DIOXIDE
Announcement Trailer
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DIOXIDE
Announcement Trailer
Website / Steam
2025 / 08
Aperçu of the week
âI want them to give us something for all of the money that we put up. We're asking for rare earth and oil, anything we can get.â
(US President Donald Trump subsequently puts a price tag on the previous government's support for Ukraine)
Bad News of the Week
In contrast to the presidential election in the USA last November - where there was occasionally reason to hope that there would be no return of a political revenant - we Germans knew exactly what we were in for in the parliamentary elections, in which the executive is elected at the same time. The leading candidate Friedrich Merz of the conservatives (CDU/CSU) would win and would then be able to form a mathematical majority with the Social Democrats (SPD - likely) or the Greens (unlikely). The far right (AfD) would double its share of the vote and become the largest opposition party. Of the smaller Die Linke, the Liberals (FDP) and left-wing populists (BSW), only the first party would make it into the Bundestag, while the other two would be relegated to insignificance. The rest - from the pro-European Volt (a pity) to the right-wing populist Free Voters (well...) to clientele parties such as the Party of Bible-believing Christians - are gathered in the âOthersâ category. And that's how it turned out.
It is interesting, but also regrettable, to look at the generations. The older and elderly prefer to vote on the right, the young on the left. The so-called youth vote (14 to 17-year-olds) was led by the Left and the SPD last weekend, with the CDU/CSU and AfD in third and fourth place - and the Animal Welfare Party won more votes than the FDP and the BSW. In other words, this is exactly the kind of mood that the average over-60-year-old conservative voter rejects. Example: Almost four times as many CDU/CSU voters are over 70 than under 25. A colleague of mine at work just said on Friday that elections set the course for the future. So you actually vote for your children. He's right - only I would add the grandchildren.
Unfortunately, a line can be drawn just as clearly between the East and the West. The AfD has secured first place in all five eastern German states. The former GDR still feels left behind. And those with a low level of education and a low income in particular tend to see their ballot paper as a lesson to teach - and vote for fundamental opposition. To really show âthem up thereâ. While the earlier shift to the left could still be explained by nostalgia, the current shift to the right is truly frightening. And stupid. After all, analyses show that it is precisely the typical AfD voters who would suffer most from their policies.
Sunday's result now opens up the following coalition options: the strongest coalition would be the conservative CDU/CSU with the far-right AfD - together, this âAustria optionâ would have a whopping 360 seats out of the 316 needed. In other words, a loose majority, which has so far been categorically ruled out by the chancellor-to-be Friedrich Merz. Whereby evil tongues point out that a) neighboring Austria has already had a conservative-right-wing governing coalition several times, b) the joint vote against migration could have been a test balloon to see whether the approval ratings would suffer (they did not) and c) US Vice President JD Vance only met with two German politicians on the fringes of the Munich Security Conference - the top candidates of the CDU and AfD - and would therefore have the blessing of big (watching) brother for this constellation. My expectation: no.
There is no majority for a coalition without the conservatives. Unless again with the far right, which is definitely out of the question for the Left or the Greens, for example, and most likely for the Social Democrats. This leaves only the âblack-redâ CDU/CSU and SPD, which together have 328 seats. This is because 293 seats are simply not enough for the âblack-greenâ alliance discussed in the run-up to the election. Theoretically, the due to their party colors so-called âKenya coalitionâ of Conservatives, Social Democrats and Greens would remain, but there is simply too little overlap in terms of political content and goals - see our tiresome experience with the traffic light coalition.
In addition to the clear shift to the right - because the CDU under Friedrich Merz no longer has anything to do with the CDU under Angela Merkel - there is a second aspect that makes these elections bad news: the loss of direct mandates. Until now, the winner of each constituency (the so-called first vote) was guaranteed a seat in parliament. If this deviated from the overall result of the party (second vote), this was balanced out by so-called overhang and compensatory mandates. The result was that the Bundestag expanded unexpectedly. A reform per se therefore made perfect sense.
Now, each party only gets as many seats as it is mathematically entitled to based on its share of second votes. These are then allocated to the strongest winners in the constituencies, while the weakest go away empty-handed. The bottom line is that many constituencies will no longer be represented in parliament - currently it looks like 23 (out of 299) constituencies will be left out. The votes of the people there will therefore be worthless. I still don't understand why alternatives were not considered at all. After all, a new layout of larger constituencies would have produced the same result of fewer MPs, but would still represent all regions and voters in the Bundestag. It is no coincidence that MPs are called ârepresentatives of the peopleâ - so they should also represent the (whole!) people.
By the way, a positive side note: the last time there was a voter turnout of almost 84% was after German reunification. And that was 35 years ago. And regardless of the outcome: that's good. Even if all political certainties no longer count, at least the people have delivered.
