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  • Satellite constellation to scan Earth every 20 minutes to catch wildfires early

    Satellite constellation to scan Earth every 20 minutes to catch wildfires early

    FireSat is capable of multispectral imaging across the visible, near-infrared, short-, mid- and long-wave infrared bands simultaneously. The firm said the broad array of IR data is essential for detecting wildfires in their early stages, monitoring fire dynamics and tracking other thermal anomalies. 

    While this technology demonstration has proven successful, a further 50 or so satellites will ultimately need to be in orbit to complete the constellation. It will operate in low-Earth orbit with an observation swath width of 1,500km and a nadir ground sample distance of 50m.

    The instrument’s resolution, sensitivity and large dynamic range enable it to detect small cool fires 5×5 metres while also imaging without saturation for hot, intense fires.

    Google, which has provided $13m (£9.5m) to the initiative led by Earth Fire Alliance, said it will be able to “detect and track wildfires the size of a classroom within 20 minutes”. While each point on Earth will be observed every 20 minutes, key wildfire-prone regions will benefit from more frequent observations. 

    Muon Space is planning to launch the first block of three additional FireSat satellites in 2026, followed by a series of further launches that should see the constellation completed by 2030.

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  • Why the Gen Z Star Is an Artist You Need to Know

    Why the Gen Z Star Is an Artist You Need to Know


    T
    he doors of the El Rey Theater in Los Angeles felt like a vortex last Friday: Fans walked in wearing Hawaiian shirts, leis, and tropical flower clip-ins, ready to be transported into the Elvis Presley Blue Hawaii world of Remy Bond. A burlesque dancer opened the show, and for her set, Bond popped out of a giant cake, backed by a pair of dancers (and her sister Olivia) dressed like Fifties diner waitresses. 

    At one point, Bond sang from inside a martini glass; at another, she marries a fan and shares a kiss with him onstage. Her giant blonde hair bounces over her tiny shoulders as she serenades the crowd with her oldies-inspired sound. In the middle of the fever dream, Bond pulls out a bedazzled vape from her dress, offering a puff to each of her dancers before taking one herself. Bond’s music lives in this fuzzy, decade-blending, kitschy utopia. It doesn’t feel real — and it isn’t supposed to. Since her first single in 2023, Bond has built a cult-like audience around this vintage fantasy, and her sound offers nostalgia and a breath of fresh air at the same time.

    “It’s a diamond sadness and a washed-up glittery sound that works for me,” she tells me over a greek salad at a diner, where we meet for lunch. We sit in the back corner of the tiny joint called Cindy’s, surrounded mostly by seniors, as Bond goes off on tangents about her adventures making music. Today, there’s no wig, but she’s wearing a Hawaiian shirt-inspired blouse, and a fake Sailor Jerry tattoo is fading off her arm. The workers here are dressed like Bond’s dancers during the show, and Bond can decipher the Sixties songs that are playing in the background. Even as she preps for her first big tour, Bond is already thinking about a new era of music. 

    “Every shroom trip, we got a new source of inspiration. We wrote ‘Movie Star’ on shrooms. We were like, ‘Oh my gosh, if we take shrooms, we can write so many bangers.’ So we would just go into album mode every time we would do it,” she says of a recent trip with her go-to producer Jules Apolinaire. 

    “Wait, we should do shrooms together. Why not do shrooms right now?”

    Despite being early in her career, Bond is already carving a distinct sonic and visual lane for her music, which pairs her old-school inspiration with a sharply Gen Z perspective. She listens to both Kanye West and the Ronettes, although “Kanye is not the bad bitch he once was,” she says. It’s not the real-life Sixties and Seventies that inspire Bond, but the fantasy worlds imagined by Hollywood — it’s no surprise that Elvis’ campy world is high on the inspo list. “Elvis’ guitar-shaped car is for sale… I should have bought that instead of the  Chelsea Hotel sign,” Bond says, confessing: “I spent all my money on it. I can’t even afford furniture.”

    That dreamy, retro longing in Bond’s music? It probably started at home. Bond’s parents often threw dinner parties and played music that she quickly fell in love with: She’d play Cat Stevens, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and the Mamma Mia! Soundtrack on repeat. The Bond sisters (they also have a younger brother) weren’t allowed phones until eighth grade, so Remy listened to whatever CDs were lying around. (Supertramp’s Breakfast in America comes up more than once in our conversation.)

