MCU Star Addresses Potential Return Of The Villain Who Set Up Avengers: Doomsday (Exclusive)

Nelson, known for his acting roles, has now written a novel – his second – about the world of superhero filmmaking. He recently talked to Chris Killian from ComicBook about his new book, Superhero: A Novel, which draws on his experiences making big-budget movies, including superhero adaptations. The conversation naturally turned to his role as The Leader and whether he might reprise it, especially considering how important his character was in setting up the events leading to Doom’s arrival. While he didn’t confirm a return in Doomsday, Nelson did say he’d be excited to play The Leader again.

New Helldivers 2 update just shaved 131GB off its PC file size with a “slim version” beta, and I’m ecstatic — here’s how to opt into the patch

Helldivers 2, the popular co-op shooter from Arrowhead Game Studios released in 2024, faced significant criticism earlier this year due to performance and technical problems on PC. The developers decided to postpone adding new features to concentrate on resolving these issues, and they successfully fixed most of them in the following weeks.

Pi Network’s December Dilemma: Tokens, Trolls, and Triumphs! 🎭🚀

This December, a grand spectacle: 190 million shiny coins ready to pop out of the digital hat. The price’s been doing the cha-cha-down 7%, but hey, it’s supported by more than 0.223. A little compliance magic (MiCA) and some gaming spell from CiDi Games could turn this ship around – or at least make it look busy. 🎩✨

Avatar: Fire and Ash’s Sam Worthington Discusses if Avatar 4 Will Happen

Later this month, 20th Century Studios will release the next installment in the Avatar series, titled Avatar: Fire and Ash. James Cameron directs the sequel, continuing the story of Jake Sully (played by Sam Worthington) and Neytiri (played by Zoe Saldaña) after the events of the 2009 original and 2023’s Avatar: The Way of Water.

Seven Paths to Quantum Paradox

The illustration demonstrates Bell’s core assumptions, framing information transmission not as a perfect replication of signal, but as a probabilistic process governed by $P(x|y)$, where the receiver decodes a signal $x$ given a transmitted signal $y$, inherently introducing uncertainty and the potential for misinterpretation.

A new framework identifies seven seemingly reasonable assumptions that clash with quantum mechanics, forcing a reassessment of its interpretations.