Good News of the Week
Tomorrow marks the third anniversary of the day Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine. And it could be the last anniversary. Unfortunately, not because the nation under attack was able to successfully defend itself against the aggressor with the help of its supporters. But probably because the most important supporter - the USA - is simply changing sides. Just because its erratic president has a strange penchant for dictatorships. And Europe is not in a position to compensate for this. Because it is not taken seriously by the key players.
âIn a world where the right of the stronger applies, it is better to be among the strong,â writes editor-in-chief Dirk Kurbjuweit in an editorial last week in Der Spiegel, the leading German news magazine. And he continues: âGermany cannot be strong on its own, it is too small for that. It can only be strong together with other Europeans, it can only be strong in the EU. One of the most serious mistakes of German politics was that after Helmut Kohl no chancellor was wholeheartedly committed to Europe. (...) Now Europe lacks leadership and cohesion.â
The analysis is correct. On paper, Europe, with its population, its economic power and yes, even its military strength, could act on an equal footing on the world stage. I am deliberately referring to Europe and not the European Union, as the United Kingdom, for example, would not be part of it. And it is not only Germany that has deficits in its European commitment. Many EU members see Europe exclusively as a free trade zone, while others deliberately want to act in a more national and isolationist way. And even France only ever sees itself as primus inter pares. I exclude Belarus, by the way, as this dictatorship only commits to the rules of European values at the Eurovision Song Contest.
For centuries, and when the world felt much smaller, conflicts dominated our continent. From the end of the Second World War until the Russian attack on Ukraine, there was not a single hot war between two countries (because in Yugoslavia it was in fact a matter of internal civil and secessionist wars). 77 years is an eternity in our increasingly fast-moving times. After the end of the Cold War, after the fall of the Iron Curtain, cooperation and cohesion dominated - people looked for common ground and found it.
This can confidently be called a recipe for success. Which is now endangered by two factors. The first is the increasing threat from outside. From the military threat posed by Russia to the security policy risk posed by the withdrawal of the USA and the economic policy attack by China. The second is the increasing threat from within. The aforementioned drifting apart of individual special interests to the detriment of the greater good. This could now come to an end, as external pressure is simply becoming too dominant.
According to Wikipedia, external pressure is the âtotal pressure that acts on a system from the outside and thus increases its densityâ. I was always bad at physics. But I always understood that you can't have different opinions about it. After all, the laws of physics are natural laws. In this respect, I hope that the increasing pressure that Europe is experiencing from outside will lead to a consolidation of its community of values. The chances have not been this good for a long time. We can now find a new form of commonality that will make us all stronger. If we recognize our common interest as such and then act accordingly. As the United States of Europe. Come on, let me just dream a little...
Personal happy moment of the week
We celebrated my mother's 87th birthday. A proud age. We were able to celebrate together in an Italian restaurant as both parents were fit enough. They'll also go on a cruise to the Norwegian fjords in a few weeks. It's nice that they can actively enjoy their retirement.
I couldn't care less...
...about the moaning from the housing sector and construction industry about the oh-so-poor framework conditions. Currently, residential building permits are at their lowest level for 14 years. And all this while the housing shortage is getting worse and rental prices - you can't buy anything in this country for a long time - are going through the roof. Housing should be seen as a basic right. I believe that everyone involved has an obligation to be constructive on this in the truest sense of the word.
It's fine with me...
...that Germany complied with all European air quality limits in 2024 - the first time ever. The Federal Environment Agency reports that, following the fine dust limits, all 600 measuring stations have now also complied with the limits for nitrogen dioxide. This positive development, which is primarily based on the use of catalytic converters, must be maintained at all costs. This is because the, according to WHO experts, outdated limit values will be tightened considerably as early as 2030.
As I write this...
...I am delighted that Canada has won the NHL's prestigious â4-Nations-Face-Offâ ice hockey tournament. Against the USA, whose president called them the â51st stateâ in the first leg. âYou can't take away our country - and you can't take away our game,â summarized outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, referred to by Trump as âGovernor Trudeauâ. In your face, Donald!
Post Scriptum
It is looking very good that Austria will not be another European country governed by right-wing extremists. First, the Austrian Peoples Party (ĂVP / Ăsterreichische Volkspartei) resisted the temptation to submit to the far-right Freedom Party of Austria (FPĂ / Freiheitliche Partei Ăsterreichs / Freedom Party of Austria) in coalition negotiations following its success in the National Council elections at the end of September. Then the Green Federal President Alexander van der Bellen refused to be pressured into considering a minority government or new elections. And now the conservative ĂVP, the social democratic SPĂ and the liberal NEOs are taking positive stock of their initial coalition talks. Van der Bellen even sees them âon the home straightâ.
