Posing that it’s cool. The caption of “Mother Af” is still very naughty. Until having to cry at once, with Aff’s mother saying ..I already messaged you and didn’t reply at all..
But who is your mother saying? Are you young? Is there anyone who dares not answer Mother Aff too?
December 15, 2022
Dead Space fans are unhappy with the new face of Isaac Clarke in the remake
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A recent preview of the Dead Space remake gave us our first glimpse of Isaac Clarke’s new face, and his surprisingly youthful and father-like appearance is a hit with fans of the series.
From the very beginning of the announcement of the Dead Space remake, it was clear that Isaac Clarke would play a larger role this time around. One of the first big changes announced in the remake was that Isaac would now talk.
However, the fact that Isaac Clarke has become more talkative is not the only thing that has changed in his appearance. As shown in a recent IGN First video explaining the changes to the game’s story, Isaac also received a completely different face this time around. The video shows Isaac during the opening segments of the Dead Space remake, but it wasn’t the character’s new garrulity that caught everyone’s attention.
Dead Space fans have been quick to react to the changes, and they don’t seem to be happy with them. One of the most popular tweets regarding the change says that Isaac Clarke now looks like a “youth pastor” and a Twitter user wonders how the developers managed to “whitewash the white guy”.
In addition to youth pastors and middle-aged fathers, Isaac’s new face model has also been compared to Adam Sandler and Cole Phelps of LA Noire. However, the only accurate comparison is Andy Bernard from The Office. Let’s hope all this anger management work doesn’t stop him from killing Necromorphs.
On the Dead Space Redditor subreddit, Pebble_Bandit even made a face edit that makes Isaac look a little closer to how he was in the original game, while still looking much younger and fresher. The reaction to this version of the face, which was made more similar to how it looked in the game.

However, some Dead Space fans don’t seem to be very concerned regarding the changes. Some point out that Isaac has always looked like a “typical white guy” and that this version of his face is at least a little closer to his voice actor, Gunnar Wright. Others point out how frustrating it will be to watch this sweet version of Isaac have his day completely ruined.
Ironically, this isn’t the first time this year that a remake of a beloved horror game has been ridiculed for the way the protagonist’s face has changed. Earlier this year, Konami announced that it was teaming up with the Bloober Team to create a remake of Silent Hill 2, and a much more expressive James Sunderland was shown in the trailer for it.
Silent Hill fans weren’t impressed with the change, deriding how normal he now looks and how the remake turned him into “a guy who would kill his wife”.
Least developed countries account for 69% of climate-related deaths
AA/ Dakar / Alioune Ndiaye
The world’s lowest emitters of greenhouse gases, the least developed countries (LDCs) are those which suffer the most impact from climate change, with 69% of the total deaths linked to climate-related disasters in the world.
This was announced on Thursday by Rolf Traeger, head of the LDCs section of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (Unctad).
“LDCs are the first to feel climate change. As proof, 69% of deaths due to climate-related disasters that have been recorded in the world over the past fifty years have occurred in these countries”, he said on the occasion of the presentation of the 2022 report of the Unctad on LDCs.
“During the period 2017-2021, they were the target of 19% of the climatic, meteorological and hydrological hazards that occurred in the world and represented 29% of the affected populations”, further noted Traeger in his presentation.
According to the report presented Thursday in Dakar, the LDCs, which number 46, have approximately 1.1 billion inhabitants (14% of the world’s population) and have a low level of carbon dioxide emissions compared to other countries.
“In 2019, their share of global CO2 emissions attributable to the two main sources of greenhouse gas emissions, namely the combustion of fossil fuels and industrial processes, was around 1.1%,” noted the report. , noting that the carbon footprint in these countries was at least eight times lower than in developed or other developing countries.
“The vulnerabilities of LDCs and the shortcomings of the current development model, which the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed, call for the adoption of a development strategy that guarantees growth and structural transformation, while taking into account social and environmental aspects,” Traeger said, calling for urgent solutions.
The report entitled ”The transition to a low-carbon economy and its daunting consequences for structural transformation” has identified ways to respond to the climate emergency in LDCs.
It is therefore a question, among other things, for Cnuced of rethinking international support and financing of climate action and also of taking into account the specific needs in terms of development to ensure a transition towards a low-carbon economy.
Only part of the dispatches, which Anadolu Agency broadcasts to its subscribers via the Internal Broadcasting System (HAS), is broadcast on the AA website, in a summarized manner. Please contact us to subscribe.
Joe Biden called on Thursday for an increased role for Africa on the international scene, also committing to promote good governance and democracy there, on the last day of a summit in Washington supposed to mark the return of the United States to the world. continent.
The American president has also promised to visit sub-Saharan Africa, possibly as early as next year, which would be the first visit at this level since Barack Obama, who visited Kenya and Ethiopia in 2015.
“We are all going to see you and you are all going to see us a lot,” he told the heads of state or government of 49 African countries represented at the Africa summit in Washington.
He did not mention a date or the countries he intended to visit, pointing out that some countries “had invited him” and that he had replied: “Be careful what you ask. I might well come” .
Former President Donald Trump had not made any trips to sub-Saharan Africa.
Support for the maintenance of peace and security, good governance or human rights, on a continent where more than one country is criticized in this area, the President of the United States spoke on Wednesday and Thursday in front of his African peers of a series of American aid intended to reflect this renewed commitment of his country on the continent.
In particular, he announced $2.5 billion in aid to fight food insecurity in Africa and concluded a “strategic partnership” with the African Union in the short and long term to ensure agricultural sustainability on the continent.
“Food security is essential for peace and prosperity,” he said. “Put simply, if a parent can’t feed their child, nothing else really matters.”
The issue of soaring food prices, aggravated by the war in Ukraine following the Russian invasion of that country in February, dominated the work of the summit on Thursday followingnoon.
In the morning, Mr. Biden announced that he would release $75 million to strengthen democratic institutions in Africa, as well as $100 million in security assistance.
Before welcoming African leaders to dinner on Wednesday evening, he had just received at the White House the leaders of six African countries where elections will be held next year, which the United States intends to monitor closely.
– At the negotiating table –
“Africa must be at the table in every room – in every room where global challenges are discussed – and in all institutions”, he further stressed, expressly quoting the UN Security Council. and the G20, which brings together the main economic powers of the world.
An initiative immediately welcomed by Senegalese President Macky Sall, who holds the rotating presidency of the African Union.
But the latter also called, in a rare discordant note, for the lifting of international sanctions once morest Zimbabwe and warned once morest a bill considered by the American Congress which would impose sanctions on African countries dealing with Russia.
“It would be the first time in international relations that an entire continent would be targeted in this way,” he said.
African leaders were generally satisfied with the holding of the summit – the last in this format dates back to 2014 under Barack Obama – even if the chairman of the AU Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, deplored the “national selfishness ” that endure and “the barely audible voice of Africa”.
President Biden, a champion of multilateralism and who boasts of America’s return to the international scene following the Trump years, had already pleaded on Wednesday to create a broad partnership with Africa.
“We want to collaborate in all areas,” he said once more Thursday, insisting that “the United States was fully for Africa with Africa”.
The Biden administration intends to free up $55 billion for Africa over the next three years in areas as varied as digital, infrastructure, health and energy transition.
If the United States refuses to talk regarding competition with China on the African continent, they nevertheless strive to strengthen their presence there and insist on their vision of sustainable development and democracy.