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Coronation Street fans ‘certain’ Peter Barlow will return after Daniel’s latest setback

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    Coronation Street fans ‘certain’ Peter Barlow will return after Daniel’s latest setback


    Daniel Osbourne has been through the wringer in Coronation Street recently, but some fans are now wondering whether there’s one person who could help turn things around – Peter Barlow.

    This week on the ITV soap, Daniel’s life was put at risk after he fell asleep while looking after Bertie, leading to a terrifying fire at his flat. Adam later attempted to give him a wake-up call, but viewers aren’t convinced it will be enough.

    With Daniel continuing to spiral, many fans now believe a return from Peter could be exactly what he needs.

    Daniel suffered a breakdown at work (Credit: ITV)

    Daniel’s mental breakdown in Coronation Street

    Daniel has been struggling ever since becoming the target of an online troll known as Truthteller. After the original account was removed, a second account, Truthteller2, soon appeared.

    The situation pushed Daniel towards alcohol and he eventually suffered a mental breakdown after pupils at his school taunted him over the online abuse and his past relationship with child groomer Megan Walsh.

    Hope Dobbs tried to calm him down, but Daniel was far from settled. When he discovered that Jodie Ramsey was behind the troll account, he continued drinking and later fell asleep while he was supposed to be looking after Bertie.

    While Daniel slept, Bertie decided to use the microwave himself. The situation quickly turned dangerous when the appliance exploded, leaving Daniel trapped inside a smoke-filled flat.

    Adam and Tracy then kept Bertie at Ken’s house for his safety. When Daniel woke up and realised his son was missing, he panicked. After finding Bertie safe with the Barlows, Daniel lashed out and punched Ken in the face.

    Things only got worse later on as Daniel accused people around him of reporting him to social services, while his family drew comparisons between his behaviour and that of his alcoholic brother, Peter Barlow.

    Coronation Street's Peter miserable
    Peter was last on the cobbles in 2023 (Credit: ITV)

    Coronation Street fans think Peter Barlow return could be the answer

    As Daniel’s drinking continues and Peter’s name keeps being mentioned, viewers have started to speculate that the former Weatherfield favourite could be heading back to the cobbles.

    Peter was last seen in Coronation Street in 2023. But, fans are now wondering whether he might return home to support his younger brother through his latest crisis.

    Taking to social media, one viewer commented: “Daniel needs his big brother.”

    Another Coronation Street fan agreed: “Peter would sort Jodie out.”

    A third fan wrote: “I would love for Peter to come back, especially now Daniel’s been drinking a lot.”

    Peter may currently be travelling the world, but with Daniel hitting rock bottom, Coronation Street fans are increasingly convinced that a return to Weatherfield could be on the horizon.

    Read more: Coronation Street opinion: Soap losing balance as villains dominate

    Coronation Street usually airs Monday-Friday at 8.30pm on ITV.

    What do you think about this story? Let us know by leaving a comment on our Facebook page @CoronationStreetInsider. We want to hear your thoughts!



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    Leak Reveals Microsoft Wants Its AI To Be ‘Addictive’

    Leak Reveals Microsoft Wants Its AI To Be ‘Addictive’



    On Tuesday of this week Microsoft made public its latest AI endeavor, Scout. On the same day, 404 Media published a leaked internal strategy document it had sourced from within Microsoft, in which it is written that the corporation’s immediate intention for Scout is to “make people addicted.” After 404‘s damning reveal, tech news site The Information followed this up with a denial from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in which the boss feigned disbelief, saying that he was “not sure what this document is or who is writing and leaking this nonsense.” 404 has now hit back, pointing out Nadella knows exactly what the document is and exactly which senior members of his staff wrote it—and one of them is Scout’s project lead.

    Scout (formerly ClawPilot) is Microsoft’s latest attempt to create a so-called “personal assistant AI,” the current golden calf of AI bullshit, designed to interfere with your attempts to use products like Word, Outlook, Teams and Edge, by reading all your email, online conversations, browsing history and private documents in order to use all your personal information to train its algorithm “keep it grounded in your flow of work.” The idea is an AI will write your emails, create your spreadsheets, file your invoices, and respond to your staff, all that dreadful stuff that forces you to engage with your job and employees. It’s using the techy OpenClaw AI agent tool that went wildly popular among some engineers this year, made more user-friendly to be the latest part of MS’s all-consuming AI obsession via Copilot under the ridiculous name of Project Lobster.

