The Thursday letters page has some big ideas for the future of Assassin’s Creed, as a reader thinks Capcom is purposefully trolling Dino Crisis fans.
Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk
Living dead platformer I have a terrible confession to make to you, GC. I’m actually looking forward to Bubsy 4D. I know the earlier games are awful but the developer on this one is good and I liked their previous game Demon Tides. More importantly, I love 3D platformers and I’m pretty much starving for anything else to play.
We still don’t know when the next 3D Mario will be and I think there’s a good chance that it won’t be next year, which seems crazy but that’s Nintendo for you.
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There hasn’t been a Sonic Frontiers sequel, which is also crazy to me because I thought the first one was actually pretty good. And that’s pretty much it, because nobody is making 3D platformers anymore. Not Rare, not Naughty Dog, not anyone for Crash Bandicoot or Spyro. Even the Yooka-Laylee guys don’t seem to be doing anything new.
Do I just have to accept that the 3D platformer is dead? Just with the odd Mario game every decade and a few low budget indie games? I guess I probably do. Thompson
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Review manipulation I see the developer of Outbound had to apologise for asking people to remove bad reviews of it from Steam. Why is that doesn’t get any outrage online but apparently Mixtape is the worst thing ever to happen to gaming?
It’s pretty obvious that the people complaining don’t care about indie gaming at all. They probably don’t care about any game more daring than Fortnite, so it’s terrible to see a game be torn down for no reason. I have no interest in it and will never play it but why can’t these haters just stop there and accept it’s not for them? Temol
The next evolution Bringing back Ezio does indeed sound like exactly the sort of thing a company would try to do when they’re desperately smashing the nostalgia button and don’t know what to do with the franchise. I’m not against it, as he was definitely the best one, but I think it’s telling that the only character anyone really cares about is from the second game from 17 years ago.
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I hope Hexe is good, and I will give it a chance, but I feel the series needs something more than just switching settings every time. Maybe it’s time for it to evolve into a different franchise? Assassin’s Creed is basically just Prince Of Persia with a different hat on, maybe they should make some actual historical games without all the pointless sci-fi stuff? Gaston
A fair price I feel like an idiot for saying this but I have to say I think £100 for GTA 6 is probably fair. That’s assuming it’s of roughly the same quality as GTA 5, including the size of the game world and GTA Online. Assuming that, and that they aren’t lying about the graphics in some way, I don’t see how you don’t get £100 of value out of it.
I’m not saying I’d be that 1% of people that said it should cost more, in that survey, but I think we need to accept that the amount of work that goes into games, and the amount of time we spend playing them, justifies a high price.
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I wouldn’t say that for any old game but when you know what you’re getting and it’s something that only comes round once a decade I don’t actually have a problem with it. Bragging that you spent 300 hours game and then you only paid £40, or whatever, for it doesn’t seem quite fair to me. Branton
Inevitable outcome Sony has faced significant financial losses due to the impairment of Bungie’s assets, which has led to a $765 million loss for the fiscal year 2025. This loss is attributed to the underperformance of Bungie’s portfolio, including the struggles of Destiny 2 and Marathon. I think they paid nearly $2 billion for Bungie?
Not good for gaming, would love Bungie to do another Halo but as things stand that’s not happening. Destiny is done and Marathon has failed but making Marathon’s gameplay a steep learning curve was always going to alienate a lot of gamers. More jobs losses I guess. TWO MACKS
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Time compression I haven’t got any obscure anniversaries to shock you with today but I did just read that it’s now been longer between GTA 6 Trailer 2 and now than it was between GTA 3 and GTA: Vice City. In other words, they made a whole game (one of the most famous of all-time) quicker than they’ve managed to make a new trailer.
I’m sure they could’ve done a new trailer quicker if they wanted, of course they could, but it does drive home how much quicker games were to make back in the day. I’m sure they were crunching like hell back then, and the game is basically a total conversion of GTA 3, but it’s still quite the achievement to get it released that quick.
I think this is an important thing we’re missing today, where you can not only not tell a proper story between games, because it takes too long between new chapters, but you also can’t make these sort of expansion pack style sequels either. There just aren’t any shortcuts anymore.
Zelda: Majora’s Mask, which was basically a total conversion of Ocarina Of Time, wouldn’t exist today because there’s be no way to make it quick enough that it wouldn’t just be easier to make a brand new game.
