Why Pragmata May End Up in a League of Its Own

Initially, Pragmata seems like many other big-budget sci-fi adventure games released recently. However, a closer look suggests its strength lies in cleverly combining existing ideas instead of trying to be completely original. It doesn’t reinvent the sci-fi genre, but it remixes familiar gameplay and character interactions in a way that’s surprisingly fresh for today’s AAA games.

5 Deadliest Weapons Introduced in Star Trek Games

Released in 2003, Star Trek: Elite Force II is a first-person shooter and a continuation of the story from Star Trek: Voyager – Elite Force. The game offers 15 different weapons, each with two ways to fire. The primary fire mode provides consistent, lower-damage output, while the secondary mode uses more ammunition but delivers slower, more powerful shots. The most devastating weapon is the Klingon Tetryon Gatling Gun. This energy weapon can continuously fire rapidly recharging energy chambers, or it can launch a powerful tetryon pulse as an energy grenade. It’s incredibly effective against shields and enemies – it is a Klingon Gatling Gun, after all.

Invincible Season 4, Episode 4 Officially Breaks an Unwanted Series Record (Here’s Why)

Okay, so this week’s episode of Invincible was… different. Mark gets pulled down to what’s basically their version of Hell by Damien Darkblood, which was cool because it finally paid off that little tease from the Season 3 credits! But honestly, the story felt a bit separate from everything else happening in Season 4, and even from the comic books. It’s definitely the weakest episode of the season so far, and apparently the lowest-rated one ever for the show – it only got a 6.9 on IMDb! Every other episode has been at least a 7, so this one really stood out as being a bit off.

Lithium’s Wild Ride: Batteries, EVs, and the Market’s Unpredictable Dance

And who, pray tell, cares about this? The battery manufacturers, of course, with their hands perpetually in the pockets of the future. The EV supply-chain companies, miners, and commodity traders-all players in this grand theater of progress. Battery prices, like a generous uncle, have lowered themselves, allowing more souls to embrace the electric chariot. Yet, lithium, that stubborn element, holds its ground, as if to say, “Not so fast, my dear market. Supply and demand are but children playing at tag.”