Link

Whoops, sorry for missing this reply. (Stuff on this blog gets buried real easily...)
Mystery solved!
And awwww, Pulse trying to remind people to save energy by turning off equipment/devices when they’re not using them (he’s even holding a plug in the picture). For someone who prefers to stay in the network all the time, I didn’t have him pegged as someone who cared that much about people in the human world being energy efficient. He does care about the ecology. (But then what decent person doesn’t?)

Photo of a small sign sporting Pulseman artwork (possibly by Ken Sugimori), posted somewhere in the Game Freak headquarters over a printer. Because the blog author cannot read a lick of Japanese, she has no idea what this says. Feel free to reply or reblog if you have a translation?
21 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
Watch Game Freak’s veteran art director Ken Sugimori draw Pulseman.
BGM track listing (so you can hear the music without people talking over it):
Electrace Pulse Man
Electrace Pulse Man [revenge]
Salasanat
Back Space Strikes Back
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
oh hey time to show I’m still relevant!
Not to mention that the only other enemy exclusive to Pulseman’s Australia stage is a red octopus-shaped floating mine:

Is no one gonna mention that Remoraids Beta design was just a gun??


Nintendo???
47K notes
·
View notes
Audio
378 notes
·
View notes
Photo










A Midnight Walk Through the Neon-Hued Streets of Asian Cities by Marcus Wendt
While on a recent trip through Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Seoul, London-based photographer Marcus Wendt found himself suffering from a bout of jetlag induced insomnia and ended up wandering the streets of several cities late at night. With a camera in-hand he captured these mesmerising shots that channel the cyberpunk vibe of movies like Bladerunner where narrow urban alleys are bathed in cool ultraviolet light. Over several days Wendt worked his way through the Kowloon area of Hong Kong and then Shenzhen’s Huaqiangbei area known for its sprawling electronics market, before eventually traveling to Seoul.
16K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Google’s DeepMind AI just taught itself to walk
230K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Did I reblog this one here yet? I don’t remember if I did or not.
FARMBOT GENESIS: This robot is changing farming as we know it
And the best part about this technology is that it’s open source, meaning you can build one yourself from the blueprints that are available for anyone to download.
Check out the full video to find out more about Farmbot Genesis.
168K notes
·
View notes