    The internal document revealed by 404 is titled “ClawPilot: Overview and Plan with Project Lobster,” and it lists three phases for its launch plans. The first phase is “Make people addicted.”

    Inject it into your veins

    This addiction, it appears Microsoft hopes, will be achieved by Scout’s sheer ubiquity across all its products, such that a user becomes so reliant on it that they “depend on it daily.” This has already proven successful with the corp’s experiments on its own employees, with “Daily Usage with High Retention and intensity of usage (chats, queries, workflows, skills)” among its staff. And one of those internal lab rats is a Microsoft employee by the name of, oh wait, Satya Nadella.

    The document, meanwhile, is credited to Microsoft executives Omar Shahine and Jakob Werner, alongside—inevitably—AI. And these aren’t two backroom employees who went rogue. Omar Shahine is a Corporate Vice President and the creator, pioneer and project lead on Scout. Gosh, look here, the official announcement of Scout on Microsoft’s site was written by Omar Shahine.

    All of which makes Nadella’s response, which somehow got into the hands of the very AI-friendly The Information, a little odd. “This is absolutely a non goal!” the CEO bellowed in a message sent to staff. “If anything we are doing the exact opposite,” he opined. So they’re building an AI they hope everyone will immediately hate and never want to use again? Well, no, it seems the “opposite” of an AI that makes people addicted is an AI that “empowers and adds real value to human endeavor and broad economic growth!” (Exclamation point his own.)

    After expressing his complete disbelief that such a document could have been written, Nadella adds that the elusive and mysterious authors “may want to go work elsewhere.”

    Scream time

    404 goes on to note that Microsoft gave the site no response whatsoever, but instead disparaged the site’s reporting in the internal damage control memo, along with a close to meaningless statement from a Microsoft spokesperson sent to a friendly outlet. Microsoft’s Frank Shaw told The Information that Scout is for “helping people accomplish tasks more effectively—not encouraging dependency. Our goal isn’t more screen time. It’s more time back. As we shared in our announcement, we’re taking a thoughtful approach to the rollout—learning with and from customers as the technology evolves, and ensuring people have clear choice and control in how they engage.”

    Obviously no one was suggesting the product would be “addictive” in the sense that people would be sitting at their desks using it 18 hours a day, jonesing to be back in the office and having it write just one more email. The clear intention of the leaked document is that people would become “addicted” as in dependent. An attempt to obfuscate in this way, were it sent as a response to a site like 404, would have been ridiculed. We have, of course, reached out to Microsoft for clarity regarding all these apparent contradictions.

    This is all a very transparent attempt at damage control, following the embarrassing leak and accompanying statements from unnamed Microsoft employees to 404 expressing their dismay and horror at the current internal strategies. It’s perhaps very convenient that the internal memo with abject denials and veiled threats got out into public.

    Of course the goal is to have Scout—or any other “AI personal assistant”—be something upon which users become dependent. Meta, Microsoft, Google, Anthropic et al are all risking impossible billions on this idiot competition to see who can win the AI race and leave all the others to look responsible for the unavoidable global recession to follow. There are only two possible business models for recouping any of these costs, and one is hooking an audience to the point of no return and then making them pay massive prices to continue using the products. (We’re seeing exactly that right now as tools like Claude and Copilot have suddenly massively hiked costs for programmers.) The other is to take all the colossal amounts of private data that have been harvested in the process and sell it to advertisers.



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    Star City’s Creators Explain Episode 3’s Big Traitor Reveal [Exclusive] – SlashFilm

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      Star City’s Creators Explain Episode 3’s Big Traitor Reveal [Exclusive] – SlashFilm






      T-minus 10 seconds until liftoff — of spoilers, that is — for Episode 3 of “Star City.”

