Are you excited about Bethesda games on Switch 2? (Microsoft)
The Friday letters page is relatively enthusiastic about Horizon Hunters Gathering, as one reader thinks Nintendo should ditch GameChat on Switch 2.
Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk
Poor Partner So that Partner Showcase from Nintendo was awful, as we all thought. Although it was actually quite a bit worse than I was expecting, to be honest. There was no real surprises for anything big, Elden Ring and The Duskbloods weren’t there, and the mic drop at the end was Bethesda.
I don’t want to get into fanboy territory but if there is one developer whose success I have never understood it’s Bethesda. OK, Skyrim was innovative back when it came out but stuff like The Witcher 3 did the same idea much better. More importantly, Bethesda has never made anything that good again.
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Fallout 4 is significantly worse than 3 and I, along with most people, didn’t even bother with Starfield – which you’ll notice was not one of the three games they revealed. But what really gets me is how bad Bethesda is technically. Everyone’s been saying it about them for years and yet they never change.
And so what do we see in that new trailer? What looks like a terrible port of a game that should have no problem working on the Switch 2. If that’s what you’re showing off I hate to think what the rest of the game looks like. Torrence PS: The only saving grace was two different dinosaur games!
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Welcome bomb What a nice surprise the Nintendo Direct pulled today.
A Bomberman Collection? Heck, yes! Takes me back to when I was 10 years old playing Super Bomberman 2 single and multiplayer and destroying the CPUs.
Also, Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth in June, for Xbox and Switch 2? I will take that! ShaunOMacY2J (gamertag)
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Small screen gaming Yikes, that Partner Showcase was weak sauce. I know we were told not to get ourselves hyped up but I really question what the point of it was. It’s not like the proper Nintendo Directs don’t have third party games, so why exactly did we need this bunch of third rate games and lazy-looking ports?
Fallout 4 looks like it runs terrible on Switch 2 and it’s going to be nearly 11 years old by the time it makes it, so I really find it impossible to get excited about it.
But what else was there to tempt anyone? Resident Evil Requiem looks like a pretty good port but there’s no way I’d buy it on Switch 2 instead of PlayStation 5. Third party games on a Nintendo format need to offer something special or be really well suited to portable play, but that didn’t seem to be the case for most of the games they showed.
Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth on a handheld screen would be such a waste given how over-the-top and detailed the graphics are. Another Nintendo Direct and yet more disappointment. Goldwing
Evil deal While most of what I was interested in from yesterday’s Direct was already known about, the release of the Pragmata demo was at least a welcome surprise.
Short but sweet as a demo, but it’s sold me on the game. Hopefully I get better at the hacking and combat at the same time, it’s a bit like rubbing your stomach and patting your head. But it already feels like it’ll be a good game.
Capcom are really going through a golden period. The new Resi looks good too, the triple pack of 7, 8 and 9 on Switch is just £82 at Argos, which is tempting, even for Game-Key cards.
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I do wish Elden Ring had been in the Direct though. Euclidian Boxes
GC: That is a very good price for the Resi trilogy.
Forgotten birthday We are getting very close to that Zelda 40th anniversary and Nintendo still hasn’t said a thing, except for some concerts. Are they really going to ignore such a big number, even as they make a fuss about Pokémon turning 30?
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You’d think they’ have a game lined up to go along with it, probably a remaster or remake, but I don’t see how they’ve got time to release it now. Even if they shadow-dropped it. Considering how multiple leakers knew about the Partner Showcase, and were accurate about it, I don’t see how we get a surprise Nintendo Direct in the next two weeks.
I’d love if it did happen but at the moment I’m not even confident Nintendo will mention anything to do with Zelda this year. Since when did Link become the unloved loser who can’t get anyone to go to his birthday party? Paulie
Wasted time As achingly trend chasing as it all looked, I surprisingly found myself quite fluffed by the Horizon Hunters Gathering reveal, it looked very polished and fun.
But live service games’ moment-to-moment gameplay often is very good, it’s that they are designed to drag on forever that’s the problem; for the well documented reason of being forever games and all the monetisation models around them, I genuinely feel I need to boycott live service games.
