The Godot Engine team announced that Mike Klubnika, the developer of Buckshot Roulette and s.p.l.i.t, has become a major funding donor for the open source game engine. Announced on Bluesky, the Godot ...
Godot Engine 4.6 ships with polished workflows, Modern UI, Jolt physics as default, improved reflections, debugger tools and LibGodot support. For those who don’t know the tool: The open-source Godot ...
Game developers should take a look at the brand new Godot Engine 4.6 release, bringing a big refresh to the popular cross-platform open source game engine. It looks a bit different now too, thanks to ...
Godot 4.6-dev5 goes live: D3D12 is now default on Windows, PCK patching gets efficient delta export, Android exports via Gradle land, and 2D rendering gets 1.1–7× speed boosts. The open-source engine ...
Godot, the open source game engine, has included basic OpenXR support for a number of years now, allowing developers to easily publish their apps across a variety of XR headsets. Now, Godot just an ...
The new Broadway staging of “Waiting for Godot” has recouped its $7.5 million investment in eight weeks (as of the week ending Nov. 9), making it the first production of the 2025-2026 season to make ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The latest starry revival of Samuel Beckett’s play is on Broadway, and one thing is certain: Whatever you call its elusive character, he doesn’t come.
As this new revival takes center stage, it offers an ideal moment to trace the play’s journey: from Beckett’s postwar France to its polarizing first performances in Paris and London, to its absorption ...
“There’s no lack of void,” Estragon tells Vladimir, in a typical bit of dryly profound wordplay in Samuel Beckett’s 1953 classic, “Waiting for Godot.” That could also describe the solid if overly ...
Bill and Ted are on Broadway. Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter, who starred in 1989’s “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” and its two sequels together, have reunited for director Jamie Lloyd’s new Broadway ...
Of course it works. Two old friends known for their clownish escapades, always wanting to get back to somewhere they were – anywhere but here, really – all the while using ever so odd verbiage to ...