Lifestyle
Nintendo Switch 2 and launch games reviewed: everything you need to know

Mario Kart World’s golden shell disperses coins to all who follow it.
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Nintendo announced that it sold more than 3.5 million Switch 2 consoles less than a week after its June 5 release. That feat makes it the fastest-selling Nintendo game system of all time. Most online retailers have run out of the console, and resellers have tagged on hundreds of dollars to the $449 MSRP on websites like eBay.
The Switch 2 will likely remain a hot item through the holiday sales season — but don’t despair. Stores get restocked periodically. Even if their websites appear empty, brick-and-mortar locations frequently have consoles reserved for in-person customers. And if you’ve logged more than 50 hours of playtime on a Nintendo account, you can line up online for an invitation to buy a Switch 2 directly from the company.
But even if you can get a Switch 2, should you buy one? Does it justify the steep cost? Are its launch games really worth it? After playtesting the console at press events and over the course of a bleary week, I’ve got answers.

The Switch 2, displayed in tabletop mode with its Joy-Cons detached.
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Nintendo’s new era
The Switch 2 improves on the first generation in (almost) every way. Nintendo has exhaustively described how, but I’ll break down the highlights.
The Switch 2 has a bigger screen and bigger Joy-Cons (though, remarkably, it’s still as skinny as the original Switch). It narrows the performance gap with its console competitors. It’s no PlayStation 5, but it is more powerful than a PS4 — and fits between your hands.
It’s also, blessedly, backwards-compatible. The vast majority of the old Switch catalog works seamlessly, though a few have special Switch 2 upgrades. For $10 (free for Nintendo Switch Online subscribers), Tears of the Kingdom plays smoothly on a Switch 2, while it could really struggle on the original Switch. The extra power is also ushering in games that were out of reach for Nintendo users, including Cyberpunk 2077 and Elden Ring.

Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Cons being used conventionally and as a mouse.
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While I adore all fancy controllers (the new Pro Controller’s great, by the way), it’s the updated Joy-Cons that impress me the most. They magnetize onto the sides of the console with a satisfying snap and stay firmly attached no matter how bumpy my train commutes have gotten. At a button-press, they’ll slip off and can be used like computer mice on nearly any surface. Believe me — I’ve tested it on cushions, pants, books, tables and even my wife’s pregnant belly! I await a killer app for this gimmicky feature, but it’s been useful for strategy games like Civilization 7.
Original Switch controllers still work with the Switch 2 — but the comparison isn’t flattering. Returning to the older Joy-Cons for some 4-player Mario Party was painful, between the smaller buttons to the inconsistent wireless pairing. But those Joy-Cons are admittedly well-used. Time will only tell if the new models will largely avoid the notorious “stick drift” that plagued the original Joy-Cons.

The console isn’t perfect. The straps for the detached Joy-Cons make them more stable to use as mice, but they also make the shoulder buttons slightly harder to press since they raise the edges around them. Much-touted “Game Chat” features let you easily talk to friends, but you can’t use the video-conferencing features unless you shrink the gameplay screen. Speaking of screens, while the Switch 2 boasts vivid colors, HD resolution and a high refresh rate, it’s not quite as luminous as the OLED Switch screen I’m coming from. Finally, the paltry internal memory can’t hold many modern games — you’ll need an expensive microSD express card to download more.
Gripes aside, I’m loving the Switch 2 and now gravitate to it more than my cherished Steam Deck. I don’t think every Nintendo fan will need to upgrade until more exclusive games arrive, but if you can afford it now and know that you’ll want one eventually, it’s easy to recommend. Especially if you’re eager to sling shells, crush mushrooms, and vroom to victory.
Mario Kart World
The original Switch launched with Breath of the Wild, one of the most influential games of all time. Mario Kart World doesn’t break as much ground, but it’s got more in common with that trailblazer than I initially thought.

