https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/livestory/artemis-ii-mission-landing-splashdown-nasa-9.7159426?cmp=rss
A WebGPU Implementation of Augmented Vertex Block Descent
https://github.com/jure/webphysics
#HackerNews #WebGPU #AugmentedReality #VertexBlock #Descent #GitHub #Jure
đź Aliens: Dark Descent now has full Steam Deck support, the entire campaign is playable handheld: lead your marine squad, manage resources and fight xenomorphs ON-THE-GO.
The optimization keeps the tension intact: controls, squad coordination and pressure-filled decision-making are tuned for a comfortable, portable tactical experience.
Immolation are the uncommon band that sits both on top of their chosen genre and outside of it simultaneously. As one of the titans of early days death metal, the natural inclination is to lump them in with all the other old school death acts from the late 80s and early 90s. While that wouldnât be entirely wrong based on their Dawn of Possession debut, over time Immolation have evolved into something else â Still classic death metal, but much more too. And while their style can seem too opaque at times to tickle the casual OSDM lizard brain, thereâs something truly primordial to their sound that exemplifies death metal like no other. Theyâve also been the most consistent brand in death over the decades, releasing 11 albums of high-quality material with no duds. 2022s Acts of God saw the band move in a slightly different direction, stripping down some of their more extravagantly creative impulses and hardening around a muscular core of dissonance and punishing ugliness. Now comes Descent. What do founding members Robert Vigna and Ross Dolan have in store for us this time? You know it will be something enormous and crushing, but what else awaits your feeble ears?
In a nutshell, Descent is a continuation of what Immolation did on Acts of God, but the soundscape is now subject to a carefully curated tension between their usual penchant for brutality and dissonance and an on-and-off experimentation with a more grandiose and vaguely symphonic vibe. These diverse elements grate upon each other like opposing grindstones, and the result is often quite dramatic. Opener âThese Vengeful Windsâ is heavy as an anvil pyramid, crushing you beneath waves of corckscrewing, twisting riffs that feel too weighty to move, yet move they do like Cthuluâs hideous face tendrils. This is Immolation at their most basic and threatening, and itâs a grotesque joy to experience. âGodâs Last Breathâ delivers a crushing midtempo assault peppered with hateful guitar flourishes before lapsing into a massive stomping groove that feels dangerous and unhinged. Soon, everything goes utterly insane, and blastbeats and mind-flaying riffs try to unbalance your sanity. Itâs special. It isnât until âBend Toward the Darkâ arrives that Immolation show you all their cards. The song is pummeling and ridiculously heavy, and hidden in the swirling maelstrom is a vague SepticFlesh vibe that almost feels symphonic, but not quite. Itâs strange, but it fits, and Ross Dolan extends his vocal range ever so slightly to sound more Deity-like.
Later cut, âHostâ stands apart from the rest of Descent due to its unconventional and experimental approach. It feels like a fever dream in the way it leaps from idea to idea, and it can feel a bit disjointed, but itâs massive and rocks a relentlessly evil vibe that chills the bone marrow. It took several spins to âget it,â but once I got used to the strange ebb and flow, it worked more often than it didnât. âFalse Ascentâ is a direct, savage assault with little effort to be clever, and because of that, it hits extra hard. The closing title track is like the best moments of Immolation condensed into an almost 6-minute brain injection. It will destroy your body, but you need it nonetheless. Is everything this killer? Well, âAttritonâ has many good pieces, but it doesnât quite gel for me as a cohesive entity. Could I do without the instrumental âBanishedâ? Yes, as it does more to disrupt the albumâs flow than add anything truly meaningful. At 42 minutes, Descent feels shorter and less overstuffed with ideas than Acts of God, and itâs easier to process. The production by Zack âSometimes Friend oâ the Blogâ Ohren is quite loud and confrontational, but less smashed than the DR 5 might suggest. The guitar tone is menacing as fuck, and the drums have a titanic force behind them. Most importantly, thereâs enough cavern murk and scuzz to round out the existential dread Immolation traffics in.
I know itâs a waste of time to discuss how talented Immolation is at this point, but Iâm going to anyway. Robert Vigna deserves his own wing in the Death Metal Guitarist Hall of Fame, and his strange style continues to bear rotting fruit at every turn of the thumbscrews. His playing is unlike anyone else, and his offbeat perspective on death metal riffing is why Immolation stand out as they do. He and Alex Bouks put on a clinic on how to decorate a death metal song with riff gold, and they build dark, threatening worlds as easily as you or I build a pile of dirty dishes in the sink. Ross Dolan is a tremendous death vocalist and always delivers the goods, and Steve Shalatyâs drumming is next-level insane and technical.
I agonized over how to score Descent. Ultimately, I prefer it over Acts of God, but, as with most Immolation albums, the qualitative differences are minor and come down to small personal preferences.1 Itâs a metal truism that you can buy any Immolation release without fear of disappointment, and Descent will certainly please the filthy death masses. Immolation remain a rare, altered beast among other repellent horrors, painting their uniquely disturbing soundscapes across history and time.
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Nuclear Blast
Websites: immolation.info | immolation.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/immolation | instagram.com/immolation_band
Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026
Kenstrosity
Itâs been said before, but it bears repeating: Immolation need no introduction. Far and away the most consistently great act in death metal, the New York troupe forge a deadly blade with each new release, familiar in design and function but meticulously crafted to rise with distinction. A discography unmarred by blemishes or misfires ensures that no matter where your point of entry, listeners new to Immolationâs fatally sharp weaponry will find themselves summarily eviscerated in short order. Twelve albums and thirty-eight years in, Immolation nests Descent inside an already legendary catalog with astonishing ease.
