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Tentacles, pointy teeth and the T-rex of the sea: the Natural History Museum on beasts that once ruled the oceans Rachel Roddy’s recipe for ricotta and breadcrumb balls in tomato, chilli and basil sauce | A kitchen in Rome ‘We feel let down’: sustainable chefs in UK mourn end of Michelin green star Have no doubt: the campaign to sack Misan Harriman is part of an assault on black figures in public life | Afua Hirsch Toxic chemicals in pet flea treatments harming wildlife, UK study warns Thursday news quiz: Eurovision winners, Tesla swimmers and Strictly zingers ‘Give every item a long life’: Vinted boss on how the site is moving beyond fashion AI will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within a year, says Anthropic co-founder Care review – this searing portrayal of dementia raises urgent questions for us all How often should you go to the toilet? How can you get the better of wind? Experts’ tips for a healthier gut Wiggy stardust! The mind-blowing hair artist who astonished Rihanna and Cate Blanchett ‘The devil’s child’: the rise and fall of the only female yakuza Sánchez is loved everywhere – but not so much in Spain, say Andalusia’s voters. Can he pull off another comeback? | María Ramírez While rightwing Australia scapegoats immigrants, the country directly benefits from our skills and labour | Zoya Patel UN backs historic climate crisis ruling, despite US attempts to stop resolution Ukraine war briefing: Fresh threat of attack from Belarus front, warns Zelenskyy Trump news at a glance: US indicts Raúl Castro, ratcheting up Cuba tensions Papua New Guinea warns against fishing in New Ireland after mystery deaths of marine life Trump claims he will speak to Taiwan’s president, departing from decades-long diplomatic norms The Ebola and hantavirus outbreaks warn us we must be better prepared if we are to prevent the next pandemic | Helen Clark ‘If she didn’t have us, she would be toast’: a NZ mother’s fight to free her daughter from ICE detention Trump envoy says it’s time for US to ‘put its footprint back on Greenland’, during visit to arctic territory Voters across parties believe UK net migration is rising despite sharp drop Nvidia’s revenue blows past Wall Street expectations as AI boom accelerates ‘We will not go back to Jim Crow’: thousand of Mississippians rally for voting rights SpaceX discloses finances for first time in plan for $1.75tn stock market debut Tielemans starts party as Aston Villa outclass Freiburg to claim Europa League glory Alice Capsey shines as opener to give England lead in T20 series against New Zealand Tennessee man jailed over Charlie Kirk post wins $835,000 settlement Murder inquiry launched after fatal assault on London bus driver Sinkhole shuts down runway at New York LaGuardia airport Aaron Rodgers says 2026 will be his final NFL season: ‘This is it’ Canada faces calls for investigation into death of woman after plasma donation UK struggles to reassure Ukraine after easing new sanctions on Russian oil UK radio station apologises for accidentally announcing king’s death San Francisco turns to AI to save whales from ship strikes as deaths soar DRC cancel World Cup training camp and fan event due to Ebola outbreak Israeli security minister stirs diplomatic outrage with flotilla activist abuse video Guardiola leaves Manchester City as one of the game’s greats – and someone who knows its dark heart | Barney Ronay The Guardian view on Britain and Europe: international upheaval demands new terms of debate The Guardian view on tackling Ebola: pathogens aren’t the only things that kill Meghan Markle’s anniversary candle: who wouldn’t want to pay $64 to celebrate someone else’s marriage? Norwegian court blocks extradition to Greece of migrant rights activist ‘If you keep looking we will kill you’: death stalks those searching for Mexico’s disappeared US indicts former Cuban president Raúl Castro as it seeks to oust regime Are Xi and Putin still ‘best friends’? - The Latest Freiburg v Aston Villa: Europa League final – live Russian jet causes ‘dangerous’ near collision after flying close to RAF spy plane England v New Zealand: first women’s T20 cricket international – live I didn’t think it was possible to love Kylie Minogue any more – her new Netflix series changed that Bolivia rocked by protests as US warns of ‘coup d’état’ UK strikes £3.7bn trade deal with six Gulf states Tesla Cybertruck pulled from Texas lake after attempting ‘wade mode’ How Arteta overcame setbacks, crises and boos to defy the doubters at Arsenal Giro d’Italia: Narváez storms past Mas for third win as Eulálio keeps pink jersey Jeff Bezos defends Amazon’s controversial $40m Melania film as ‘a good business decision’ James Murdoch to acquire half of Vox Media in deal reportedly worth $300m Immunotherapy could be used to treat depression, early trial suggests Open plan is not the answer: design professionals on the dos and don’ts of small space living Plastic food and drink packaging ‘world’s most common coastal litter’ January 6 police officers sue Trump over $1.8bn fund, alleging ‘presidential corruption’ Fan-friendly pricing at this World Cup? Some cities are showing that it’s possible US and Israel ‘hoped to install Ahmadinejad as Iran’s leader’ Pedro Almodóvar says film-makers have a ‘moral duty’ to speak out against the far right Bournemouth race to upgrade Vitality Stadium before first season in Europe US puts pressure on Palestinian leaders to withdraw bid for UN vice-presidency role ‘He sacrificed his life’: security guard killed in San Diego mosque attack hailed as hero ‘Real talk’ or wreaking havoc? The questions WNBA coaches should ask before calling out their teams ‘You’re expected to learn quick’: three draft picks on stepping up to the NFL Google DeepMind in talks with UK unions amid staff concern over AI use by US and Israel ‘Messy, chaotic, funny’: inside the hilarious comedy about teen Muslim schoolgirls Southampton hit out at ‘largest penalty ever’ for spying on opponents Same but different: how Xi and China welcomed Trump and Putin Lithuanian leaders rushed to bunkers as drone violates country’s airspace ‘Brits are not as groovy as us – but they’re less square than Europeans’: how drum’n’bass united Brazil and the UK Dog yoga and the Ministry of Hound: Goodwoof festival – in pictures Eva v Goliath: the 20-year-old climate activist taking on Trump and the fossil fuel industry Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: Posh Grandpa is fashion’s new main character More than £52m reserved for social housing at risk after collapse of investment firms Arsenal to reward Mikel Arteta with huge pay rise and put Kroupi among transfer targets Tennis players plan ‘work-to-rule’ French Open media protest over prize money Fantastic visions and cosmic rhythms: how Whistler is making me see – and hear – differently Vaccine to tackle Ebola outbreak will take six to nine months, says WHO The lesson from John Travolta’s dramatic new look: always dress for the job you want ‘The flavour crisis’: an exposé on the origins of broken Britain George Soros group pledges $300m to US economic security and civil liberties Forced disappearances and torture: Ecuador’s war on drugs is brutal – and backed by US troops Tom and Jerry: Forbidden Compass review – furry foes out of their depth in candy-coated Chinese adventure How to turn leftover cooked new potatoes into a spicy Indian snack – recipe ‘He’s one of us’: Liverpool fans say goodbye to Andy Robertson Tell us: have you emigrated because of rising anti-migrant sentiment? Back on top: the season-by-season story of Arsenal’s return to title glory Totó la Momposina, vocalist and Colombian music legend, dies aged 85 We can’t talk about press freedom without talking about misogyny Art Cure by Daisy Fancourt review – is culture the best medicine? ICE-watch group decries ‘intimidation tactics’ as federal agents raid activists’ homes: ‘We’re not gonna stop’ An Epstein ‘reading room’ is showing 3.5m printed-out files. Why does it feel like a troll? ‘I don’t worry about a robot takeover’: AI expert Michael Wooldridge on big tech’s real dangers (and occasional blessings) Manchester City succession sheds light on Enzo Maresca’s Chelsea departure Uefa vows to take hard line on multi-club ownership in Women’s Champions League
How games capture the awe and terror of cosmic isolation
2026-04-08 · via The Guardian

