Every year more layoffs, every year worse results (Microsoft)
As Xbox prepares to lose five development studios and over 3,000 staff what is it that they’re planning, that makes Microsoft so confident for the future?
Even if Monday’s mass layoffs at Xbox hadn’t already been rumoured, they were easy enough to predict. After all, laying off thousands of developers is exactly what Microsoft did this time last year and the year before that. Over 9,000 people have been laid off from the Xbox division in just the last three years and there’s little reason to think that number won’t rise again next year. There’s even less reason to think any of this is helping Xbox as a business, if that’s even the goal anymore.
There are already conspiracies, propagated by one of the original founders of Xbox, that new boss Asha Sharma has been brought in to wind down the business. That does seem like it could be true, not necessarily based on what she’s doing but because Xbox as a brand feels like it has nowhere to go and, if it wasn’t owned by the richest company in the world, would long ago have been sold off or mothballed.
But Microsoft is still refusing to admit defeat and for a company that has over 225,000 people worldwide 9,000 is just a drop in the ocean. But that’s part of the problem, because if they were a normal company, where that volume of layoffs would be keenly felt, they’d be forced to take a more objective view of the situation.
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Xbox will be 25 years old this autumn, but it was only really a power player for the first five years of the Xbox 360’s lifetime, after which it gave up its comfortable lead over the PlayStation 3 to chase the success of the Wii. This demonstrated one of Xbox’s longstanding faults: a complete lack of patience. The original Xbox was abandoned early in favour of the Xbox 360, then the Xbox 360 was abandoned in favour of Kinect, and then there was a bizarre obsession with TV for the launch of the Xbox One and, well… you know the rest.
We covered all this when Microsoft raised the price of Game Pass back in October, a decision that, true to form, they didn’t stick with. Xbox’s problems are manifold but their obsession with always looking for a short cut and never nurturing and growing the successes they do have are a recurring theme. One it seems Sharma may have identified.
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It’s hard to tell exactly what Sharma thinks, given the indecipherable corporate speak she indulges in (which already sounds disarmingly like one of Phil Spencer’s scripts, right down to the bizarre goal of having 1 billion daily players) but this time she emphasised having ‘greater focus’. She didn’t say on what but based on her previous comments the obvious guess is those franchises most closely associated with Xbox (Halo, Gears Of War, Forza, and perhaps Fable) and Bethesda’s big hitters of Fallout and The Elder Scrolls.
Gears Of War: E-Day – is Microsoft telling porkies? (Xbox Game Studios)
Microsoft is legally obligated to keep Call Of Duty multiformat for several more years, so that franchise doesn’t factor into anything but their bottom line – especially after they stopped releasing it day one on Game Pass.
Sharma’s already expressed frustration at how long it’s taking to make a new Elder Scrolls and Fallout and she’s every right to do so, as Bethesda has been underperforming, in the quality and quantity of their releases, since at least Fallout 4 in 2015. A bold decision would’ve been to replace Todd Howard with new management but of, course, it’s the ordinary wage slaves that are made to suffer for a publisher’s failures, not the executives.
What will be done about Bethesda’s franchises is unclear but the obvious thing is to farm new entries out to other studios. The fact that Microsoft has owned Fallout: New Vegas developer Obsidian for eight years and hasn’t got so much as a remaster out of them is just one more example of bad management decisions and an inability to prioritise and schedule new releases sensibly.
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People do at least want new Fallout and Elder Scrolls games though, as well as more Forza Horizon, but it’s unclear whether they feel the same about Halo and Gears Of War. Both are outdated in terms of gameplay and the latter in almost every respect, with its roided-out machomen seeming so 2006. Neither franchise prospered outside of the Xbox 360 era and while you could say that’s also due to mismanagement sometimes games are just of a certain time and place and don’t travel as far as their publishers would like them to.
Forza Horizon 6 -Microsoft has gone out of its way not to mention the PS5 version in recent months (Xbox Game Studios)
Nevertheless, it seems likely Microsoft is planning to focus squarely on these franchises and to give up on the more avant-garde titles that the likes of Double Fine and Ninja Theory trade in. The latter is perfectly reasonable – a company like Microsoft should never have bought them in the first place, as Sharma seems to recognise. But focusing Xbox on Halo, Gears Of War, Forza, and Bethesda? They’ve tried that before and it didn’t work.
Having lost so many staff, and so many studios, the options for Xbox are now limited. They will need to rely more on third party developers (not that there are many big ones left, after they inspired a buying spree across the whole industry) and they will have to make a proper decision about going multiformat, rather than the nonsensical excuses they made for Gears Of War: E-Day and Clockwork Revolution.
The sensible decision would be to drop plans for Project Helix (even if there is anyone out there still willing to buy Xbox hardware the price alone will make it an irrelevance) and become a full-bloodied third party publisher, something like EA were back in their heyday, when they released more games than just sports titles and Battlefield. But everything Sharma has said, especially this week, seems to imply they’re not doing that.
