MultiVersus, the platform fighter from Warner Bros. and Player First Games, has broken record after record, jumping from five million players to 10 million in only a few weeks.
The game is still in open beta and has only been available for a few weeks.
Fighting games tend to get a fair amount of love from fans and newcomers alike, but no fighting game has ever come close to the numbers MultiVersus is pulling.
In the span of only a handful of weeks, the game where you can fight LeBron James as Batman has shattered player count records yet again, as spotted by GamesRadar.
While there are plenty of fighting games that have enjoyed immense success, such as Tekken 7, Brawlhalla, and Guilty Gear -Strive-, none of those games had opening numbers like MultiVersus.
It’s plain to see that going free-to-play with such large IPs is paying off dividends. With a 24-average of more than 53,000 players, people seem to really enjoy the Smash Bros.-style of fighting game.
Future characters are already in the works, with Morty from Rick and Morty confirmed first.
Rumors of other characters, such as the Joker, Scooby-doo, Godzilla, and even Ted Lasso are most likely making their way to the game.
There are even more unconfirmed (and less likely) rumors of characters like the Powerpuff Girls, Scorpion, and Ben 10 floating around the internet, as well.
Despite the success, or perhaps as a result of it, director Tony Huynh stated that Season One of the game would be getting delayed to address some issues, including a “big overhaul” of characters’ hitboxes.
The game doesn’t have a new release date as of this writing, but the open beta has been extended indefinitely, so players can give the game a try.
Multiverse had a good showing at Evo, the largest fighting game tournament in the world, last weekend. Evo drew a massive crowd throughout the event, but especially during the MultiVersus tournament.
The event was so popular, that developers even teased new projects during the event.
Home and Away spoilers follow from Tuesday’s Australian episode (August 9), which some UK viewers may prefer to avoid.
Home and Away has left Cash Newman’s fate hanging in the balance in the show’s latest Australian episode.
The local policeman was caught in the crossfire this week as the Parata family’s troubles with a dangerous biker gang spiraled out of control.
In Tuesday’s episode on Channel 7 in Australia, Cash was rushed to hospital after taking a bullet during a police operation to bring in the gang members.
Cash’s loved ones in the Bay were all left upset as it became clear that his chances of survival were touch and go.
Channel 5
Related: Home and Away updates fans on Jasmine Delaney’s exit decision
When new doctor Bree Cameron spoke to Cash’s sister Felicity Newman about the sad situation, she tried her best to provide an optimistic outlook.
However, in a separate conversation with Xander Delaney – who’d brought in Cash while on paramedic duty – Bree admitted that she may have given Felicity false hope.
Bree also provided a sombre warning to Rose Delaney, telling her: “There are no guarantees. I wish there were, but Cash lost a lot of blood and the internal damage was extensive. If he makes it through the next couple of days, he’s looking at a long recovery.
“But he’s young, strong, fit. All of that works in his favour.”
paramount
Related: Home and Away newcomer hints at secrets as new character Bree arrives
Shortly afterwards, Bree’s worst fears were realized when Cash went into cardiac arrest in his hospital bed.
Wednesday’s Australian episode will see Felicity called back to Cash’s bedside, distraught after being told that he could still die.
Home and Away fans in the UK will see these scenes on Channel 5 in September.
Home and Away airs weekdays at 1.45pm on Channel 5 and 6pm on 5STAR. First-look screenings air at 6.30pm on 5STAR and the show also streams on My5.
In Australia, the show airs Mondays to Thursdays at 7pm on Channel 7 and streams on 7plus.
Selected classic episodes are available via Amazon Prime Video in the UK.
Read more Home and Away spoilers on our dedicated homepage
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The Wests Tigers have made an inquiry with Wigan about the prospect of bringing 2019 Dally M Backrower of the Year John Bateman back to the NRL in 2023.
In a move unrelated to Isaiah Papali’i having second thoughts about switching from Parramatta to Concord next year, Tigers director of football Tim Sheens has confirmed the club has made the approach.