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There are some amazing triple-A games out there at the moment and I’m loving Pragmata, but that game is only about 12 hours long and it took six years to make. That’s six months per hour of playing time or, to put it another way, at least four GTA 6 trailers! Manx
Extinct hopes I can’t believe what a dissing Dino Crisis took in that Capcom report. They already didn’t have enough games to mention, because they did Onimusha when we already know it’s getting a new franchise. Why couldn’t Dino Crisis have taken that slot?
And then there’s multiplayer dinosaur game they had a while back, that I can’t remember the name of… it feels like Capcom is trolling Dino Crisis fans and I don’t understand way. Jurassic World is still big, why would you think Onimusha and Ōkami are worth another shot but not Dino Crisis? Korbie
GC: The multiplayer game you’re thinking of is Exoprimal.
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Real gamers Looking at the discourse around Mixtape I have to say gamers don’t do themselves any favours, the whole thing is just weird. We also had the bizarre Marathon and Crimson Desert back and forth earlier in the year, that to anyone not terminally online is just baffling.
As far as I can tell Crimson Desert is the real gamers’ game of the year? Because… reasons… and anyone who doesn’t like it is a shill for the ‘woke mafia’ I guess. Then whenever Marathon and Bungie are mentioned it seems to rally nutters to say the game’s ‘dead’ and the userbase inflated due to some cabal of journalists and powerful publisher interests. Guys… it’s just an online shooter some people like and some people don’t.
Obviously, we live in a time were everything is a conspiracy, from politics to sport thanks to social media. You’d expect gaming to fall victim to that too, by just existing in the same space, every mistake or attempt to expand the audience is actually some nefarious scheme out to change something against the ‘will of the people’.
I also wonder if part of it is that gaming does seem to be getting more hardcore? Older gamers are drifting away through the pressures of family and work commitments, or for the young it’s just the endless supply of other media to consume.
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Most of the next generation either don’t games like we did in the past (I remember the article some months ago saying gaming was now competing with gambling and adult internet content) or do game and are deep in the walled gardens of Roblox, Fortnite, et al. That’s leaving an ever smaller over-invested player-base behind, who see themselves as gate keepers and lash out at anything they don’t like.
It seems to me this increasingly unpleasant online chatter is as much a threat to the future of the medium as ever-increasing hardware and software costs. We need to expand the audience and get more normal people involved, not shrink it. Marc
GC: It’s pretty depressing stuff, we have an article up today about it. But your penultimate paragraph pretty much nails it.
Inbox also-rans Hang on, so that Steam Controller costs £85 and it doesn’t have a speaker? I know PC hardware is expensive at the moment, jeez… Topcat
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I didn’t realise so many different people had tried to blow up Nintendo before. Between this and constant layoffs, being a games developer sounds like no fun at all. Jester
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Bill Gates told members of Congress that Jeffrey Epstein used the billionaire philanthropist to “rehabilitate his reputation” and admits he “should never have met” the dead pedophile in the first place.
In Wednesday’s closed-door interview with the House Oversight Committee, the Microsoft co-founder said the wealthy and well-connected sex offender tried to leverage explicit details about his personal life, including his extramarital affairs, to coerce Gates into working with him.
Epstein “sought to build an image of legitimacy around himself, using connections to reputable and powerful people to deflect scrutiny and attempt to rehabilitate his reputation,” said Gates, according to a copy of his statement provided to The Independent.
Gates told reporters that he hopes his interview is “helpful” to the long-running investigation into the dead pedophile and his alleged ties to a network of powerful abusers.
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He said he is “glad to be here voluntarily to testify to help with the committee’s work.”
Bill Gates expressed regret in meeting Jeffrey Epstein, who leveraged his relationship with the Microsoft co-founder to ‘rehabilitate’ his image and tried to exploit details about his personal life to coerce Gates into working with him, Gates told the House Oversight Committee (Reuters)
“I hope my testimony is helpful to the work, important work of the committee to find justice for the victims,” he said.
Gates, among the highest-profile figures speaking to the committee, was subpoenaed for testimony after the release of millions of documents stemming from Epstein investigations raised questions about the billionaire’s ties to the late sex offender.
Documents released by the Department of Justice included calendar entries and correspondence between Gates and Epstein, who were also photographed together.
Gates has repeatedly denied any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and has not been accused of wrongdoing in connection with his abuse.
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“Due to public reporting, documents released by the Department of Justice, and documents obtained by the Committee, the Committee believes you have information that will assist in its investigation,” the committee’s Republican chair James Comer wrote in March.
A spokesperson for Gates told The Independent that he “welcomes the opportunity to appear before the committee.”