    Her dad, she says, is a cinephile and would play classic movies all the time. She’d also watch shows like Downton Abbey constantly. “I was Lady Branson for Halloween for three years,” she says. “I consumed everything my parents were really into. I guess they had good taste.” Oh, and she grew up next door to Sean Ono Lennon. “My first exposure to nudity was him shooting [something] in the backyard,” says Bond. “Dude, this guy literally never left this house.”

    Before music became her full passion, Remy and her sister Olivia made history as the first sibling duo to compete on MasterChef Junior. Culinary art was like her first love, thanks to her mom. In some adorable YouTube videos from 2018, you can see a tiny Bond strutting around the kitchen in a giant bow, bossing the other kids around. The hair accessories — now it’s usually a tropical flower — are part of the vibe today, too.“I still am into cooking. I make macaroons and shit,” she says. “It was something I was into, but it just didn’t mean anything to me.”

    She traded the spatula for a microphone once she hit high school. “I was studying music but wasn’t writing it, until I got an Omnichord — that’s when I started writing songs,” she says. (You can thank David Bowie for the instrument choice.) “I was trained classically in Italian, but when I realized I could write my own songs and create the music I wanted to hear, I became fixated.”

    Bond started releasing music in 2023 with “End of the World,” where she posed the paradoxical question, “Why am I so nostalgic for the now?” — a lyric that still defines much of her music. The next summer, she dropped “Summer Song,” which introduced her to many of the fans she has today, thanks in part to its virality on TikTok.

    “Summer Song,” her breakthrough hit, was born from an impromptu trip to Paris after watching The Virgin Suicides. She and her sister Olivia had just seen the iconic film for the first time when Liv decided to DM Air — the duo behind the film’s dreamy soundtrack — to ask if they’d want to collaborate. “[Jean-Benoît Dunckel] actually responded. I totally lied. I was like, ‘I’m going to be in Paris next week, let’s get a coffee,’” Bond recounts. “And he was like, ‘Sure.’ So I flew to Paris for a coffee. I didn’t want to seem like a stalker, so I looked at their tour dates… and we made ‘Summer Song’ there.”

    Early listeners of Bond were drawn in by the cinematic quality of her music, with some comparing her sound to that of a young Lana Del Rey. Her use of old-Americana nostalgia has sparked conversations about parallels with Del Rey, including with the visual for “Summer Song,” which calls to mind “National Anthem.” But Bond, who first got into Lana during the Covid pandemic, doesn’t mind the comparisons. “People can say what they want. I think it’s a compliment,” she says. (She’s a fan of Del Rey’s unreleased music.)

    It’s the whimsical energy of the music that really sets her apart. Bond’s song “San Francisco” takes inspiration from the Summer of Love. “My muse was Jenny from Forrest Gump,” she says. She wrote last year’s “Red, White, and Blue” during what she describes as a time of “a lot of political tension” around the 2024 election, and shortly after cutting ties with a friend who wanted to vote for RFK “because of his views on food,” she explains. “I was worried people would perceive it as an ‘I love America’ song. I think it is a little bit perceived that way, but it’s not.” And “Star-Shaped Baby,” it’s about “a girl who’s shaped by the industry to be a star.” Is that you? “I don’t know,” she says. “I think I’m a star.”

    The artwork for February’s “Simple Girl” features a Stepford Wives-like Bond mowing a lawn, mirroring the irony of the song’s opening line: “I’m a simple girl, I like gardening ‘n drugs.” She pulled the lyric from something she overheard at a café in L.A. “I was like, ‘I relate to that.’ I have a garden, and I hide my vape in my garden to avoid hitting it,” she says with a laugh. None of Bond’s lyrics take things too seriously.

    Bond’s latest single “Movie Star” trades the Fifties-Sixties fantasies for Seventies Europop. Remy takes a jab at an unworthy lover withthe silly line: “You say you love the music / But you vape, you vape, you vape.” “That line modernizes the song a bit,” Bond explains. “I didn’t want it to be totally a throwback; I wanted it to feel a little kitschy, a little funny.” Then she giggles: “The bridge is just about the guy I lost my virginity to…” She leans in and whispers his name in my ear. “It’s about some spawn of a Spice Girl,” she clarifies on the record, eyeing my phone recording. 