Instead, Xbox continues to live in denial, of the fact that nobody was buying their hardware even before the memory crisis raised prices, and that except for Forza Horizon nobody is very interested in their first party games either. If Sharma is secretly winding down Xbox, or planning to sell it off, she’s really committing to the deception, but the far more likely truth is that she’s doing exactly what it looks like: trying to turn the clock back to the pre-Xbox Series X days, if not pre-Xbox One.
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No doubt that sounds like a good idea in the boardroom but it makes no practical sense. You can’t make games that cost hundreds of millions of dollars exclusive on a console that too few people own, because it’s impossible to make your money back. And nobody’s going to buy new hardware in order to play new entries in franchises that reached their natural end 15 years ago. Not to mention the folly of even thinking about making The Elder Scrolls 6 an exclusive.
If that’s not Sharma’s plan then good, because maybe it’ll have a chance of succeeding but it’s the only obvious option for her, based on her recent statements and her current resources. If she has an ace up her sleeve, that no one is yet aware of, then that would be the best news possible for the whole games industry, as we’ve already see how Sony is carrying on when they have no serious competition. But it’s very hard to believe there’s any magic wand about to be waved and, in all probability, Xbox really is as doomed and desperate as it seems.
Will it be third time lucky for the next gen Xbox? (Microsoft)
Erika Kirk, widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, broke down in tears and left the courtroom during the preliminary hearing for Tyler Robinson, who is accused of shooting her husband dead at Utah Valley University in September 2025.
Charlie Kirk’s widow departed a courtroom visibly distressed on Monday as prosecutors commenced outlining their case against his alleged murderer, Tyler Robinson.
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Erika Kirk, who became emotional prior to today’s hearing, exited in tears while a police officer recounted how her husband, the conservative activist Charlie, was fatally shot on September 10, 2025.
Monday’s proceedings marked the beginning of prosecutors presenting their case against Tyler Robinson, accused of discharging the fatal bullet that killed Charlie Kirk while he addressed an audience at Utah Valley University in Orem, situated 40 miles (65 km) south of Salt Lake City.
Throughout the week-long preliminary hearing, prosecutors intend to persuade District Court Judge Tony Graf that adequate evidence exists against Robinson, 23, to warrant formal charges and the scheduling of a trial.
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Charlie Kirk’s parents, alongside his widow Erika Kirk, attended the court session for the first time, joined by Donald Trump Jr. and far-right influencer Jack Posobiec. Robinson’s parents were equally present for the preliminary hearing, reports the Mirror.
Kirk was extensively recognised for mobilising substantial numbers of young voters to support Trump in the 2024 presidential election via his movement Turning Point USA. A staunch proponent of loosening gun safety legislation, Kirk had previously asserted “some gun deaths” were acceptable to safeguard second amendment rights.
He was assassinated during a public debate while responding to a question regarding mass shooting statistics. Robinson is confronted with seven criminal charges, amongst them aggravated murder, with prosecutors declaring their intention to pursue the death penalty against the student electrician, who handed himself in to authorities the day following the shooting.
Judge Graf is additionally expected to deliver a ruling on whether capital punishment remains a possibility in the event of a conviction.
The hearing represents the most substantial presentation of evidence in the case thus far. Television crews, photographers and journalists had gathered outside the Fourth Judicial District Courthouse in Provo, Utah, as proceedings commenced today.
Law enforcement officials took to the stand to provide testimony detailing how events played out on the day of the fatal shooting.
Kirk’s mother, Kathryn Kirk, clutched a pocket-sized packet of tissues, listening to the proceedings with her head bowed and eyes closed. Widow Erika Kirk had been resting her head on the shoulder of a blonde woman seated to her right, before leaving the courtroom as a police officer recounted the circumstances of Charlie’s shooting.
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Defendant Tyler Robinson sat in silence alongside his legal team at the defence table, casting his eyes over exhibits displayed on a monitor and periodically jotting down notes. Dressed in a grey suit, pale pink shirt and tie, his wrists were shackled to a chain secured around his waist.
Ahead of Monday’s preliminary hearing, Charlie Kirk’s family extended their gratitude to supporters for their kindness and prayers. “Every court proceeding serves as a painful reminder of his death,” Erika Kirk, his widow, said in a statement posted on X, “and the loss that has irrevocably impacted our lives and the lives of his children.”
She added that the public outpouring “has sustained us during the darkest days of our lives.”
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The statement was issued on behalf of Kirk’s parents, Robert and Kathryn, his widow and his sister Mary. “Out of respect for the judicial process, we will not be commenting further at this time,” the brief statement said.
During her husband’s memorial service in September, Erika Kirk extended forgiveness to defendant Tyler Robinson. “My husband, Charlie, he wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life,” she said as she struggled to hold back tears.
“I forgive him because it was what Christ did. It is what Charlie would do,” she added.
Following her husband’s passing, Erika Kirk assumed leadership of Turning Point USA, the prominent conservative youth organisation that her husband co-founded aged 18.
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Throughout the coming days, prosecutors are anticipated to present video footage capturing Robinson at Utah Valley University both before and after Kirk was shot, alongside additional evidence connecting him to the alleged offence.