      “Star City” has been one of the biggest TV surprises of 2026, a prequel spin-off series of one of AppleTV’s best sci-fi shows, “For All Mankind.” This is not just a show explaining the origin of what we already saw in the flagship series, however. “Star City” infuses the alternate timeline love of space exploration from “For All Mankind” with the Cold War paranoia and political intrigue of “The Americans.” 

      So far, the season has focused on two big plotlines. There’s the space story, wherein Rhys Ifans’ Chief Designer is publicly working toward a Moon base for the Soviet Union while secretly working on plans to explore Venus.

      Then we have the spy thriller story, involving a mole in Star City who is working for the Americans. This is where we get the one big origin story in “Star City,” devoted to the best villain in “For All Mankind”: Irina Morozova (Agnes O’Casey). The identity of the traitor is finally revealed at the very end of this week’s episode, when Ruby Ashbourne Serkis’ Tanya and her cosmonaut husband Valya (Adam Nagaitis) go to the opera. Suddenly, Valya disappears, and we see him at the end of the episode talking to a woman. Though we are led to believe, like she does, that he might be cheating on her, the reality is a lot worse. The woman is his handler, and Valya confesses he planted a transmitter on a lunar module that nearly killed the crew. He’s the mole.

      /Film had the chance to talk to “Star City” co-creator Matt Wolpert, who cited Russian tragic romance literature as an inspiration for this reveal.

      Expect Valya’s story to get tragic

      “There is this great tradition of tragic romance in Russian literature that was a big inspiration for us in developing the story of the show,” co-creator Matt Wolpert said. “I think this concept of this kind of pure love that he has for his wife driving him to do things that he would never have done under other circumstances and putting her above the state.”

      It is clear from the scene that Valya is not happy with his arrangement and is being coerced by his handler, which Wolpert says is part of the tragedy that he’s doing this not out of malice.

      “I think that Valya is a patriot on a certain level also, so that makes it even more difficult to betray the country that he serves to protect his wife, or do whatever he can to protect his wife,” Wolpert explained. “And so those kinds of decisions that characters are forced to make, that’s the heart of drama. In many different ways, I think different characters throughout ‘Star City’ are confronted with those same choices.”

      It is clear that “Star City” has more in mind than a clear-cut mole storyline like the ones that were the bread and butter of “24.” Just like we get a compelling origin story for Irina Morozova that paints her as an idealist slowly being broken down by the rigid system of the KGB, and just like we have a well-meaning but foolish Chief Designer that acts like Otto Hightower, so too are we getting a traitor story that has more to it than first meets the eye.

      His reasons may be complicated, but now we know Valya is the traitor. How long until the KGB finds out?




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      Pump.fun’s Latest Experiment Is Already Getting Weird – Decrypt

      Pump.fun’s Latest Experiment Is Already Getting Weird – Decrypt



      In brief

      Pump.fun’s GO platform lets users pay others to complete “ANY task,” and hundreds of bounties appeared within hours of launch.
      Rewards reached as high as $50,000, though actual payouts on the platform have so far been far smaller.
      Some of the high-profile listings sought interviews with a murderer’s relatives, public stunts, and permanent tattoos in exchange for crypto rewards.

      Pump.fun will now pay you to do almost anything, and people are already lining up to do the strangest things possible.

      On Thursday, the Solana meme coin launchpad launched GO, a bounty platform built around the slogan “Pay ANYONE to do ANYTHING,” and within hours, users had posted hundreds of tasks, including one offering roughly $2,650 for someone to get a token’s ticker tattooed “on the forehead.”

      “Humans & money are undeniably the most powerful tools on Earth,” Pump.fun tweeted. “We’re combining both of them with GO: an all encompassing bounty platform where ANYONE can create or complete bounties for ANY task for UNLIMITED rewards.”

      Users connect an X account and wallet, post a task, and lock rewards in escrow starting at $5, while Pump.fun reviews submissions and determines payouts.

      At the time of writing, GO listed 234 live bounties, 494 submissions, and a $118,000 unclaimed pool.

      Anything goes

      The biggest rewards remain unclaimed on the platform.

