io9 shares an exclusive excerpt and reveals the cover for the short fiction author's debut novel.
Loewe's low-resolution clothing collection is finally available and ready to empty your savings.
Ahead of 2024, Biden’s team is specifically looking to target influencers that do not follow the White House or the Democratic Party official accounts.
At Star Wars Celebration, the creatives behind The High Republic unveiled the first details about the third phase of the prequel initiative.
io9 has the exclusive reveal of new Star Wars merch from Lego, Mattel, Hasbro and shopDisney.
Plus we've got some news about the Highlander reboot/sequel, additional Daredevil casting, and Star Wars: The Acolyte details.
A fed-up office worker changes herself, then changes the world in Julien David's 2D and 3D animated sci-fi short.
Sci-fi author Lavanya Lakshminarayan explains how cyberpunk continues to thrive in South Asian literature.
A new AI chatbot from Google is in town, and despite attempts at a more measured rollout, it's just as unhinged as its peers.
Check out a passage from Dr. Lydia Kang's new novel in the second phase of The High Republic , Cataclysm .
Cal Kestis has grown more powerful in this new trailer for the game sequel, but so has the Empire.
Chupa translates to the verb "suck," so you can just begin to imagine the online puns.
The From a Certain Point of View series of anniversary anthologies continues with 40 authors writing 40 Star Wars stories set in and around Return of the Jedi .
Evil Dead Rise 's Lily Sullivan stars in the film, which screens at the SXSW Film Festival. The teaser makes its debut on io9 today.
Jon Favreau, creator of the hit Disney+ show, talked about the show's Star Wars timeline.
Archaeologists studying the remains of two brothers discovered evidence of painful diseases—and a gruesome attempted treatment.
A new paper details how we might command robots using simple language. Sounds fun... until they start commanding themselves.
If Studio Ghibli wanted to do a fashion collab for fans, you would think it would partner with a brand that they could actually afford.
Meme makers are taking their subject matter and talents to a surprising place: the stage.
Brian Butler's 50-minute film follows two characters thrown together in the worst of times.
Mode
Follow us