So they built a whole third act around a character they were legally barred from depicting. That is some spectacular due diligence right there.
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So they built a whole third act around a character they were legally barred from depicting. That is some spectacular due diligence right there.
The article is a little too cheerful about how easy the transition is. The physical and operational realities are genuinely demanding. But the opportunity is absolutely real if you go in with clear eyes.
Eleceed at eleven feels right given the CGI question mark hanging over it. DandeLion is talented but The First Slam Dunk worked because the sport itself has natural 3D movement. Superpowers and cat comedy are different challenges.
Every opponent in this series is technically the hero of their own story and Yu is the disaster that ends it. The series running nearly 123 episodes of that structure without it becoming repetitive is an extraordinary achievement.
Does anyone actually know who the artist is? The writer gets mentioned constantly but I feel like the artist deserves way more credit for what makes this series special.
The name localization thing is a real adjustment but it is standard practice for Japanese dubs of Korean properties. Solo Leveling did the same thing and after a few episodes you just adjust.
Does anyone else feel like the Solo Leveling comparisons are getting a little tired? Yes both series come from Redice Studio and share some DNA but Tomb Raider King does enough differently to stand on its own feet.
Does the free plan actually work for normal use, or is the 300 minutes monthly limit a constant wall? Asking because that is less than one hour per week for a single person.
I work in literary translation and the ghostwriting premise is doing something quite clever because it puts language itself at the center of a romance story. Who speaks for whom and whether borrowed words can still carry real feeling are questions with serious literary history behind them.
Speaking as someone who got into manhwa through anime adaptations, the upcoming ORV anime announcement has brought a huge wave of readers to the source material and regression genre recommendations are everywhere right now.
In a manhwa landscape dominated by dungeon crawling, regression narratives, and power fantasies, The Greatest Estate Developer stands out by asking a simple question: what if the protagonist's greatest weapon wasn't a sword or magic system, but civil engineering knowledge? This bizarre premise transforms into one of the most entertaining, genuinely funny, and surprisingly heartfelt series currently running, proving that innovation in storytelling comes from unexpected places. The series takes the familiar isekai setup where a modern person finds themselves in a fantasy world and completely subverts expectations. Instead of becoming an adventurer or hero, protagonist Kim Suho uses his engineering knowledge to revolutionize construction, infrastructure, and economic development. What sounds like it should be boring becomes absolutely captivating through sharp writing, excellent comedic timing, and genuine passion for showing how infrastructure improves lives.
The software development world just witnessed something unprecedented. A European startup called Lovable reached $20 million in annual recurring revenue in just two months, making it potentially the fastest-growing startup in European history. But here's the twist that's making traditional software agencies nervous: they did it by giving non-technical founders the power to build full-stack applications without writing a single line of code. For years, the promise of no-code tools has been the same: anyone can build an app. But the reality has always been different. You'd create a beautiful frontend, get excited about your progress, and then hit the technical cliff. Suddenly you needed to configure databases, set up authentication, manage API keys, and deploy to servers. The "no-code" dream became a "hire-a-developer-anyway" nightmare.
When a company's revenue jumps from $10 million to $100 million in nine months, you pay attention. When that growth comes from an AI agent that builds entire applications autonomously, you realize something fundamental just changed in software development. Replit Agent represents that change, and the numbers prove developers are ready for it. Replit started as a browser-based coding environment for education. Students could write Python or JavaScript without installing anything locally. Teachers loved it because setup time vanished. But the company saw something bigger. If you could run code in the browser, why not let AI write that code? That question led to Agent 3, an AI that doesn't just suggest code completions. It builds entire applications from scratch.
What happens to the Ray-Ban glasses when this rolls out to the hardware ecosystem? That is where the ambient AI angle gets genuinely interesting and genuinely creepy in equal measure.
Wait, what about the broader stablecoin picture? If institutions are rotating in through ETFs, stablecoin inflows to exchanges should be showing a big spike too. Has anyone checked on-chain data?
The way the silver accessories complement each other is so well thought out. I usually struggle with matching my metals but this is giving me inspiration
Wonder if silver metallic jeans would work as a more wearable alternative to the sequins
You could make this work for fall by adding a cropped leather jacket and switching to ankle boots
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