PC Gamer US Edition
STANZ AND DELIVER
Gozer your own way in GHOSTBUSTERS: THE VIDEO GAME
1 min |
October 2025
PC Gamer US Edition
WALK THE LINE
The ants know the score in THE SPIRIT OF THE ANTS
1 min |
October 2025
PC Gamer US Edition
SEXYRO
STELLAR BLADE leans on its inspiration a little too much
3 min |
October 2025
Popular Woodworking
Grooving Plane
This traditional plane is a fun way to cut grooves, and can be made in half of a day.
7 min |
October 2025 - Issue 285
Popular Woodworking
Meyer Woodworks Filter Shaker
I've said it once, and I'll say it again: my dust collection system is one of my favorite things in my shop.
1 min |
October 2025 - Issue 285
The New Yorker
CITY OF LUCK
Four ways New Yorkers have gambled.
10+ min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
ON THE WATER POWER TRIP
One foggy morning this spring, a ferryboat traversed the choppy waters between lower Manhattan and Governors Island. It was just after 7 A.M.—the first run of the day. But, for the boat, it was almost sunset. “She’s our tether,” a lightly bearded passenger named Sebastian Coss said. Coss, a former Governors Island staffer, was referring to the ferry, whose official name is the Lt. Samuel S. Coursen.
3 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
SPF Nostalgia
Sunscreen, as a consumer good, tends to fall into the gloppy gray area between need and want. We are all aware that the sun, as dazzling and mood-bolstering as it may be, is an unmerciful adversary. Sustained exposure to UV radiation, the science tells us, comes with a roster of terrible potentialities, from skin cancer to cataracts to leathery wrinkles. So the need is clear; but what about the want? I have rarely stood in the sunblock aisle of a drugstore and found myself overwhelmed with desire. My concerns are practical: I am pale and quick to crisp. Give me high SPF, at a reasonably low price, and I'm sold.
1 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
LIVE LONG AND PROSPER
The quest to extend the human life span and get rich doing it.
10+ min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
HOW-TO DEPT.NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH
John Wilson, the thirty-eight-year-old filmmaker, was drinking iced coffee on his home turf of Ridgewood, Queens, one recent morning. He was in Rudy’s Bakery and Cafe, a venerable neighborhood joint, feeling on edge.
3 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
SENSE AND SENSIBILITY
What James Schuyler's poetry obscured and revealed.
10+ min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
STERLING CHARACTER
“Washington Black,” on Hulu.
5 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
ROMANTIQUE
A torrent of forgotten French opera on the Bru Zane label.
6 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
Jane Mayer on John Hersey’s “Hiroshima”
Thirty years after this magazine published John Hersey’s “Hiroshima,” I sat in his classroom at Yale, hoping to learn how to write with even a fraction of his power. When “Hiroshima” appeared, in the August 31, 1946, issue, it was the scoop of the century—the first unvarnished account by an American reporter of the nuclear blast that obliterated the city. Hersey’s prose was spare, allowing the horror to emerge word by word. A man tried to lift a woman out of a sandpit, “but her skin slipped off in huge, glove-like pieces.” The detonation buried a woman and her infant alive: “When she had dug herself free, she had discovered that the baby was choking, its mouth full of dirt. With her little finger, she had carefully cleaned out the infant’s mouth, and for a time the child had breathed normally and seemed all right; then suddenly it had died.”
2 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
THE TALK OF THE TOWN
The young Donald Trump was the Nelson Muntz of Jamaica Estates. (Or was he its Draco Malfoy? Scholars will debate such questions for generations.)
4 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
DEATH TO THE SHAH
Nobody expected the Iranian Revolution. Not even the revolutionaries.
10+ min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
ENEMY OF THE GOOD
The pain of perfectionism.
10+ min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
DEPT. OF TOURISM SIGN HERE, PLEASE
The “world’s greatest pedestrian,” as an old magazine once put it, may have been a farm boy born outside Zagreb, Croatia, in 1878. He has no Wikipedia page (yet!), though in his heyday his press coverage was abundant.
3 min |
August 11, 2025
The New Yorker
CRIME SCENE
Immigrants showing up for court dates in Manhattan must now navigate a spectacle of intimidation.
1 min |
August 11, 2025
Fortune US
POLITICS: GEN Z'S WAKE-UP CALL TO CORPORATE AMERICA
SEBASTIAN LEON MARTINEZ had pounded the pavement for New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani from frigid 23-degree cold snaps in January to the 100-degree day in June when the young democratic socialist stunned the political establishment by winning the primary for the Democratic nomination.
6 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
IN FOCUS THE MOOCH'S SECOND ACT: ANTHONY SCARAMUCCI'S POST-PARTISAN AMERICAN DREAM
ANTHONY SCARAMUCCI strides into the seaside ballroom of Bermuda's plush Hamilton Princess Hotel, sporting a well-tailored suit, a spangled American flag pin, a Mickey Mouse watch, and plenty of hair gel.
4 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
Can Alexandr Wang Bring Meta AI Supremacy?
The 28-year-old startup founder has been tapped by Mark Zuckerberg to lead an AI dream team with hundreds of billions in resources and orders to achieve superintelligence. No pressure.
8 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
THE LEGACY OF REGENERATION
On the edge of the Saudi coast, where turquoise waters kiss untouched coral reefs and mangroves hold natural wisdom in their roots, Red Sea Global is rewriting the rules of travel. This isn't luxury for luxury's sake—it's a vision that fuses ambition with conscience, and aesthetics with science. And at its heart is one simple, radical idea: regeneration.
7 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
INVEST IS IT SAFE TO GET BACK IN THE IPO WATERS?
INVESTORS kicked off 2025 hoping to see the healthy return of what had become a rare species: the initial public offering, or IPO. After three years of stalled transactions and historically low deal activity, many believed the Trump administration would prioritize deregulation and economic growth, triggering a healthy flurry of new IPOs in the process.
5 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
PASSIONS FOR THE WATCH LOVER WHO HAS EVERYTHING, A VISIT TO THE SOURCE
THE SEVEN SWITCHBACKS up to the top of Bürgenstock mountain are emotional for Dr. Pablo Richard.
4 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
MOVE FAST AND REMAKE THINGS
AI is transforming every industry— and we may look back on this moment as the calm before the storm.
2 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
Is this man a Google killer?
Perplexity and founder Aravind Srinivas are using AI to reshape how people find information online. They're forcing giants like Google and Apple to figure out how to beat them—or buy them.
10+ min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
BYD BEAT TESLA. NOW IT'S IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT.
China’s champion electric-vehicle manufacturer is outselling Tesla and Volkswagen in the global EV race—and a spate of new factories could help it dominate markets outside China.
9 min |
August - September 2025
Fortune US
BIG OIL'S GREEN RETREAT
In 2005, BP was No. 2 on the Fortune Global 500 and was carving out a role as an early adapter to the green energy transition. Now there's speculation about whether the struggling $85 billion supermajor will survive as a freestanding company.
7 min |
August - September 2025
Techlife News
NVIDIA'S $4 TRILLION VALUE MARKS A NEW ERA FOR AI, AND THE GROWTH HAS JUST BEGUN
Nvidia has surged past a $4 trillion market capitalization, becoming the world’s most valuable publicly traded company—and analysts suggest this is only the beginning of its growth trajectory.
3 min |