Annexion in dieser Woche: Warum der Westen gerade jetzt besonnen bleiben sollte

Themen des Tages: Moskau zieht Zeitplan in der Ost-Ukraine durch – Anschluss am Freitag. Fassungslosigkeit im Westen treibt seltsame Blüten. Und warum Europa der Gaskrise nicht entkommt.

Themen des Tages: Moskau zieht Zeitplan in der Ost-Ukraine durch – Anschluss am Freitag. Fassungslosigkeit im Westen treibt seltsame Blüten. Und warum Europa der Gaskrise nicht entkommt.

How hobbyist hackers are preserving Pokémon’s past—and shaping its future

Enthusiasts are intent on improving old games, whether Nintendo likes it or not.

How hobbyist hackers are preserving Pokémon’s past—and shaping its future

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Earlier this year, Pokémon Legends: Arceus reinvigorated developer Game Freak’s iconic series by shaking up a formula that had gone largely unchanged for more than 25 years. But that recent bout of experimentation doesn’t diminish just how long the Poké-formula has remained mostly static. For two and a half decades, the developer essentially released the same game over and over, and fans like me ate it up like pulled Lechonk. Perhaps disappointingly, the series appears to be resuming its usual course with the more traditional Scarlet & Violet launch this November.

Whether Legends will form an enduring and fresh new branch on Pokémon’s franchise tree is the kind of philosophical quandary that could make Xatu spend all day staring at the sun.

But for those who look beyond Nintendo’s official releases, the Pokémon series is anything but stale. While Nintendo, the games' publisher, hasn't worked to make older Pokémon games accessible on modern hardware—or affordable on older gear—a certain demographic of dedicated fans has taken it upon themselves to not just preserve legacy Pokémon titles but to actively improve them. These volunteer ROM hackers and preservationists work to keep the passions of an aging generation of Pokémon masters alive, all while fighting occasionally brutal legal crackdowns from Nintendo.

Read 47 remaining paragraphs | Comments

How hobbyist hackers are preserving Pokémon’s past—and shaping its future

Enthusiasts are intent on improving old games, whether Nintendo likes it or not.

How hobbyist hackers are preserving Pokémon’s past—and shaping its future

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Earlier this year, Pokémon Legends: Arceus reinvigorated developer Game Freak’s iconic series by shaking up a formula that had gone largely unchanged for more than 25 years. But that recent bout of experimentation doesn’t diminish just how long the Poké-formula has remained mostly static. For two and a half decades, the developer essentially released the same game over and over, and fans like me ate it up like pulled Lechonk. Perhaps disappointingly, the series appears to be resuming its usual course with the more traditional Scarlet & Violet launch this November.

Whether Legends will form an enduring and fresh new branch on Pokémon’s franchise tree is the kind of philosophical quandary that could make Xatu spend all day staring at the sun.

But for those who look beyond Nintendo’s official releases, the Pokémon series is anything but stale. While Nintendo, the games' publisher, hasn't worked to make older Pokémon games accessible on modern hardware—or affordable on older gear—a certain demographic of dedicated fans has taken it upon themselves to not just preserve legacy Pokémon titles but to actively improve them. These volunteer ROM hackers and preservationists work to keep the passions of an aging generation of Pokémon masters alive, all while fighting occasionally brutal legal crackdowns from Nintendo.

Read 47 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Rosa Rückscheinformular: Deutsche Post digitalisiert Einschreiben mit Rückschein

Das rosa Rückscheinformular wird von der Post abgeschafft. Nach der Zustellung des Einschreibens gibt es eine digitalisierte Empfängerunterschrift und ein Bild des Briefes. (Post, Paypal)

Das rosa Rückscheinformular wird von der Post abgeschafft. Nach der Zustellung des Einschreibens gibt es eine digitalisierte Empfängerunterschrift und ein Bild des Briefes. (Post, Paypal)