Executive producer Dana Eden of the hit TV spy thriller "Tehran" was found dead in an Athens hotel room on Sunday, while western France is grappling with severe flooding that has claimed at least two lives and left 81 departments on alert. Meanwhile, the next installment of the "Silent Hill" video game series is drawing inspiration from a small fishing village in Scotland, and potential memory shortages could impact the release of the next PlayStation console.
Dana Eden, 52, was in Greece filming the fourth season of "Tehran" when she was discovered, according to Sky News. Police have launched an investigation into her death, and a production company dismissed "rumours regarding a criminal or nationalistic-related death." Israeli state broadcaster Kan reported that Eden's body was found after a relative made several attempts to reach her.
In France, weeks of relentless rain have caused widespread flooding, leading to at least two deaths and power outages affecting up to 850,000 homes, Euronews reported. Gironde and Lot-et-Garonne remain on maximum alert as the country faces one of its most intense flood episodes in years. Vigicrues reported a record number of simultaneous alerts, with 81 departments affected.
On a lighter note, the next "Silent Hill" game, titled "Townfall," is being developed by Screen Burn, a Glasgow-based studio, and is set in the fictional village of St Amelia, which is based on the real-life fishing village of St Monans in Fife, Scotland, according to BBC Technology. The game is described as the developer's "biggest and most ambitious game yet."
In other tech news, The Verge reported that Sony and Nintendo are reportedly feeling squeezed by RAM shortages due to increasing demand from AI data centers. This could potentially push back the debut of Sony's next-generation console to 2029.
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