Ahead of the hearing, the defence sought to prohibit livestream coverage and photographs of the proceedings, contending that they were being exploited to drive sensationalised media reporting. Erika Kirk, however, maintained that cameras should be permitted in the courtroom to ensure complete transparency.
Police have vowed to keep searching for a young Arkansas mom and her newborn baby after they went missing more than a week ago.
An officer was called to a home in Dardanelle in connection with a “possible suicidal person” in the early morning hours of June 25, local police said. The officer was told that 20-year-old Ashlynn Bocksnick left the home with her six-week-old baby, Lalynn Dream Williams, just before the call.
At 4:40 a.m. local time, less than two hours after police were called to the home, the vehicle Bocksnick was believed to be driving was found parked on the boat ramp at Veteran’s Memorial Park near the Arkansas River, Dardanelle police said.
Ashlynn and Lalynn were nowhere to be found. Authorities have searched at least 85 miles of river from the Dardanelle Lock and Dam to the River Bridge in Little Rock, according to a Facebook update from Dardanelle Police Chief Joe Paterak on Friday.
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“We’re not quitting. We’re gonna keep going until, hopefully, we find her. We want to find her,” Dardanelle Police patrol officer Chris Collier told KARK.
Police launched a major search for young Arkansas mom, Ashlynn Bocksnick, and her newborn baby after they went missing more than a week ago (Dardanelle Police Department)
Five drone teams, five civilian boats, seven dog teams, a Survival Flight emergency medical helicopter and a personal airplane have been deployed as of last Monday.
Thirty-six agencies across Arkansas have helped search for the mother and daughter, even as conditions became hazardous.
The Army Corps of Engineers “had to open the gates on the Dardanelle Dam because of water from Oklahoma, which caused the rising water and dangerous currents became [sic] too hazardous for crews, but they still were out there and in the water,” Paterak said.
The Corps of Engineers said it will close the gates on the Dardanelle Dam this Saturday.
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Authorities have combed through at least 85 miles of the Arkansas River in the search for Ashlynn and her six-week-old baby, Lalynn Dream Williams (Dardanelle Police Department)
Last Monday, “the search was scaled back but crews are still out there searching every day,” Paterak said.
“Divers have reported one-to-two-inch visibility under water and with the current water flow it is impossible to properly search,” the police chief added.
Authorities said there is also a lot of debris in the river, hindering the search.
The full search will resume as soon as the water level goes back to normal, according to Friday’s Facebook post.
The vehicle Bocksnick was believed to be driving was found parked on the boat ramp at Veteran’s Memorial Park near the Arkansas River, police said (Yell County Emergency Management)
As authorities try to piece together what happened to Ashlynn and Lalynn, they have given the public some details about the moments leading up to their disappearance.
Ashlynn’s vehicle was found facing the river, about 10 feet away from the water’s edge.
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A Dardanelle City Hall surveillance camera showed Ashlynn pulling up to the boat ramp, the police said.
“She got out of the car, circled around the back and opened the rear passenger side door where she leaned in for approximately one minute then picked something up,” Paterak said in Friday’s post. “Due to the distance you cannot see Lalynn but her car seat was exactly where she was leaning into.”
Police say no foul play is suspected (Yell County Emergency Management)
It was initially reported that Ashlynn was last seen walking toward the river but not entering the water, according to the chief.
“Enhanced viewing does show her enter the water, but nothing can be seen after that,” Paterak said.
The chief said there were concerns about the safety of Ashlynn and Lalynn “because of statements she had made prior to leaving the house.”
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Authorities have clarified that there were no arguments at the house before Ashlynn left and that no foul play is suspected.
Five drone teams, five civilian boats, seven dog teams, a Survival Flight emergency medical helicopter and a personal airplane have been deployed as of last Monday (Yell County Emergency Management)
Police found no movement in Ashlynn’s bank accounts, and they have yet to crack her phone as of Friday.
Ashlynn’s mother had given her daughter’s phone to police after the 20-year-old left it at the home. Police obtained a search warrant to go through it, but her phone was locked and they didn’t know the password.
“The FBI is currently providing help to see if they can enter the phone to see if there is anything pertinent to the case,” Paterak said in Friday’s post.
Paterak said the department had no new updates in the case when reached for comment Monday by The Independent.
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If you are based in the USA, and you or someone you know needs mental health assistance right now, call or text 988, or visit 988lifeline.org to access online chat from the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. This is a free, confidential crisis hotline that is available to everyone 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Happy Hours – A Great British Pub Diary is a record of St Helens-based journalist Mike Critchley’s 42-year journey through the inns, bars and alehouses of these islands.
Since he turned 18 in 1984, Mike has recorded and graded every new pub he has visited in a little blue notebook – a tally that has now surpassed 1,880.
In Happy Hours, he recalls many of the highlights – and a few low points – of that ‘never-ending pub crawl’ with many of his personal favourites featured.
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Among those recorded are a 1987 trip to the Kings Arms, where legendary landlord Ian Webb was early into his 10-year tenure, and a more recent visit to the beloved Blue Bell in Fossgate.