    The vape talk suddenly reminds Bond of something. She pauses, checks her phone, and looks at me: “I actually ordered a vape here. Do you mind if I use your ID?” she asks. “I don’t have my fake.” Yeah, I’m down! (I pull out my wallet.) “Fuck. It said the delivery guy was here 20 minutes ago,” she says. “It’s not good for my lungs, anyway. I just like the flavor.”

    Mid-interview, a call comes in from “Cheese,” the nickname for Bond’s sister Olivia. “She’s editing the ‘Moviestar’ video as we speak,” Bond tells me, before answering one of her sisters’ questions about the visual over the phone. (A close-up of some bedazzled vapes open the video meant to be set in the Seventies. “No one let us film the vape on set. So we rehired a film crew to just get a shot of us twinkling our vapes,” she says.)

    Olivia is an integral part of Remy Bond, The Artist. During the tour, Olivia acts as a co-star. For “Moviestar,” which Olivia wrote on and sings on, she grabs a mic and duets with Remy, frolicking with her onstage. During “San Francisco,” she appears in a peace sign-shaped dress inspired by what Marina Abramović wore at Glastonbury last year. Olivia also directs and stars in most of Bond’s videos — and when Bond’s opener dropped out at a recent show, she filled in, performing some of Remy’s unreleased songs.

    “We just keep each other in check,” says Bond. “We are the same person, but also completely opposites. She has a really good perspective on things. I don’t. I’m better with melodies because I’m not as quick at putting things into words. She’s better with words, but not as sonic.”

    “Same with our faces,” she adds. “The top half of her eyes are better than mine, and my mouth is better than hers. So if we combined ourselves, we’d be perfect.”

    After the Bonds wrap her tour this month, they’ll be going full-throttle on Remy’s debut album. Bond says she’s headed to Austria with Jules Apolinaire, her and Suki Waterhouse’s go-to producer, to make more songs for the album. Expect more ABBA, more Seventies sparkle, more Europop flair. She’s actually deep in “research” mode. On a recent trip to Sweden — which included a shroom-fueled escape from the music of a modern male pop singer she won’t name (“I don’t want to diss anyone, but I was literally in hell,” she says) — she somehow ended up on a date with one of Björn Ulvaeus’ grandkids. “We just went for a walk. He didn’t really speak any English,” she says with a giggle. “In LA, I couldn’t do that. But when I’m in Sweden, I’m free of all social norms, so I can be weird.” Also, she’s single, and into English guys. “I don’t really date LA guys. They’re all gay to me,” she says. 

    After finishing her salad, I give Bond a ride to the studio — with a quick vape stop on the way, of course. She comes out holding a pink, strawberry mango-flavored one she’s had before. She takes a few puffs before we get to the studio, where Apolinaire matches Bond’s endearingly chaotic energy, greeting us in fuzzy red-and-pink-heart pajamas at the door.

    “Today’s a very special day,” he says in his French accent. “Therefore, Rem-ee close your eyes.” The producer goes into another room to pull out a massive, Dolly Punkton, if you will, wig covered in plastic: “Happy two years of friendship and music.” (Today marks two years since their first session.)

    Bond lets out a squeal as she opens her eyes: “Where did you even get this?” asks Bond, plopping the head of hair on her head. “It’s so Agnetha.” The wig fits perfectly.

    “That’s the most Abba I’ve ever seen you,” responds Apolinaire. She’s yet to use the wig onstage, but it won’t take long before she does. She later sends me a photo of her gift to Apolinaire: a tin of caviar and a Bluey plushie. 

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    Weeks later, Bond sends me a text, with me an amendment for this story: “Can u include in ur article that my wig got checked for drugs at TSA?” she wrote. “#formative moment. Hairspray’s a drug.” 

    In Remy Bond’s world, it really is. 

    PRODUCTION CREDITS:

     Styling by OMID ANTHONY DIBAEI. Styling Assistant MICAELLA LANDERS.

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  • Orlando Pride signs midfielder Ally Lemos to a new contract

    Orlando Pride signs midfielder Ally Lemos to a new contract

    ORLANDO, Fla. (June 30, 2025) — The Orlando Pride (8-3-1, 25 points) and midfielder Ally Lemos have agreed to a new contract through the 2027 season with a mutual option for 2028, it was announced today. Lemos was originally drafted by the Pride in the First Round, No. 9 overall, of the 2024 NWSL Draft and became the fourth-youngest draftee in NWSL history.