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Jan-Bart Van Beek’s assurance at the start of the video, that Guerrilla bloody love making single-player games, and will continue to make them, didn’t convince me one bit. If it’s a hit they’ll divert more time and resources to it.
At the start of the gen, and the talk of Sony having 500 or so live service games in development, I convinced myself that it was additional to single-player. But we learnt that wasn’t the case and nearly all of their traditionally single-player studios were significantly tied up with the live service push. With the $3.6 billion purchase of Bungie as well, Sony committed massive resources to it all.
So no live service games for me, or Nintendo Directs from now on. Time better spent elsewhere. Simundo
Honest addition Interesting to see Valve admit that the RAM problems have caused them to change their Steam Machine plans, at least a little bit. I think that’s the first time a company has actually admitted it, because usually they just say it won’t even when they turnaround and do a price raise straight after.
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Maybe Valve would be a good addition to the console world if they’re actually going to… tell the truth and engaged with people? They’re not saying much at the moment, because the thing hasn’t been properly unveiled yet, but I’m hoping they can bring some straight talking to the industry… as well as Half-Life 3. Gantz
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Always in motion is the future The steady stream of news about the Switch 2’s fortunes is kinda interesting, it seems like it’s destined to get locked in a debate over whether it is a success or not for a while to come. I think both things can be true, it’s the fastest-selling console ever and taking Japan by storm, but also underperforming in the West and third party games sales are floundering. 18 million consoles sold is great but if everyone is just replaying Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom at 60fps, as Ubisoft weep into their Star Wars Outlaws sales, that isn’t the gaming saviour we were hoping for.
I did suspect performance in the UK might not be in line with the blockbuster figures elsewhere, the Black Friday deals (admittedly modest) ended up running right up until the end of January and the console wasn’t ever sold out over that time.
In Japan, it’s worth remembering that the machine is essentially being subsidised due to the currency problems with the yen. They have a much cheaper, locked Japanese language version that’s unavailable in other territories. Suggesting in the West, at least, Nintendo really need to bring that price down significantly somehow. Maybe ditch GameChat? I recently saw figures it was being used by less than 4% of console owners.
The latest Partner Direct lent into Japanese developed titles and franchises (outside the Bethesda reveals) in a strategy that seems to double down on the console’s trajectory so far. If Western publishers can’t turn a profit on it and so ditch support, it won’t be good for anyone at a time when we need games to be as widely available as possible. If the market fractures everything will be even worse. Marc
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GC: GameChat Is unlikely to have cost very much in either R&D or manufacturing. That’s probably why it exists. Nintendo actually did better, proportionally, in the UK than most other countries, over Christmas. Whereas it did unexpectedly poorly in France, which is usually it’s biggest market in Europe. Everything is very much in flux at the moment.
Inbox also-rans So if the PlayStation 5 is selling roughly the same as the PlayStation 4 that means it’s going to come out at about 117 million sales, right? So somewhere around the fifth best-selling console of all time, above the Wii and PS1. That seems a pretty good achievement to me. PhantomZ
So glad to see that Rave Racer is getting a proper console. I was always sore it never got a proper home version, as it was my favourite in the arcades. Can’t wait to play it again. Johno
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Some residents who live on the street that won Nigel Farage’s controversial energy bills competition have said they have not been given their prize.
Reform said they would cover the energy bills from the winning home – and every address on the street – for a year.
June from Wigan was announced as the winner earlier this month. In a video posted on social media, Mr Farage could be seen handing over flowers to June and her husband in their foyer, as the party’s treasury spokesman Robert Jenrick held a giant cheque.
Wigan’s local Reform UK branch also posted the news on Facebook later, congratulating the pair of “staunch” branch members on their win.
It is understood that the party followed the legal requirements of the competition, with a draw that picked June as the winner at random.
The Reform UK leader announced the winner of the controversial competition earlier this month, telling June from Wigan that the party would be paying for her entire street’s energy bills for a year (Facebook/Nigel Farage)
Now some people who live on St Malo Road in the Greater Manchester town have said they have been excluded from the prize, despite Reform saying it would pay for the energy bills for every home on the street.