Mike Critchley has visited almost 2,000 pubs over the years (Image: Pic supplied)
The author admits to also being enchanted by a trip to Knaresborough’s Six Poor Folk and Blind Jacks after jumping off the train from York to Harrogate.
He said: “York has been one of my favourite destinations for so long now and has so many excellent pubs, with bars and inns catering for all types of drinker.
“The city has so many pubs with such a long history, ones that ooze charm and character from every pore.
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“It is a place I always look forward to visiting, and no trip to York is ever complete without dropping in on the Blue Bell, a real gem on every level.”
Of the visits to around 175 pubs described in the book, 27 are in Yorkshire with cities London, Liverpool, Birmingham and Manchester also featured prominently.
Mike weaves in many personal anecdotes and social history as the book charts significant changes to the way people drink and the world about us.
Around 175 pubs are featured (Image: Tony Hannan)
The book features potted histories of some of Britain’s finest pub buildings, observations of legendary landlords and landladies, recollections of colourful elbow-bending customers and an appreciation of good beer.
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“I had to write this book.
“At a time when we are losing pubs hand over fist due to a multitude of reasons, this book is a reminder of the importance of these wonderful institutions and community hubs, and the role they play in society,” he said.
Priced at £14.99, the book is now on sale and can be ordered from Waterstone’s, Scratching Shed Publishing Ltd or on Amazon.
Where are your favourite pubs? And what do you like about them? Please share us your thoughts in the comments below.
The Tuesday letters page struggles to see a way forward for Microsoft and Xbox, as Kickstarter responds to Sony’s new digital-only policy.
Games Inbox is a collection of our readers’ letters, comments, and opinions. To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.uk
Shrinking franchise So Xbox has done exactly what we all knew they would and sacked even more people and lost five studios in the process. I can easily see why they picked on these ones, because they only made art house games no-one ever played. You can’t even say that Microsoft shouldn’t have bought them, because it was the new boss’ idea anyway.
But where do they go from here? They haven’t got any studios left that make anything other than Halo, Gears Of War, and Forza, so are they stuck doing that forever? I totally believe the rumours that studios are being moved to work on Halo and nothing else, but what I don’t believe is that there’s enough people left that care.
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The peak of these games was in the mid-2000s, so you’re talking 20 years ago now. Anyone that liked them then is going to be in a totally different place in their lives now and I don’t see any evidence that anyone younger cares about those franchises. Xbox is backing itself into a corner, banking on nostalgia that I don’t think is really there. It really does feel like the whole business is doomed. Cranston
Chain of command Absolutely disgusting that Microsoft can just lay off 3,200 people like that. As far as I understand around 200 people is pretty big for a triple-A studio, so just imagine what they could’ve used all those talent developers for if Xbox wasn’t run so badly.
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All those people who have their livelihoods taken away, although they may almost feel it was worth it if they’re dealing with 14 layers of management every day. How that could’ve been going on under Phil Spencer, and he thought was alright, I don’t know. But as far as I understand Matt Booty was in charge of games and he’s still there! That company has been run so terribly the last few generations. Benson
Just one more remaster I don’t know how Bethesda has got away with doing so little for so long. I can imagine the Xbox boss asking for an Elder Scrolls update and being given various elaborate excuses while nothing gets done. Not even a short preview.
They’ve been riding their luck, and I think Microsoft are on to them and will demand results. Or maybe they’ll just do another Skyrim remaster or anniversary edition to buy time. Mark Matthews
Never again With regard to only digital games in the future, I’m not too surprised. The choice between physical and digital is being removed, that’s a shame. Pros and cons for both methods. The obvious pro for physical is being able to trade in. What’s needed when things do go completely digital is a refund policy that is fair, many more, than are currently available, free game demos to try before you buy and a trade-in system for digital vouchers to spend in the store. If one company implements such a trade-in system then I’ll guarantee that the other will follow suit.
The ability to trade-in might well encourage me to buy more digital games at, or near to, full price than I do at present. Paul C. PS: Currently playing Project Cars 3 again on Xbox Series X. I love this game (it was much maligned at release for various reasons). The game has a tendency to drop frames, very badly, if it’s running from a full-ish hard drive. I have 360GB of free space at the moment and the game is running perfectly.
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GC: Publishers pushed for digital in large part to kill the concept of trade-ins, they’re not going to willingly bring them back.
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New small print This thing with games on disc isn’t Sony’s fault, it’s the people that bought them digital only from the very start of gaming. If you didn’t walk down to your local shop and buy the game, guess what? You didn’t play it and now no one can be bothered to walk to a shop to buy the game.
Sony showed you the problem of digital years ago, when they was removing digital movies and TV shows you had bought already. The amount of gamers that have written in saying I download has done this. Sony has just updated their terms and conditions, saying if your account isn’t used within 36 months you may lose your account all together, including games and other stuff. Why don’t people learn that, yes, digital games are better for the planet but if you don’t own something it’s not yours to keep. David
Destined replacement I played Borderlands 2 but not to any serious degree. But I played a lot of Destiny 1 and 2 and Diablo in the time between that and Borderlands 4, and I have to say I’ve found it great fun. The campaign was OK but some of the side missions were genuinely funny. The ones with the guy being weirdly obsessed with mating his pet thresher and the existential rocket were highlights.