    “From the moment we drafted her in 2024, we knew Ally possessed special qualities both on and off the pitch. In her rookie season, she demonstrated remarkable maturity and professionalism while contributing to our championship run,” VP of Soccer Operations and Sporting Director Haley Carter said. “Her development trajectory has been exceptional, and we’re committed to nurturing her growth into one of the league’s premier midfielders. This extension reflects our belief in her potential and our investment in building sustainable success around young, talented players like Ally.”

    Since joining the Pride ahead of the 2024 season, Lemos has appeared in 29 matches, playing a pivotal role in securing both the NWSL Shield and NWSL Championship in her rookie year. The 21-year-old made her professional debut in the Pride’s season-opening match at Racing Louisville last year, coming on as a second-half substitute. She later made her first NWSL start in the return match at home against Louisville on May 5.

    Before turning professional, Lemos showcased her talent at UCLA, where she started in all 44 matches across two seasons, tallying three goals and 11 assists. In 2023, she earned First-Team All-Pac-12 and All-Pacific Region honors while leading the Bruins in minutes played. During her freshman campaign in 2022, she led the Pac-12 in assists (nine) and earned Second-Team All-Pacific Region honors.

    One of her most memorable collegiate moments came in the 2022 NCAA Championship match, when she provided the game-tying assist with just 16 seconds left in regulation, helping UCLA clinch the national title in extra time.

    At the international level, Lemos represented the U.S. in the 2024 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup, helping the Americans to a third-place finish.

    TRANSACTION: Orlando Pride signs midfielder Ally Lemos to a new contract through the 2027 season with a mutual option for 2028.

    Ally Lemos

    Born: March 4, 2004 in Pasadena, Calif.

    Hometown: Glendora, Calif.


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  • World Cup heat: Fifa should consider 9am start for final, says expert

    World Cup heat: Fifa should consider 9am start for final, says expert

    While such suggestions may seem far-fetched to some, a more flexible approach is something global players’ union Fifpro is now calling for after what it calls the “wake-up call” of the Club World Cup.

    At a news conference on Monday, its medical director Dr Vincent Gouttebarge said extended half-time breaks of 20 minutes in extreme heat to keep players’ core temperatures within their normal range should be considered.

    Alexander Bielefeld, Fifpro’s director of policy, claimed the weather was of “increasing concern”, and that while postponing matches for heat was “slightly trickier” than in a domestic league “we clearly believe that from a health and safety perspective this is something that must take priority over commercial interests.”

    Fifa guidelines currently rely on the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT), a measure of heat stress combining temperature and humidity. If the WBGT exceeds 32C, short ‘cooling breaks’ are mandatory in both halves of a match.

    In contrast, Fifpro believes breaks should be introduced once the WBGT goes above 28C, and that if it exceeds 32C matches should be delayed. On this basis, so far at the Club World Cup both PSG v Atletico Madrid in Pasadena and Chelsea v ES Tunis in Philadelphia “should have been postponed to a better place in the day and, if not available (another slot), then rescheduled”.

    “We are partially happy, because Fifa have been quite responsive once the tournament was underway [and] have actually modified how they’ve been dealing with heat during matches, based on our input,” said Fifpro general secretary Alex Phillips.

    “Obviously it would have been better if that had happened in advance, but they’ve put in place measures such as additional water and towels around the pitch.

    “There’s a question at some point [over] what the industry sees as a precautionary threshold to players, but also to spectators, to potentially delay kick-off later on. You can apply so many pragmatic measures, such as shading, hydration, cooling, etc. At some point, that probably won’t be enough. And that’s a discussion which we need to have, even though this is a difficult conversation based on commercial interests.”

    Earlier this year, researchers from Queen’s University Belfast warned the temperatures at 14 of the 16 stadiums being used for the 2026 World Cup could exceed potentially dangerous levels, with Miami and Monterrey posing the greatest risk as they do not have air-conditioned stadiums.

    While Dallas and Houston do have cooling systems, it said there was still a risk to spectators if games were played in the afternoon. Significantly, the report also suggested afternoon games be avoided in New York, along with Kansas City, Boston and Philadelphia.

    Fifpro says any afternoon kick-offs at six venues; Kansas City, Miami, Monterrey, Houston, Dallas and Atlanta carry an “extremely high-risk” of a “heat-stress injury”. Only two; San Francisco and Vancouver are rated “low-risk”.

