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The DICE Awards show is the celebration developers and fans deserve

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The DICE Awards show is the celebration developers and fans deserve

The Baldur’s Gate 3 developers won Game of the Year, again, during the 27th annual DICE Awards. But in stark contrast to their 2023 Game Awards win, this time they actually got to speak.

“We don’t have shareholders, but we also don’t think about them,” said Larian Studios head of production David Walgrave. “Building a community, building a player base, building games that are actually fun is going to make you the most money.”

His words were a direct shot at Embracer Group CEO Lars Wingefors, who said during a recent earnings report that the company’s “overruling principle is to always maximize shareholder value in any given situation.”

Baldur’s Gate 3 has been crowned game of the year several times over, with its previous game of the year honor coming from Geoff Keighley’s The Game Awards.

The 2023 Game Awards boasted millions of viewers and is frequently one of the most-watched gaming shows of the year. But on one of the largest, most visible platforms in the industry, Larian Studios CEO Swen Vincke didn’t have the chance to say much before a teleprompter encouraged him to “wrap it up.”

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Onstage at the DICE event, his colleagues’ acceptance speech lasted for several minutes, allowing multiple members of the BG3 team the time to acknowledge the abysmal state of the industry while offering developers hope.

“Many, many people were let go at the start of this year,” said director of publishing Michael Douse. “I want you all to know that you are talented, and that you matter, and that you are the future of this industry.”

The DICE Awards (short for Design Innovate Communicate Entertain) are put on by the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences — basically the video game industry’s equivalent to the motion picture, television, and recording industry academies — making the event the video game version of the Oscars. However, The DICE Awards don’t get the same level of attention as their entertainment counterparts or even The Game Awards, lacking an equal level of production value and visibility — after all, it’s an industry event attended by industry people for industry people.

But it’s the better show by far.

Because there’s nowhere else that you’ll hear a scathing joke about the Embracer Group’s status as the premier villain of the video game industry while one of its companies — Gearbox Software — is a corporate member of the Academy.

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Unity wasn’t spared either, even though it was also an event sponsor:

Beyond excoriating some of the companies responsible for 2023 being one of the worst years in recent memory for video game industry labor, DICE was also about celebrating industry legends. Mario and The Legend of Zelda composer Koji Kondo was inducted into the Academy’s Hall of Fame with a tribute that paid homage to Kondo’s iconic music and legendary career.

And even if a developer wasn’t receiving hall of fame honors, it was nice to see them have the time and space to be human, to remind us that the people who work on video games deserve acknowledgment as much as the games they make.

The reason why The Game Awards take up so much attention is because it’s a showcase of games, trailers, and movie stars. It’s a giant ad. And because it’s an ad, beholden to sponsors, during the rare moments when it does have a statement to make, it makes them as vague and inoffensive as possible.

We watch the Oscars and the Grammys because, over time, our culture has come to hold the people making the movies and the music in the same esteem as the product. But game developers, outside of Hideo Kojima, don’t yet and will likely never have that level of esteem — so we pay more attention to the product, not the people.

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The DICE Awards remind us of the people.

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Meta’s glasses will turn off the camera if you tamper with the privacy light

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Meta’s glasses will turn off the camera if you tamper with the privacy light

Amid public backlash over its smart glasses, Meta announced that it will be updating its glasses with a new feature that will disable the camera when it detects that someone has tampered with or destroyed the glasses’ privacy LED light. The update is meant to address modders who have taken actions such as physically drilling into the LED light.

Meta has previously tried to discourage tampering with the LED light. For example, starting with its second generation glasses, blocking the light with tape or other objects will trigger a prompt asking users to uncover the recording light. However, many modders have found various workarounds for that particular measure.

Meta’s VP of wearables Alex Himel told The Verge that the privacy-focused update was on the way a few weeks ago after launching cheaper Meta Glasses without Ray-Ban branding. At the time, Himel acknowledged that the company was aware of increasing misuse alongside wider adoption of the devices.

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Discord accidentally banned over 8,000 people for posting grids and other ‘benign’ images

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Discord accidentally banned over 8,000 people for posting grids and other ‘benign’ images

Stanislav Vishnevskiy, Discord co-founder and chief technology officer, writes that the bug impacted around 200 users who posted “grid-like” pictures, in addition to about 8,000 people who posted “other benign images” since May 2026. “Everyone affected has now been unbanned,” Vishnevskiy says.

In a thread on X, Discord writes that its safety system is designed to flag content by “matching it against known harmful material.” This system can produce “false positives,” Discord explains, which is when an employee would step in to review the flagged content. But instead of just temporarily preventing the account from uploading content during the review, a glitch led its system to ban users entirely.

“When our staff reviewed and cleared those accounts, the same bug prevented the ban from being lifted automatically, so it just stayed in place,” Discord says.

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Hoto’s PixelDrive screwdriver is down to $60, matching its best price

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Hoto’s PixelDrive screwdriver is down to , matching its best price

If your Prime Day purchases included a new desk, TV stand, bookshelf, or other furniture you still haven’t assembled, Hoto’s PixelDrive cordless screwdriver can help speed up the process. It’s currently on sale for $59.99 ($20 off) at Amazon, matching its best price to date.

From tightening loose screws on furniture to repairing electronics, the PixelDrive is designed to handle a wide range of household projects. Hoto includes 30 screwdriver bits that cover many of the most common screw types, all neatly organized in a small cylindrical case. It also offers six adjustable torque settings, allowing you to use less power when working with fragile electronics or increase it when putting together a desk, bookshelf, TV stand, or other furniture. You can also switch between a slower 80RPM mode for more precise work and a faster 200RPM mode with the press of a button.

Hoto also added several features that make assembling projects a little easier. A built-in display lets you quickly check your current torque setting and remaining battery life, while an integrated LED light helps illuminate dim spaces, whether you’re working under a desk or inside a cabinet. The rechargeable 2,000mAh battery also charges over USB-C, so you won’t need to keep buying disposable batteries.

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