The current ĂVP party chairman Christian Stocker can certainly chalk this up as a success. Because back in January, his predecessor and former Federal Chancellor Karl Nehammer failed at precisely such coalition talks. Now it looks like the first âZuckerl coalitionâ (Jelly Bean coalition) which is named after the colorful party colors turquoise, pink and red. I much prefer this sweetness to the sour political program of FPĂ leader Herbert Kickl, who would even have overtaken Hungary's Viktor OrbĂĄn on the right with his restrictive âFortress Austriaâ stance. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that after turning onto the home straight, they will also make it to the finish line. After all, I would still like to visit our southern neighbor without any stomach ache.
Why This Ingredient 3: Minerals
Part three of the ingredients and their uses series, minerals! Take care of your body: lick a rock today!
Very few of these are the minerals described in the article, but they look cool so here we are.Photo by Edz Norton on Unsplash Minerals are underrated. For a lot of minerals, only a tiny amount is needed for them to take an immense part in the bodyâs ability to stay alive and well. Many come from rocks, but often those rocky mineral sources are broken up and modified by plants, or simply mixedâŠ
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NO2 pollution has been at the centre of the debate on the air pollution crisis in Europe.But data from a new European Space Agency satellite reveals the scale and spread of NO2 on a global scale.
First look at DIOXIDE
A new trailer has been released for DIOXIDE. No release date was specified.
Cinematech's Trailer Park - Dioxide (PC)
A Soulslike FPS from the makers of Forgive Me Father!
Soulslike first-person shooter DIOXIDE announced for PC - Gematsu
Forgive Me Father series developer Byte Barrel has announced DIOXIDE, a âtactical first-person shooter with Soulslike elements.â It will be available for PC via Steam. A release date was not announced, but a demo is due out in Q3 2026.
âWith DIOXIDE, weâre taking our signature comic-book style into a new dimension,â said Byte Barrel CEO Ernest Krystian in a press release. âWeâre evolving our distinctive aesthetic into a grittier, dystopian world that demands your attention. By transitioning from the 2D/3D mix players know from Forgive Me Father to a fully realized 3D experience, weâre giving them an even more immersive way to tear through the absolute carnage while feeling the weight of a relentless world on the edge of collapse. We canât wait to show everyone what the next chapter of Byte Barrel looks like.â
Here is an overview of the game, via Byte Barrel:
About
DIOXIDEÂ is a high-stakes, tactical first-person shooter with Soulslike elements set in a dystopian world ravaged by industrial decay. In this place, players are just another number in the corporate ledger, reduced to nothing more than a cheap spare part in a machine that never stops. By obtaining the Core-ID administrator module, players gain the ability to come back from the dead, instantly making the protagonist enemy number one. Now, they are the last hope to break the system and build a hidden sanctuary for whatever is left of humanity.
The game offers a visceral journey through a brutal, oil-drenched dystopia, brought to life in Byte Barrelâs signature blood-soaked, comic-book art style. This unique, dark aesthetic captures the suffocating feel of a society on the brink of total collapse. Players must navigate the corporate-ruled metropolis where every sector is a cog in a malignant construct designed to grind everyone into profit. From the soot-choked production zones to the toxic undercity and the heavily-guarded upper-class district, every biome presents a deadly set of challenges but also the vital resources needed to fuel progress. While marked for immediate termination, players must confront ruthless, neo-antique enforcers mass-printed to maintain order and dispose of anyone who opposes the authority.
Key Features
A Dying World â Immerse yourself in a post-apocalyptic dystopia ravaged by industrial decay and ruled by a ruthless Corporation.
Neo-Antique Nightmares â Face relentless hunters mass-printed by a tyrannical authority to maintain total control and dispose of anyone who dares to resist.
Weapon Customization â Assemble a lethal arsenal of versatile firearms and overhaul them with a modular system of attachments to suit your playstyle.
Navigate a Corporate-Ruled Metropolis â From the soot-choked production zones to the toxic undercity and the heavily guarded upper-class district, every biome presents a deadly set of challenges but also the vital resources needed to fuel your progress.
Sanctuary Management â Build and manage a hidden sanctuary for the remnants of humanity, serving as both your base of operations and a long-term progression hub.
Moral Dilemma â Balance the survival of your community against the scarcity of resources. Will you be a savior to your people, or exploit them to gain power?
Paint the Canvas Red â From the creators of Forgive Me Father comes a brutal dystopia brought to life in our signature, blood-soaked comic-book style. Weâve prepared the canvas. Now itâs your turn to paint it red.
Watch the announcement trailer below. View the first screenshots at the gallery.
Announce Trailer