    When asked if Fifpro will make recommendations to Fifa before the World Cup when it comes to kick-off times at certain venues, Phillips said, “We have absolutely no power to force them to, we can only use informal pressure.

    “We will use common sense arguments. We can use the MLS [Major League Soccer] protocols. They don’t play matches at midday in Florida, for example, and haven’t done for a number of years. So those kind of arguments are strong.”

    However, with more matches next year (104) than at any previous World Cup, Fifa may feel its ability to adapt scheduling and postpone matches is limited.

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  • Mpetshi Perricard shatters Wimbledon serve speed record with 153 mph blast – ATP Tour

    1. Mpetshi Perricard shatters Wimbledon serve speed record with 153 mph blast  ATP Tour
    2. Frenchman rips Wimbledon-record 153 mph serve  ESPN
    3. Taylor Fritz next match at Wimbledon 2025: TV schedule, scores, results for tennis grand slam  sportingnews.com
    4. Wimbledon Betting Odds and Match Previews for June 30, 2025, Men’s Singles  Sportsbook Wire
    5. Fritz vs. Mpetshi Perricard Prediction at the Wimbledon – Monday, June 30  Bleacher Nation

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  • Apple weighs using Anthropic or OpenAI to power Siri in major reversal, Bloomberg News reports – Reuters

    1. Apple weighs using Anthropic or OpenAI to power Siri in major reversal, Bloomberg News reports  Reuters
    2. Apple Weighs Using Anthropic or OpenAI to Power Siri in Major Reversal  Bloomberg.com
    3. Our Testing Found That Siri Is a Search Tool, Not an AI Assistant  Deepwater Asset Management
    4. Apple up 3% at 5-week high after report of ‘major reversal’ in Siri AI strategy  TipRanks
    5. Tech evolution: Did Apple blink or think different in the race for artificial intelligence?  Mint

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  • Renewable Polymers Set to Revolutionize Medicine

    Renewable Polymers Set to Revolutionize Medicine

    In recent years, scientists have been exploring the use of renewable polymers derived from natural sources. Materials such as vegetable cellulose, bacterial cellulose, chitosan, and starch offer attractive properties for biomedical applications, especially in controlled drug release systems and regenerative medicine. However, despite their potential, many of these polymers still face significant challenges in reaching commercialization.

    The study conducted by Lopes et al. points out that despite advances, only a few natural polymers have become available on the market. The research emphasizes the importance of chemical modification and preparation strategies to improve the properties of these materials for clinical applications consequently.

    An interesting finding of the study is that, despite the promising properties of these renewable polymers, the path from the bench to the market remains challenging. This is due to factors such as the need to ensure the safety, efficacy, and economic viability of these materials before their widespread adoption.

    As such, this study aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the properties and potential of renewable polymers for biomedical applications, highlighting the routes from the laboratory to the market and the prospects for future developments. Addressing these aspects is hoped to contribute to the advancement and applicability of these sustainable materials in biomedical practice.

    /Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.

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  • Wimbledon 2025: How has the first day of electronic line-calling gone?

    Wimbledon 2025: How has the first day of electronic line-calling gone?

    The emptiness of the courts is noticeable on Centre Court and Court One, where the vast space behind the baseline is now occupied only by the ball kids.

    Britain’s Cameron Norrie said it “looks cool” with the line umpires in place and contributes to the “tradition” of the tournament.

    “Obviously there’s a lot of jobs and people that love tennis, which will definitely be missed from them,” he said.

    But while many players agree line judges are part of the spectacle, few can argue with the accuracy of the calls.

    “As a player it’s pretty black or white with the calls,” added Norrie.

    “In, out… there’s no mistake, nothing happening. Definitely you’ve got to feel for those linesmen and those people. That’s a bit tough for them, but it’s pretty black or white with the calling.”

    The theatre of players challenging the calls has also been a notable absence with fans unable to get involved with the drama of a close call being replayed on the big screen.

    American 12th seed Frances Tiafoe said he would have liked to see Wimbledon keep line judges.

    “I actually like [it] with them [line judges] on the court, because I think for fanfare it’s better,” he said.

    “If I were to hit a serve on a big point, you go up with the challenge, is it in, is it out? The crowd is, like, ‘ohhh’. There’s none of that.

    “If I hit a good serve now and they call it out, you may still think it’s in, but it doesn’t matter. I think that kind of kills it.”