      Earlier, the highest-paying bounty offered up to $50,000 for someone to skydive into a World Cup match in a meme coin mascot costume, requiring footage “verified through any media agency” and specifying that the video “cannot be AI.”

      By the time of writing, however, the listing had disappeared, with the site stating, “This bounty has vanished. It may have been closed, removed by a moderator, or never published.”

      The top remaining listing, worth roughly $23,525, sought an interview with either a family member of the person responsible for Henry Nowak’s death or the lead police officer on the case, requesting at least two minutes of unedited footage and noting that “the more viral the interview the better.”

      

      Below it sat $15,204 to beat a running world record, $12,199 to organize a “NEET March” through New York City, $11,034 to help a token win Pump.fun’s own hackathon, $3,989 to host a “best butt contest,” and $9,103 to “Interview a Billionaire On Biological Intelligence.”

      Further down the board, the tasks turn stranger and, in places, riskier.

      Bounties asked people to set a branded car alight, streak an NBA Finals game, fart through a megaphone in a lecture, pour milk over themselves, hand out 100 jars of pineapple Kool-Aid to homeless people, get Elon Musk to engage a token on X, and bail someone out of jail.

      One entrant in the roughly $2,876 “Quit Your Job on Camera” bounty livestreamed the attempt on Kick and said he was fired from another job in the process, writing, “This was worth it for the sol.”

      The actual money has been thin. Since the launch, the top earner collected $487.11 in a single payout, followed by wallets that took home $346.72 and $275.49.

      Meanwhile, the biggest spender paid out $1,707 across 11 bounties.

      An acquisition play

      Pump.fun’s escrow-and-moderation setup may not be enough to keep harmful bounties off the platform, Musheer Ahmed, founder and managing director of Finstep Asia, told Decrypt.

      “While escrow systems can work, when combined with moderation, it is likely that this is an automated process,” he said, adding such systems have not proven fully effective on platforms like Instagram and X, and that creators can pay out and coordinate with users off-platform anyway.

      “It feels like it is an attempt by pump.fun to retain users/attract non-crypto native users,” he said, comparing it to task-based creators like MrBeast, noting it really doesn’t have much to do with “tokens, NFTs, and crypto in general.”

      We’ve been here before

      GO formalizes a pay-for-stunts incentive that has repeatedly turned dangerous on Pump.fun.

      The launchpad pulled its livestreaming feature in 2024 after an influx of contentious streams that included animal cruelty, self-harm, and a faked suicide.

      Pump.fun revived livestreaming at the start of 2025 with new moderation, then leaned into “creator capital markets,” pairing viral stunts with tradable tokens.

      Pump.fun did not respond to a request for comment.

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      Cartier Jewelry Resale Value: Better than any Luxury Brand

      Cartier Jewelry Resale Value: Better than any Luxury Brand


      Cartier Juste Un Clou Diamond 18k White Gold Bangle Bracelet 15

      If you’ve ever asked, “Does Cartier jewelry have resale value?” the answer is yes, but it depends heavily on which piece you own, its condition, and how the market has shifted since you bought it. Cartier sits in a rare category of luxury goods that genuinely retain a significant portion of their original retail price, sometimes even appreciating over time.

      That’s not just anecdotal, and we’ll get into the numbers below. In 2026, Richemont, the Swiss luxury group that owns Cartier, reported double-digit sales growth and a valuation near $123 billion, outpacing fashion and accessories rivals as demand for fine jewelry proved more resilient than almost any other luxury category.

      This guide breaks down exactly why Cartier holds its value, which collections perform best on the resale market, and what factors can make or break your return.

      Why Cartier Resale Value is Stronger Than Its Contemporaries

      Cartier Love 18K Yellow Gold Diamond Small Bracelet in Excellent Condition
      Cartier Love 18K Yellow Gold Diamond Small Bracelet in Excellent Condition

      Cartier’s resale value isn’t an accident, but the result of over 170 years of deliberate brand-building, supply control, and design consistency.

      Brand heritage and cultural cachet:

      Cartier is one of the few jewelers that have maintained their status as a “jeweler of kings” without diluting their prestige through overexpansion. That cultural weight translates directly into sustained buyer demand on the secondary market.

