond this, I loved the GameCube for its start-up screen signature, getting sports games and pitting the AI against each other in tournaments, and playing the exclusive WWE games on it.

Something I particularly loved about the GameCube was you had all these family friendly platformers and sports titles with Nintendo’s iconic mascots adorning them, but occasionally a Resident Evil game would turn up exclusively on the system and soak all that bountiful joy in viscous dread. There was a variety on the GameCube I really love and appreciate, and there were many experimental first and third party games on the system too.

Yet no matter how much I love Nintendo GameCube, I know it was a huge step down from the N64. The Pokémon games we loved on the N64, such as Pokémon Stadium, Pokémon Stadium 2, and Pokémon Snap were replaced with the likes of Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale Of Darkness. Not to say the latter two games were terrible, but the pleasures and joys of the N64 games were lost and replaced with something far less enticing and inviting.

Advertisement

I reckon both of these Pokémon GameCube adventures mirrored the declining popularity of Pokémon. Personally, I loved Pokémon a lot in my single digits, but from 2002 onwards my interest disappeared, and thus these GameCube games represent my diminished Pokémon fandom.

WWF/WWE games were also very stripped back on GameCube. The Herculean success of the Attitude era and its exclusive N64 titles WWF WrestleMania 2000 and WWF No Mercy were replaced with four WWE games that wouldn’t even defeat Kurt Angle if he was blindfolded and both of his legs were taped together.

Expert, exclusive gaming analysis

Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning.

Advertisement

WrestleMania X8 was poor and didn’t start things well at all. WrestleMania XIX was appreciable for its audacious Revenge Mode but only felt like a marginal improvement over X8. Then the Day Of Reckoning games were really solid and enjoyable, but you still couldn’t defend titles in Exhibition mode, nor could you play as any WWE superstar in their story modes. The WWE games had been scaled back significantly and they just weren’t on the level that came before, despite a few of them still being readily enjoyable.

This weird love of GameCube I’ve been talking about is nestled in the consensus that this console was far inferior to the N64, and many of the games didn’t hit anywhere near as hard as they did on N64. I still favour the GameCube among every system because of its quirks. From the lunchbox-like design to the start-up screen, and how it can play different jingles if you hold down the ‘Z’ button, to the experimentation of the games that released on the system.

Advertisement

The Nintendo GameCube is still my favourite console no matter how middling it might seem when considering all the games consoles ever released.

By reader James Davie

Nintendo GameCube line-up of re-releases for Switch 2
Many GameCube games are available on Nintendo Switch (Nintendo)

The reader’s features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro.

You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot.

Just contact us at gamecentral@metro.co.uk or use our Submit Stuff page and you won’t need to send an email.

Advertisement

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

What can governments do when petrol prices rocket?

Published

on

What can governments do when petrol prices rocket?

The price of oil has changed a lot in the last few weeks. There have been dips as well as peaks, but generally, since the the start of the US-Israeli attacks on Iran at the end of February, the black stuff has been getting more expensive.

As a direct result, petrol and diesel prices in the UK have also rocketed.

Motorists have felt the steep rise on petrol station forecourts, while some fuel sellers have been accused of profiteering and ripping off customers. There have also been calls for the government to intervene to prevent costs from spiralling out of control.

But what can it actually do to bring petrol prices down?

Advertisement

One option might be to impose price caps, setting a legal limit on what motorists can be charged for a litre of fuel. But a major problem with this idea comes down to a lack of supply.

Taking the Strait of Hormuz as a perfect example, if fewer tankers from Kuwait and Qatar are getting through, that means there is less oil available. As stocks runs low, it is impossible for everyone to get the same amount of fuel at the same price as before.

If price caps were introduced (with the supplier taking on the full impact of the discount), the countries and firms with oil to sell would naturally shift their sales to countries willing to pay higher prices. So a price cap would probably lead to empty petrol pumps in the UK.

There have already been shortages in France, where one major fuel provider implemented its own price cap and was subsequently inundated with customers.

Advertisement

In contrast, high fuel prices may persuade households to cut down on consumption, which is helpful when there is less oil available. After all, people don’t switch from travelling by car to public transport (which is often less convenient) unless there is a good reason to do so. High fuel prices are a good reason.