The catch is going to be Bateman is under contract with Wigan until at least the end of 2024 and for now the Warriors have blocked the Tigers move.
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Bateman was one of the standout backrowers in the NRL the year the Canberra Raiders made the grand finale in 2019 before his tenure in the national capital sourced over a contract stalemate with the Green Machine.
Bateman then returned home to the UK at the end of the 2020 NRL season after inking a four-year deal with Wigan through until the end of 2024.
The Raiders were forced to pay a $250,000 transfer fee to Bradford to bring Bateman to the NRL the first time around but the one bonus with transfer fees to English clubs is they aren’t included in the NRL clubs salary cap.
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The Tigers have made a play for former Raiders star John Bateman.Source: Getty Images
The Bateman approach is creative thinking from Sheens trying to look outside the square and devise recruitment ploys aimed at overhauling the Wests Tigers roster.
The Tigers have made some recruitment moves this week by re-signing Brent Naden, Asu Kepoa and Starford To’a but the real recruitment space where they need to get busy is the re-signing of Adam Doueihi.
Doueihi is easily the Tigers best player, a local junior and the type of leader the Wests Tigers need to build the club around.
With Sheens and Benji Marshall now having control of the steering wheel at least it won’t be left to dithering management types to make another misguided mistake.
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‘He gets angry at some weird things’ | 01:13
The issue with Doueihi is he’s going to be a free agent as of November 1 and you can guarantee rival clubs are going to be getting the queue to try and convince the five-eighth to switch allegiances.
The Tigers need to sharpen their pencil and try and get a long-term deal done now prior to the stronger clubs being able to table a deal.
The Melbourne Storm have already had one crack at getting Doueihi on loan for the remainder of this year and with uncertainty surrounding the future of Cameron Munster the Tigers five-eighth would make an ideal replacement.
An eighth teenager has been charged with murder months after a 16-year-old was allegedly chased down and attacked outside a Melbourne house party.
Homicide detectives arrested the boy at Melbourne Airport, taking him into custody early on Wednesday.
Declan Cutler, 16, was beaten and fatally stabbed in Coburg North earlier this year.
The 17-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, faced a Children’s Court hours later, where a magistrate heard it was the boy’s first time in police custody. Flanked by three police officers, he sat in handcuffs during the brief hearing, with his mother watching nearby. The boy made no application for bail and was remanded in custody to reappear next month.
His arrest comes five months after eight teenagers allegedly chased and attacked Declan Cutler, a 16-year-old from Reservoir, following a house party in Coburg North.
The court heard that while there were no witnesses to the incident, a friend of Cutler’s was scheduled to give evidence at a compulsory examination hearing to provide details about the teen’s movements before he died.
Police had been searching for an eighth alleged killer since March after the knife attack was captured on CCTV from a nearby home.
The street where Declan Cutler died on March 13.Credit:penny stephens
The seven other teens – aged 13 to 17 – are all also charged with murder and remain in custody. Two of them are brothers.
Police say Cutler had been at a house party when a group of youths in a dark-coloured car chased him along Elizabeth Street in Coburg North at about 2.30am on March 13.
Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, of West Springfield, Mass., reacts to the not-guilty verdict at Coos County Superior Court in Lancaster, NH, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2022. The commercial truck driver was charged with negligent homicide in the deaths of seven motorcycles club members in a 2019 crash in Randolph, NH (David Lane/The Union Leader via AP, Pool)
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Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, of West Springfield, Mass., reacts to the not-guilty verdict at Coos County Superior Court in Lancaster, NH, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2022. The commercial truck driver was charged with negligent homicide in the deaths of seven motorcycles club members in a 2019 crash in Randolph, NH (David Lane/The Union Leader via AP, Pool)
CONCORD, NH (AP) — A jury on Tuesday acquired a commercial truck driver of causing the deaths of seven motorcyclists in a horrific head-on collision in northern New Hampshire that exposed fatal flaws in the processing of license revocations across states.
Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, 26, of West Springfield, Massachusetts, was found innocent on seven counts of manslaughter, seven counts of negligent homicide and one count of reckless conduct in connection with the June 21, 2019, crash in Randolph. Jailed since the crash, he appeared to wipe away tears as the verdict was read and briefly raised his index finger skyward before leaving the courtroom.
Jurors deliberated for less than three hours after a two-week trial during which prosecutors argued that Zhukovskyy — who had taken heroin, fentanyl and cocaine earlier on the day of the crash — repeatedly swerved back and forth before the collision and told police he caused it. But a judge dismissed eight charges related to whether he was impaired, and his attorneys blamed the lead biker, Albert “Woody” Mazza Jr., saying he was drunk and not looking where he was going when he lost control of his motorcycle and slid in front of Zhukovskyy’s truck.
“Our hearts go out to the victims and their families. Our trial team did an excellent job and we firmly believe that the State provided its case beyond a reasonable doubt,” New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella said in a statement.
Zhukovskyy’s family, some of whom attended the trial, said in a statement they were grateful to God, the court and the defense attorneys for an “honest and fair trial.”
“Our family expresses its deepest condolences to the family and friends affected by this tragedy,” the family said, describing him as a “very honest and kind man. He would never have done anything to hurt anyone.”
Zhukovskyy, who was born in Ukraine, remained jailed as of late Tuesday afternoon. It is unclear when he might be released. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued an immigration detainer on him after the crash and that he was executed following the verdict, said Ben Champagne, the superintendent at the Coos County Department of Corrections.
ICE said in a statement that Zhukovskyy has been served a notice to appear before an immigration judge and will remain in ICE custody pending the outcome of that appearance. It did not say where he is being held.
All seven motorcyclists killed were members of the Jarheads Motorcycle Club. After the verdict, a member of the Marine group reached through Facebook declined to comment. Mazza’s father, also named Albert, said he was stunned.
“Killing seven people and he gets off. That is unbelievable,” said Mazza. He described his son of him as a “good man” who devoted much of his time to charity, and said it was wrong to pin blame on him.
“It doesn’t make much sense,” he said. “There are seven people dead. There are seven families affected. It’s strange that he didn’t get something.”
The motorcyclists who died were from New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island and ranged in age from 42 to 62. They were part of a larger group that had just left a motel along US Route 2 in Randolph.
Killed were Mazza, of Lee, New Hampshire; Edward and Jo-Ann Corr, a couple from Lakeville, Massachusetts; Michael Ferazzi, of Contocook, New Hampshire; Desma Oakes, of Concord, New Hampshire; Daniel Pereira, of Riverside, Rhode Island; and Aaron Perry, of Farmington, New Hampshire.
In closing statements Tuesday morning, the two sides raised questions about who was more “all over the place”: the trucker accused of swerving back and forth across the road or the eyewitnesses accused of contradicting each other.
“Those witnesses were all over the place about what they recalled and what they claimed to have seen,” said defense attorney Jay Duguay.
Duguay also accused prosecutors of ignoring that their own accident reconstruction unit contradicted their theory that Zhukovskyy crossed into the oncoming lane. An expert hired by the defense, meanwhile, testified that the crash happened on the center line of the road and would have occurred even if the truck was in the middle of its lane because Mazza’s motorcycle was heading in that direction.
“From the beginning of this investigation, the state had made up their mind about what had happened, evidence was damned,” said Duguay, who also highlighted inconsistencies between witness accounts or when witnesses contradicted themselves.
In particular, Duguay suggested that the bikers “shaded” their accounts to protect Mazza and the club. Prosecutor Scott Chase acknowledged some inconsistencies, but asked jurors to remember the circumstances.
“People were covering the dead, trying to save the barely living, comforting the dying. This wasn’t story time,” he said. “They were up here talking about some of the most unimaginable chaos, trauma, death and carnage that we can even imagine three years later. They were talking about hell broke open.”