“While he never witnessed or participated in any of Epstein’s illegal conduct, he is looking forward to answering all the committee’s questions to support their important work,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
In his opening remarks, Gates stressed that he “never witnessed nor had any indication that Epstein was engaged in ongoing criminal conduct.”
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“I never went to his island, his ranch, or his Florida home. I have never victimized anyone. While he may have sought to foster a personal relationship, I was never interested in that and never reciprocated,” he added.
The committee’s Republican chair James Comer subpoenaed Gates for testimony after finding that the Justice Department’s Epstein files contained ‘information’ to assist in its long-running investigation into the late sex offender (AFP/Getty)
Gates explained that he first met Epstein through people he trusted in his professional and philanthropic work in 2011 — three years after Epstein had pleaded guilty to soliciting a minor for prostitution in Florida. Gates
“I recall being aware that Epstein had faced prior legal issues, but I did not fully understand the extent of the crimes he committed,” Gates said. “I accepted the introduction without applying the scrutiny I should have.”
His interactions with Epstein were limited to a handful of meetings in 2011 and 2012 followed by “more extensive conversations” about charitable giving efforts in 2014 and 2014, according to Gates.
Gates ultimately determined that Epstein’s efforts to reel in potential donors to his foundation were a “dead-end,” he said.
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“I told him we would go no further and stopped communicating or meeting with him,” Gates told the committee.
No funds were raised and “no vehicle for charitable giving was ever created,” and their interactions ended in 2014, according to Gates.
At the same time, one of Gates’s former employees “engaged” Epstein to discuss the terms of his separation from his office, which Gates “did not ask” nor “want or need” Epstein’s involvement, he said.
Epstein had also learned “sensitive information” about Gates’s personal life, “including the fact that I had been unfaithful in my marriage,” he told the committee.
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“These affairs had nothing to do with my interactions with Epstein, but they were painful for my family,” he added. “As the public can now see, based on what has been released in the files, Epstein was working to use information about my infidelities — in addition to many lies that he layered on top — to pressure me to re-engage with him. He was unsuccessful in this effort, but it shows some of the ways he tried to leverage his interactions with me to further his agenda.”
The committee has interviewed 15 people in connection with Epstein, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, Howard Lutnick and Epstein’s former associates and employees (AFP/Getty)
Gates said he “should never have met with Epstein in the first place.”
“Based on what I know now, I understand that even if he had delivered the new donors he promised, it would not have justified associating with him,” he added.
“I was so focused on the possibility of raising funds for global health that I allowed that goal to override my better judgment,” he said. “That is a sobering realization, and it has reinforced for me the importance of being more attentive to how access and reputation can be manipulated by people acting in bad faith.”
Epstein died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on trafficking charges. His death was ruled a suicide.
In those notes, he appears to claim that he facilitated sexual encounters for Gates and helped him obtain medication to hide a sexually transmitted infection from his wife.
Epstein appears to claim that he got medication for Gates “in order to deal with consequences of sex with russian girls” and “illicit trysts, with married women,” according to documents in the files.
Another draft message alleges Gates asked Epstein to delete messages referencing a sexually transmitted disease as well as explicit details about his penis.
Republicans on the committee have rejected Democrats’ demands for testimony from Donald Trump, who is pictured alongside Epstein in a billbaord from anti-Trump campaign The Lincoln Project (AFP/Getty)
Last week, the committee referred two men to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution after a survivor’s sexual assault allegations, marking the first such move after a series of interviews and congressional hearings with members of Donald Trump’s administration.
Epstein’s former assistant Lesley Groff testified on Tuesday, during which she claimed that she set up calls between her former boss and Trump, among other allegations.
Democrats on the committee have repeatedly urged testimony from the president, whose name appears thousands of times within the millions of documents released by the Justice Department. Trump socialized with Epstein throughout the 1990s and 2000s, and Epstein once described himself as the president’s “closest friend.”
Trump has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing, and one’s appearance in the Epstein files does not suggest otherwise. The president has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein and insists he cut ties with Epstein years before the wealthy pedophile was under investigation.
The England and Wales Cricket Board’s (ECB) investigation into the actions of Stokes and Atkinson is still ongoing.
An ECB statement said: “Given the ongoing investigation, Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson have not been made available for selection for the second Test against New Zealand.”
The Cricket Regulator is conducting a separate investigation, one that might not be concluded for a number of weeks.
Stokes, 35, has been given time by the ECB in order to consider his options. The governing body has denied any suggestion he has been asked to resign.
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The episode is an unwanted controversy for the ECB following a dismal 4-1 Ashes tour of Australia that was dogged by off-field controversy.
