The fighting game community is going to have their hands full this summer between the release of Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls and Avatar Legends: The Fighting Game. The studio behind the 2D fighting game based in the Avatar universe announced that a July 2 release date with a trailer that shows off new gameplay and a base price of $29.99.
The game will launch with 12 characters, encompassing both the heroes and villains from Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra. The game’s developer, Gameplay Group International, said that there are more than 900 hand-drawn frames for each character, which makes the game look like it came directly out of the beloved TV series. Avatar Legends: The Fighting Game will feature both casual and ranked matches, using a rollback netcode to ensure smooth frame-by-frame action between players, along with crossplay across PS5, Xbox Series X and S, Nintendo Switch 2 and PC.
For those more interested in the lore, there will be a single-player story mode and a gallery mode with “never before seen art.” Avatar Legends: The Fighting Gameis currently available for pre-order, starting at $29.99, but there’s a $59.99 deluxe edition that includes a digital art book, music soundtrack, unique HUDs and a Year 1 Pass, which adds five additional characters that will be released in the future. Those who pre-order will also get a Samurai skin for Appa, exclusive character colors and voting privilege for the Year 1 Pass characters.
It’s a sad day for the dozens of players still grinding The Elder Scrolls: Blades. Bethesda announced that it’s permanently shutting down the servers for its free-to-play mobile spinoff on June 30. First spotted on Reddit, The Elder Scrolls: Blades has already been delisted from the App Store and Google Play store, and is currently unavailable on the Nintendo Store.
In the meantime, players will receive a free bundle of Gems and Sigils, while all items in the in-game store are available for just one Gem or Sigil each. With a server shutdown imminent, The Elder Scrolls: Blades‘ will at least cross its six-year mark since its official release was in 2020 for Android, iOS and Nintendo Switch. The dungeon-crawling spinoff did see early success when more than one million iOS users downloaded the game during the first week of its early access period, but it never amounted to the commercial success of Bethesda’s mainline titles.
In the end, The Elder Scrolls: Blades ended up with a “Generally Unfavorable” score on Metacritic, with critics calling it “repetitive” and filled with microtransactions. The shutdown doesn’t come as a total surprise, since Bethesda also killed off its other spinoff, The Elder Scrolls: Legends, by halting development in 2019 and ultimately taking the game’s servers offline in January 2025. For anyone who still wants to play a mobile spinoff of Bethesda’s fantasy world, there’s still The Elder Scrolls: Castles.
The state of Real-World Assets (RWA) is transforming rapidly from tokenized assets to complex automated financial layers. In a major step towards helping facilitate this transformation, Quantra has announced a strategic PR partnership with REI Network. The intention of this partnership is to combine Quantra’s RWA infrastructure and REI’s high-performance blockchain capabilities to create a benchmark for how physical energy and computer assets can be integrated into the DeFi market.
Strengthening the RWA Backbone
Quantra is branding itself as a fundamental creator within the RWA (Real World Asset) space, as opposed to those projects that are mainly centered around just fractional ownership of real estate. They have chosen two sectors that are in high demand: those being the real-world computing power sector as well as the real-world energy asset sector. The basis for their infrastructure is a tripartite structure composed of the following three components, verification, on-chain mapping, and rule-based execution.
Financializing these physical assets with Quantra results in the creation of an on-chain instrument that can be used as verification for resource production. The transparency provided by the audit and mapping of every digital token, which gives clear backing to each physical asset, will allow institutional use of the tokens to be more readily accepted. This is because institutions can rely on and trust that the underlying physical asset exists.
REI Network – The Engine for Scalable Web3
Quantra has partnered with REI Network to meet the high numbers of transactions necessary for the RWA verification and execution processes. REI is an EVM-compatible blockchain designed to tackle scalability issues and eliminate high gas fees.
Rule-based execution, which refers to the automated execution of contracts based on data coming from reality, is important for many applications. A modular architecture and fast finality in REI’s blockchain will allow developers to create next-generation Web3 apps that use many microtransactions or large amounts of data. Zero fees will help make REI a good place to develop these types of applications.
The Future of On-Chain Energy and Computing
A convergence of “DePINs” (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks) and RWA are demonstrated in both Quantra and REI Network as well as in the increasing global needs for sustainability through energy and AI computation. The ability to trade, lease, or verify such assets using blockchain technology will represent billions of dollars in market opportunities.
Reports by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) estimate that tokenizing the world’s illiquid assets will create a $16 trillion market by 2030. Partnerships like this help reduce (or eliminate) technical barriers such as interoperability and high transaction fees before a significant amount of institutional capital comes into play.