The Telegraph has reported that only the homes in the same half of the street, which is divided by St Aubyn’s Road, as the winners that received a letter, which instructed them how to put in a claim to Reform.
Reform says they were not able to deliver all of the letters on the day of their visit, but they are now incoming.
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Angie Ecclestone, 48, told The Telegraph that her sister rang her to congratulate her on the winnings but she has not received them.
“I thought to myself I’ll believe it when I see it but I didn’t realise I had been excluded and that my neighbours had all received a letter and instructions,” Ms Ecclestone said.
“Nigel Farage said the whole street [would be included] but we haven’t heard anything. I am in shock. I am the first house on St Malo Road. It’s the whole street or not the street. I am mortified.”
Similarly, IT worker Matt Johnson, 53, learnt about the prize draw win when his sister got in touch with him.
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“We thought we would hear something from Reform by email or post but at the moment we haven’t heard anything,” he said.
Nigel Farage on the campaign trail with local elections coming up next month (PA)
“I mean if Reform said at the time it would be the whole street, then we feel like we should be included in that.
“Our energy bills keep going up and down but they are around £3,500 a year. Having them paid for would make a huge difference.”
Fraser Hayes, 63, also said he has not received the winnings but would give them away if he does get them, as he is no fan of the insurgent right-wing party.
“I have no qualms about depriving Reform of the money and giving to a local kids’ charity or maybe even the Labour candidate,” he told The Telegraph.
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“[The stunt] is appalling. It’s obviously a data grab. They’re trying to get loads of people to write in and they ask, ‘Who did you vote for last time. Who will you vote for this time?’
“I am absolutely not a Reform fan and I am appalled that anyone is.”
Reform UK said it had been cleared by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO).
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A Reform UK spokesman told The Independent: “We posted letters physically through some of the doors on the day but weren’t able to deliver to all the addresses on the day. Letters are incoming for the remaining households. We always intended to pay for the whole road, as promised, and will do.”
An investigation is underway ‘to establish the full circumstances of the crash’ on the M90 near Kinross
The police watchdog is set to investigate the circumstances of a crash that killed two men after one of them drove in the wrong direction down a motorway.
Police Scotland said a grey Ford Kuga was seen driving northwards on the southbound carriageway of the M90 close to junction seven near Kinross at around 10.30pm on Friday.
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It collided with a white Vauxhall Corsa which was on the southbound part of the motorway. The 44-year-old man driving the Kuga and the 20-year-old man driving the Corsa were both fatally injured.
Police Scotland confirmed a referral has since been made to the Police Investigation and Review Commissioner (PIRC) to investigate.
A spokesperson said: “A referral of the circumstances of the incident has been submitted by Police Scotland’s Professional Standards Department to the Police Investigation and Review Commissioner for consideration.”
Chief inspector Lyne Williamson said on Saturday that an investigation was underway by Police Scotland “to establish the full circumstances of the crash”.
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“Anyone who was travelling on the M90 at the time and witnessed what happened, or has dashcam footage that could assist our inquiries, is asked to contact officers as soon as possible,” the chief inspector added.
The M90 was closed southbound between junctions six and seven for around 16 hours to allow an investigation to be carried out.
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Finance Minister said the Executive ‘deserves recognition’ for supporting families as energy costs rise
Stormont is in talks with the Treasury to secure a “proper financial package” for Northern Ireland.
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The region’s Finance Minister John O’Dowd said the decision by the Stormont Executive last week to allocate money towards helping families struggling with rising energy costs will “place further pressures on the Executive budget”.
He said he has had two meetings with Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn over the last week, adding there is a united front from the Executive over the budget.
“I have presented two papers to the Executive in relation to the budget for the next three years, all my Executive colleagues are telling me that they can’t deliver the services that are required within the confines of that budget, we won’t be able to support the economy to the level that the economy needs supported either,” he told the BBC.