      Iconic, timeless designs:

      The Love Bracelet, Trinity Ring, and Juste un Clou are not trend-driven pieces. They have remained essentially unchanged for decades, which means there is no “old season” problem — a Love Bracelet from 2005 and one from 2024 are largely interchangeable to buyers.

      Controlled production:

      Cartier does not flood the market. Limited availability keeps demand high and prevents the value crash that affects mass-market luxury goods.

      High-quality precious metals:

      Every piece in the core collections is made in 18k gold — yellow, white, or rose — which has intrinsic commodity value as a floor beneath the brand premium.

      Proven market outperformance — right now:

      In May 2026, Richemont — the Swiss luxury group that owns Cartier — reported annual sales of €22.4 billion ($26 billion) for the year ended March 2026, up 11% at constant exchange rates, with net profit surging 27% to €3.5 billion. Its jewelry division, led by Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels, grew 14% and delivered an operating margin of 30.5% — the most powerful profit engine inside the group. Richemont’s market valuation is now approaching $123 billion, having more than doubled over the past five years, outpacing much of the broader luxury sector as fashion and accessories brands face consumer pullback. For Cartier buyers, this matters: the parent company’s financial strength and market dominance directly bolster confidence in the secondary market and in the brand’s long-term value.

      Routine retail price increases:

      Cartier raises its retail prices by approximately 2–3% annually. This matters enormously for resale: a Love Bracelet bought three years ago at a lower retail price becomes more attractive on the secondary market as the new retail price climbs. Older pieces that originally cost a fraction of today’s retail have, in some cases, significantly appreciated in absolute value.

      How it compares to rivals:

      Cartier Love 18k Yellow Gold Classic Model Bracelet

      Cartier Love 18k Yellow Gold Classic Model Bracelet 

      Van Cleef & Arpels retains value at a comparable rate but has a narrower collector base, which means pieces take longer to sell. Bvlgari and Tiffany typically fall within the 50–70% retention range for most pieces, respectable but meaningfully below Cartier’s core collections. Hermès jewelry holds well among dedicated collectors but sees far less secondary market activity, limiting real-world liquidity. What separates Cartier is the combination of retention rate and liquidity, the ability to sell quickly at a strong price, not just hold value on paper.

      Global secondary market:

      Platforms like myGemma, Vestiaire Collective, The Luxury Closet, and specialist pre-owned jewelers actively trade Cartier pieces, giving sellers genuine liquidity and competitive pricing.

      Cartier Resale Value: Collection-by-Collection Breakdown

      Love Bracelet Resale Value

      Cartier Love 18K Yellow Gold Diamond Small Bracelet
      Cartier Love 18K Yellow Gold Diamond Small Bracelet in Excellent Condition

      The Love Bracelet is Cartier’s strongest performer in the resale market, with an average retention rate of 85–95% of its retail value. The classic 4-screw yellow gold version without diamonds is the most liquid — buyers specifically seek it out, and it is the easiest to authenticate and sell quickly. Diamond-pavé versions and limited editions can command premiums above retail in strong markets, but they are harder to move. The screwdriver mechanism is both a practical and emotional lock-in that has kept this piece culturally relevant since 1969.

      Best version to buy for resale: Classic 4-screw, yellow gold, no diamonds.

      Juste un Clou Resale Value

      Cartier Juste Un Clou 18K White Gold Bracelet 16
      Cartier Juste Un Clou 18K White Gold Bracelet 16

      Designed by Aldo Cipullo in 1971 and relaunched by Cartier in 2012, the Juste un Clou (French for “just a nail”) is a bent nail rendered in 18k gold. Its resale retention frequently exceeds 90% — making it arguably the strongest performer on a percentage basis — driven by strong recognition among younger buyers. The standard-gauge bangle in yellow gold is the workhorse of this collection. Thinner versions and white gold sell slightly slower.

      Cartier Juste Un Clou 18k Yellow Gold Classic Model Bracelet 17
      Cartier Juste Un Clou 18k Yellow Gold Classic Model Bracelet 17

      Best version to buy for resale: Standard-gauge yellow gold bracelet.

