Laurence Wall is a Contributor at DualShockers who has been writing professionally since 2022 and covering games since 2023. He primarily writes guides and lists, with a focus on indie games, RPGs, ...
Getting a depth module in Subnautica 2 increases your tadpole submarine's depth resistance and lets you explore further without having to worry about finding oxygen spots. However, you'll reach the ...
Subnautica 2 is off to a successful launch after releasing in early access today. According to developer Unknown Worlds, the underwater crafting sequel sold one million copies in its first hour. The ...
The U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of 2% in the first three months of 2026, slower than forecasters expected but a rebound from weak growth in the previous quarter, new government data shows.
The federal government is expecting to issue the first refunds of President Trump’s invalidated tariffs on or about May 11, according to new court documents. U.S. Court of International Trade Judge ...
The First Bloom is the new Assault Rifle introduced alongside the Cherry Blossom event in The Division 2. Unlike other event weapons in the game, that were meant for a more gimmicky purpose, the First ...
The Trump administration said the first tariff refund payment is set to go out around May 11, even as thousands of U.S. importers encounter issues with a new online portal designed to handle claims on ...
Imagine breaking the world record in your event and not winning the race. In the men’s marathon, the bar has been set even higher after a pair of runners eclipsed the mystical 2-hour barrier at the ...
LONDON -- The fabled 2-hour barrier for a marathon has been broken, officially, in a once-inconceivable achievement in sports. Not by one runner, but two. In a race for the ages, Sabastian Sawe of ...
Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe became the first person to ever crash the two-hour mark in a marathon on Sunday by winning the London Marathon in a record 1 hour, 59 minutes and 30 seconds. Sawe, 29, ...
Isolating the first spark of life on Earth is a matter of biology, geology, and chemistry — but it’s also an amazing math problem. At least, that’s how Varun Varanasi ’24 viewed it when he was a Yale ...
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