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But I am not level 60 on my first character on UVH5 (Ultimate Vault Hunter 5) and still seems like a huge amount left after 90 or so hours – including getting to UVH7, about 30 missions/side missions, tons of collectables and the takedown to do still. And that’s not even thinking about a second or third character.
The amount of different builds you can make is also superb, with so many options (although as usual only a few top tier ones for the highest difficulties).
I would highly recommend if you like looter shooters and maybe coming off the back of Destiny 2. Tom
Kicked to the curb This is one of the other Kickstarter campaigns I am going to back, which I will probably late pledge, it is called Dark Queen of Samobor and it is a side-scrolling action combat puzzle game with amazing visuals, inspired by classic Disney animation and dark fantasy movies of the 80s for PC. I will probably go for the digital copy with my name in the credits for £23. There is an option for a digital copy for £9 too.
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With the announcement of Sony ending the production of physical PlayStation discs this is affecting Kickstarters too, as a way to raise money for a Kickstarter campaigns you can usually can buy a digital copy or spend more to get a physical copy on Switch, Xbox, and PlayStation.
A couple of the Kickstarters I have seen mention what will happen with the PlayStation physicals in the rewards of their campaign. I have seen one Kickstarter creator say they will have to research about what to do with the PlayStation 5 physicals in their rewards because of Sony’s announcement. Andrew J.
Legend of Goemon The first Super Famicom Ganbare Goemon has always been one of my favourites. I had rented the Western version of Legend Of The Mystical Ninja and then saw the Japanese version cheap and it became one of the few imported games I had for the SNES; I loved that it had bits that were removed for our version. I knew that a sequel existed from magazines at the time and was disappointed it never got released over here.
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Owned the first N64 game and loved that, it was the first time I’d seen some of the other main characters now being shown as allies and my introduction to the giant robot Impact. Dash dash dash. It was years later that I discovered there are multiple Super Famicom sequels plus loads of games before and after on other consoles.
The Japan-only Goemon collection is fantastic, some of the games are pretty much locked away from me as they are full role-playing games and being unable to read Japanese is a hindrance. But the way Konami experimented with the franchise was great, just chuck in platforming, minigames, role-playing, whatever else and just see if it works. It did mean the games could be a bit hit and miss depending on your preferences, but when they hit the spot they really are brilliant.
Konami also smashed it out the park with the graphics and sound on the four main Super Famicom games, for a company that really knew how to get the best out of the SNES sound chip I would say the soundtracks for all four games are possibly the best they ever did in that era.
Enough waffle, if you are interested in slightly obscure (in the UK) games from that era, I would definitely recommend getting a copy of the new collection, I even enjoyed fumbling my way through the menus just to get the display settings I wanted, it reminded me slightly of carefully writing down the enormous save codes for my import copy of Goemon, all in kanji. All I learned from that experience was that battery backed saves were better. John Atkinson
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Inbox also-rans So who do we think has bought Undead Labs and Ninja Theory? I don’t actually care about State Of Decay 3 but I wonder if Sony will buy Ninja Theory and have them make a new Heavenly Sword? I’d be up for that. Johnson
So I guess Psychonauts 3 isn’t happening now. Oh well, I’ve much more faith in Double Fine surviving on their own than if they were still under Microsoft. Breaker
The small print New Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers’ letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content.
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Cristiano Ronaldo’s final World Cup act: Portugal star, 41, makes lonely walk down the tunnel in eerily similar scenes to Qatar failure four years ago – but defiantly claims he has NO regrets after latest heartbreak
Cristiano Ronaldo has vowed he will wake up tomorrow with no regrets after crashing out of his final World Cup following Portugal’s late 1-0 defeat against Spain in the round of 16.
The Portuguese superstar, 41, broke down in tears on the pitch after Mikel Merino’s stoppage-time winner snatched victory for Spain in Dallas, calling an end to Ronaldo’s historic World Cup career.
Ronaldo, who is the only player in history to score at six World Cups, will now finish his glittering career without international football’s greatest prize after confirming prior to Portugal’s last-16 clash with Spain that this summer’s tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico would be his last.
The teary superstar doubled down on this decision after Portugal’s heartbreaking elimination at Dallas Stadium, admitting: ‘It’s been my last World Cup, yes – but now I will have time to think, stay with my family and life continues.’
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Ronaldo, who guided Portugal to European Championship glory in 2016 and to two separate Nations League trophies in 2019 and 2025, went on to insist that he will not look back with regret at not having won the ultimate international honour.
‘I will wake up tomorrow with a clear conscience, because I gave my all,’ he urged. ‘I won three titles for Portugal, and Portugal had not won any before me.
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Cristiano Ronaldo has urged that he will have no regrets after crashing out of his last World Cup
The devastated Portugal legend walked down the tunnel at the World Cup for the final time
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‘My biggest title with Portugal is Euro 2016. That trophy means the same to me as the World Cup.’