      Trinity Ring Resale Value

      Cartier Trinity 18k Three Tone Gold 7 Band Rolling Ring Size 61
      Cartier Trinity 18k Three Tone Gold 7 Band Rolling Ring Size 61

      The Trinity Ring — three interlocking bands in yellow, white, and rose gold — is one of Cartier’s oldest icons, dating back to 1924. It retains 70–85% of its retail value and has high liquidity. Because it comes in ring, bracelet, necklace, and earring formats, the market is broad. The classic ring band is the most traded format. Versions with diamonds retain less predictably.

      Cartier Trinity Ring 18k Rose Gold Band Ring Size 48
      Cartier Trinity Ring 18k Rose Gold Band Ring Size 48

      Best version to buy for resale: Classic tri-gold band.

      Panthère Resale Value

      Cartier Panthere de Cartier 18K Yellow Gold Emerald Onyx Tassel Necklace
      Cartier Panthere de Cartier 18K Yellow Gold Emerald Onyx Tassel Necklace in Excellent Condition

      The Panthère de Cartier collection — featuring the house’s iconic panther motif — has a 70–80% retention rate and medium liquidity. It has a more defined collector audience than the Love or Trinity, which means it takes longer to sell. However, vintage Panthère pieces with original stones (particularly the onyx-and-emerald-eyed panther brooches and rings) have been appreciating as collector demand grows. Modern pieces are more accessible but less distinctive to serious buyers.

      Cartier Panthere De Cartier Head Multi Gemstones 18k White Gold Ring Size 54
      Cartier Panthere De Cartier Head Multi Gemstones 18k White Gold Ring Size 54

      Best version to buy for resale: Vintage pieces with original stones.

      Love Ring Resale Value

      Cartier Love Diamond 18k Rose Gold Solitaire Ring Size 51
      Cartier Love Diamond 18k Rose Gold Solitaire Ring Size 51

      Often overlooked in favor of its bracelet sibling, the Love Ring holds its own, with 75–85% retention and high liquidity. It is a more accessible entry point to the Love collection at a lower retail price, which means more buyers — and faster sales. The classic yellow-gold band is the most sought-after style.

      Best version to buy for resale: Classic yellow gold band.

      Cartier Resale Value Comparative Analysis

      If you’re wondering how to tell whether your pre-owned Cartier jewelry is authentic, read our guide to buying authenticated pre-owned Cartier jewelry. 

      What Affects Cartier Jewelry Resale Value

      Even within the same collection, two identical-looking pieces can sell for very different prices. Here’s what moves the needle:

      Condition:

      Cartier Love Diamond 18k Rose Gold Necklace
      Cartier Love Diamond 18k Rose Gold Necklace in Excellent Condition

      Surface scratches on gold are normal and often polish out, but deep dents, bent structures, or broken mechanisms significantly reduce value. A Love Bracelet or necklace in unworn condition with box and papers will always command a premium.

      Completeness of papers and packaging:

      Cartier Trinity Heart Diamond 18K Yellow, Pink, White Gold Diamonds Necklace
      Cartier Trinity Heart Diamond 18K Yellow, Pink, White Gold Diamonds Necklace

      Original box, papers (certificate of authenticity), receipt, and screwdriver (for Love pieces) can add 10–15% to the resale price. Many buyers specifically filter for “full set” listings.

      Gold type:

      Cartier Juste Un Clou Diamonds 18k Rose Gold Classic Model Ring Size 57
      Cartier Juste Un Clou Diamonds 18k Rose Gold Classic Model Ring Size 57

      Yellow gold consistently outperforms white and rose gold on the resale market across all Cartier collections. White gold may require rhodium re-plating, which adds to buyer costs and reduces demand.

      The brand premium (and brand tax):

      A meaningful portion of every Cartier retail price covers craftsmanship, heritage, and the trademark itself — what resale specialists call the “brand tax.” On the secondary market, you do not fully recoup this premium. That said, Cartier’s brand tax is lower than most luxury goods categories: a 70–90% retention rate compares very favorably to, say, a luxury handbag or a car.