Last week’s launch of the Artemis II space mission was a stunning spectacle, the 17-storey-high rockets erupting into cacophonous life before wrenching the craft through the Earth’s atmosphere. But the images that have come since hold just as much impact: the tiny Orion craft and its four-person crew drifting silently through space, further and further from home.

In his autobiography, the Apollo astronaut Michael Collins described this feeling perfectly. Left in the command module as Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin touched down on the lunar surface, he wrote: “I am alone now, truly alone, and absolutely isolated from any known life. I am it. If a count were taken, the score would be three billion plus two over on the other side of the moon, and one plus God knows what on this side.”

Although most science-fiction video games are set in distant galaxies or far-off futures where space travel has become routine, a few have attempted to explore this sense of solitude and vulnerability. As a Nasa-obsessed child in the 1980s, I loved the classic space trading game Elite, which rendered an entire lonely universe in monochrome vector visuals. I would play for hours, navigating between silent space stations in a small, single-seater craft, watching the stars pass by through the windows, planets rotating in the darkness far away.

More recently, the original version of space adventure No Man’s Sky, released in 2016, let you explore weird planets all alone – though these desolate places could be deadly, with acid for air or no resources for fuel, so every trip had around it the ominous shadow of death. The game was later patched to be more forgiving, but that sense of deadly peril made those quiet moments of arrival all the more enticing and emotional. Similarly, the surreal, minimalist planetary exploration game Exo One has you piloting a tiny alien craft over weird psychedelic landscapes, surfing thermal updrafts and swooping down impossible mountainsides. When I asked on BlueSky for people’s memories of space games that evoked this sense of beauty, loneliness and mortal danger, game developer Henry Driver wrote of Exo One: “I included it in the programme for a games festival I ran last year, and it captivated audiences like nothing else.”

