On Thursday,Japan Archives LightSpeed Studios, a subsidiary of the Chinese game publisher Tencent Games, released “High Energy Heroes,” an adapted version of Apex Legends tailored for Chinese players. Apex Legends, a free-to-play battle royale shooter game developed by Respawn Entertainment and published by Electronic Arts in 2019, served as the source material for this adaptation. The original Apex Legends team collaborated with Tencent to create “High Energy Heroes,” combining elements of first-person shooting, teamwork, and strategic decision-making. The game places a strong emphasis on team communication, with players working together to outgun their opponents. Currently, “High Energy Heroes” has claimed the top spot on the domestic iOS free-download game list. The official website indicates that the number of pre-registered players exceeded 10 million over a month ago. [nadianshi, in Chinese]
The Perfect Symmetry of Shaker ArchitectureJhumpa Lahiri on James Salter’s “Light Years”The Provocative, Misleading Paperbacks of the 1930sWe’re Bringing Back Our #ReadEverywhere ContestI Demand Satisfaction, and Other News100 Billboards Celebrate the Allure of the WestThe Barbarism of Goebbels’s DiariesFor Graduates: The Paris Review’s Commencement Gift BoxHow Men’s Magazines Changed Our Idea of BachelorhoodStaff Picks: Solstad, Agee, GatesBeauty Is ScaryOn the Origin—and the ModernStaff Picks: Lorenzo Chiera, Michael Friedman, YuknavitchCat Pianos and Other Wondrous Imaginary InstrumentsSearching for Cy Twombly in Lexington, VirginiaPractice Safe Selfies, and Other NewsWatch how 6 planets orbit their star in perfect syncHow Men’s Magazines Changed Our Idea of BachelorhoodStaff Picks: Solstad, Agee, GatesShona Sanzgiri’s Photos of Havana—An Embarrassment of Riches Joseph Cornell, Our Queequeg by William N. Copley What We Aren’t Seeing by Francine Prose A Medieval Mother Tries Distance Learning by Esther Liberman Cuenca Five Films Enrique Vila Staff Picks: Monsters, Monuments, and Miranda July by The Paris Review Escaping Loneliness: An Interview with Adrian Tomine by Viet Thanh Nguyen The View Where I Write by John Lee Clark The Legacy of Audre Lorde by Roxane Gay Painting with a Moth’s Wing by The Paris Review Redux: A Ball of Waxy Light by The Paris Review What Remains by Kerri Arsenault Our Interminable Election Eve by Jonah Goldman Kay Redux: A World Awash in Truth by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 26 by The Paris Review Staff Picks: People, Places, and Poems by The Paris Review The Digital Face by Namwali Serpell Staff Picks: Rats, Rereaders, and Radio Towers by The Paris Review When Murakami Came to the States by David Karashima Staff Picks: Witches, Glitches, and Governesses by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Haiku, Hearts, and Homes by The Paris Review
1.9307s , 8183.109375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Japan Archives】,Steady Information Network