Battlegrounds, plans to spend more than 200 billion won ($136 million) this year to invest in over a dozen promising game studios, underscoring its ambition to become a global force in publishing.Most Read from BloombergThese Homes Withstood the LA Fires.
EBL, a pioneering sustainable energy brand committed to environmental protection, efficiency, and stability, made an impact at the CES 2025 held at the Las Vegas Convention Center. The event served as a platform for
Palm Tree Club at MGM Grand is scheduled to debut this May. The tropical oasis overtakes the resort’s Wet Republic space. Wet Republic was a leader in the dayclub trend when it opened in 2008. The space underwent a major overhaul just before the pandemic in 2019, and celebrated its final pool party season in 2024.
Electronic music artist Kygo has struck a major deal in Las Vegas: He will open his own Palm Tree Beach Club at MGM Grand in May in the Tao Group venue formerly occupied by pioneering dayclub Wet Republic,
Janet Jackson, Blake Shelton, and New Kids on the Block are just a few of the acts with Las Vegas residencies this year. See the full list of 2025 shows and how to buy tickets.
After dropping a plethora of cryptic clues and tantalising teasers, Kenny Chesney has officially announced that he will be launching a residency at the Sphere in Las Vegas this May. The ‘No Shoes, No Shirt,
Kenny Chesney is Sphere-bound. The country star announced Thursday that he’ll launch a 12-date residency at the state-of-the-art dome-shaped venue in Las Vegas in May, nine months after he wrapped a U.S. tour that hit Inglewood’s SoFi Stadium in July.
Kenny Chesney will be the first country artist to headline the Las Vegas Sphere following residencies by U2, Phish, Dead and Company, and the Eagles.
SPECULATION over Nintendo’s new console, a successor to the wildly popular Switch, reached a fever pitch Thursday with specialist media predicting an imminent announcement from the Japanese gaming giant.
Battlegrounds, is planning to invest more than 200 billion won ($136 million) this year into more than a dozen game studios. It’s the latest step in a push to become a global publishing powerhouse. According to a Bloomberg report,
Battlegrounds, plans to spend more than 200 billion won ($136 million) this year to invest in over a dozen promising game studios, underscoring its
US chipmaker Nvidia is under a Chinese probe, while China’s Tencent was blacklisted and TikTok faces a ban in the US. America should rethink its whack-a-mole approach. It’s self-defeating.