Looking ahead: The first official visual upgrade in Minecraft's 16-year history was released last June for Bedrock Edition players. However, the original Java version has a long road ahead of it ...
Minecraft Java has recently announced an array of changes to modernise the game and improve performance. Among others, one of the biggest overhauls is the transition from OpenGL to Vulkan. While this ...
James Ratcliff joined GameRant in 2022 as a Gaming News Writer. In 2023, James was offered a chance to become an occasional feature writer for different games and then a Senior Author in 2025. He is a ...
The Minecraft wonderland.jar mod is a unique pack that adds multiple strange and horror-themed entities that follow players everywhere. After a while, gamers are transported to a distant liminal ...
Ahead of its Season 3 premiere, Apple TV’s “Shrinking” has scored a renewal for a fourth season. The series, which stars Jason Segel and Harrison Ford, follows the former as a grieving therapist who ...
This short Minecraft clip shows a player using a shrink mod to move through a difficult obstacle course. By reducing their character size step by step, the player is able to fit through small gaps and ...
The Season 3 trailer for the Apple TV comedy “Shrinking” teases Michael J. Fox’s return to acting after stepping away from his career in 2020 due to speech issues associated with his Parkinson’s ...
Mojang Studios announced Tuesday it will eliminate code obfuscation in Minecraft: Java Edition, marking a significant shift in how the company distributes the game to its modding community. The change ...
Mojang has dropped some huge news for Minecraft Java players - especially those that love to mod. While the modding scene is already thriving in Minecraft, it's not as accessible as you'd expect for ...
Apple TV+’s dramatic comedy “Shrinking,” which stars Jason Segel as a grieving therapist, will return with Season 3 on Jan. 28, 2026. The new season, which will have 11 episodes, will have a one-hour ...
Big companies are getting smaller—and their CEOs want everyone to know it. The careful, coded corporate language executives once used in describing staff cuts is giving way to blunt boasts about ...