Conclusion
The partnership between Quantra and REI Network is not just about PR, but also about strategically integrating specialized physical infrastructure with scalable technologies. This initiative is largely driven by Quantra’s emphasis on the financialization of computing and energy, which stand as the key resources in today’s geopolitical landscape. The cooperation will allow REI Network to be a key provider of high-speed, low-cost rails for seamless integration through REI Network’s high-speed networks. The two organizations will work together to develop innovative solutions for the next generation of DeFi applications that will be based on RWAs.
OKX, a fintech company known for its global crypto trading platform and its on-chain wallet and marketplace, is pleased to announce the launch of Aave on X Layer, OKX’s Ethereum-compatible Layer 2 network. Aave is a famous decentralized, non-custodial liquidity protocol where users can participate as suppliers or borrowers. The main purpose of the expansion of X Layer’s Decentralized Finance (DeFi) ecosystem is to make easy access to battle-tested, institutional-grade lending infrastructure directly on-chain.
Aave has a successful track record across more than a dozen blockchain networks, along with perfection. Aave is famous due to its world’s biggest decentralized liquidity protocol by total value locked (TVL) and net deposits. Its arrival on X Layer brings permissionless lending, borrowing, and yield-earning for users without the need to be connected to complicated interfaces.
Aave Growth Continues with Seamless OKX Wallet Integration
Stani Kulechov, founder of Aave Labs, gave its expression on the integration of OKX and Aave. He said, “By expanding to X Layer, Aave connects its liquidity to a growing ecosystem of users and applications, making it easier to earn, borrow, and build applications on the network. Aave looks forward to continuing expansion across OKX’s products and extending access to its millions of users.”
Through this integration, Aave can be approached on X Layer natively via OKX Wallet today, with no distinctive wallet setup requirement. This alliance provides USDT0, $USDG, $GHO, xBTC, xETH, xSOL, xBETH, and earns a competitive yield that works automatically. Moreover, this will also expand crypto holdings through the easy accessibility of stablecoins.
Aave and OKX Integration Enhances Borrowing Power and DeFi Flexibility
The combination of Aave and OKX is much more important than you think, because it also helps to borrow USDT0, $USDG, and $GHO, etc. X Layer has 6 affirmed eModes. Users can borrow up to 88% LTV for liquid staking pairs, or up to 78% LTV for crypto-to-stablecoin eModes vs. the 70% standard LTV.
Moving forward, this partnership with the OKX ecosystem offers deposit and management of funds on Aave X Layer within OKX Wallet, independent of Aave’s interface. Trade tokenized Aave availability positions, a Tokens (aUSDC, aWETH, aUSDT) directly on OKX Decentralized Exchange (DEX) anytime and anywhere, without manually withdrawing from Aave first, with real-time market data and pricing.
Mary Beth Hurt, the Tony-nominated actress whose demure demeanor drew moviegoers to her array of emotionally impactful performances in such films as Interiors, Chilly Scenes of Winter and The World According to Garp, has died. She was 79.
Hurt died Saturday at an assisted living facility in Jersey City, New Jersey, her husband, Oscar-nominated writer and director Paul Schrader, told The Hollywood Reporter. Diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2015, she had until recently been living in another facility in Manhattan, with her husband in another apartment in the building.
Hurt also brought a sophisticated flair to James Ivory’s Slaves of New York with her turn as a gallery owner, and she portrayed a 1950s mom whose quirky behavior convinces her son (Bryan Madorsky) that she and her husband (Randy Quaid) are cannibals in another 1989 film, the Bob Balaban-directed black comedy Parents.
And in Six Degrees of Separation (1993), Hurt played one of the New York socialites who falls into the web of deceit created by a charismatic young man (Will Smith) pretending to be the son of Sidney Poitier.
Hurt appeared 15 times on Broadway from 1974-2011 and in 1982 received one her three career Tony nominations for her turn as Meg Magrath, one of three Mississippi sisters facing trauma in their lives, in the Beth Henley-written Crimes of the Heart. (Jessica Lange starred in the role opposite Diane Keaton and Sissy Speck in the 1986 Bruce Beresford-directed film adaptation.)
“The first thing, above all, is that she is a fine ensemble actress,” said playwright David Hare, who directed Hurt on Broadway in 1989’s The Secret Rapture and praised her in a piece that year for The New York Times in 1989. “She has the best of the English and the best of the American traditions.
“What marks English actors is that they can turn on a sixpence — there isn’t anything technically they can’t do. They’re supple, like musicians, and from the technical facility they acquire freedom. And in Mary Beth’s case, there is a sort of improvisatory gift, a willingness to make the performance fresh every time.”