The defeat of New Zealand in the first Test at Lord’s looked to be a small step in the right direction, but now England will have to attempt to win the series without their captain and all-rounder, and a key pace bowler.
Though Stokes’ poor batting form has come under scrutiny, his all-round abilities are vital to balance the XI.
Atkinson, 28, endured a poor winter, yet looked back to somewhere near his best with seven wickets in the first Test.
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The Surrey man has now surrendered his place in the England team on his home ground and his absence could mean a return for Archer, who missed the first Test following his stint at the Indian Premier League.
Depending on conditions, the best replacement for Stokes would be spin-bowling all-rounder Rehan Ahmed, who is retained in the squad after missing out on the final XI at Lord’s.
It would be tough on Shoaib Bashir – the off-spinner was in the XI at Lord’s and was not required to bowl a ball. If Ahmed replaces Stokes, Bashir would then make way for England to field four specialist seamers.
If England decide to replace Stokes with a specialist batter, uncapped James Rew was in the squad for the first Test.
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Essex’s Cox, 25, has been in a number of England Test squads but is yet to make an appearance. He was due to make his debut as wicketkeeper on the tour of New Zealand in 2024, only to suffer a broken thumb in the nets.
Root’s return to the captaincy is an indictment of the situation the ECB found themselves in.
It would have been difficult to have one captain, Stokes, unavailable for a nightclub incident, only to replace him with Brook, eight months on from his own nightclub misdemeanour.
Therefore Root will lead England at least once more, and perhaps even for the third Test at Trent Bridge a week later.
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Root’s elevation could be a hint towards an expectation that Stokes will eventually return to the job.
If Brook had been made captain, there would have been the opportunity to demonstrate the Test team in his image, especially with Stokes’ playing powers appearing to be on the wane.
Instead, with Root named as interim captain, there looks to be a path for Stokes to return if he desires.
If the all-rounder misses the remaining Tests against New Zealand, his comeback could be for the three-Test series against Pakistan in August.
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Earlier on Wednesday, ex-England skipper Michael Vaughan said Stokes should not lose his job as captain.
“Yes, Ben Stokes broke a curfew. Yes, he made a mistake. But is that a sacking offence as England’s Test captain? I don’t think so,” Vaughan wrote in the Telegraph.
“The ECB has to be brave enough and strong enough to do what it thinks is right. If that is to sack him then fine, but I do not agree with that decision on this issue.”
Legislation should be introduced to tackle the “scandal” of property developers charging residents exorbitant fees for roads that have not been adopted by local authorities, according to Cllr Tom Seston.
The Reform councillor, who represents Eastfield on North Yorkshire Council, said residents in his division “were originally told it would take two or three years before the roads would be adopted, which has now turned into five or six years and they still haven’t; meanwhile, the maintenance fees for some residents have gone from £200 a year to £440 a year”.
Speaking at a recent meeting of the Scarborough and Whitby Area Committee, Labour’s Cllr Liz Colling said similar issues had been reported in her Falsgrave and Stepney ward and said it was “disgraceful” that developers were charging residents.
Last year, the Home Builders Federation revealed that on new housing developments of 10 or more units built over the last three years, just 10 per cent of sites had had the roads adopted.
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The HBF said that the non-adoption of public amenities on new housing estates was an “increasingly significant and complex problem in the UK housing market”.
When local authorities are invited to adopt roads, the costs for maintaining the roads and streetlights are usually incorporated into council tax bills, while residents on unadopted estates often have to pay annual fees to management companies.
The federation added: “A growing number of housing estates are being left with unadopted amenities, creating complications for developers, local authorities, and, most critically, the residents themselves who face increased costs and added frustration.”
Scarborough And Whitby Area Committee 05.06.26
Speaking at the council meeting last week, Cllr Seston highlighted that he had “raised this at full council and the short answer was that the council won’t adopt the roads until it’s invited to do so”.
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Calling for national-level attention of the issue, he added: “If you’re charging £440 a year and you’ve got twenty or so houses, you’re getting about £10,000 a year to realistically do some light gardening.
“There are some firms making quite a lot of money off this, and equally, some of them haven’t raised their fees, while some of them had more than doubled their fees. It is a scandal in a way.”
Alison Hume, the MP for Scarborough and Whitby, said she was eager to work on the issue with Cllr Seston.
She told the meeting: “It won’t surprise you to know that the issue of unadopted roads has been brought to the Government’s attention by many, many MPs, including myself.
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“I would be interested in working with you on this issue, because we have a group of MPs working on the unadopted roads and pressuring the government to move on this, as we are aware.”
