Plus: HBO’s best zombie show is getting a huge upgrade.Plus: HBO’s best zombie show is getting a huge upgrade.
Inverse Daily
The Nintendo Switch 2 has finally been revealed with a short trailer from Nintendo. Here's everything we learned (and everything we still don't know) about the next Switch.
Nintendo
Gaming
The Nintendo Switch 2 Reveal Answers Some Questions But Raises Far More

At long last, the Nintendo Switch 2 has been officially revealed. After Nintendo’s January 16 announcement, we now know… well, not a whole lot more, honestly. Nintendo fans are still waiting to hear about the Switch 2’s technical capabilities, and more importantly, what games will be available, but our first look at the console does at least answer a few questions that grew out of the many leaks preceding it, while raising even more.

To get the biggest questions out of the way first: no, we don’t know the Switch 2 release date (though it is launching this year) or price tag. While the original Switch landed in stores in March 2017, there’s essentially no chance the Switch 2 will be available before June. Nintendo has announced a series of in-person events to show off the Switch 2 around the world, one of which runs until June 1, and two more that could come ever later.

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In a dimly lit room, a woman looks concerned as two figures approach her from a doorway, creating a tense atmosphere. Shadows enhance the suspense.
NEON
Review
‘Presence’ Falls Short Of Its Great Ghostly Gimmick

A cavernous house sits empty. The camera sits motionless from within a closet, its frame fixed on a window straight across from it. Suddenly, it moves, gliding to look out the window. It’s daylight — cars drive through a sunny suburban street, crickets chirp, the faint sound of kids trail through the air. But the camera seems to shrink away from the window, as if frightened. It glides through the rest of the house, weaving through wood-paneled hallways, before pausing in front of an old, rusty mirror. As the minutes pass, it makes its way back to the closet, as if waiting for … something.

It’s not long before its patience is rewarded: a family enters, led by a realtor showing them the house. The parents (Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan) and their two teen kids, Chloe (Callina Liang) and Tyler (Eddy Maday), are looking to make a fresh start after Chloe had suffered some unknown trauma. The camera seems to perk up upon seeing the family, taking a particular interest in Chloe, who jerks out of her grief-stricken haze when she senses something hovering over her shoulder.

It’s a striking opening for Steven Soderbergh’s Presence, a horror movie both defined by and burdened by its unique gimmick: a haunted house movie from the point of view of the ghost. But despite how game Soderbergh is to give this gimmick its due, screenwriter David Koepp’s barebones script and the casts’ somewhat shaggy performances result in Presence fading from the mind soon after it ends.

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