After Artemis II, NASA looks to SpaceX, Blue Origin for Moon landings
https://atlas.whatip.xyz/post.php?slug=after-artemis-ii-nasa-looks-to-spacex-blue-origin-for-moon-landings
<p>With Artemis II successfully completing its historic lunar mission on Friday
#landings #artemis #spacex #origin
After Artemis II, NASA looks to SpaceX, Blue Origin for Moon landings

With Artemis II successfully completing its historic lunar mission on Friday, NASA is banking on billionaires Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk for the next step: landing astronauts on the Moon. The post After...

🎁Netmarble rolled out patch 1.1 for The Seven Deadly Sins: Origin, spotlight on hero Daisy in a limited banner and a FREE SSR ticket for everyone.

A super-hard boss-trial mode Abyss opened for vets; 'Path of Exploration' missions eased, more starting resources, faster world gathering, enemy behavior tuned on 'Hell', option to disable others' VFX, season 1 of the battle pass is live, and the group-connect crash has been fixed.

#SteamAndEpic #Exploration #Netmarble #Deadly #Origin #Seven

Archspire – Too Fast to Die Review By Alekhines Gun

After no less than three albums’ worth of glowing praise from my great predecessor Kronos, it’s safe to say that a new Archspire is a big deal in the hall.1 One blistering offering after another has cemented these lads as among the forerunners of tech-death, pushing BPM and bass-string structural integrity in equal measure. But the human body, alas, has limits, and with previous release Bleed the Future already pushing the speedometer well into the red, one could be forgiven for invoking the oldest of clichés: Where do they go from here? There’s only so much speed, so much scale wankery to be derived from mere flesh and bone. With a bit of a self-referential title in Too Fast to Die, Archspire have made their mission statement clear and concise; will their meteoric rise continue to light up the sky, or will their first independent release see them crash and burn?

Archspire have officially been around long enough to say “Expect the expected.” Too Fast to Die continues the band’s whirlwind musical trajectory, with an emphasis on scorching tempos and arpeggios delivered at string-withering pace. New drummer Spence Moore (formerly of Inferi, among others) plays like the lives of his family depend on it, etching his identity into the music with a smorgasbord of snare fills and delightful rhythmic shifts which somehow manage to maintain a blasting pace without ever smearing together into one double-bass-filled haze. Vocalist Oliver Aleron continues to sound pulled from an alternate universe where Atilla doesn’t suck,2 spitting syllable-heavy diatribes with gleeful abandon and an s-tier talent for phrasing which lets him compliment the intensity rather than overwhelm it. Enough breathing room is given to the bass, letting Jared Smith fill in the cracks with sweeps that rumble and clang under the chords with vibrancy and potent kinetic energy (“Red Goliath”) before disappearing back under the assault. Everything is excellently executed, engaging, and familiar.

Too Fast to Die by Archspire

And yet, there is a clear rumbling of growth and evolution in the Archspire camp. Rather than openly go out of their way to crank all the knobs from 11 to 12, Too Fast to Die puts heavy stock on pathos-riddled melody, with a heavier leaning on atmospheric theatrics and amphitheater-ready harmonies which don’t seek to overwhelm as much as invigorate and inspire. Album highlight “Carrion Ladder” features a midsection with a pair of leads so relatively simple a fledgling guitar student could learn to play them, yet thanks to the band’s compositional mastery, this simplicity isn’t an anticlimactic letdown as much as a genuine moment of appreciable, raw beauty, not to mention it features one of Oliver’s catchiest vocal parts. Such moments are littered throughout the album, with the borderline emotional chug section of “Limb of Leviticus” transitioning into the band’s traditional plucked interludes with melancholy rather than neo-classical sheen. Archspire’s interludes in older albums would have sounded just as appropriate if played by harpsichord as much as guitar, but Too Fast to Die eschews just a touch of that dual identity to place a heavier focus on thematic coherence with massive dividends.

Nevertheless, this is still a death metal record, and any gushing over emotive power and atmospheric bombast shouldn’t frighten away fans. “Liminal Cypher” features an absolutely devastating slamming section, and “Deadbolt the Backward” briefly dispenses with the atmospheres and opts for sudden shifts of waltz time signatures and straightforward brutality akin to Deeds of Flesh covering an Origin song. The most tendinitis-inducing of leads kick down your front door in “Anomalous Descent” only to suddenly shift identities and flirt with the briefest of hardcore stylings while putting an exclamation point on the proceedings with honest-to-goodness gang vocals. Somehow, this works. While Archspire haven’t quite gone prog on us with clean vocals and a litany of guest instruments (thank God), it’s delightful to see them stretching their artistic wings in so many directions and skillsets, despite promotional material perhaps pitching them as a one-trick pony of speed.

I haven’t been as high on Archspire as some of my colleagues. I enjoyed them, but felt such a style could only be mined so much. Too Fast to Die is Archspire commanding me to take those opinions and violate myself with them, track after track after track. This album sees the band embracing their not-so-newfound star status and offering an experience that is riddled with crowd-engaging moments, meticulously engineered pit fodder, and leads of such beauty that you could sing them in the shower, without sacrificing an ounce of the Africanized-bees-on-red-bull songwriting backbone. “Where do they go from here?” I wondered? Well, the answer is “bigger and better”, and if we are entering a new era of grandiosity over raw technique, I’m so here for it. You should be, too.

Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: NA | Format Reviewed: Yet another stream, come on, guys
Label: Self-release
Website: Album Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

#2026 #40 #Apr26 #Archspire #Atilla #CanadianMetal #DeedsOfFlesh #Inferi #Origin #Review #Reviews #SelfRelase #Techdeath #TooFastToDie
#すいだか 2話切り抜き「こんな素敵な人と出会えるなんて…」絶望の真っ只中の蓉子を待ち受けるのは、毎週水曜日の“終わらない不倫”という名の地獄―。 https://www.vivizine.com/1170549/ #202604 #actor #drama #origin #suidaka #俳優 #柾木玲弥

#Browser-Vergleich 2026: Welcher schützt deine Daten WIRKLICH?

#Google hat #uBlock #Origin auf #Chrome abgeschaltet – den besten Adblocker der Welt.

In diesem Video teste ich die wichtigsten Browser für Desktop und Handy mit meinem 5-Kategorien-Scoring-System: Telemetrie, Tracker-Blocking, Fingerprint-Schutz, DNS & IP-Schutz und Open Source. Am Ende bekommst du drei klare Empfehlungen – je nachdem, wie viel Privatsphäre du wirklich willst.

#PrivacyTutor

@privacytutor

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Bl0b3vWcBuA

Browser-Vergleich 2026: Welcher schützt deine Daten WIRKLICH?

YouTube
#すいだか 1話切り抜き「人のお弁当、勝手に見ないで」職場に一人はいる「距離感バグってる後輩」ウザいけどどこか憎めない…? https://www.vivizine.com/1168788/ #202604 #actor #drama #origin #suidaka #俳優 #柾木玲弥

Netmarble admits The Seven Deadly Sins: Origin stumbled, despite a 65,000 peak it only has 57% positive reviews due to poor optimization and a clunky UI, so the studio needed to respond.

In Dev Note #8 they promise a sizable patch on April 8: easier grind, a boss Abyss difficulty and automatic healing on dungeon entry, plus a ticket for any SSR as an apology to win players back. Small but tasty FREEBIE 😏

#SteamAndEpic #Netmarble #FREEBIE #Deadly #Origin #Seven