Diesel product Outerwilds Gallery Outerwilds
Lonely … Outer Wilds. Photograph: Annapurna Interactive

Many other familiar titles came up on that thread. The wonderful puzzle adventure Outer Wilds thrusts players into a time loop in a doomed planetary system, living out the same lonely 22 minutes over and over, while searching for a means of escape. Its worlds are cruel but beautiful, and all the while the clock ticks down to an apocalyptic supernova. Observation and Tacoma set you down in crippled space stations where you must piece together the events that led to disaster. Other games writers and designers, meanwhile, recalled feelings of solitude, awe and fear in titles such as Alien: Isolation, Freelancer, Homeworld and Out There. All of these capture the minimalist elements of space travel – often just isolated noises and details. Games industry adviser Tracey McGarrigan wrote of the Atari 2600 game Solaris: “The sounds of your ship’s engines … the scrolling fuchsia corridors …”

We’ll never fully understand what the crew of the Orion felt in those 40 minutes when they disappeared behind the moon, out of contact with mission control and utterly alone apart from each other. But games have, throughout their history, sought at least to simulate the feeling – to give us a taste of facing the black abyss, protected only by a thin layer of metal and a few tanks of oxygen. There is something in us that needs to know what it is like to loiter at the very edge of existence. That may be through extreme sports, or theme park thrill rides … or through the generated galaxies of thoughtful space games, the ones that concentrate not on generational starships or laser wars, but on small crews in tiny pods, the weight of the universe stacked against them in the dark.

What to play

Xenonauts 2 game
Save the Earth … Xenonauts 2. Photograph: Hooded Horse

If you’re a veteran of the classic turn-based strategy sim XCOM, then saddle up: you’re needed back on the extraterrestrial battlefields. Xenonauts 2 is the sequel to Goldhawk Interactive’s well-received tribute to the XCOM series, once again putting you in charge of Earth’s defences as humanity squares up against alien invaders. You manage secret bases, develop technologies and then direct your troops to face alien monsters. The graphics are incredibly neat and evocative, and the complex layers of strategy and action make for a ruthlessly immersive challenge. I may be caught up in this desperate cause for many weeks.

Available on: PC
Estimated playtime:
30-plus hours

What to read

The Exit 8 game screenshot
Trapped in the underground … Exit 8. Photograph: Kotake Create
  • Indie horror games based on the creepypasta phenomenon of the Backrooms have been in vogue for a couple of years via titles such as Exit 8 and The Complex: Found Footage. This recent MIT feature uses these games to analyse the concept of institutional gothic – a sort of modern take on Victorian horror set in office blocks and shopping malls. Fascinating stuff.

  • Despite a tsunami of poor reviews, the Super Mario Galaxy movie made $372.5m in its opening weekend. How did an animated sequel with a Metacritic score of 36 perform so well? “Family movie-going is leading the industry now,” box-office watcher David A Gross told Variety.

  • As an apologetic Sega fan, I was interested to read that the creator of Alone in the Dark is crowdfunding a new Mega Drive game. Frédérick Raynal developed the brick-breaking game PopCorn in 1988, and his rebooted version will come with a dedicated controller. The Kickstarter for the game is halfway to its target.

What to click

Question Block

Play it read it … EmilyBlaster – a real-life version of the fictional game that a character makes in Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow.
Play it, read it … EmilyBlaster, a real-life version of the fictional game from Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow. Photograph: Gabrielle Zevin

This week’s question comes from Carl via email:

“Having just read and enjoyed Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, I wondered if there are any direct novelisations of video games – and if so, which should I read?”

Yes, there have been lots of video game novelisations over the years – indeed, a lot of 1980s games such as Elite and Lords of Midnight were packaged with novellas that set the scene in an era before cinematic cutscenes. However, like film tie-ins they’re rather hit and miss. My favourite is very difficult to get hold of now: Ico: Castle in the Mist is based on the beautiful PlayStation game, written by Japanese author Miyuki Miyabe and translated into English in 2011. Otherwise, the Halo novels, especially Halo: The Fall of Reach by Eric Nylund, provide pretty good sci-fi fare, while SD Perry’s Resident Evil novels expand on the first games in the series, as well as exploring new stories (but are now considered non-canon, if that matters). If you enjoyed the classic dystopian adventure Bioshock, then John Shirley’s prequel novel Bioshock: Rapture is an intriguing read. Finally, lots of people enjoyed the Metal Gear Solid novels written by Raymond Benson, who also penned a series of James Bond stories. By the way, I would absolutely love to write a Last of Us novel if anyone at Naughty Dog is reading?

If you’ve got a question for Question Block – or anything else to say about the newsletter – email us on pushingbuttons@theguardian.com.