Wario and Waluigi form a motorcycle duo in Mario Kart World’s “Free Roam” mode.
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When I previewed the game in April, I described it as baby’s first Forza Horizon: an open-world racing game that would undoubtedly brim with noisome side activities. It’s actually got a far lighter touch. The game strings dozens of possible races across an interconnected landscape for hectic Grand Prix events and 24-person Knockout rounds. Yet you can also freely roam across the titular world and discover its many delights — which, like Breath of the Wild, aren’t advertised on the map.
Granted, blue-coin dashes and time trials rarely made me squawk with surprise like the shrines and secrets of a Zelda game. But these challenges perfectly fit in-between competitive bouts. Unfortunately, the mode works best when playing alone. Online friends can roam with you, but you can’t unlock costumes and achievements while playing with them.
When it comes to actual racing, World feels like Mario Kart 8 with wider roads and glitzy new power-ups. It’s hard to improve on 8’s formula, which embraces the greatest hits from decades of series history. But by expanding the space between the races, Mario Kart World feels innovative enough to earn the $80 asking price.

Miniscule people explore a gargantuan console in Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour.
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Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour
The other Nintendo launch title, conversely, feels like homework — and I don’t exactly mean that as an insult. Welcome Tour synthesizes Nintendo’s recent forays into theme park and museum design into an exhaustive survey of Switch 2 hardware.
Imagine you’re an ant, crawling along the Switch 2’s surface, hungrily grubbing up morsels. That’s the Welcome Tour experience. Your tiny avatar hunts for hidden stamps needed to progress through a massive console and its peripherals. You’ll also endure demonstrations and occasionally entertaining minigames meant to show off the Switch 2. As tech demos go, it falls short of the heights set by Astro’s Playroom. But as an interactive exhibition piece, it’s oddly compelling.

A sampling of the occasionally whimsical answers to one of Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour’s many quizzes.
Nintendo/James Mastromarino
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Nintendo/James Mastromarino
I made it my mission to ace all of Welcome Tour’s quizzes, which the game doles out after you’ve read facts about the Switch 2. Complete with satisfying bloop sounds and jokey answers, these multiple-choice tests target technical manual enjoyers and How It’s Made watchers (a population that overlaps considerably with gaming console reviewers!). Poindexters like me will feel welcome in Welcome Tour. Everyone else may as well save the $10.


Lifestyle
Is walking 10,000 steps a legit fitness goal or a marketing myth?

The magic number shows up on smartwatches, fitness apps and office step challenges. For many, hitting 10,000 steps in a day has become a marker of good health — a goal that prompts post-dinner walks, lunchtime laps around the block and a reason to park a little farther away.
While the target is widely embraced by doctors and their patients, its origins are less scientific than some may expect.
“The whole idea behind the 10,000 steps was actually a marketing campaign for a company in Japan that developed a pedometer,” said David Raichlen, professor of biological sciences and anthropology at USC.
The idea of walking 10,000 steps a day gained popularity in Japan in the 1960s, when a company introduced a pedometer called the Manpo-kei — a name that translates to “10,000 step meter.” Released around the time of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, the product gave people a numerical goal and helped sell pedometers.
“It was kind of brilliant,” Raichlen said. “Is it arbitrary? Yes.”
A couple take advantage of pleasant weather to walk their dog in the Venice Canal Historic District in Venice Beach.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Researchers say that even if the number wasn’t evidence-based at the time, it caught on for a reason — and may have landed close to a meaningful benchmark.
“It turns out, bizarrely enough, they probably weren’t that far off, even though they did not have any of the epidemiological data to support it at the time,” Raichlen said.
In the years since the 10,000 step target gained attraction, researchers have tried to pinpoint how many daily steps are actually linked to better health outcomes. Some studies show that benefits such as reduced risk of cardiovascular disease begin around 2,500 to 3,000 steps a day. Others suggest a plateau of health-related benefits begins around 7,500 steps, Raichlen said.
Still, many public health messages continue to promote the five-digit mark, and fitness trackers, including Fitbits and other smart devices, often set 10,000 steps as the default daily goal.
Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, interim chief of cardiology at UCLA, said step counts are a practical, easy-to-understand way to communicate physical activity guidelines with patients. He often recommends 10,000 steps and doesn’t view the number as random.
“Conveying step count is one of the ways of quantifying, easily and understandably, a trackable, actionable way to communicate what would be a good level of physical activity for them,” Fonarow said.