      Diamonds and stone quality:

      Cartier Love 4 Diamonds 18k Yellow Gold Bracelet 16
      Cartier Love 4 Diamonds 18k Yellow Gold Bracelet 16

      This one cuts both ways. Plain gold pieces (especially the classic Love Bracelet) sell faster and to a broader audience. However, pieces set with high-quality, GIA-certified diamonds carry a higher baseline resale value because the stones themselves have independently verifiable worth. The nuance: pavé or factory-set diamonds without certification are harder to value and often drag down resale prices, while significant stones with GIA papers add a measurable floor. If diamonds are part of your purchase, certification matters enormously at resale.

      Size:

      For the Love Bracelet, sizes 16–19 are the most common and easiest to sell. Very small (under 16) or very large (over 21) sizes take longer to find buyers.

      Market timing:

      Gold spot prices influence perceived value. When gold prices rise, buyers feel more confident purchasing gold jewelry at higher secondhand prices. The resale market also has seasonal peaks around Christmas and Valentine’s Day.

      Where you sell:

      This has an outsized impact. Specialist luxury resale platforms like The Luxury Closet and myGemma connect your piece with a global pool of verified buyers, offer professional authentication, and tend to maximize return through competitive pricing. The Luxury Closet, in particular, is well-positioned for sellers in the UAE and the wider Middle East, combining regional reach with an international buyer base. Auction houses work well for rarer or vintage pieces. General peer-to-peer platforms (eBay, Facebook Marketplace) carry lower fees but also lower buyer trust, which depresses offers. Always use a verified, authenticated platform, and get at least two quotes before accepting an offer.

      FAQ: Cartier Jewelry Resale Value

      Does Cartier jewelry hold its value?

      Yes. Cartier is one of the few jewelry brands that reliably retains 70–95% of retail value, depending on the piece. Core collections like the Love Bracelet and Juste un Clou are among the strongest performers in the entire luxury jewelry category.

      Does Cartier jewelry have resale value?

      Absolutely. There is an active, global secondary market for Cartier pieces. Specialist resellers, auction houses, and peer-to-peer platforms all facilitate Cartier sales at competitive prices. Pieces in good condition with original packaging sell quickly.

      Does Cartier have resale value compared to other luxury jewelry brands?

      Cartier compares favorably to most competitors. Van Cleef & Arpels and Buccellati also hold their value well, but Cartier benefits from broader name recognition and a larger pool of buyers globally, which significantly improves liquidity.

      Does a Cartier bracelet have resale value?

      The Love Bracelet in particular is one of the most resaleable luxury items on the market, full stop — not just in jewelry. Expect 85–95% retention for a classic yellow gold version with papers and box.

      What is the best Cartier piece for resale?

      The classic yellow gold Love Bracelet (4-screw, no diamonds) is the gold standard for resale. It has the highest retention rate, the deepest buyer pool, and the fastest average time to sale of any Cartier piece.

      Does Cartier hold its value better than gold bullion?

      In terms of price appreciation alone, gold bullion tracks the gold spot price more directly. However, Cartier pieces benefit from an additional brand premium — meaning they can retain value even when gold prices dip, and appreciate faster when gold prices rise. For most buyers, the aesthetic and emotional value is a bonus on top of the financial case.

      Should I buy Cartier as an investment?

      Cartier jewelry should not be purchased primarily as a financial investment — no jewelry should be. However, if you plan to buy a luxury piece anyway, Cartier’s resale retention means you are not making a purely depreciating purchase. With the right piece, in good condition, you may recover most of your spend if you decide to sell. The annual 2–3% retail price increases also mean that older pieces become relatively more attractive on the secondary market over time — a dynamic that traditional assets don’t offer alongside wearability.

      Do Cartier prices increase over time?

      Yes. Cartier raises retail prices by approximately 2–3% annually across its core collections. This steady inflation in retail prices helps support the pre-owned market: as new prices climb, older pieces bought at lower prices maintain or increase their secondary-market value in relative terms. It is one of the reasons vintage Love Bracelets from the 1980s and 1990s have appreciated significantly in absolute value.