Research suggests that in the UK, a 10% increase in petrol prices can lead to a reduction in demand of up to 5%. So, high prices are a way of adjusting consumption to cope with the lower supply.

Duty calls

In the longer term, households might invest in a way which reduces their dependence on future fossil fuel consumption. Maybe, instead of a big SUV, the next family car will be be smaller or electric.

In the short term, though, demand for petrol and diesel will remain. Not all commuting and travelling can be cancelled or postponed. People need to get to work, children need to go to school.

Advertisement

A more promising policy intervention could be temporary fuel duty discounts – reducing the proportion of fuel costs which ends up in the Treasury. Unlike with price caps, oil exporters’ incentives to sell in the UK are not diminished by reducing fuel duty. So fuel duty cuts wouldn’t cause supply issues.

A vessel anchored off Dubai on the Strait of Harmuz.
EPA/Stringer

The issue here is that fuel duty cuts reduce government revenue at a time when it is already seriously stretched. Fuel duty receipts account for almost 2% of UK government income.

Also, the measure is not very targeted. Wealthy households with multiple vehicles would benefit more than a single mother struggling to pay for petrol to get to work.

Making allowances

Another option, favoured by some economists, is based on one-off transfers of money from the state directly to some motorists.

Advertisement

Instead of fuel duty cuts, the government could pay out a fixed sum to those in particular need (much like the winter fuel allowance for heating bills). This could be paid to households under a certain income threshold that own a car.

When a similar transfer scheme for gas was implemented in Germany in 2022 after Russia shut off gas pipelines, firms and households received compensation based on past consumption. Germany was able to reduce its gas consumption by about 20% during that time.

Unlike a fuel duty cut, compensation does not change depending on the amount of fuel bought. So the incentive to cut down on fuel consumption wherever possible remains.

Indeed, households that leave the car at home will profit, as they keep the transfer. This is as it should be: households that use less fuel get rewarded, while those that need it still have some support.

Advertisement

Many economists like this proposal because it keeps prices as an accurate reflection of supply shortages, while providing targeted relief. Neither price caps nor fuel duty cuts achieve this.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Benn vs Prograis: Date, fight time, undercard, prediction, ring walks and latest odds

Published

on

Benn vs Prograis: Date, fight time, undercard, prediction, ring walks and latest odds

Plenty has happened since that career-best night for ‘The Destroyer’, who shocked the world of boxing in February by splitting from long-time promoters Matchroom and Eddie Hearn to sign a lucrative deal with Zuffa, the new promotional company founded by UFC CEO Dana White and Chairman of the Saudi Arabian General Entertainment Authority, Turki Al-Sheikh.

It’s a one-fight deal rumoured to be worth a cool $15million, causing plenty of fallout and only heightening the tensions between Hearn and White.

Despite stating after his win over Eubank Jr – against whom he jumped up two divisions to middleweight for both fights – that he now wanted to return to his natural home of welterweight (147 pounds) to challenge for world titles, particularly the WBC belt which Ryan Garcia won from Mario Barrios earlier this year, Benn’s next outing is being fought at a catchweight of 150 pounds.

He is up against American southpaw Prograis, the 37-year-old former two-time super-lightweight world champion who has spent his whole career to date in the 140-pound ranks.

Advertisement

‘Rougarou’ last fought in August 2025, when he outlasted Joseph ‘JoJo’ Diaz in a thrilling 10-round contest in Chicago to bounce back from consecutive defeats by Devin Haney – in which he lost the WBC super-lightweight title – and England’s Jack Catterall, by whom he was outpointed in Manchester in October 2024.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Larne boss insists players should come to Windsor Park to face Linfield with confidence

Published

on

Belfast Live

The Invermen are wounded going into the 1pm kick-off at Windsor Park on Saturday after suffering a 4-1 defeat at home to Coleraine on Tuesday

Larne boss Gary Haveron has reminded his players they are where everyone else wants to be as the league leaders travel to the reigning Champions for huge game in the title race.

Advertisement

The Invermen are wounded going into the 1pm kick-off at Windsor Park on Saturday after suffering a 4-1 defeat at home to Coleraine on Tuesday, having played an hour with 10 men.

That defeat saw their lead over Glentoran cut to three points with three Premiership games remaining.