Searches for “walking 10000 steps” have increased over the past five years.
(Google Trends)
He said 10,000 steps equals roughly five miles of walking and about 150 minutes of moderate-to-intense activity — in line with existing guidelines for weekly exercise.
Still, Fonarow acknowledges that research findings vary. He cites one study that found risk reduction plateaued around 7,500 steps for older women, while other studies have found benefit continuing through 10,000 steps or more. “Walking is a fantastic form of exercise,” Fonarow said. “It improves blood pressure, supports brain health, reduces insulin resistance and helps strengthen the blood vessels.”
Raichlen said he typically avoids prescribing specific thresholds. While 10,000 steps may be a useful goal for some, he said, it is not a requirement for good health.
“A little bit is better than nothing, and then a little bit more is better than that,” Raichlen said.
However, the type of walking matters. Researchers have found that cadence — how many steps a person takes per minute — can influence the impact of physical activity. A brisk walk offers greater cardiovascular benefit than a slower pace even with the same total step count.
Wes Brumbaugh, left, and Tucker O’Neill get in some steps on their 41-mile walk across Los Angeles. In 2023, they went from Pasadena to Santa Monica.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
“You don’t have to run,” Raichlen said. “But more intensity is generally better.”
What’s not clear, he said, is whether there’s an upper limit where benefits begin to decline — or if more steps always yield more return.
He said walking more is generally tied to lower risk of several chronic conditions, including diabetes, dementia and cardiovascular disease, but the risk reduction plateaus after a certain point.
“The health outcome you are interested in — whether that be heart disease, diabetes, dementia — there are different steps recommended,” he added.
Raichlen also pointed out that the effectiveness of a given step count may differ by age and that most existing studies rely on wrist-worn accelerometers, which can vary in precision.
“You can use multiple methods and end up with multiple different step counts from the exact same person,” Raichlen said, adding that his sister-in-law and her son tracked their steps on a recent trip to Disneyland using different devices — one with a phone, the other with an Apple Watch — and came away with very different totals.
That variation, he said, reinforces the importance of using step counts as a guide rather than a rigid rule.
“The best thing people can do is to be their own study,” Raichlen said. “Look at what you’re doing today and try to do more tomorrow.”
Fonarow said he often encourages patients to build activity gradually. For those who are largely sedentary, trying to walk 10,000 steps on day one may not be practical. “We really need to personalize these recommendations,” he said, adding that some people may choose to add resistance — like a weighted backpack — for additional benefits, but it’s not necessary for improved health.

The Culver City EverWalk Walking Club, one of several walking groups in L.A., usually meets on the first Saturday of every month.
(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)
Dr. Parveen Garg of Keck Medicine of USC also sees patients aiming to meet step goals. While spreading activity throughout the week is ideal, he said it’s fine if some days are more active than others. For patients with limited time or energy, walking more on the weekends or during longer breaks can still offer meaningful benefits.
Garg said he reminds patients that walking is beneficial even at lower levels. Multiple studies show that risk of cardiovascular disease and premature death decreases measurably beginning around 2,500 steps per day, he said.
While spreading activity throughout the week is ideal, he said it’s fine if some days are more active than others. For patients with limited time or energy, walking more on the weekends or during longer breaks can still offer meaningful benefits. Like other experts, Garg emphasizes that the benefits of movement don’t begin at 10,000 steps — they can start much earlier.
“As humans, we like goals,” Garg said. “We like to feel like we’ve accomplished something. We like to check off boxes. … It does give people a goal to accomplish. In that aspect, it’s really great — as long as it does not discourage people.”
He encourages his patients to prioritize aerobic activity — movement that gets the heart rate up — even if it’s done in short bursts or mixed into daily routines.
Whether a person walks 2,000 steps or 10,000, local experts agree the key is consistency, and increasing activity over time can be beneficial.
“Just keep moving,” Raichlen said.
Lifestyle
Part war propaganda, part comic strip, Bayeux Tapestry to return to U.K.