After finishing his post-match interviews on the pitch, Ronaldo headed down the tunnel cutting a heartbroken figure as the realisation that this would be his final World Cup act sunk in.
Footage of Ronaldo captured by cameras inside Dallas Stadium appeared eerily similar to his emotional elimination from the World Cup in Qatar four years ago.
After Portugal were dumped out by Morocco at the 2022 tournament, footage of Ronaldo bursting into tears as he headed down the tunnel went viral.
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Despite managing to fight back his tears in the tunnel this time around, the former Manchester United and Real Madrid forward showed similar signs of devastation as he walked alone with his head bowed down in contemplation.
Ronaldo had initially resisted questions about his World Cup future prior to Sunday, when he eventually revealed that this year would be his swansong.
‘It’s about enjoying it as much as possible,’ Ronaldo said ahead of the round of 16 clash with Spain.
‘This will be my last World Cup, but let’s hope tomorrow isn’t my last game.’
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Ronaldo confirmed this World Cup would be his last before Spain’s late 1-0 win over Portugal
He insisted that Portugal’s Euro 2016 triumph means the same to him as any World Cup
Ronaldo, who has plied his trade domestically in Saudi Arabia since his lucrative move to Al-Nassr in 2023, has made no indication that he plans to retire from football altogether any time soon.
The all-time great is chasing the remarkable feat of reaching 1,000 career goals, now just 24 goals away after netting in Portugal’s 2-1 round of 32 victory over Croatia last week.
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Cristiano Ronaldo’s final World Cup act: Portugal star, 41, makes lonely walk down the tunnel in eerily similar scenes to Qatar failure four years ago – but defiantly claims he has NO regrets after latest heartbreak
Matches would be held at Acomb Working Men’s Club and Institute on Wednesdays and Fridays from 6pm to 11pm if York Council approves its licensing application.
The club’s plans stated it also wanted to extend its beer garden’s opening hours until 9pm.
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Approval of the club’s application would see the Front Street venue licensed to sell alcohol from 11am to midnight daily.
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It would be allowed to hold sporting events indoors from 7pm to 11.30pm from Monday to Wednesday and from 11am between Thursday and Sunday.
Live music would be permitted indoors from 7.30pm to midnight Thursday, Friday and Saturday and until 11.30pm on Sunday.
Recorded music would be allowed from 10am to 11pm Monday to Saturday and from 12pm to 10.30pm on Sunday.
Acomb Working Men’s Club, in Front Street, Acomb, York (Image: Google)
Indoor dance performances would be permitted from 8pm to 11.30pm from Thursday, to Sunday.
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The club’s application stated its opening hours would remain unchanged if the application is approved.
It currently opens from 12pm to 3pm and from 7pm to 10pm from Monday to Wednesday and until 11pm on Thursday.
Evening opening times start at 6pm on Fridays.
The club opens from 11.30am to 11.30pm on Saturdays and until 8pm on Sundays, according to Google.
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Its licence also allows it to serve drinks until 2.30am on New Years and from 7.30am until 10am on 12 member trips a year.
Labour’s defence plans were branded a ‘pantomime’ – as new figures revealed Russian jets are testing Nato‘s defences an average once a day.
Keir Starmer will head for what looks set to be a bruising Nato summit in Turkey on Tuesday morning amid warnings that he has failed to protect Britain.
Downing Street is braced for a final blast from Donald Trump after US officials accused countries like the UK of ‘lagging behind’ Nato spending targets.
And, in an ominous development, it emerged that a Russian aircraft buzzed the British aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales last week.
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The warship scrambled two F-35 fighter jets to shadow the Russian maritime patrol aircraft, which also dropped a number of sonic buoys near the British carrier in an apparent provocation.
Downing Street branded the manoeuvre, which took place in the Norwegian Sea, ‘unsafe and unprofessional’.
Government sources revealed it was one of 700 incursions that Nato jets have had to deal with in the last two years – an average of almost one a day.
Kemi Badenoch said the action by Vladimir Putin was a ‘test’ that the government is failing.
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Humiliation: Officials fear Donald Trump could try to embarrass the PM over defence at this week’s Nato summit (pictured together in August last year)
Confrontation: An F-35 jet launched from HMS Prince of Wales shadows a Russian military aircraft as it drops a sonic device, inset
Targeted: The HMS Prince of Wales was in the Norwegian Sea
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Reckless: Vladimir Putin
In a speech on Tuesday, the Conservative leader will warn that Britain’s defence policy is becoming a ‘pantomime’ at the moment that the threat has grown to the most serious since the end of the Cold War.
Mrs Badenoch will urge Andy Burnham to take up her offer to help push through welfare cuts to help fund defence investment. But she will warn that the would-be prime minister has ‘said nothing’ about the growing threats facing the UK.
‘We are sending an outgoing Prime Minister who is now completely powerless to that Nato summit,’ she will say.
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‘And he is taking with him a Defence Investment Plan which he knows is not fit for purpose. With barely half of the additional funding that our armed forces need.
‘So little that the former Defence Secretary quit the government because he thought the plans would put British troops in danger.’