This could be another pivotal day in the title race, but Haveron was keen to point out that any other team behind them would swap places with his side as he looks to steer his hometown club to their third title in four seasons.

“We need to be in the best shape possible come Saturday,” he said.

Advertisement

“We also need to show character, we need to show grit, determination. We need to have people who are ready for the fight on Saturday.

“We know it’s going to be difficult on a big pitch at Windsor, but we have to dust ourselves and be ready to go again.

“At the end of the day we’re top of the league and three points clear – we’re still where we want to be.

“Anyone would rather in our position than anywhere else so it’s up to us to take advantage of that and to give ourselves the best chance in these last few games.”

Advertisement

Tuesday’s defeat to Coleraine was their second in four days, having also suffered Irish Cup semi-final disappointment after extra-time against the Bannsiders last weekend.

“It’s incredibly small margins against all the top teams at this stage of the season,” he said.

“Last Saturday there was nothing in the game really and on Tuesday the big decisions went against us.

“We can’t dwell on that though, we have to be looking ahead to give ourselves the chance of being in the best shape.

“We dusted ourselves down this week and it was all about what we need to do going forward.”

Larne boss Haveron went with the same XI in both the Cup and league defeats to Coleraine, but may look to freshen things up ahead of the early kick-off on Saturday against David Healy’s side.

He added: “After Saturday I knew the players were hurting and I wanted to give them a chance to put it right.

“Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t. As a manager sometimes you have to hold your hand up and reflect on things and ask what we could have done differently.

Advertisement

“Hindsight is a wonderful thing and now we have to react in a positive way.”

Having won all four league games and overseen Irish Cup progress away to Glentoran in March, Haveron was named as the league’s manager of the month yesterday.

He is now hoping to kickstart another impressive run of form in the last month of the season.

“It’s always an honour to win this award, it would not be possible without the help of our backroom staff and the players, who have worked so hard this season,” he said.

Advertisement

“Unfortunately, we’ve not carried our March form into April with the two defeats against Coleraine.

“But that’s football. There’s still plenty to play for with three massive league games between now and the end of the season, starting with Linfield on Saturday.”

Click here to sign up to our sport newsletter, bringing you the latest sports news, headlines and top stories

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Does marriage prevent cancer? And who benefits the most?

Published

on

Does marriage prevent cancer? And who benefits the most?

Marriage, it turns out, may come with a side‑effect no one puts in the vows: people who have been married seem less likely to develop cancer than those who have never married at all.

That is the provocative finding from a large new study that has raised interesting questions about what really keeps us healthy over a lifetime. If marriage shows up in the data as “protective”, is it love that matters, the piece of paper, or something much bigger hiding in the background?

In this analysis, researchers looked at cancer diagnoses in more than 4 million adults across 12 US states, representing a population of over 100 million people. They focused on cancers diagnosed after the age of 30 between 2015 and 2022 – a modern snapshot taken in an era when same‑sex marriage is legal nationwide, so marriage includes more people than ever.

Everyone was divided into two camps: those who were or had ever been married, including divorced and widowed people, and those who had never married at all. Around one in five adults landed in this never‑married group, a sizeable minority whose health has often been overlooked in traditional family‑centred research.

Advertisement

When the researchers compared the numbers, the gap was impossible to ignore. Men who had never married were about 70% more likely to develop cancer than men who had married at some point, while women who had never married were about 85% more likely to develop cancer than women who were or had been married.

More advantage to women

That last figure is especially notable, because many earlier studies suggested that men gained more from marriage than women. Here, women appear to gain at least as much, if not more. And the differences grew wider with age, especially after 50, when the consequences of decades of habits – smoking, diet, exercise, medical check‑ups, or the lack of them – finally rise to the surface.

The gap was not the same for every cancer, which is where the story becomes more revealing.

For anal cancer in men and cervical cancer in women – two diseases closely linked to infection with the sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) – the differences were enormous. Never‑married men had around five times the rate of anal cancer compared with men who had married.

Advertisement

Never‑married women had nearly three times the rate of cervical cancer. These are precisely the cancers where preventive tools already exist: HPV vaccination and regular screening to catch pre‑cancerous changes early.

The study’s authors suggest that being married may increase the chances that someone is nudged into attending those appointments, or into having more stable healthcare and insurance.

