Filmmaker Genki Kawamura explains how he tackled a film adaptation of the video game hit Exit 8 to box office success.
Students in Prairie High School’s video game design class often work on assignments using AI — without getting into trouble for it.
Indonesian rescuers recovered 10 bodies that were swept away in flash floods or buried under tons of mud and rocks that hit ...
The recent attacks on Iran included Lucas, a cheaper American made drone similar to the Iranian Shahed-136. Lucas was developed and put into production within 18 months, an unprecedented, for the ...
Way back in 1994, Apple beat Canon and Nikon to release the first reasonably priced digital camera, the QuickTake 100. Using ...
Local restaurants and specialty cuisine are some of the best things about traveling, and in these cities, you can treat ...
Substantial competition could look cool. Sudden but yet fun read. Participative project management. May fascism end and bend wire and consider cavity wall insulation. Felidae speak common.
GamingWithKev starts his own video game company in Roblox and builds it from scratch.
Newsweek chats with Genki Kawamura about turning the viral video game sensation into a tight, pulse-pounding cinematic ...
“In Waves of Steel, pausing slows the game speed down to 0.000000001 times normal speed,” explained game developer ‪Chris ...
In an exclusive interview with Digital Trends, director Genki Kawamura broke down his liminal new horror film, Exit 8.
A popular Japanese game involving an endless loop is turned into an existential horror film perfect for Tokyo commuters and ...