Perth and Kinross Council paid out for just nine of the 291 vehicle damage claims it received over the past two years
A councillor has questioned why the majority of claims made to Perth and Kinross Council (PKC) for damage done to vehicles by potholes on its roads were dismissed.
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Last month the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) reported a Freedom of Information request response revealed PKC had, at that stage, paid out just nine of the 291 claims submitted over the past two years.
At a meeting of the Scrutiny and Performance Committee on Wednesday, June 3, Cllr Willie Robertson said he was “totally shocked” so few drivers had been reimbursed for the damage done to their vehicles.
According to the FOI, shared with the LDRS, PKC received 84 claims in 2024/25, rising to 207 in 2025/26. It paid out a total of £2172.21 for seven claims in 2024/25 and £735.89 for two claims in 2025/26. The local authority denied liability for 75 claims in 2024/25 and 24 in 2025/26. Two claims in 2024/25 were still being reviewed, as were 181 from last year.
At Wednesday’s meeting, it emerged a briefing note had been shared with PKC’s Scrutiny and Performance Committee which said the council had paid out on just five per cent of claims made to it last year. However, PKC has since confirmed those figures – shared privately with the committee – included all liability claims, not just those relating to potholes.
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Cllr Willie Robertson represents Kinross-shire ward, where the most pothole-related claims were made last year with a quarter of all potholes claims amde to PKC in 2025/26 relating to Kinross-shire roads.
The Liberal Democrat councillor was “totally shocked” so few drivers had been reimbursed for the damage done to their vehicles.
He added: “I find it really surprising. Normally, when people contact me they’re really upset because they’ve hit a huge pothole and seriously damaged their car.”
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Strathallan ward councillor Keith Allan said he himself had missed out.
The Conservative councillor said: “I have personal experience of our insurers not playing the game. I just think we need to have a good look at it.”
The convener, Independent councillor Colin Stewart, agreed “it does seem like a low percentage” and asked Cllr Robertson what next steps the committee should take.
Cllr Robertson suggested councillors be given a breakdown on the claims and why they are refused, to help inform future claimants.
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He added: “There must be a consistent reason why so many claims are not being met or honoured. I think it would be helpful to know why claims are being rejected in such a huge way.
“When people go to the bother of making a claim they take photographs, they get statements from people who have witnessed the thing happening, they fill out the big form. It’s quite a laborious thing to do and people don’t just do it on a whim so I think it would be really useful to find that out and maybe have a report.”
SNP Strathmore ward councillor Jack Welch revealed he had suffered “extensive damage to two practically brand new tyres” prior to becoming a councillor and submitted two claims to PKC, “which were both refused”.
Cllr Welch told the committee he received “comprehensive” explanations for why his claims were refused, with one reason given being that the pothole had not been present when PKC last inspected that road.
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He said: “In one of them it was because the giant pothole was off the road surface, at the side of the road, and therefore was not an area that was essentially the responsibility of Perth and Kinross Council.
“And the second instance was that in terms of the process and procedure around statutory inspections, a statutory inspection had been carried out on that section of carriageway, which was evidenced, and there was no pothole at that time. Unfortunately, the pothole had occurred between then and me driving into it and, unfortunately, all I was thanked for was for notifying them there was a giant pothole, which was subsequently repaired very quickly it must be said.”
Conservative councillor Angus Forbes queried if refusal decisions lay with PKC or its insurance company.
He said: “I wonder if this is not a cost to Perth and Kinross Council. I assume this is covered by our insurance policy and therefore it’s entirely the insurance company’s decision whether to pay out or not pay out and, if they paid out more would it put our premium up?”
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Following the discussion, the committee’s convener Colin Stewart called for officers to provide members with:
a breakdown of the reasons for refusal
a comparison with other local authorities
where the responsibility for pay-outs lie and the information decisions are based upon.
He proposed the committee then have a sit-down discussion with the relevant council staff to raise any further questions that arise. This was unanimously agreed.
The future of the creative industries was brought vividly to life at Portsmouth Guildhall recently, as students from HSDC South Downs demonstrated outstanding talent and professionalism at Portsmouth Comic Con 2026, taking their learning far beyond the classroom and into a live professional environment.
“People have called us heroes but to be honest I’d like to think most people would’ve got stuck in and helped if they could.”
15:07, 10 Jun 2026Updated 15:12, 10 Jun 2026
The ‘North Belfast knife attack hero’ has recalled the moment he tackled the suspect with his son’s hurling stick, fearing for the victim’s safety.
