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Tag: arrow

  • ‘Europe’s Oldest Battlefield’ Just Got Stranger With New Evidence of Outsiders Involved

    ‘Europe’s Oldest Battlefield’ Just Got Stranger With New Evidence of Outsiders Involved

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    Northeastern Germany’s Tollense Valley hosts what is known as the world’s oldest battlefield: an archaeological site bearing the remains of some 150 individuals, dating to the 13th century BCE.

    Now, analysis of arrowheads found on the site reveal that the weaponry was not produced in the area, indicating that the conflict involved people from elsewhere in Europe. The team’s research was published today in Antiquity.

    “The arrowheads are a kind of ‘smoking gun’,” says lead author of the research, Leif Inselmann, a researcher at Freie Universtät Berlin and lead author of the study, in an Antiquity release. “Just like the murder weapon in a mystery, they give us a clue about the culprit, the fighters of the Tollense Valley battle and where they came from.”

    The site was first proposed to be a battlefield in 2011, though the parties involved in the conflict remain unclear. According to the release, based on the number of human remains left on the site, some researchers estimate over 2,000 people were involved with the battle itself. Now, the recent team has determined that at least some of the combatants were not locals to northern Germany.

    Inselmann has collected nearly 5,000 arrowheads from across Central Europe and discovered that different types were present at the battle site. The arrowheads were flint and bronze; though the flint arrowheads were typical from the area, the bronze arrowheads were a combination of local and non-local types. Many of the arrowheads were found in the Tollense area, but others—namely those with straight or rhombic bases—are more generally associated with regions farther south, like Bavaria and Moravia.

    The foreign arrowheads have not been found in tombs in the Tollense area, indicating that the arrowheads from elsewhere didn’t simply make their way to the region through trade. The barbs, it seems, were brought to Tollense for the purpose of conflict. One set of remains on the site makes that clear: a human skull cap, punctured with a bronze arrowhead.

    “The Tollense Valley conflict dates to a time of major changes,” Inselmann said. “This raises questions about the organization of such violent conflicts. Were the Bronze Age warriors organized as a tribal coalition, the retinue or mercenaries of a charismatic leader ‒ a kind of “warlord” ‒, or even the army of an early kingdom?”

    Though the arrowheads do not clear up the parties involved in the conflict, they show that the large-scale violence (for the time) involved groups from farther afield than previously known. As the team noted in their paper, no helmets and breastplates typical of the time have shown up from archaeological excavations of the site, so more digs may be necessary to reveal more about the ancient combatants at Tollense, the remains of many of whom remain on the site.

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    Isaac Schultz

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  • CW Boss Claims Superman & Lois Died For James Gunn’s Man of Steel

    CW Boss Claims Superman & Lois Died For James Gunn’s Man of Steel

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    The CW’s Arrowverse was once the talk of the superhero town, and arguably DC’s more successful live-action venture in the 2010s. But in recent years, the network’s superhero outings have all been shuttered, with Superman & Lois standing as the last Arrowverse hurrah for one more season.

    In a recent interview with TheWrap, CW’s entertainment president Brad Schwartz and overall company president Dennis Miller talked about keeping some shows from the old regime. Superman & Lois has apparently performed quite well in previous seasons, but it was allegedly Warner Bros.’ call to cap it at four seasons. “They don’t want a competing Superman product in the marketplace,” Schwartz explained, effectively laying the blame for the show’s end at 2025’s Superman: Legacy from James Gunn.

    This isn’t the first time the Arrowverse has been put in this position: WB asked Arrow’s creators to put in several Suicide Squad regulars like Deadshot and Amanda Waller in its show to get audiences used to them before their silver screen debut. The show was also apparently keen to do something with Harley Quinn, but those plans had to be junked once she was a principal lead in the film. Both Deadshot and Waller, along with Katana, were killed off or disappeared. The same was true of Deathstroke, who was a recurring character on the show: when it seemed like he’d be getting a solo movie (or be the villain in a planned solo movie for Ben Affleck’s Batman), Arrow’s Deathstroke had to walk into the mist, never to be seen again.

    It’s a weird situation DC has put the Arrowverse in, least of all because it let Grant Gustin’s version of the Flash stick around for Ezra Miller’s (possible) entire tenure as the Flash in the movies. Batman’s also been fairly exempt from this rule, since Gotham was on during Affleck’s Bat-tenure, and Robert Pattinson’s version is getting to co-exist with the evental Bats who’ll headline The Brave & the Bold.

    However, it’s also worth noting that the new CW regime is about saving (and eventually making) money lost by the old bosses. Schwartz even admitted when he and Miller came onboard, the network had “lost a lot of money.” And like WB Discovery, it’s in a penny-pinching move: Superman & Lois has had to dump several longtime series regulars and writers for its final season, and the episode count has been slimmed down from a standard 13-15 range to just 10. Schwartz similarly told TheWrap other veteran shows like All American and Walker will stick around on the network…as long as their budgets stay relatively the same.