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  • Greige on the Beach: Jon Hamm and Alexandra Daddario Join Loro Piana’s Montauk Cocktail

    Greige on the Beach: Jon Hamm and Alexandra Daddario Join Loro Piana’s Montauk Cocktail

    Jon Hamm, Anna OsceolaPhoto: Mikey DeTemple

    The skies were grey. Then moody. Then, miraculously, golden. As the clock struck five on Saturday evening, the clouds over Lake Montauk parted and the sun beamed down—just in time for Loro Piana’s chic cocktail gathering at the Crow’s Nest.

    Among the first to arrive were Alexandra Daddario and Jon Hamm—two of the evening’s most star-studded guests. Daddario, dressed in a pale seafoam pleated skirt and soft white knit, made herself right at home at the backgammon table, diving into a match with a fellow guest as though it were the most glamorous tournament in town. Hamm, fresh off the news that his Apple TV+ series had been renewed, held court near one of the beachside lounge setups, trading stories and charming absolutely everyone within reach. His wife, Anna Osceola, stood nearby in a minimalist ivory dress and slouchy sweater, a study in coastal polish.

    To toast the season (and subtly debut its Resort 2025 and new eyewear collections), Loro Piana transformed the lakefront stretch of sand into an elevated playground. Wicker lounges sat atop woven seagrass carpets, white-upholstered sofas flanked by the brand’s signature Art of Good Living touches—cashmere-lined backgammon sets and leather-trimmed Connect Four games artfully arranged for play.

    Naturally, Loro Piana had dressed many of the evening’s guests, turning the crowd into a softly sunlit palette of beige, greige, and perfectly pleated linen. And when the sun made its theatrical entrance, the brand’s new sunglasses—gifted to attendees—ensured no one was left squinting.

    As DJ Bec Adams spun a breezy set and spritzes were passed around, guests like Will Arnett, Cynthia Rowley, Carolyn Tate Angel, Iana Godnia, Casey Fremont, and Alejandra Alonso Rojas settled in to enjoy the scene. With the tide gently rolling in and the sky streaked pink and lavender, the evening captured what Loro Piana does best: quiet elegance with a sense of place.

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  • “Speculation is always fun” — Halo Studios says fans won’t want to miss this year’s championship in October

    “Speculation is always fun” — Halo Studios says fans won’t want to miss this year’s championship in October

    Any Halo fans hoping to hear something about what’s next for the long-running Xbox franchise should tune into Halo World Championship 2025. That’s according to the Halo Studios team, which shared an update via Halo Waypoint on Monday.

    “We don’t usually comment on such matters, but this time we want to enter the chat and share a little more perspective for Halo fans who might be on the fence about whether to attend this year’s event,” the team says, addressing recent speculation surrounding when exactly something will be seen.

    At last year’s championship, Halo Studios shared that it was rebranding away from its prior name, 343 Industries, while also unveiling an Unreal Engine 5 teaser called Project Foundry that served as an exploration of the Halo universe using the new technology.

    The studio confirmed that it was switching to Unreal Engine 5 for future projects, abandoning the Slipspace engine that was used to build Halo Infinite and had served as a successor to the Blam! engine of the original Halo games.

    “Speculation is always fun, but if you want the official scoop on what Halo Studios has been working on, you won’t want to miss this year’s Halo World Championship. We really hope you’ll join us in Seattle this October!”

    What projects is Halo Studios working on?

    Will we see a return to Halo: Combat Evolved? (Image credit: Xbox Game Studios)

    It’s interesting to me that Halo Studios continues to emphasize “multiple projects” as opposed to just saying the team’s next game. There are a couple of different possibilities worth mentioning.

    Rumors abound that Halo: Combat Evolved is getting a remaster or remake of some kind, which would line up with the assets seen in the Project Foundry teaser, as well as comments from Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer.

    During the Xbox Games Showcase 2025, Spencer noted that 2026 would see a “new Fable, the next Forza, Gears of War E-Day, and the return of a classic that’s been with us since the beginning.”

    While Halo wasn’t mentioned by name, it’s hard to imagine exactly what other classic Spencer would be referencing.

    Project Foundry focused on the Pacific Northwest, snowy mountains, and Flood-infested biomes. (Image credit: Xbox Game Studios)

    If this does pan out, then I sincerely hope it leans more toward a remake rather than a remaster. Halo: Combat Evolved was already remastered and can be played on Xbox and PC as part of the Master Chief Collection.

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