Back in December, when SFWA announced that it was updating its rules for the Nebula Awards. Works written entirely by large language models would not be eligible, while authors who used LLMs "at any point during the writing process" had to disclose that use, allowing award voters to make their own decisions about whether that usage would affect their support.
It's a simple but effective premise: Your hero dies. He awakens, only to relive his last day. He dies again. Over and over, this cycle happens until our hero has conquered the time-loop he's stuck in, having become stronger, faster, and wiser in the thousands of times that he's been resurrected. It's the video game conceit, as a thrilling alien invasion story.
Subsequently, runaway children turned the valley into a fortress, surviving on food they could catch or grow, with occasional forays into the towns below. Riley has heard the rumours, but it is only when she sees a green-clad boy or is it a girl? hovering outside her bedroom window offering directions on how to find Nowhere that she realises this might be her chance to escape and save her little brother from their sadistic guardian.
There is a simple answer to the best way to play Fallout: New Vegas, but the answer itself isn't what I would call simple or easy. The best way to play this classic RPG is on PC and with a ton of mods. Thankfully, there's a very handy guide out there that I used recently to turn New Vegas's somewhat messy PC port into a fine-tuned experience: The Viva New Vegas comprehensive mod guide.
But if a reluctance to add yet another subscription to your streaming rotation means you haven't watched Amazon's surprisingly excellent adaptation yet, you might be interested to know that the company is currently releasing season one for free on the Prime Video YouTube channel.
BBC Threads, directed by Mick Jackson, follows two families in Sheffield as they try to survive a direct hit from a nuclear bomb. It pulls no punches as its characters fall one by one, before ultimately only focusing on pregnant Ruth (Karen Meagher) as she tries to survive and carve out a life for her and her child. Meticulously researched, it presents a bleak picture of what civilization would look like after nuclear winter, including the ozone layer weakening, resulting in blindness and skin cancer, and the degradation of the English language itself.
As I saw on GamesRadar, Amazon Prime's official YouTube channels around the world have added the first two episodes of 2024's first season of Fallout to watch for free. (Well, you know, YouTube ads still appear if you've not, er, prevented that.) The live-action adaptation of Interplay and Bethesda's Fallout games was wildly better than anyone could have hoped, and proved a colossal hit for Amazon's streaming service.