Witnesses were consistent, he argued, in describing the truck as weaving back and forth before the crash. That behavior continued “until he killed people,” Chase said.
“That’s what stopped him. It’s not that he made some responsible decision to start paying attention or do the right thing,” he said. “The only thing that stopped him was an embankment after he tore through a group of motorcycles.”
Chase called the attempt to blame Mazza a “fanciful story” and “frivolous distraction,” while reminding jurors that Zhukovskyy, who didn’t testify at trial, told investigators “Obviously, I caused the crash.”
“He was crystal clear from the very beginning that he caused this crash,” Chase said. “That is what he said, because that is what happened.”
Zhukovskyy’s commercial driving license should have been revoked in Massachusetts at the time of the crash because of a drunken driving arrest in Connecticut about two months earlier.
Connecticut officials alerted the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles, but Zhukovskyy’s license wasn’t suspended due to a backlog of out-of-state notifications about driving offenses. In a review, federal investigators found similar backlog problems in Rhode Island, New Hampshire and at least six other jurisdictions.
___
Associated Press Writers Michael Casey and Kathy McCormack contributed to this report.
But more than half of the country’s game development companies are based in Victoria, as well as 57 per cent of the workforce.
Wilton’s game was among six games backed by Victorian agency VicScreen previewed to the media that are set to launch in the next 12 months either on mobile, PC, or Xbox and Playstation.
The game Wood & Weather by Paper House Studio.
Many of Melbourne’s most anticipated games previewed on Wednesday are left-of-field, exploratory games that aren’t necessarily pitched at typical male video gamers.
Future Folklore, set for concept release next year, will be Australia’s first ever Indigenous-led mobile game, set in a fantasy world inspired by the Australian bush where players can explore and care for Country.
A Silicon Valley venture capital firm has just pumped $9.76 million into a Melbourne mobile-based app called Kinder World by female-led Melbourne studio Lumi Interactive. Dreamt up during the dark days of COVID lockdowns, the cozy game is all about tending to virtual houseplants and spreading kindness to help people unwind.
Climate change and environmental themes are explored in Onepixel.com’s Studio Ghibli-like game Way to the Woods as well as Paper House studio’s Wood & Weatherwhich depicts a “toy world” undergoing the impacts of climate change.
Melbourne outfit Ghost Pattern also previewed wayward strand, a game set in the 1970s that explores the world of 14-year-old Casey, who tags along on summer holidays to her mum’s job at an aged care hospital in regional Victoria (which is also suspended in the sky).
Wednesday also marked the official opening of applications for the next round of Victoria’s Games Development Internship program, which aims to foster more game creators from traditionally underrepresented backgrounds in the screen industry.
Melbourne’s status as a video game powerhouse was cemented in 2019 after game smash hit Untitled Goose Game, which lets players take control of a rampaging, mischievous goose.
The game, created by Fitzroy-based studio House House, was recently acquired by ACMI in Melbourne, the Powerhouse in Sydney and the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra, which are preserving the game and its early drafts for posterity.
VicScreen chief executive Caroline Pitcher said the Victorian digital games industry had just had a record year, with VicScreen-supported games injecting $9.7 million into the state economy – a 46 per cent increase on the previous year.
“The digital games industry is growing exponentially, and we are championing that by backing local IP and career development,” she said.
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Pregnant Chrissy Teigen shows off her growing baby bump as she crashes her husband John Legend’s live interview
By Mary Mrad For Daily Mail Australia
Published: | Updated:
They recently announced they’re expecting their third child together.
And on Wednesday, Chrissy Teigen showed off her growing baby bump as she made a surprise appearance during her husband John Legend’s interview with Australian Hit Network’s Carrie & Tommy
John was discussing his new single with the radio team via video link when Chrissy suddenly popped into frame.
Pregnant Chrissy Teigen showed off her growing baby bump as she crashed her husband John Legend’s (pictured) live interview
‘You performed All of Me at your wedding for Chrissy. If you were writing a song now, how different would it be?’ Carrie Bickmore asked.