Elsewhere, the pattern echoed long‑known biological themes. Cancers such as endometrial and ovarian cancer were more common in never‑married women, which may reflect lower rates of childbearing, since pregnancy and childbirth alter hormone exposure in ways that can reduce risk, as research my team has undertaken shows.

By contrast, for cancers strongly influenced by organised screening – breast, prostate, thyroid – the differences by marital status were smaller. Screening levels the playing field, regardless of whether someone has a spouse reminding them about their appointments.

Advertisement

Even race played an unexpected part. Black men who had never married had the highest overall cancer rates in the study, yet married black men actually had lower cancer rates than married white men, hinting that marriage might be especially protective in some groups.

Screening levels the playing field.
illustrissima/Shutterstock.com

Nothing magical about marriage, per se

So does this mean marriage itself somehow protects people from cancer? The researchers are careful to say no. Their study shows a pattern, not proof that marriage is the cause.

The real question is whether marriage makes people healthier, or whether healthier, wealthier and better-supported people are simply more likely to get married in the first place. People facing serious mental illness, addiction, chronic illness or deep poverty may be less likely to marry, and those same struggles are also linked to a higher risk of cancer. In that sense, marriage may be less a cause than a sign of other advantages that begin long before anyone walks down the aisle.

There are other reasons to be cautious, too. The “ever married” group bundles together happily married people with those who are divorced or widowed, despite the fact that those experiences can look very different in practice. Meanwhile, the “never married” group includes people in long-term relationships who may receive much of the same support as married couples. The researchers also cannot fully account for differences in income, education or access to healthcare – all of which strongly shape cancer risk in their own right.

Advertisement

Even so, the study points to something important. People who are or have been married are more likely to have someone encouraging them to see a doctor, to share financial resources and health insurance, and to be less likely to smoke heavily or avoid medical care. Over many years, those small differences can add up, shaping the risks people carry and influencing which cancers eventually develop – and which never do.

If you have never married, none of this is a personal health verdict. What the study really underlines is the need to ensure that the quiet advantages so often bundled with marriage – social support, gentle “nagging” to seek help, easier access to healthcare – are not reserved only for those with wedding photos on the mantelpiece.

Single people, widowed people, those who live alone or outside traditional coupledom, may need more targeted support to get to screening, to be offered vaccinations like HPV, and to have their concerns taken seriously. As more people choose to stay single, or to build lives outside marriage, those questions will only become more urgent.

In the end, this study is less a love letter to marriage than a reminder that our bodies are shaped not just by genes and chance, but by the social structures we move through. The people who notice when we’re unwell, encourage us to book that test, and help determine whether we can afford to act on that advice may leave traces visible years later under a microscope. The deeper challenge for public health and policy is to deliver the benefits of connection, stability and access to care to everyone – including those who never say “I do.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

We must demand worse graphics to save the video games industry – Reader’s Feature

Published

on

We must demand worse graphics to save the video games industry - Reader’s Feature
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 – tiny budget, massive profits (Kepler Interactive)

As the price of making, and paying for, video games continues to increase, a reader argues that publishers need to roll the clock back a decade.

A couple of weeks ago it was revealed that $300 million is now a normal sized budget for triple-A video games, which is an absolutely crazy amount. To put that in context, that is more than all but 18 of all movies ever made. That’s right, there are just 18 movies that have ever cost more and even the most expensive, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, is only $536 million, which is bound to be way less than GTA 6 and maybe others.

If $300 million is becoming the standard that means some games will already be more than that. Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 was already over it back in 2023. So just imagine what Marvel’s Wolverine, or the new Fable, or Naughty Dog’s Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet must be costing.

I don’t think you need me to say that these price are outrageous and unsustainable, especially because they’re constantly going up, and will have a major bump when the (completely unnecessary) next generation starts. Budgets are rising all the time and yet the total number of people playing console games hasn’t increased since the PlayStation 2 days.

Advertisement

These numbers do not make any sense. The fact that they can only get worse makes even less sense. And the fact that not one single publisher is doing anything about it (even Nintendo’s games are getting bigger budget, more expensive, and taking longer to make) is absolutely crazy. Especially as this problem has been obvious all generation.