People look at the Bayeux tapestry in Bayeux, western France, on Sept. 13, 2019.
Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images
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Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images
LONDON — The earliest-known depiction of the 1066 Battle of Hastings — which began the Norman Conquest, changing England’s ethnic mix and history forever — is coming home for the first time in 900 or so years.
The Bayeux Tapestry looks like a 224-foot medieval comic strip with scenes from that iconic 1066 battle, when William, Duke of Normandy — better known as William the Conqueror — led an army from France that invaded England, killed its king, Harold, with an arrow to the eye, and installed William on his throne. The tapestry is often called the world’s first war propaganda, woven in wool on linen.

It’s believed to have been sewn in England a few years after the battle, and soon taken to France — where it’s currently displayed in a museum in the medieval town of Bayeux, Normandy. England has had to make do with only a 19th century replica, in one of its own museums.
But when the Bayeux museum closes this September, for two years of renovations, its famous tapestry will be packed up and sent on temporary loan to the United Kingdom — where it will go on display in London’s British Museum starting in Sept. 2026.
Tapestry loan took longer to organize than Brexit
French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced the deal this week during a three-day U.K. state visit by Macron that was full of pomp and pageantry, including a horse-drawn carriage ride with King Charles III.
Macron and Starmer also agreed to increase support for Ukraine’s defense, and announced a “one in, one out” deal to tackle illegal migration across their water border in the English Channel. Under that deal, within weeks the U.K. would return some undocumented migrants across the Channel to France, in return for an equal number of asylum seekers who’ve filed applications and have been waiting there.
In a speech Tuesday to the U.K. Parliament, Macron noted that in 2027, William the Conqueror would have celebrated his 1,000th birthday.
“I have to say, it took probably more years to deliver this project than all the Brexit texts,” the French president joked to Parliament, referring to Britain’s 2016 vote and 2020 exit from the European Union.
Speaking Wednesday alongside Macron at the British Museum, Starmer noted the year 1066 is iconic in England — even though it marked a historic battlefield loss to French troops.
“The Battle of Hastings, illustrated by the remarkable Bayeux Tapestry, was the beginning of 1,000 years of shared culture that is now defined by mutual admiration and kinship,” the prime minister said.
The British Museum has many other artifacts other countries want back
In exchange for the tapestry, the British Museum says it will send on loan to museums in Normandy several “treasures” that represent the four nations of the U.K. — England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. They include Byzantine artifacts unearthed at the Sutton Hoo ship burial site in eastern England, and 12th century chess pieces carved from walrus ivory and discovered buried in a sand dune on Scotland’s Isle of Lewis.

Museum experts say the exchange is part of a bigger trend of museums giving things back. The British Museum has many artifacts in its collection which were plundered during imperial and colonial eras, and are contested. It even publishes a list on its website.
“There’s a lot of talk about slippery slopes and museums emptying,” says Sarah Baxter, who serves on the advisory board of the Parthenon Project, lobbying the British Museum to return to the so-called Elgin Marbles to Greece, where they were plundered from the Parthenon. “But I think what the Bayeux Tapestry coming to Britain does show though is the power of a partnership as the diplomatic solution.”
Lifestyle
Summer's Hot Spot For The Stars: Spain … Bienvenida!

Summer 2025 Hot Spot For
The Stars: Spain …
Bienvenida!
Published
Fuel up the jet, ‘cuz TMZ is taking you to one of summer’s hottest spots for the stars … Hollywood’s high-tailing it out of the L.A. bubble and vacaying their lavish lives away in … SPAIN!
Kylie Jenner kept it cool and casual sippin’ Spain’s finest wine during sunset hour, Alix Earle brought the Miami heat in her red-hot bikini, and couples, Deshaun Watson and Jilly Anais and Teresa Giudice and Louie Ruelas turned up the PDA meters!
Kendall Jenner was on the same Spain wavelength as her younger sis Kylie — lounging in a chair with the backdrop doin’ all the talking!
And age is just a number, just take it from this Eva Longoria bikini pic … The 50-year-old OWNING this black bikini!
Ready for a vacay? Hit up Spain with the stars. We’ll see you there!
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