‘That was the first time I ever played it live… Wait till you hear the new album. There are songs for Chrissy on there,’ John responded.
Chrissy then appeared and posed on the side to reveal her growing baby bump.
John was discussing his new single on Australian Hit Network’s Carrie & Tommy radio show via zoom, when Chrissy crashed the interview
She waved at the camera before leaving the room.
Chrissy is expecting her new baby with her husband John, who she met when she starred in his 2006 music video for his song Stereo.
The lovebirds got engaged in 2011 and married in 2013. In April 2016, they welcomed their daughter Luna, now six, and their son Miles, now four, followed in May 2018.
Chrissy posed on the side to reveal her growing baby bump
Chrissy is expecting her new baby with her husband John, who she met when she starred in his 2006 music video for his song Stereo
Teigen and Legend initially met while working on a music video that was shot in 2006.
In August 2020, the Chrissy Court star announced she was pregnant with a third child, whom she and John later named Jack.
The couple tragically lost the child the following month.
Family: Chrissy and her husband John Legend already share their daughter Luna, six, and son Miles, four. She suffered a stillbirth in September 2020
Willie Rioli Senior has been remembered as a football legend and community leader, and a man whose “cheeky” smile brightened the lives of those around him.
Key points:
Around 500 people attended a memorial service in Darwin for Willie Rioli Senior
He died suddenly of a heart attack in July at age 50
Mr Rioli will also be commemorated at a burial at his home on the Tiwi Islands
Warning: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this story contains the name and image of a person who has died.
The ABC has permission from Willie Rioli Senior’s family to use his name and image.
Hundreds of people filled the pews at St Mary’s Cathedral in Darwin on Wednesday to pay tribute to the father, grandfather, star footballer and respected leader in the Tiwi Islands community.
Mr Rioli died suddenly last month, age 50, of a heart attack, according to a statement from AFL Northern Territory.
Willie Rioli Senior died suddenly in July at the age of 50. (Supplied: Tiwi Bombers Football Club)
Northern Territory Football league (NTFL) broadcaster Dominic McCormack remembered his friend as a man with a “cheeky smile” who “brightened all our lives.”
“He always brought great energy, experience, organisation, a big smile, lots of humility and a bit of stubbornness to all he did,” Mr McCormack said in a eulogy.
He said even Mr Rioli’s opponents could not help but like him.
“It would be rare to ever hear a bad word about him,” Mr McCormack said.
“Even while he was taking [the opposite] team apart they still loved him — they just wanted him on their side.”
Proud of his children and a lifelong love story
In his younger years, Mr McCormack said Mr Rioli would sneak out of boarding school at night to visit Georgina Vigona, the woman who would remain his wife until his death.
Mr Rioli’s wife, Georgina Vigona, had been by his side for decades.(ABC News: Myles Houlbrook-Walk)
The couple raised three children: Nikita, Kathleen and West Coast Eagles premiership winner Willie Junior.
Mr Rioli is survived by his three children, two grandchildren and wife Georgina.(ABC News: Myles Houlbrook-Walk)
The resignation letter of the former NSW building commissioner has been referred to the state’s corruption watchdog following questions about why he abruptly quit last month.
Key points:
The NSW Opposition compelled the government to make the resignation letter public within 24 hours
Premier Dominic Perrottet revealed the letter had also been referred to ICAC
The building commissioner worked closely with former cabinet minister Eleni Petinos
Pressure has been building on the NSW government to make David Chandler’s letter public after reports he may have resigned because of a strained relationship with former fair trading minister Eleni Petinos.
Ms Petinos was sacked from the NSW ministry last month over bullying allegations, which she denies.
Premier Dominic Perrottet today revealed in parliament that Mr Chandler’s resignation letter had been referred to the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).
Mr Perrottet was pressed during question time about whether the former commissioner’s resignation had anything to do with Ms Petinos.