I don’t know why publishers won’t do anything about it, but I assume it’s the all or nothing logic that has had so many of them wasting all their time and money trying to make the next Fortnite. I think I can guarantee that they will learn nothing from the success of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and other indie games.

Expert, exclusive gaming analysis

Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning.

Advertisement

Just to remind you, Expedition 33 was made by a core team of just 30 people on a budget of less than $10 million and yet has sold well over 5 million copies (I could only find numbers that go back to last October). And that’s for a game that was almost universally named the best game of last year, had great graphics, and lasts over 40 hours.

Whether you like the game or not is not the point, the point is if some random team of ex-Ubisoft developers can do that then so could any reasonably talented, and motivated, team.

Advertisement

The graphics in Intergalactic and Wolverine, and whatever else, are going to be great, I’m sure, but there is absolutely no way any video game should be costing over $300 million. Is Wolverine going to look 30 times better than Expedition 33? That’s literally impossible.

We need to tell publishers that we are fine with good graphics. We do not need them to be amazing graphics, if that means the budget increases by 3,000% and the game becomes more expensive to buy.

GTA 6 screenshot of character Jason leaning against a tree
GTA 6 is rumoured to have a budget of over $2 billion (Rockstar Games)

I’m not against big budgets just because it’s gross and a waste of money but because it limits what games can be. If you’re spending $300+ million on a game you’re not going to want it to be some wildly experiment thing that you don’t know is going to be a hit. You’re going to want it to be as safe and predictable as purpose, to try and attract as many people as possible.

Expedition 33 isn’t just a good game it’s a pretty weird one, while also paying homage to old school turn-based role-players that even Square Enix doesn’t give a big budget to nowadays.

I didn’t really mean to make this about Expedition 33 so much but it’s such a good example of what should be happening with games right now and yet big publishers aren’t paying it any attention.

Advertisement

I’ll break it down, as to what needs to happen:

  • Lower budgets – if you’re not GTA than anything even close to $100 million is madness
  • PlayStation 4 level graphics – we didn’t need this generation let along the next one, the improvement is tiny and the cost (in every sense of the word) is ridiculous
  • Shorter run times – simply making shorter games would instantly cut your budget, especially as people are sick of every other game being a 60 hour epic; how much free time do you think we get?!
  • Cheaper prices – the other benefit of Expedition 33 is that it’s below average price, but if you make your game shorter and with lower-tech graphics that’s not a problem.

Look at the most successful games – everything from Fortnite to Among Us to Minecraft – and you won’t see high-tech graphics anywhere. Ordinary people don’t care about graphics, they care about having fun and we should all take that attitude.

Publishers think that hardcore fans demand better graphics and I say we tell them otherwise. There needs to be a campaign to make graphics worse. I know how that sounds but what it really means is to make games cheaper, because the actual decrease in graphics will be so minimal no sensible person will care anyway.

By reader Togi

Marvel's Wolverine screenshot
Marvel’s Wolverine – clearly not a cheap game (Sony Interactive Entertainment)

The reader’s features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro.

You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot.

Advertisement

Just contact us at gamecentral@metro.co.uk or use our Submit Stuff page and you won’t need to send an email.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Arsenal FC vs Bournemouth: Prediction, kick-off time, TV, live stream, team news, h2h results, odds

Published

on

Arsenal FC vs Bournemouth: Prediction, kick-off time, TV, live stream, team news, h2h results, odds

Arsenal return to Premier League action for the first time in almost a month as Bournemouth visit the Emirates Stadium on Saturday lunchtime.

It means anything less than a winning return to top-flight action this weekend will prompt alarm bells in some quarters, despite Arsenal sitting nine points clear of City at the top of the table.

The Gunners need momentum, because City appear to be building up a head of steam ahead of their final eight league games of the captain.

Date, kick-off time and venue

Advertisement

Arsenal vs Bournemouth is scheduled for a 12.30pm BST kick-off on Saturday, April 11, 2026.

The match will take place at the Emirates Stadium in north London.

Where to watch Arsenal vs Bournemouth

TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on TNT Sports 1, with coverage starting at 11am BST.

Advertisement

Live stream: TNT Sports subscribers can also catch the contest live online via the HBO Max app and website.

Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog, with expert analysis from Matt Verri at the ground.

Arsenal vs Bournemouth team news

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025