Drawing from the rich pool of their own history, Immolation have little need to reference their peers for ideas or inspiration on Descent. Pulling the infernal energy of Close to a World Below (âThese Vengeful Winds,â âAttritionâ), merging it with the violent groove of Majesty and Decay (âThe Ephemeral Curse,â âDescentâ), and embedding purposeful structure into the resulting mesh by way of Atonementâs sweeping, multi-phase phrasing and intentionally scorched layers (âGodâs Last Breath,â âHostâ), Descent honors its ancestry in monstrous fashion. Rare is the death metal act that exudes class and elegance, but Immolation embodies those traits in Descentâs grander songwritingâparticularly evocative of Communion-era SepticFleshâwhich makes the whole all that much more imposing. Thatâs to say nothing of the riffs, which have the same verve and vitality as ever without sacrificing an iota of Immolationâs core identityâan astounding feat that needs to be heard to be believed.
As water-cooler discussions in AMG HQâs back alleys and seedy underbellies confirm, Descent creates an environment solely populated with muscular apex predators, leaving the staff gnashing teeth and sharpening claws to defend their favorite track as the best item on hand. Mine are âAdversary,â âBend Towards the Dark,â and âFalse Ascent,â primarily because they invoke a horde of particularly fiery trem-picked leads, flourishes, and shimmers that provide a bright contrast to Immolationâs trademark deep roars, stomping motifs, and precisely punctuated percussion. Equally compelling, high-impact cuts like âThe Ephemeral Curse,â âAttrition,â and gargantuan closer âDescentâ boast the same or similar features, applied in other ways or in alternate locations to create varied textures and high-detail points of interest. No song proper drops the ball at any point, and at a remarkably tight 42 minutes, the album as a whole boasts ridiculous levels of immediacy and engagement.
Immediate though Descent is, time and attention are its best friends. Revisits unfurl and intensify Immolationâs latest salvo such that it effortlessly deflects distraction. Harmonized layers, multifaceted riffs, and tumbling transitions across the record expand in scope and grandeur in direct correlation to the number of times I hear it. Strict structuring and highly compartmentalized compositions loosen, relax, and bleed into rich sonic hombre, betraying an intricacy and sophistication that such blunt force instrumentation shouldnât be capable of achieving. Even my initial misgivings towards penultimate interlude âBanished,â which feels fluffy and insubstantial at first, gained some justification as the days and weeks spent with Descent progress. What once felt like a rude interruption now feels more like a palate cleanser for the final course. Still, I could cut it from the runtime. Even though the ride to the end might feel a tad rougher for it, I am not convinced I would wholly miss the padding. My only other critique of import concerns production. While incredibly well-mixed all things considered, Descent is loud, crushed to within an inch of its lifeâa life that barely breathes only by the grace of meaty guitar tones and a snappy snare.
As I grow closer to this world below, I feel nothing but reverence for an act whose unflappable dedication to the death metal craft knows no equal. I am awestruck by the longevity of Immolationâs back catalog and the remarkable quality of their modern entries. Descent is no exception. It is, instead, exceptional. Taste amongst my peers polarizes to some extent as to which Immolation era earns the most flowers, but recognition of their collective elite status is universal. This twelfth album, soon upon us, perpetuates that standard and may even prove, with time, to have elevated it once again. At the very least, it ranks among my personal favorites by these New Yorkers. It is my intention, consequently, to spend every free moment basking in its consuming flame.
Rating: Great!
#2026 #35 #40 #ActsOfGod #AmericanMetal #Apr26 #DeathMetal #Descent #Immolation #NuclearBlastRecords #Review #Reviews #SepticFleshđ§” So at 128 samples, my virtual #bass rig in #Carla #PluginHost does work without xruns. It's not bad. Actually it's quite some fun with the plugins in the screenshot. And it's free.
I did a lot of switching back and forth now, but unfortunately⊠it's really hard to beat a pedal board full of #tcElectronics. One of the most underestimated pedals is the analog #DarkMatter #overdrive by tc.
As most people have a birthday each year, so do I, and there's a product that seems to be the product for me and my birthday. They recently lowered the price, now it's sold out everywhere: The #tcPlethora x5. Digital beast with complete patches of 5 digital tc FX stored each, and gazillions of virtual pedals available⊠https://www.thomann.de/de/tc_electronic_plethora_x5.htm
But as usual, when doing these kinds of experiments, I forget to make music.
So perhaps things should just remain the way they are, plus some #AuidioDamage #AD061 #Descent #GranularDelay⊠the wonderful thing that had started the virtual bass rig journey: https://makertube.net/w/hMwaXVNb1mTMGMv28yDvwU
Working on a new level for Cell Sword. Finally finding the chaos I was always searching for in the premise. Thinking of calling it "Heart Thumper".
Yeah yeah this is me taking a break from Low Earth Orbit Adventures
Descent II was released 30 years ago on 13th March 1996 for DOS.
#1996InVideoGames #90sGames #VideoGameHistory #Descent #Descent2 #retrogames #retrogaming
#descent : transmission of an estate by inheritance, usually, but not necessarily, in the descending line
- French: descente
- German: der Abstieg
- Italian: retrocessione
- Portuguese: descendente
- Spanish: descenso
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Try Christian's word chain building game @ https://wordwallgame.com
Descent: Journeys in the Dark heroes; Ravaella Lightfoot, Grisban The Thirsty, Ulma Grimstone & Logan Lashley.
Quick and fun. Got a soft spot for Ulma, as I think the face sculpt is awesome.
Paints and a few WIP shots on my blog as usual ... https://www.nerodine.com/2026/03/ravaella-lightfoot-grisban-thirsty-ulma.html