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13 votes
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As NASA faces cuts, China reveals ambitious plans for planetary exploration
16 votes -
Cat clause: Pet ‘loan’ disputes spread in China
8 votes -
China executed four Canadians for drug crimes, says Ottawa
37 votes -
The Loess plateau was the most eroded place on Earth until China took action
6 votes -
Two Split Fiction players invited to Stockholm to see Hazelight Studios' next game after beating rock-hard secret level Laser Hell
10 votes -
BYD unveils new super-charging EV tech, to build charging network in China
26 votes -
Virologists are still bringing dangerous, novel pathogens in from the wild
11 votes -
Back to the future: China revives blimps, now fully electric
19 votes -
Beijing's deflation dilemma: Falling prices signal bigger troubles ahead for China's economy
27 votes -
Australia, with no auto industry to protect, is awash with Chinese EVs
19 votes -
'Ne Zha 2' is highest-grossing animated movie worldwide, tops $1.7B
20 votes -
New EV batteries are making electric cars cheaper and safer
14 votes -
The Tiananmen Square protests in pictures, 1989
78 votes -
Decommissioned wind turbine blades recycled into asphalt for new roads in China
9 votes -
The Wandering Earth and the ugly American
7 votes -
I'm shocked how much I enjoyed Ne Zha 2, and I honestly think a lot of people here would feel the same about it
My partner and I have friends from China, and they pushed us to watch Ne Zha 2, the animated movie produced over there. It's pronounced "nuh zah" by the way. We had no idea what the fuss was...
My partner and I have friends from China, and they pushed us to watch Ne Zha 2, the animated movie produced over there. It's pronounced "nuh zah" by the way. We had no idea what the fuss was about, and we were skeptical since it has literally no marketing in the US, and we hadn't seen the first movie either. All we heard is that it's insanely popular in China, and making records in the domestic box office there.
Now, I can say I was honestly blown away. It's like, ruined other animated movies for me, for a while. Again, I had no expectations going in, and the first ten minutes of the movie, I thought this was not the movie for me, it looked like a kids' movie, I was almost rolling my eyes in the beginning of the movie tbh.
We didn't look at any clips on the Internet beforehand, and I'm glad, because they would not do the movie justice!
What got me, I think it was the visuals, the nonstop action that looks like it was made with an insane budget, and animators working way beyond healthy hours to produce. Oh, and the sound production with the deep bass, so I could feel every impact, I have to thank the theater for that lol. I didn't even know it was an action movie, so it caught me off guard just how many scenes they crammed in there! Once it started, it really felt almost nonstop, no time to breathe like most movies would do
The story is actually good too, and there are definitely parts where people could cry
I'm also not used to seeing much of Chinese fantasy settings, so that part was entertaining for me. I don't know how much was out of the director's imagination, or coming from Chinese mythology, or Chinese video games, it all came together so well though
If you like action, and fantasy, and animation or video games, and are okay reading subtitles, please do yourself a favor, watch this one!
Disclaimer: I'm a US citizen, I'm not affiliated with Chinese media, I'm not a marketer, I really genuinely loved the movie
21 votes -
Microplastics can block blood vessels in mice brains, researchers find
25 votes -
Researchers have created a new battery using aluminum
15 votes -
Infrastructure laundering: criminals are blending in with the cloud
4 votes -
DeepSeek’s safety guardrails failed every test researchers threw at its AI chatbot
16 votes -
Valiant Comics on the feasibility of a $4.99 issue
3 votes -
Chinese solar firms go where US tariffs don't reach
11 votes -
1,156 questions censored by DeepSeek
37 votes -
DeepSeek FAQ
20 votes -
What is China’s DeepSeek and why is it freaking out the AI world?