“Do you stand by your statements of yesterday that the sacking of [Ms Petinos] had nothing to do with the resignation of David Chandler?” Opposition Leader Chris Minns asked.
“Yes,” Mr Perrottet answered.
Since Mr Chandler quit last month, citing the need for a “reset”, the Opposition has been calling for his resignation letter to be made public.
Eleni Petinos was sacked over bullying allegations.(ABCNews)
Today Labor successfully moved a motion in the upper house to compel the government to produce the letter within 24 hours.
Yesterday Mr Perrottet said he had not read the letter, but now he says he has.
“I have read the resignation letter from David Chandler to the DCS (Department of Customer Service) Secretary Emma Hogan.”
“Out of an abundance of caution, the letter was provided to the ICAC for information.
“I understand the letter is to be provided to the upper house tomorrow.”
The Premier was also pressed on when he learned that the letter had been referred to the ICAC.
“Late last night,” Mr Perrottet replied.
Labor’s move to compel the government to release the document comes after it was revealed Ms Petinos met with a property developer linked to former deputy premier John Barilaro earlier this year.
After the two meetings on June 2 and June 21, a building ban affecting the developer, Coronation Property, was lifted.
Ms Petinos said the lifting of that ban had nothing to do with her and would have been a decision made by Mr Chandler.
Mr Chandler was appointed as the state’s first building commissioner by former premier Gladys Berejiklian in 2019 to clean up the building industry.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said that it has ended a Trump-era policy requiring asylum-seekers to wait in Mexico for hearings in US immigration court, hours after a judge lifted an order, in effect since December, that the so- called Remain in Mexico rule be reinstated.
The timing had been in doubt since the US supreme court ruled on June 30 that the Biden administration could end the policy.
Homeland security officials had been largely silent, saying they had to wait for the court to certify the ruling and for a Trump-appointed judge, Matthew Kacsmaryk, in Amarillo, Texas, to then lift his injunction.
The supreme court certified its ruling last week and critics of the policy had been increasingly outspoken about the Biden administration’s reticence on Remain in Mexico, calling for an immediate end to it.
“It’s a zombie policy,” Karen Tumlin, founder of the Justice Action Center, an immigration litigation organization, said last week.
The program now will be unwound in a “quick, and orderly manner”, DHS said in a statement. No more people are being enrolled and those who appear in court will not be returned to Mexico when they appear in the US for their next hearings.
The policy “has endemic flaws, imposes unjustifiable human costs, and pulls resources and personnel away from other priority efforts to secure our border”, the department said.
Many questions remain, including whether those whose claims have been denied or dismissed will get a second chance or if those whose next court dates are months away will be allowed to return to the US sooner, where many immigration courts are struggling with backlogs and shortage staffs. . DHS said it will provide additional information “in the coming days”.
About 70,000 migrants were subject to the policy, known officially as Migrant Protection Protocols, from when Donald Trump introduced it as president in January 2019 until Joe Biden suspended it on his first day in office in January 2021, fulfilling a campaign promise.
Many were allowed to return to the United States to pursue their cases during the early months of Biden’s presidency, often from squalid, dangerous, ad hoc camps or strained shelter accommodation in towns a short distance over the border into Mexico.
Then it was reinstated and migrants fleeing to the US once again were halted at the border and made to stay out of the US.
This together with a policy of routine expulsions at the border under a heavily criticized pandemic rule ostensibly to curb Covid-19, known as Title 42, has driven thousands to make unauthorized crossings, often repeatedly, and with deadly results for some – succumbing to botched smuggling businesses, the swirling waters of the Rio Grande in Texas or the desert there and further west.
Nearly 5,800 people were subject to the policy from December through June, a relatively modest number. Nicaraguans account for the largest number, with others from Cuba, Colombia and Venezuela.
Trump made the policy a centerpiece of border enforcement, which critics said was inhumane for exposing migrants to extreme violence in Mexico and making access to attorneys far more difficult.