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“So on behalf of the Executive, I have been engaging with the British Government over this week as have my officials…
“I am satisfied that the British Government are now listening to us but we now need to move quickly into the mode of where they giving the financial whereforall to this Executive to do the job that the Executive needs to do.”
Stormont ministers pledged £19.2 million to go with £17 million already set aside for the scheme from the UK Government.
“We are talking directly to the British Government about securing a proper financial package for the Executive to allow us to fund public services, to support our economy and see us through what is going to continue to be a significant cost of living crisis for several months if not longer,” Mr O’Dowd said.
Speaking on the BBC’s Sunday Politics Northern Ireland, Mr O’Dowd said that despite the financial pressure the Stormont Executive is under, they made the decision that it is “vitally important to support those families on low incomes”.
“We have received a £17 million pot from the British Government, and the decision was made collectively at the Executive that given the scale of pressures bearing down on families that we would inject a further, up towards £20 million into that fund,” he said.
“That funding will come directly from our budget allocation, there is no other separate pot where that money can from, it’s about decisions, and politics is about making decisions, and the Executive has made a decision in this instance that given the scale of pressures we will supplement that £17 million.”
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Mr O’Dowd went on to say the Executive “deserves recognition” for making the decision to support families in terms of rising energy costs.
“We cannot plug every gap the British Government creates, the Executive cannot afford to bail out the British Government, that is the reality of the situation, and that’s why I’m involved in discussions with the British Government about securing a proper funding package for this place so we can support our community and voluntary sector, so we can support our public services and we can support our economy,” he said.
Sunniside Nights will take place on Friday, May 29, from 6pm, offering a packed evening across venues with comedy, live music, theatre, exhibitions and a showcase of “the worst ever album covers.”
Curated by The Futureheads musician, Ross Millard, the free festival will be a diverse showcase of not just talent but also of the great and versatile spaces that Sunniside has to offer.
Mr Millard said: “The idea is to have the whole of Sunniside buzzing with activity: artists, musicians, theatre-makers and DJs all popping up in familiar and unfamiliar spaces.”
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Highlights include a headline performance at Pop Recs by experimental folk musician Richard Dawson, hot on the heels of an American tour and his own mini-festival held at The Barbican in London.
Artist Frank Styles will paint a mural live in the courtyard at Pop Recs throughout the evening.
Wild Fire City will host a set from Worldwide FM’s DJ Santa Leticia, who explores sounds spanning Latin America, the Caribbean, Brazil and Africa.
Elsewhere, comedian Scott Turnbull will present Surreally Good, a comic-book-inspired sketch show at Diego’s.
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At Tribeca, photographer Andy Martin will unveil Tins of Town, a new exhibition of handmade tintype images.
Breeze Creatives will host two visual art exhibitions on the night.
The Abject Gallery will present This Time I Have a Reason, a group show by artists on Breeze Creatives’ Best Practice professional course.
Downstairs, the Moving Gallery will feature Worst Record Covers, curated from artist Steve Goldman’s collection of the most questionable record sleeve designs ever produced.
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The Bridge Hotel Vaults will welcome musician Sarah Hayes and her band for a set of traditional music, following their 2025 Sunniside Nights appearance.
Theatre Space North East will host Shakespeare Shakedown, a monologue slam that reimagines classic Shakespeare passages.
Read more:
Roberta Redecke, head of business services at Sunderland BID, said: “Ross has brought together some absolutely incredible performers and created a unique programme with so many facets that there is something for everyone.
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“It’s fantastic to see this event return even bigger than last time around, with more venues, more performers and even more variety.”
The event is curated by Mr Millard and funded by Sunderland’s BIDs, Art Council England, Sunderland City Council and with support from UKSPF.
A Stockton Council report says 175 children and young people started in the authority’s care in 2025, compared to 67 in 2024 and 54 in 2023.
The number of children in care overall rose at a slower rate of nine per cent, reaching 615 children by the end of March.
Children had “increasingly complex needs that put pressure on families and children”, says the report which sets out the achievements and challenges in the children’s social care for the council over the past year. A leading officer has revealed the council will open three more children’s homes.