Maitiu Mág Tighearnán intervened during the knife attack in the Kinnaird Avenue area of North Belfast on Monday night, June 8, to rescue the victim, Stephen Ogilvie.
He has been remanded in custody for four weeks. The court heard that the 44-year-old victim had lost his left eye and received deep cuts to his head, face and back.
32-year-old Mág Tighearnán and a friend said they jumped out of their car to rescue Mr Ogilvie as he lay on the ground. The pair had stumbled across the horrifying incident by chance as they took a short-cut to a petrol station.
Mr Mág Tighearnán, from West Belfast, who had been driving, told the Daily Mail: “I turned into Kinnaird Avenue and I could see another car stopped in the middle of the road a little further up. The woman driving then began reversing at speed as though she was trying to get away from something.
“She stopped as I approached and I drove round her, and as I did so we could see what looked to be two men fighting in the street, with one on top of the other. This was late at night and so we thought we better go and break it up. Andre was in the front passenger seat and he jumped out first.
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“He’s trained in Brazilian jujitsu and so he approached them to separate them, but as he got closer he saw the knife. It looked to be a serrated steak-knife but with a broken handle. He shouted to me that the man attacking the other had a knife and to get something to help.”
At this point, Mr Mág Tighearnán said he thought someone was going to lose their life: “I’d taken my son to hurling practice earlier that evening and so I’d got out of the car, gone to the boot and grabbed his hurling stick. Instinct took over and I ran over and I smashed this guy over the head with the hurling stick. Right on the flat side, about three times. As hard as I could.
“Andre was a few seconds behind and he came running in and tried to subdue the attacker with an ankle-hold so he could free the victim. I hit this guy again, hard, but it didn’t seem to phase him. He did stumble back, though and dropped the knife. I think another man who’d been watching came in and kicked the knife away.
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“We were trying to roll the attacker onto his stomach to subdue him but he was struggling. The police then arrived and four officers took over before armed tactical support turned up.”
Mr Mág Tighearnán, who runs his own removal company, added that the victim, Mr Ogilvie, was “still conscious but weak with all the blood loss”.
“When he was taken away, he looked to have a horrible injury to his eye. The knifeman was led away by six officers but they were still struggling with him. I’m glad we intervened when we did. It was pure chance that we’d gone that route to the petrol station.
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“People have called us heroes but to be honest I’d like to think most people would’ve got stuck in and helped if they could. I just hope the victim pulls through and manages to recover as best he can,” he added.
Maitiu’s proud partner, Aoife O’Reilly, described him as “very, very humble”, adding, “I couldn’t be prouder of Matt. This is my partner and the father of my child who stood in and hopefully saved a man’s life last night.”
A GoFundMe fundraiser has been launched to ‘buy a pint’ for Maitiu, reaching over £20,000 in less than 24 hours, with the organiser, Niall Donnan, saying he has been told that Maitu wants to share some of the funds with the victim.
Maitiu wrote online that he had stumbled on the attack ‘by chance’ and that he ‘got out to protect a young lad’ when he saw what was happening and that the police had yet to arrive.
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If you would like to donate and buy a pint for the ‘knife attack hero’ please follow this link.
Vasily Belokurov is one of three winners of the 2026 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics. The award is for “uncovering the fossil evidence of past mergers proving that the Milky Way galaxy” was built through the continuous collision and merging of smaller objects.
No matter the time or vantage point, from a pre-Neolithic cave to a post-lockdown London high-rise, the predictability of the night sky has always been humanity’s symbol of permanence and reassuring stability.
Yet this apparent calm is deceptive. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, emerged from chaos and turbulence, and its constellations are full of migrants, exiles and survivors. Right now, it has begun to stretch and distort again, pulled by a massive companion and heading for an inevitable collision.
How can I be so sure? As a galactic archaeologist, my job is to reconstruct the past of our galaxy and read the signs of its future.
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Instead of digging through soil, I use the laws of dynamics and stellar evolution to sift through hundreds of millions of stars – searching for the most ancient and chemically peculiar among them, interpreting their orbits and piecing together the events that shaped the Milky Way. One ancient encounter left scars so deep that, billions of years later, they still define the galaxy around us.
I want to understand what governs the lives of these massive cosmic systems: which changes are nature – the slow internal evolution of a galaxy disc – and which are nurture, imposed by collisions and mergers.
Questions about the source of dark matter underpin it all. This is the invisible substance whose gravity holds galaxies together, but whose true identity remains one of the greatest unsolved puzzles in astrophysics.