Sir Keir will tell Nato allies this week that his controversial Defence Investment Plan (DIP) represents a major step on the way to hitting Nato’s target of spending 3.5 per cent on defence by 2035. But it only commits the UK to reaching 2.7 per cent by the end of the decade.
New Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis said Labour would ‘commit the resources to evidence the trajectory to 3.5 per cent’ at a spending review next year. But neither No 10 nor Mr Burnham have so far agreed to the timetable.
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Nato chief Mark Rutte said he expected member states to produce ‘clear, concrete and credible’ plans to hit the 3.5 per cent target.
No 10 fears that Mr Trump may use this week’s summit to humiliate Sir Keir over defence spending.
Speaking at the weekend, he said ‘weak’ British leaders had allowed the country to become a ‘deindustrialised welfare zone unable to stop Third World men arriving on boats’.
The two leaders are not expected to hold a formal meeting this week, despite it being Sir Keir’s final appearance on the world stage before leaving office. But Downing Street said they would be seated next to each other at a summit meeting tomorrow and insisted that their relationship remains ‘constructive’.
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Ahead of the summit, Putin sent a clear message to defence chiefs over Russia’s willingness to threaten its member states, including Britain.
It emerged how a Russian aircraft conducted a ‘danger close’ low pass of the HMS Prince of Wales while the £3.5billion carrier was operating in the Norwegian Sea.
After ignoring requests from the carrier’s control room, the Bear-F maritime patrol aircraft then dropped tens of sonobuoy projectiles in close proximity to HMS Prince of Wales which could have injured sailors or damaged the carrier.
British commanders scrambled two F-35 jets from HMS Prince of Wales to shadow the Russian aircraft in the carrier’s first ‘real-time’ engagement with enemy forces.
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The Royal Navy has released information about the July 2nd incident for the first time.
At the time HMS Prince of Wales was sailing as part of the UK’s Carrier Strike Group which also consisted of the Type-45 destroyer HMS Duncan, the Royal Fleet Auxiliary ship Tidespring which were conducting freedom of navigation patrols in the High North.
The Arctic Sentry patrols are intended to reinforce security. The engagement came just weeks after the UK seized a Russian shadow fleet vessel in the English Channel for the first time and after a Russian fighter jet flew within feet of a Royal Air Force intelligence gathering aircraft conducting a patrol over the Black Sea.
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Labour’s defence plans branded a ‘pantomime’ as Keir Starmer heads to bruising Nato summit with Donald Trump
Arthur’s Fery-tale continues! British wildcard wins AGAIN in five-set epic against Grigor Dimitrov to reach Wimbledon quarter finals – with underdog mouthing hilarious X-rated comment after stunning victory
Twenty five years after Goran Ivanisevic became the first wildcard to win Wimbledon, Britain’s Arthur Fery is three wins away from becoming the second.
Born in Paris, raised in Wimbledon, this cross-Channel Fery is chugging further and faster than anyone could have anticipated.
On his Centre Court debut, on the biggest day of his life he produced the best match of his life – and all with Roger Federer looking on from the Royal Box.
The 23-year-old beat Grigor Dimitrov 7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 and, for the second match in a row, the 5ft 9in pocket rocket proved he could squeeze through the narrowest gap; wriggle out of the stickiest situation.
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Having come from 4-1 down in both the fourth and fifth sets of his second-round win over Zizou Bergs, Fery, trailing Dimitrov two sets to one, twice recovered from a break in the fourth set.
The man who began the grass court season with two Tour-level wins in his life has forgotten how to lose.
Arthur Fery appeared to mouth an expletive in shock after reaching Wimbledon quarter-finals
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Fery takes the acclaim of Centre Court after dispatching of Grigor Dimitrov
He has played four tiebreaks this fortnight and won the lot, and here is one illustration of his priceless ability to bring his best in the most pregnant moments: across three hours and 55 minutes Fery struck seven aces – and two of those came within five minutes of each other in the deciding tiebreak.
‘It’s incredibly hard to describe what I have just felt on that tennis court,’ he told the crowd afterwards, and as he continued his ability to form full sentences deserted him: ‘First time on this court, against an absolute legend of the game…I grew up five minutes from here…we’ve got the greatest of all time watching…’
On another comeback: ‘It’s been the story of the tournament, I’m playing really well with my back against the wall.’
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He will face Italian No 9 seed Flavio Cobolli in the quarter-finals on Wednesday.
Even to parochial eyes, there were compelling narratives on both sides of the court: the Ferytale and the fairytale, if you will.
This was the first time in Grand Slam history two wildcards had faced off in the fourth round or later. Fery’s reason for being handed that golden ticket was obvious; in Dimitrov’s case the story is a little darker.
Britain’s Fery is three wins away from becoming the second wildcard winner at Wimbledon
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The 23-year-old beat the wily Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov 7-5, 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6
It was on this very same second Monday of Wimbledon last year, on this very same court, when Dimitrov tore a pectoral muscle when leading eventual champion Jannik Sinner by two sets to love.
Eleven months and two weeks of the subsequent time has been hellish for the Bulgarian as first the physical and then the mental pain threatened to end the 35-year-old’s career.