Her first husband was Oscar-winning actor William Hurt; they married in 1971, separated in 1978 and divorced in 1982.
Raised in Iowa, where one of her babysitters was future actress Jean Seberg, Hurt made her big-screen debut in Interiors (1978), Woody Allen’s first full foray into drama. She made a lasting impression as Joey, a would-be artist outshined by her sisters, successful poet Renata (Keaton) and well-known TV actress Flyn (Kristin Griffith). The daughters come together after their mother (Geraldine Page) suffers a mental breakdown.
Though it was Hurt’s first feature, she more than held her own in a powerhouse cast that included E.G. Marshall, Maureen Stapleton, Sam Waterston and Richard Jordan.
“Miss Hurt is very appealing as the youngest daughter who hates her mother and, thus, goes out of her way to convince herself she doesn’t,” Vincent Canby wrote in his review for The New York Times.
In Chilly Scenes of Winter (1979), directed by Joan Micklin Silver, she played the emotionally unavailable romantic obsession of John Heard’s character. And in by George Roy Hill’s The World According to Garp (1982), she took on the pivotal role of Helen Holm, a smart, fiercely independent woman who catches T.S. Garp’s (Robin Williams) eye, marries him, betrays his trust and ultimately becomes a passionate defender of his legacy.
Watch a 1982 interview about her work in Garphere.
Mary Beth Hurt with Robin Williams in 1982’s ‘The World According to Garp.’
Warner Brothers/Courtesy Everett Collection
Hurt rarely enjoyed top billing during her career, and that’s the way she preferred it.
“I’ve never been extremely comfortable playing the lead,” she explained in a 2010 interview. “I don’t like the responsibility; there’s a feeling that I have to be good. Besides, I found secondary parts much more interesting, especially when I was younger and the ingénue roles were pretty bland.
“I never felt very beautiful, or incredibly smart or witty, so I was always looking for something about [roles] that intrigued me. And I would sort of twist that character in a way because I remember thinking that an ingénue character doesn’t ever think they’re an ingénue. They think they’re a person, and they have idiosyncrasies. Those idiosyncrasies interested me.”
Mary Beth Supinger was born on Sept. 26, 1946, in Marshalltown, Iowa. Her father, Forrest, had been a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during World War II, and her mother, Dolores, took her and her sisters to see plays in Des Moines.
“It wasn’t until I saw a play at our high school — I must have been in the eighth grade — that I realized that it was something you could do,” she said.
Before she starred in Otto Preminger’s Saint Joan (1957) and Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (1960), Seberg used to babysit her.
“She was just a neighborhood kid,” Hurt said. “We lived on Summit Street, which was between 6th and 7th. And the Sebergs lived on 6th Street. Her father was a pharmacist and my grandfather was a pharmacist, so the families had known each other for a while.”
After graduating from Marshalltown High School, she enrolled at the University of Iowa to study drama. In college, she was selected to join the Mortar Board, a national honorary service society for women.
With a bachelor of arts degree, Hurt continued her graduate theater studies at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts in 1969, and she met and married William Hurt while in New York. Her next stop was Ealing, the district in West London, where she performed with the theater troupe The Questors.
Mary Beth Hurt on Broadway in 1974’s ‘Love for Love.’
Van Williams/Courtesy Everett Collection
At Joseph Papp’s Public Theater, she played Celia in a 1973 production of As You Like It for the New York Shakespeare Festival. Her other efforts with the company included roles in Pericles, Prince of Tyre, Othello, One Shoe Off and More Than You Deserve before she made her Broadway debut in 1974 by playing Miss Prue in a revival of Love for Love, directed by Hal Prince.
Hurt’s first Tony nom came in 1976 for her turn in a revival of the comedy Trelawny of the “Wells.” Among those sharing the stage with her were John Lithgow, Mandy Patinkin, Jeffrey Jones, Christopher Hewett, Michael Tucker and, in her Broadway debut, Meryl Streep.
She originated the role of Meg in the Manhattan Theatre Club’s off-Broadway production of Crimes of the Heart and received an Obie Award, then accompanied the drama to Broadway.
Her third Tony nom came in 1986 for her performance in the Michael Frayn drama Benefactors, about an architect’s attempts to revitalize a run-down London neighborhood. It gave Hurt the chance to work with longtime friend Glenn Close (the two first met on Love for Love andstarred opposite each other in The World According to Garp) and Waterston, who had played her love interest in Interiors.
