HBO is developing a television series based on the popular video game Baldur's Gate, with The Last of Us co-creator Craig Mazin attached as creator, writer, executive producer, and showrunner, according to The Verge. The series will continue the story of Baldur's Gate 3, the hit RPG from Larian Studios, and is set to feature new protagonists, though existing characters from the game are planned to return.
The announcement was made public by Deadline, and further details, such as a release date, have not been released. The Verge reported that the show is in development.
In other entertainment news, the path of the horror film "Iron Lung" to theaters was unique, according to The Verge. The movie, based on a video game, is a small-budget horror flick that has some cool ideas and pulls them off in an extremely efficient way, creating a sense of tension.
Meanwhile, in the tech world, Republicans attacked Netflix during a Senate hearing, criticizing the streaming service for its "woke" ideology, according to The Verge. The hearing, which initially focused on antitrust issues related to the Warner Bros. merger, shifted to a performative attack on Netflix's content.
In gaming news, the Switch 2 is getting a new Virtual Console of sorts, according to Ars Technica. Hamster Corporation is offering downloadable versions of retro console games for direct individual purchase on the Switch 2, starting today. This comes after Nintendo replaced its Virtual Console with a subscription service.
Finally, in Silicon Valley, loyalty appears to be waning, as evidenced by recent acqui-hires in the AI space, according to Wired. Meta invested more than $14 billion in Scale AI and brought on its CEO, Alexandr Wang. Google spent $2.4 billion to license Windsurf's technology and fold its cofounders and research teams into DeepMind. Nvidia wagered $20 billion on Groq's inference technology and hired its CEO and other staffers. The frontier AI labs are also experiencing a high-stakes game of talent musical chairs, with OpenAI rehiring researchers who had previously left to join Mira Murati's startup, Thinking Machines.
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