Suffering from flashbacks and crippling uncertainty, he came into the grass season with a seasonal record of one win and 11 defeats – including seven in a row.
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But a couple of wins apiece in Dublin and Mallorca sparked a flame and that has grown into an inferno at Wimbledon as his talent has blazed into light.
Dimitrov was known in his early career as Baby Fed, his flowing single-handed backhand and all-round style reminiscent of the great Swiss.
The man himself, Roger Federer, was there the night of the Sinner match, looking on in horror from the Royal Box as his friend limped from the court; and here both men had played five-set matches coming into this fourth round, Fery that act of escapology against Bergs, Dimitrov an absorbing tussle with Matteo Berrettini.
In theory, this was a match between the 114th (Fery) and the 146th best tennis players in the world – the quality of the spectacle told otherwise.
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As the surfaces have homogenized over the past 20 years, men’s tennis has largely become a baseline battle of power and endurance.
This was a throwback to old school grass-court tennis. These two can give the ball a wallop – Fery had a forehand clocked at over 100mph this fortnight – but they can wield the surgeon’s knife as well as the butcher’s cleaver.
Roger Federer was looking on from the Royal Box as Fery made his Centre Court debut
After a couple of shanks in the first couple of games Fery settled well. There has been a serenity about his play here that suggested he would not be discombobulated by the occasion.
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At 5-5, having thus far won only two points on the Dimitrov serve, Fery broke to love, cracking a couple of backhands and then hammering a forehand return.
For all the aesthetic beauty of the Dimitrov backhand – whether sliced or driven – it is his weaker side and Fery directed the majority of his fire in that direction.
Off his own backhand wing, Fery was simply not missing. Incredibly, he got through a set and seven games with one single unforced error on that side – and then it all fell apart, as he made three unforced errors in a row to concede the break at 3-4 in the second set.
Fery headed off-court for an eight-minute loo break – sadly standard practice these days. Of course, if you gotta go you gotta go but if it was more of an attempt to recentre himself, there is always the possibility you go further off-kilter.
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And, upon his return to Centre Court, Fery played a second ragged service game in a row. The quality of the Brit backhand in the first period of the match meant Dimitrov was largely forced to employ his delightful but less offensive slice.
As Fery’s level dipped Dimitrov began unfurling his majestic single-hander. One he unleashed down the line at the start of the third set would have made Federer himself purr – sadly the great man was off court at the time, no doubt tucking into afternoon tea.
The man who began the grass court season with two Tour-level wins in his life has forgotten how to lose
As Fery went an early break down in the fourth set the scoreboard looked imposing. But having come back from 4-1 down in both the fourth and fifth sets of his third-round win over Zizou Bergs, Fery was not about to panic.
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He broke back; Dimitrov broke again; Fery broke back again. At 4-5, 0-40 on the Dimitrov serve Fery had three points to take it into a fifth set. On the third he hammered a backhand past Dimitrov at the net and launched into a wild, fist-pumping jig of delight.
The fifth set was fearfully tight – even Federer was leaning forward in his chair, in tune with the tension of the match. At 4-4 and again at 5-5, Fery extracted himself from sticky situations.
And so to a match tiebreak – first to 10 points – Fery’s second in a row here. He opened it with only his fifth ace of the match and went 4-2 up with a punched backhand return and a rush to the net – the modern equivalent of the Henman chip and charge. Dimitrov won three points in a row, then double faulted.
Another wonderful volley combination from Fery made it 6-6. Then another ace. Dimitrov went wide and Fery led 8-7 – win two points on his serve and he was home. He dug a backhand deep into the corner and Dimitrov sliced into the net – how often had we seen that play pattern?
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A Dimitrov return into the net and Centre Court erupted in noise. It may not be the Azteca but when Fery needed it most, this grand old arena roared him home.
One person was taken to hospital while others were treated on the scene.
The incident took place on the M62 Eastbound at around 6:10pm, according to National Highways North West, between Junctions 18 and 19.
All those involved in the collision were transferred into the care of North West Ambulance Service, and one was taken to hospital for treatment.
(Image: Traffic Cameras UK)
A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) said: “Shortly after 6:15 this afternoon (Monday 6th July), two fire engines from Heywood and Whitefield fire stations were called to attend a road traffic collision involving four vehicles between Junction 18 and 19 on the M62.”
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“Crews arrived quickly and worked alongside Greater Manchester Police to make the area safe. All casualties were transferred into the care of North West Ambulance Service and one casualty has been conveyed to hospital.”
“Firefighters were in attendance for around 45 minutes”
The incident led to delays on the M62 for around three hours, though the road was never fully closed – one lane remaining open.
Two lanes remained closed well into the evening, allowing workers to undertake repairs to the road.
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(Image: Traffic Cameras UK)
A National Highways spokesperson said: “Throughout the incident, traffic has been able to keep moving by using the services.
“Two of the lanes are open and two are still closed.
“The closed lanes are closed due to necessary ongoing recovery work, including repairs to damaged street furniture and electrical work.”
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