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Louise Hollick, assistant director for early help, safeguarding and children in care, told councillors they still faced significant challenges, rising costs and financial pressures.
She said: “What we are seeing is more older children entering care with significant safeguarding risks, including child exploitation, neurodiversity needs, speech and language needs and trauma.
“We also see higher numbers of babies coming into care due to complexities around domestic abuse, neglect and parental substance misuse.”
She said their disabled children team also saw rising demand with more assessments and support needed for children with complex needs.
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She told the council’s children and young people select committee they, like other councils, faced a “major challenge” finding children’s places.
Not enough in-house foster carers meant more children placed with independent agencies and non-council children’s homes, including “high-cost solo placements”.
“Although we have approximately 85 local placements, and new internal provision is coming online so we do have more plans to open more internal homes, the overall system remains stretched,” she added.
Asked by Councillor Sally Anne Watson how many new children’s homes were in the pipeline and how many were needed, she said they had planning permission and had just bought a three-bedroom “edge-of-care” home, meant for “teenagers who perhaps just need a short break from their parents to stabilise things with a view to them going home very quickly”.
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She added: “We’ve also had permission and DfE funding to open two further therapeutic homes for children with complex mental health needs. That will be a one-bed and a two-bed.”
She said some of the children in non-council homes were still local, with a handful farther afield, and they were looking at bringing some back to Stockton, adding: “Some of those children are very settled where they are, and not all of those children are in very high-cost residential homes. So it wouldn’t be right to bring back every single one of those children.”
She told of Ofsted-recognised improvements in leadership and workforce stability, good staff feedback and more agency staff taking up permanent posts.
She said a new “front door”, the Family Help Point, launched this month involving safeguarding specialists, police, domestic abuse and substance misuse services, provided earlier help: “It’s very early days, obviously, but the first two weeks have gone really positively.”
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She added they were preparing for national social care reforms, with a child protection pilot for pre-birth and babies starting soon, saying: “We will begin our pilot on May 1 for those reforms, in preparedness to have them up and running by April 2027.”
She said they were investing in their learning academy, with 12 per cent of their workforce newly qualified social workers, and “growing our own” social workers, as 90 per cent of final-year students took up permanent roles in 2025, and 91 per cent of social workers were permanent staff.
She said it was hoped a forthcoming “regional care cooperative” would transform the way fostering, residential and secure care were brought in and tackle cost challenges, and a new “Best Start Family Hub” at Redhill would strengthen early years support and help get children ready for school.
Cllr Clare Besford, cabinet member for children and young people, said: “There is so much happening in children’s services right now. On April 1 we did successfully launch our integrated front door, our Family Help Point. I’m really pleased that it went so well.”
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She said the council’s Best Start In Life programme had ambitious government targets for at least 78.5 per cent of children to achieve a good level of development by the end of reception by 2028, adding: “I’m confident that we have the right team in place. We’ve got some fantastic people around the table today.”
Cllr Ann McCoy said: “I think we’ve got a lot to be proud of here and I’m sure there’ll be some real rewards for the children as well.”
Raducanu had a very promising debut clay court season in 2022 – the year after she won the US Open in New York as a teenager – but hurt her back in Madrid and had to retire from her first match in Rome a week later.
Much of 2023 was lost to the operations she had on her hands and left ankle. In 2024, Raducanu played very promisingly on indoor clay, winning two matches for Great Britain against France in the Billie Jean King Cup before reaching the quarter-finals in Stuttgart.
But that was followed by a heavy first-round defeat by qualifier Maria Lourdes Carle in Madrid.
Raducanu said she was “mentally and emotionally exhausted” and did not play on clay again that year, choosing to skip the French Open to prioritise a training block that she thought would benefit her fitness in the second half of the year.
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She played four clay court events last year, with the highlight a run to the fourth round in Rome, but experienced further back issues in Strasbourg and after competing at Roland Garros.
Her next opportunity to play on clay will be at the Italian Open in Rome from 5 May. There are also two tournaments – in Strasbourg and Rabat – the week before the French Open, which rounds off the clay court swing.