47 votes -
Restaurants close across China
25 votes -
US CIA now favors lab leak theory to explain Covid’s origins
33 votes -
Feminists facing resistance in China find the funny side of things
13 votes -
China's new stealth aircraft - "J-36" and the challenge to US air power (with Justin Bronk)
19 votes -
TikTok makes app unavailable for US users ahead of ban
54 votes -
US Supreme Court unanimously backs law banning TikTok if it’s not sold by its Chinese parent company
48 votes -
TSMC may have approval to create 2nm chips in the US
24 votes -
US introduces additional export restrictions on AI-chips
14 votes -
BYD's self-driving U9 jumps over obstacles
23 votes -
TikTok says it plans to shut down site for US unless Supreme Court strikes down law forcing it to sell
38 votes -
Tencent designated as a Chinese military company by US
29 votes -
Squabble grows as US government holds back 2024 funding from world anti-doping watchdog WADA
9 votes -
Any Tildeans who have lived in China or Russia and the West? What were the differences in the daily lives of average people?
edit: It's been a surprisingly active thread in a way I hadn't expected. Thank you everyone for the light debate, and I'm sorry if any of this was a source of discomfort. The internet has...
edit: It's been a surprisingly active thread in a way I hadn't expected. Thank you everyone for the light debate, and I'm sorry if any of this was a source of discomfort. The internet has historically been a safe place to find out things that would be difficult to ask in person even if you know who to ask, and I appreciate the fact-checking, reality-checking, what-have-you that comes with that.
Things like:
- What things felt free to do and not free to do? Was that a quality of law or society? (e.g., freedom of speech, gay relationships, zoning, running a business, jaywalking, etc.)
- Trust or reliability in government
- Educational quality
- Relationship to the media
- What luxuries people tended to have (e.g. modern imported gaming consoles, domestically produced products, number of cars, etc.)
Posting from America here. As the great power politics seems to have heated up these past 3-10 years, it feels like the environment has become more polarized as well. Eventually I started to ask myself what exactly I was supporting or opposing philosophically, in wanting my country to have the largest influence. The measures I came up with were not things that my own country did well on, and often felt like things I couldn't get the most accurate picture on without Russian or Chinese language acquisition. I happened upon a BBC article about new Chinese graduates I guess going through what millennials did in 2008, and found the general similarity of it interesting.
67 votes -
US Treasury says its computers were hacked by a Chinese 'threat actor' in a 'major incident'
45 votes -
More US telcos confirm Salt Typhoon breaches as White House weighs in
20 votes -
China to build world's largest hydropower dam in Tibet
12 votes -
Rare, widespread snowfall in Taklamakan Desert - China
16 votes -
She sued over transgender ‘conversion therapy,’ a first for China
14 votes -
Will China’s “green Great Wall” save it from encroaching sands?
9 votes -
How China became the world’s largest car exporter
7 votes -
Chinese pebble-bed reactor passes “meltdown” test
18 votes -
The price America paid for its first big immigration crackdown
29 votes -
World Chess Championship 2024 - Ding Liren vs Gukesh Dommaraju
The World Chess Championship started today between reigning champion, China's Ding Liren (2728 Elo, 32 y/o) and India's young prodigy Gukesh D. (2783 Elo, 18 y/o). It's taking place in Singapore...
The World Chess Championship started today between reigning champion, China's Ding Liren (2728 Elo, 32 y/o) and India's young prodigy Gukesh D. (2783 Elo, 18 y/o). It's taking place in Singapore with games starting at 5PM local time (10AM CET, 4AM EST). Commentated coverage can be found at Chess.com or FIDE as well as numerous smaller channels.
Coming into the match, Ding is far more experienced, but has been displaying terrible form since becoming World Champion. Meanwhile Gukesh has looked far stronger and has the chance to become the youngest World Champion ever, beating out the likes of Magnus Carlsen and Garry Kasparov by several years. Former World Champion Magnus Carlsen is still ranked as the #1 player in the world, but has declined to participate, just like last year.
The match is 14 games from November 23 to December 13, with potential rapid chess tiebreaks if the score is even after 14 games. The players will have a rest day after every 3 game days.
15 votes -
Top US senator calls Salt Typhoon ‘worst telecom hack in our nation’s history’
37 votes