The Milky Way is the one galaxy where stellar motions can be measured in extraordinary detail. This allows cosmologists including myself to construct our most precise map yet of dark matter: how far it reaches, how dense it is around the Sun, what shape it has and how smooth or lumpy it may be. If we can build this map in enough detail, we may begin to understand not just where dark matter is, but what it is.
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Francesca Fragkoudi and Mark Lovell, Durham University.
A cataclysmic collision
Our work has been transformed by a revolution in open sky surveys. From 2000, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey showed what becomes possible when vast astronomical datasets are made public, enabling discoveries far beyond the goals for which the survey was first built.
And since 2014, Gaia, the European space telescope, has taken this transformation to another level by mapping the positions and motions of nearly 2 billion stars, turning the galaxy into a vast archaeological record. No ruins, no shards and no bones – only stars that hold the clues.
The clearest giveaway that something cataclysmic took place long ago in our galaxy is the migrants we observe: stars that were not born in the Milky Way.
While native stars mostly travel together, circling the galactic centre in the great rotating flow of the disc, migrants cut across that order. They slide past the locals, plunge into the inner galaxy, then fly back out to its outskirts, again and again.
These unusual orbits go hand-in-hand with unusual chemistry. Most of the migrant stars are less enriched in heavier elements than the locally born population. Their chemical composition is a sign of a slower rate of evolution that is typical of a dwarf galaxy.
This makes the migrants doubly valuable. They are both fossils of the Milky Way’s violent past, and probes of its outer regions, travelling where the local stars rarely go.
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How the Milky Way was rewired
One of the central ideas in the theory of cosmic structure formation is that galaxies grow hierarchically. Smaller galaxies fall into larger ones and are torn apart, leaving their stars behind as migrants.
In the Milky Way, the largest ancient structure of this kind is known as Gaia-Sausage-Enceladus. It is the remains of a vanished galaxy that collided with our own between 8 and 11 billion years ago (the “sausage” refers to a pattern in its stars’ motions).
The Milky Way also did not go through that crash unscathed. The collision rewired and reshaped it.
Some of these changes are easily visible in the data. Stars from the old disc were splashed into our galaxy’s halo, becoming exiles in the place where they were born. A new posse of star clusters were also acquired.
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At the same time, we think something even more momentous was taking place. The encounter changed the orientation of the Milky Way’s disc, and its alignment with the dark matter halo.
Around the Milky Way, this dark matter forms a vast halo, much larger than the luminous part of our galaxy. We often imagine this halo as a sparse, round cloud, but Gaia has helped show this picture is too simple.
The dark halo can be stretched out of shape by a major encounter. Like a ship beginning to list, the Milky Way started to lean – not suddenly, not visibly, but over billions of years.
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View of the Southern sky shows the Milky Way and (far right, close to horizon) two galactic neighbours, the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds. H.H. Heyer/ESO via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-NC-ND
A new galactic dance
Unusually compared with many galaxies of similar mass, the Milky Way was allowed ample time to recover from the shock of the “sausage merger”. No other cosmic cataclysm appears to have shaken our Galaxy since, letting it settle into a quiet, uneventful life. That is, until now.
The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), currently our galaxy’s most massive companion, is already pulling at the Milky Way, disturbing its halo again. In an echo of what happened some 10 billion years ago, the Milky Way is being drawn into an accelerating dance with this neighbouring dwarf galaxy, recoiling in response to the LMC’s approach.
This is a dance that only one galaxy is likely to survive intact. A new chapter of migration, survival and adaptation has begun.
None of this spoils the beauty of the night sky – it deepens it. The calm band of light above us is not a symbol of permanence, but the visible reminder of a long survival.
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The Milky Way has been broken, rebuilt and is now being disturbed again. Its stars remember the past; their motions reveal the future. What looks eternal is, in truth, a moment in a much longer story.
A section of the Wales Coastal Path located in Neath Port Talbot looks set to remain closed after “significant ground instability issues” which the local council say risks public safety.
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The news came after a group of councillors from the area launched an online petition in May calling for urgent action to re-open sections of the path around Baglan, Briton Ferry, and Sandfields West.
This followed an open letter from 20 members of the local Labour group in Neath Port Talbot to the Welsh Government cabinet minister for rural resilience and sustainability, MS Llŷr Gruffydd.
In it they said the “prolonged closure” of the path had gone on for several years and was becoming a matter of growing frustration and disappointment for residents who previously used it for walking, cycling, and enjoying the natural environment.
They added the closure had affected active travel connections in the borough as well as tourism, health, and local wellbeing.