“Those wins over Dublin, Kerry and Galwaybacked up what we were doing on the training field,” Morris said. “They gave us that extra bit of confidence that we can hang with those teams. Donegal probably knocked us down a peg or two but we took a lot from it. It was a big learning experience.”
Getting there (Leinster final) and not winning it was disappointing,” Morris admitted. “But now it’s about taking it one game at a time. There are no easy matches. Westmeath are up first and we know how good they are.”
There are many Roman remains across Cambridgeshire
Cambridgeshire is steeped in history, especially from Roman times. Across the county, there are many remains that prove Romans once settled here.
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There are roads that still stand today that were created by the Romans, as well as remains of Roman buildings. There are also remains of former Roman towns.
It extends across 75 acres, which is around 30 hectares. When it was discovered, archaeologists said the town’s buried features were well preserved.
A spokesperson for Homes England said it had “extensive streets” and “buildings of a highly organised Roman settlement of urban character”. Other features include ditches, pits and post holes, as well as grave surfaces that were used as roads or yard areas.
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A number of artefacts were also discovered, including pottery, animal bone, glass, copper alloy objects, iron objects, coins, and shells. In 2024, the town was named as a scheduled monument.
At the time, Duncan Wilson of Historic England said this was “clearly a significant Roman town”. He added that the town gave a “remarkable insight into Roman life in the east of England”.
Great Staughton itself is a village steeped in other history. In the village, there is a sundial that dates back to 1637. This sundial has E.I carved into it, which is believed to be for Edmund Ibbutt. He was a major landowner in Great Staughton between 1630 and the 1660s.
The White Hart, which still stands today, is a 17th century coaching inn which is an important part of the village’s history. It was visited by Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War.
Former world number one Mark Allen produced a superb potting display as he fought back from 6-4 down to beat China’s Zhang Anda 10-6 in the first round of the World Snooker Championship.
Northern Ireland’s Allen, a two-time Crucible semi-finalist, had not made a single break of 50 in Saturday’s first session but looked a different player on Sunday.
The 40-year-old produced a magnificent clearance of 140 in frame 11 to start his recovery, following that with a break of 109 in frame 12.
His third century in five frames came in frame 15 with an effort of 129 to move one away from victory, which he sealed with a break of 81 in the 16th frame.
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Zhang, who has lost in the first round on all of his six Crucible appearances, scored only 42 points in the last six frames as Allen stormed into the last 16.
Allen will play either 2024 champion Kyren Wilson or 19-year-old Stan Moody in the next round.
By choosing, out of pure hatred for CM Punk, to go after the world heavyweight championship, it means the ‘Original Tribal Chief’ will main event a sixth WrestleMania in a row, taking his record to 11 overall.
Jade Cargill looks to improve her WrestleMania winning streak to 3-0 (2-0 in singles competition) as she defends the women’s championship against 2026 Elimination Chamber winner Rhea Ripley.
Jade Cargill will walk into WrestleMania 42 as champion
WWE
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Trick Williams, on his WrestleMania debut, is out to capture the United States title against Sami Zayn. Meanwhile, Penta puts the WWE Intercontinental championship on the line in a six-pack ladder match against rising star Je’Von Evans, Dragon Lee, JD McDonagh, Rusev and Hall of Famer Rey Mysterio.
Speaking of Mysterio, his son Dominik, may have bitten off more than he can chew by summoning the ‘Demon’ Finn Balor as the former stablemates aim to settle a score.
Perhaps the most anticipated match on the entire WrestleMania card sees two giants collide as Oba Femi has accepted Brock Lesnar’s open challenge, seeking revenge after being eliminated by ‘The Beast’ in the Royal Rumble match.
Here’s everything you need to know about where to watch night two of WrestleMania 42…
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How to watch WWE WrestleMania 42
Live stream: In the UK, WWE WrestleMania 42 night two can be watched and streamed live on Netflix.
The show is scheduled to start at 11pm BST.
A membership costs £5.99 a month and the subscription can be cancelled at any time.
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