Hurt’s Broadway résumé included 1974’s The Rules of the Game; 1975’s The Member of the Wedding (where Close was her understudy); 1976’s Secret Service and Boy Meets Girl; 1977’s The Cherry Orchard; 1981’s Twyla Tharp Dance; 1983’s The Misanthrope; 1996’s A Delicate Balance (from Edward Albee); 2008’s Top Girls; and 2011’s The House of Blue Leaves.
She and Schrader married in August 1983 in Chicago, and she appeared in four films he directed: Light Sleeper (1992), Affliction (1997), The Walker (2007) and Adam Resurrected (2008).
Mary Beth Hurt with her ‘Chilly Scenes of Winter’ co-star John Heard in 1979.
United Artists/Courtesy Everett Collection
She also worked on the big screen in A Change of Seasons (1980), Martin Scorsese’s The Age of Innocence (1993), D.A.R.Y.L. (1985), the Schrader-penned Bringing Out the Dead (1999), The Family Man (2000), M. Night Shyamalan’s Lady in the Water (2006), The Dead Girl (2006), Untraceable (2008) and Change in the Air (2018).
And for television, she starred on the 1988-89 NBC drama Tattinger’s and had a memorable guest-starring turn alongside Henry Winkler on a 2002 episode of Law & Order: SVU.
Survivors also include her children, Molly and Sam.
In the 1989 Times piece, Hurt described her process for the theater. “I try not to think about the play, or the part, until I start rehearsals,” she said. “And then I just try everything that comes to mind, until one thing makes sense.
“You may say, ‘Oh, she’s very selfish,’ and so you add that to the character. And then maybe a few weeks later you say, ‘She’s selfish, but she’s well intentioned,’ which tempers the selfishness. It’s just a process of addition and subtraction.”
Nick Cannon is getting candid about his political views.
The comedian-producer was joined by model Amber Rose on a recent episode of his show, Big Drive, where he called the Democratic Party “the party of the KKK.”
After Rose claimed that Democrats “don’t care about Black people, don’t care about people of color and the Republicans do,” Cannon replied, “I agree with you 100 percent.”
The Masked Singer host continued, “People don’t know that the Democrats are the party of the KKK. People don’t know that the Republicans are the party that freed the slaves. I mean, both of you and I have some conservative views. You’re just a little bit more outspoken than I am. And honestly, I don’t subscribe to either party. I rock with W. E. B. Du Bois, when he said there’s no such thing as two parties. It’s just one evil party with two different names.”
Rose added that she’s “not married to any party” but voted for Donald Trump in the 2024 U.S. presidential election because “we had two options and he was definitely by far the better option for us.”
When she said she mostly agrees with how Trump’s second term is going, Cannon enthusiastically jumped in, saying, “motherfucker’s cleaning house. He’s doing what he said he was gonna do.”
“We got the Gulf of America now,” Cannon added. “He’s like the club. He’s charging a $5 million bottle service fee to get into the country. I fuck with Trump.”
The Wild ‘N Out creator’s claims were partially correct. Regarding who founded the KKK, the white supremacist group was not established entirely by the Democratic Party, but rather by some people who were largely Democrats in the post-Civil War South, the Associated Press reported.
As for the Republican Party, it was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists. Several years later, then-President Abraham Lincoln, a member of the Republican Party, issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, freeing all slaves living in Confederate states who were against the Union. Slavery was officially abolished in the United States when the 13th Amendment was passed in 1865.
Bluesky is the latest social media platform to throw its hat into the AI chatbot ring. Bluesky, but specifically its chief innovation officer Jay Graber and her new Exploration team, built a new AI assistant called Attie that’s designed to help users create custom feeds. Graber called Attie an “agentic social app” that’s built on its its open-source framework called the AT Protocol.
To use Attie, users can punch in prompts in natural language to generate social feeds without having to know how to code. On the Attie website, examples include prompts like, “Show me electronic music and experimental sound from people in my network” or “Builders working on agent infrastructure and open protocol design.”
Attie
“It feels more like having a conversation than configuring software,” Graber described Attie in a blog post. “You describe the sort of posts you want to see, and the coding agent builds the feed you described.”
Graber added that Attie is a separate app from Bluesky and users don’t have to use the new AI assistant if they don’t want to. However, since Attie and Bluesky were built on the same framework, it could mean there will be some cross-app implementation between the two or any other app built on the AT Protocol. Attie is currently available on an invite-only closed beta, but anyone interested can sign up for the waitlist on its website in the meantime.
James Blake has asked for his name to be removed from the production credits of Kanye West’s track “This One Here,” featured on the artist now known as Ye’s new-ish album “Bully.”
Blake says his “original version” of the track, which was recorded several years ago, “is completely different in spirit.”