The latest petition called on Neath Port Talbot Council to formally write to the new Welsh Government for urgent intervention and a clear restoration plan.
It also requested that Welsh Government secure funding in order to repair the path as well as publishing a clear timetable for its reopening.
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The petition, led by councillors Josh Tuck, Carol Clement-Williams, and Suzanne Paddison, said: “The Wales Coastal Path is one of our nation’s greatest assets – a world-renowned route that should be a source of pride for communities across Wales.
“Yet for several years major sections around Baglan, Briton Ferry, and Sandfields West have remained closed, fenced-off, and left to deteriorate.
“This unacceptable situation has denied local people access to an important walking and cycling route, damaged tourism and local businesses, and undermined community wellbeing.
“Residents across Neath Port Talbot are increasingly frustrated by the lack of visible progress, the absence of a clear timetable for restoration, and the continued neglect of a nationally-important coastal route.”
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However a spokesman for Neath Port Talbot Council said while they were supportive of re-opening the route in principle it was not currently feasible to do so safely or sustainably.
They said: “While acknowledging that the local authority receives funding via Natural Resources Wales to maintain the Wales Coast Path (WCP) the current position as relates to the closure of a section of the WCP in the Baglan/Briton Ferry area is not due to how funding is allocated.
“The route was closed in 2023 following significant ground instability issues, including the formation of sinkholes, which presented an unacceptable risk to public safety.
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“While grant funding can support initial works the local authority must also consider long-term maintenance, ongoing safety risks, and legal responsibilities, particularly where the route crosses privately owned land and is not recorded as a registered public right of way as shown on the definitive map.
“While the WCP is recognised as an important route within the county borough the safety of the public is paramount and it is unfortunate therefore that the local authority is unable to re-open this section of the route at this time.
“The local authority remains supportive in principle to the re-opening of the route, however based on the constraints identified through discussions with the landowner, Natural Resources Wales, and Welsh Government it is not currently considered feasible to do so safely or sustainably. The agreed diversion will therefore remain in place at this time.”
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The father of Stephen Ogilvie has issued a plea to those spreading disinformation as his son remains in ICU
Matt Jackson Live News Network Reporter and belfastlive.co.uk
14:38, 10 Jun 2026
The father of a knife attack victim in North Belfast has made an urgent plea to those peddling misinformation online, urging them to ‘Please stop’. Stephen Ogilvie lost an eye and sustained further severe injuries following the assault on Kinnaird Avenue on June 8.
Hadi Alodid, 30, of Duncairn Avenue in Belfast, appeared before the city’s magistrates’ court on Wednesday, facing charges of attempted murder of Stephen Ogilvie, threatening to kill an NHS radiographer, and possession of a knife.
Widespread violence and disorder broke out across Belfast and several other towns in Northern Ireland on Tuesday night in the wake of the North Belfast incident, reports Belfast Live.
Mr Burrows confirmed that the victim’s father had a personal message he wished to convey. He said: “I want to thank Mr Ogilvie for taking the time to speak with me at such a distressing time for his family.
“His son remains in the ICU following the devastating injuries he sustained, but is stable. The injuries inflicted upon him are truly shocking, and our thoughts and prayers are with him and his entire family.
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“The victim’s father has also asked me to pass on a direct appeal to those spreading disinformation online: please stop. This has shockingly included false posts on social media at various times that his son has died.
“This is causing immense additional distress to a family already going through an unimaginable ordeal. I echo that appeal wholeheartedly and urge everyone to act with decency and respect for this family.
“I offered my full solidarity and support to the whole family today.”
Mr Burrows continued: “I will be meeting with the Secretary of State tomorrow, where I will be raising issues directly related to this case.
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“It is important that those in political leadership engage with issues like immigration, the security of our borders and the protection of all our citizens, whilst also standing unequivocally on the side of law and order. I also appeal again for parents to ensure their children are not out on the streets and involved in disorder.
“Tomorrow I will be asking the Secretary of State to meet the family of Stephen Oglivie in the coming days.”
In a previous statement released via Independent Councilor Stafford Ward, Stephen’s relatives emphasized that they “want to make it clear that overnight unrest is not welcome”.
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The family also commended locals who intervened to help the victim and requested privacy from both the public and media.
“We are aware of the tensions and talk of protests following this incident. We want to make it absolutely clear that overnight unrest is not welcome, and peaceful protest is the only way forward.
“We have many migrants who make a deeply valuable contribution to our country, including in our healthcare system and hospitality sector and we depend on them to make our country work. We do not want this terrible tragedy to be used to divide people or fuel hostility,” the family said.
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