-
11 votes
-
Op-ed: The Persian Gulf oil crisis is a food crisis
20 votes -
Iran 'in talks' to move World Cup games to Mexico
7 votes -
Helium prices soar as Qatar LNG halt exposes fragile supply chain
37 votes -
The billionaire ‘buccaneer’ braving the Strait of Hormuz
13 votes -
The ethics of buying, playing military, war or games inspired by them?
I liked playing Ace Combat since I've been a kid, Ace Combat 2 was one of my favorite PS1 games alongside Crash Team Racing at the time, and I did play AC3 as well but don't remember much of it. I...
I liked playing Ace Combat since I've been a kid, Ace Combat 2 was one of my favorite PS1 games alongside Crash Team Racing at the time, and I did play AC3 as well but don't remember much of it.
I completely skipped PS2 generations since I was on handhelds instead, so my first interaction with Ace Combat since 3 was ACAH(Yuck) on PS3, but I ended up buying Ace Combat 7 since that was actually a good game, but being bad at committing to one game hasn't allowed me to finish it, with AC8 being announced to come out soon, I decided I should try and focus on clearing AC7.
I never gave it a mind at the mind but since now I'm aware of what Lockheed Martin is, I noticed it when I started up the game the past few days at one of the splash screens at the start of the game, and given that Lockheed Martin's involvement with the current ongoing wars, it's safe to assume that Bandai Namco have had an agreement that most likely has had financial and monetary incentives to license their planes.
licensing weapons and arms aren't particularly a new thing afaik in games, I'm not much of an FPS person myself since I stick with Doom and Bioshock if I want a more "traditional" FPS experience (But prefer things like Ultrakill or Metal Hellsinger) and never been into CoD or other military shooters.
So depending on their license agreement, they either have paid the royalties upfront(Unaware of how licensing typically goes but I assume it's most likely to be this one?) just to have their arms in the game, or they get a portion of their sales. If it is the former then sales of the game do not directly(as in unless sequels or relicensing occur) contribute to their bottom lines, if it is the latter then every sale contributes to wars.
Posting this in places like reddit or other gamer spaces I'd imagine would elicit a "Don't bring politics to my games" kind of response.
I'm curious what Tildes users would think of this, I think that would make pirating these games or buying them secondhand(impossible on Steam though Steam family could count) be more ethical than buying them in a way, though I imagine some may advocating for separating the art from... whom the artist pays?
27 votes -
Shadow fleet dominates Hormuz crossings as Iran ramps up bypass loadings
13 votes -
Iran war spreading economic damage far beyond oil and gas markets
25 votes -
The big lie about the origin of manga
15 votes -
Gas prices soar as QatarEnergy halts LNG production after Iran attacks
27 votes -
Two Amazon Web Services Middle East availability zones down after data centre fires
15 votes -
[PL] Brutal selection on the front lines. Study: War rapidly changing Ukraine's dog population
I've found it interesting to learn how the animal (in this case dog) population is affected by the war. I've attached translation in a comment below. [edit] Link to the article:...
I've found it interesting to learn how the animal (in this case dog) population is affected by the war.
I've attached translation in a comment below.[edit]
Link to the article: https://naukawpolsce.pl/aktualnosci/news%2C111358%2Cbrutalna-selekcja-na-froncie-badanie-wojna-blyskawicznie-zmienia-populacje
I have no idea how I forgot to add it...20 votes -
The ten best and ten worst US foreign policy decisions
15 votes -
‘It’s emptiness’: banned Ukrainian athlete accuses International Olympic Committee of fuelling Russia’s propaganda
23 votes -
Wolves killed more than 2,100 reindeer in Finland last year – herders suspect Russian wolf numbers have exploded after hunters were sent to the frontline in Ukraine
11 votes -
In the 1930s a radical conservative faction almost pushed Finland into full authoritarianism
8 votes -
A Norwegian rocket launched on 25th January 1995 to study the Northern Lights was mistaken by Russia for an incoming nuclear missile on a direct course to Moscow
10 votes -
La Marseillaise, Casablanca (1943)
12 votes -
Why we're boycotting Xbox (and maybe you should too)
26 votes -
New documentary about Astrid Lindgren released in Europe - ‘The antithesis to Nazi ideology’: how Pippi Longstocking was born to stand up to Adolf Hitler
10 votes -
Red Baron vs White Death | Epic Rap Battles Of History (2025)
7 votes -
Christmas tree at Trafalgar Square shines with Norwegian roots – tree symbolizes the friendship between London and Oslo in an annual ceremony that highlights the history of the countries' alliance
7 votes -
Letters from an American November 26, 2025 - The historical origin of the US Federal Thanksgiving holiday
13 votes -
As the war in Ukraine rages on, many Finns are getting reacquainted with the country's remarkable network of väestönsuoja, or civil defense shelters
24 votes -
Russians confront wartime internet cuts with public shrug, private fury
38 votes -
The Florentine Diamond resurfaces after 100 years in hiding. Legendary jewel of the Habsburgs not seen since 1919 and thought lost, has actually been safe in a Canadian bank for decades. (gifted link)
29 votes -
Denmark's drive to conscript teenage girls – as the threat from Russia increases, it is no longer only young men who are being called to serve
20 votes -
How nuclear power ambitions aim to wean Finland off Russian energy – nuclear share in electricity production went from 28% in 2022 to 39% in 2025
15 votes -
Hermann and Albert Göring: Two very different brothers
19 votes -
The almost forgotten Japanese-American truce at Aka
20 votes -
Holocaust history shows LGBTQ+ people have always been their own heroes
20 votes -
The democratic creation of the field jacket
12 votes -
Swedish fisherman digging for worms stumbles upon cache of silver coins, beads, rings and pendants dating to the 12th century
36 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund set to undergo review as heightened geopolitical tensions lay bare the challenges of weighing national interest and ethics in steering the massive investor
9 votes -
This is not a ruined cottage | The Druridge Bay ruin
10 votes -
How the Dutch deleted the sea... and got rich! | Map Men
24 votes -
The genius logic of the NATO phonetic alphabet
18 votes -
Upcoming match between Norway and Israel overshadowed by politics, with Norwegian football authorities using the game to make a stance over the ongoing conflict between Israel and Gaza
4 votes -
What it takes to be a revolutionary war enactor
12 votes -
How America nearly forged a different path in 1916
19 votes -
"Game changers" in Ukraine (2025) - evaluating effective, disappointing and weird systems
11 votes -
Voices of the Manhattan Project: Peggy Bowditch’s interview
5 votes -
Radioactive hulk of aircraft carrier USS Independence located off San Francisco coast (2015)
15 votes -
Ground launched cruise missiles and Ukraine's "Flamingo" - the new missile and global return of GLCMs
15 votes -
Russian Civil War, Winter 1917-1918
4 votes -
Finland and Poland are both considering rewetting dried-out peatbogs to form defence barriers against a potential Russian ground invasion
31 votes -
Medieval Europeans were fanatical about a strange fruit with a vulgar name that could only be eaten rotten. Then it was forgotten altogether. Why did they love it so much? And why did it disappear?
49 votes -
The long-term costs of war - the price of life, economics of casualties and Russia's war
11 votes -
A Ukrainian startup develops long-range drones and missiles to take the battle to Russia
25 votes -
How arrogance destroys armies - overconfidence and the road to military failure
11 votes