    Either way, four seasons is a solid run for any show, and getting too long in the tooth has long been an issue with the medium (especially ones on this network). It’s not ideal, but at least Superman & Lois gets to go out on its own terms and deliver as much of an ending as it can.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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  • Critical Role’s Matt Mercer Solves Baldur’s Gate 3 Problems In The Most D&D Way

    Critical Role’s Matt Mercer Solves Baldur’s Gate 3 Problems In The Most D&D Way

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    Gif: Larian Studios / Kotaku

    Finding nonsensical solutions to a problem is a core part of the Dungeons & Dragons experience, and not many people know that better than actor and Critical Role DM Matt Mercer. With Baldur’s Gate 3 out this week, it seems only natural that a D&D superstar would make his way to Larian Studios’ RPG set in that universe and also come up with a ridiculous play like stacking a few dozen boxes on top of each other to get over a defensive wall and into a castle.

    Mercer, who appeared on a stream playing the game alongside Larian founder Swen Vincke, accomplished this feat by stacking 45 boxes to make a staircase. Using the jump command, Mercer scaled the makeshift stairs until he was high enough to fire an Arrow of Transposition, which teleports the user to wherever the projectile lands. Honestly, the whole thing kind of broke my brain.

    I’m around 25 hours into Baldur’s Gate 3, and I’m still wrapping my head around how much chaos it allows for. More often than not, when we think of RPGs and systemic chaos we think of open-world games where there are all these clockwork systems that we disrupt as the player and watch disorder unfold. But I think Baldur’s Gate 3 is more impressive in that it gives you so many tools to navigate the world and find creative solutions that can support something like making a giant staircase of boxes and then teleporting via arrow. It rules.

    As more players get their hands on Baldur’s Gate 3, we’ll no doubt see more people pulling off impressive nonsense, but shoutout to Mercer for ringing in release day with this terrific display.

    While we might not have outlined anything this wild, we can give you some early-game tips to help you get started in Baldur’s Gate 3.

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    Kenneth Shepard

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  • ‘Arrow’ Star Stephen Amell Doesn’t Support SAG Strike

    ‘Arrow’ Star Stephen Amell Doesn’t Support SAG Strike

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    Not every actor in Hollywood is happy about the SAG-AFTRA strike. Heels star Stephen Amell, best known for playing the superhero Green Arrow in the CW series Arrow, has spoken out against the work stoppage, calling the strike “myopic” as well as a “reductive negotiating tactic.”

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    Amell expressed his opposition to the strike while attending GalaxyCon in Raleigh, North Carolina. “I feel like I’m insulated in Hollywood because that’s where I live. I literally live in Hollywood. Like all the stereotypes that exist. So I feel like a lot of people in this room aren’t aware of the strike,” said Amell during a Q&A portion of the panel he appeared on. 

    “I support my union—I do, and I stand with them,” Amell continued. “I do not support striking. I don’t. I think that it is a reductive negotiating tactic, and I find the entire thing incredibly frustrating. And I think that the thinking as it pertains to shows like the show that I’m on [Heels] that premiered last night—I think it’s myopic.”

    Amell’s series Heels returned to Starz for a second season last Friday. Per the SAG Strike guidelines, Guild members “cannot participate in conventions such as Comic-Con on behalf of, or to promote, companies we are striking against—this includes appearances, panels, fan meet and greets, etc., involving struck work.” According to The Wrap, Amell attended the convention with the intention to sign autographs and talk to fans about himself—not to promote Heels or any of his other projects. 

    Amell is one of the only actors to speak out against the SAG-AFTRA strike, which nearly 98% of SAG-AFTRA members voted in favor of this past June. Led by SAG president Fran Drescher, the actors union began its strike against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers on July 14, joining the Writers Guild of America, which has been on strike since May 2. The industry is now being roiled by its first dual strike in 63 years. 

    While Amell might not have technically broken SAG rules by appearing at GalaxyCon, other members of the Arrowverse—the shared universe that connects DC Comics superheroes found on CW television shows—don’t seem too happy with his comments or actions. Matt Letscher, who played Eobard Thawne/Reverse-Flash on CW’s The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow, tweeted, “Still waiting on that comprehensive list of totally non-reductive negotiating tactics we get to employ now.” Actor Kirk Acevedo, who starred as comic book villain Ricardo Diaz/The Dragon, an antagonist to Amell’s Green Arrow on Arrow, put it more plainly, retweeting a Hollywood Reporter story on Amell’s GalaxyCon comments and writing, “This fucking guy.”

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    Chris Murphy

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