In a post on Vault, the direct-to-fan streaming platform that Blake joined after parting ways with his longtime label Universal, he wrote, “The way I pitched his vocals and constructed the track from his freestyle is partiaully there, majorly peppered with other newer vocal takes etc…. Happy for the fans but I’ve asked to be taken off the producer credits for now as I don’t want to take credit for other people’s work and this version isn’t what I created with Ye.
“It’s not personal!” he added. “I just hit a point where [I] don’t want to be credited on music where I can’t affect the end result.”
Vault
Like most of West’s releases over the past decade, “Bully” has gone through multiple different iterations before it was officially released. The two artists have collaborated several times over the years, but not recently.
Both the request and the comment, which were first reported by Complex, are consistent with comments Blake has made in past interviews with Variety. While he celebrated West playing an unreleased collaboration between the two at an afterparty in London in 2022, he declined to comment when asked by Variety about their friendship a year later, after West had made multiple antisemitic comments.
“We haven’t seen each other for a little while,” he said, before adding with a sigh, “I think it’s probably a no-comment from me… and I say that with sadness.” He said in the same interview that he’s asked for his name to be removed from songs that he felt had evolved so far beyond his original contributions that he didn’t deserve or want credit, although he did not give examples.
At the time of this article’s publication, Blake’s credit remained on the song on major streaming services.
“Trying Times,” Blake’s new album — his first since leaving Universal and going fully independent — debuted at No. 3 on the U.K. charts earlier this month. Over the past few years Blake, disillusioned with the traditional music business, has taken control of virtually every aspect of his professional career, joining forces with the independent label Good Boy and direct-to-fan platforms like Vault and B-side ticketing.
“Happy Death Day” star Jessica Rothe is happy to relive another day as Tree Gelbman in the franchise’s third installment.
Rothe, who starred in the 2017 film “Happy Death Day” and its 2019 sequel, “Happy Death Day 2U,” recently revealed that writer and director Christopher Landon “has the whole third one figured out” while discussing the future of the “Groundhog Day”-style horror-comedy franchise.
“I think that is the power of zeitgeist. I think the more we ask, and the more we put it into the universe, it will happen,” she told ScreenRant. “Because the truth is, Chris Landon, our brilliant, fearless writer/director, he has the whole third one figured out.”
In “Happy Death Day,” Rothe plays a college student named Tree, who is murdered on her birthday, only to wake up at the beginning of the day. As the nightmarish day keeps repeating itself and ending in her death every time, she has to uncover her killer’s identity in order to stop the cycle. The sequel incorporates sci-fi elements, as Tree finds herself in a parallel universe as a result of her friend’s time-travel experiments.
Rothe added, “I think at this point, it’s just logistics, and all I’ll say to you and the fans is, whether it’s next year or when I’m 65, pulling a Jamie Lee Curtis coming back for ‘Halloween,’ I will be there to finish Tree’s story. So, it’s just a matter of when they get all their ducks in a row.”
Rothe also stated she’d be game for a crossover event amongst all of Landon’s films, saying, “I’m sure he also has his version of the MCU, but the ‘ChrisCU’ with ‘Freaky,’ ‘Happy Death Day,’ ‘We Have a Ghost’ and ‘Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse,’ they all could totally live in the same universe. That’s the crossover that I need right now in my life.”
The latest version of the crypto bill Clarity Act is in the spotlight mostly because of its stablecoin rules. In practice, it may land hardest on decentralized finance (DeFi) and tokens tied to it, according to a report by 10x Research.
At the center of the proposal is a ban on offering yield — or anything resembling it like rewards — on stablecoin balances. That effectively ends the idea of stablecoins as onchain savings products and redefines them as pure payment rails.
“This represents a clear re-centralization of yield,” wrote Markus Thielen, founder of 10xResearch. This is because the proposal pulls back yield into banks, money market funds and regulated wrappers, leaving crypto-native platforms with less room to compete on returns.
That shift could also hit DeFi, despite early hopes it might benefit.
The logic was that if centralized platforms can’t offer yield, users would move onchain, Thielen said.
But that assumes DeFi escapes the same rules. In practice, the Clarity framework is likely to extend into front-end interfaces and token models, especially where fee generation or governance starts to resemble equity, he said.
That puts a wide swath of the sector in focus. Decentralized exchanges like Uniswap (UNI), and dYdX (DYDX), as well as lending protocols like Aave and , could face tighter constraints around how they operate and distribute value, the report argued. The result could be lower volumes, reduced liquidity and weaker token demand.
On the other hand, the proposed regulation is “structurally bullish” for infrastructure players like Circle (CRCL) as it embeds stablecoins deeper into payment rails, Thielen said.