      Does Cartier jewelry hold its value in the UAE?

      Yes, and the UAE is one of the strongest regional markets for Cartier resale globally. Dubai, in particular, has a highly active pre-owned luxury jewelry market, driven by a large, affluent expatriate population, a strong gold culture, and year-round tourist footfall. The UAE’s tax-free retail environment also means Cartier pieces are often purchased here at lower prices than in Europe or the US, which can improve the margin between purchase price and resale return.

      Where can I sell Cartier jewelry in Dubai?

      Dubai has a growing ecosystem of pre-owned luxury platforms and dealers. The Gold Souk in Deira is a traditional route, though prices there reflect commodity value more than brand premium. For better returns, specialist luxury resale platforms like The Luxury Closet, headquartered in Dubai and with regional expertise and a global buyer base, will typically offer far more competitive quotes than commodity dealers. That way, you can sell your Cartier jewelry in Dubai without any hassle.

      Is buying pre-owned Cartier in Dubai worth it?

      It’s one of the smartest ways to buy. Pre-owned Cartier in Dubai combines two advantages in one: the UAE’s tax-free retail environment means even new pieces are priced lower than in the UK or Europe, and the pre-owned market adds a further layer of value, giving you access to authenticated, sought-after pieces like the Love Bracelet or Juste un Clou at significantly below current retail. The Luxury Closet, based in Dubai, is purpose-built for exactly this: a curated selection of verified Cartier pieces available to buyers in the UAE and internationally, with the authentication and trust that the secondary market demands. For buyers, it means owning a genuine Cartier piece at a price that already includes the brand premium. For future resale, that lower cost basis means more room on your return.

      Can I sell my Cartier jewelry online?

      Online specialist platforms expose your piece to a global pool of authenticated buyers rather than limiting you to local demand. The process is straightforward: submit photos and details, receive a valuation, ship the piece with insurance, and get paid upon authentication. Platforms like The Luxury Closet, myGemma, and Vestiaire Collective are among the most established. The Luxury Closet is particularly well-suited for UAE-based sellers, offering local convenience without sacrificing access to international buyers. Before committing, compare at least two offers; valuations can vary by 10–15% between platforms depending on current buyer demand for your specific piece and size.

      Your Favorite Cartier Jewelry Piece is Waiting at The Luxury Closet

      Some pieces find you. A Love Bracelet in exactly the right size. A vintage Panthère ring with its original stones intact. A Juste un Clou bangle in the yellow gold you’ve always wanted, at a fraction of the retail price. Yes, you can find yourself dazzled with Cartier rings for women, Cartier pendants, and bracelets

      At The Luxury Closet, every Cartier piece is authenticated, curated, and ready to wear — not sitting in a vault, not locked behind a waitlist. Whether you’re buying your first Cartier or adding to a collection you’ve spent years building, the secondary market is where the best stories begin.

      Every piece on The Luxury Closet has already proven something: it was worth buying, worth keeping, and worth passing on. That’s not just resale. That’s legacy.

      [Explore Cartier at The Luxury Closet →]

      Want to Find Out What Your Cartier Is Worth?

      Whether you own a Love Bracelet, a Trinity Ring, or a vintage Panthère, your piece likely holds more value than you think. Get a free, no-obligation valuation from a verified luxury resale specialist. It takes minutes and gives you a real number to work with.

      [Get My Free Cartier Valuation →]



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      Tactical Force: The Leaked Cost and Release Date of Star Wars Zero Company | Metaverse Planet

      Tactical Force: The Leaked Cost and Release Date of Star Wars Zero Company | Metaverse Planet


      I have to admit, as someone who spent way too many late nights commanding troops in Star Wars: Empire at War and sweating through tactical turns in XCOM, the phrase “Star Wars turn-based tactical RPG” immediately locks my radar.

      We were all patiently waiting for the upcoming Summer Game Fest to get our first official gameplay deep dive of Star Wars Zero Company. But the gaming industry simply cannot keep a secret. A massive new report from Dealabs just blew the doors wide open, leaking the exact release date, regional pricing tiers, and a very surprising launch strategy from Electronic Arts.

      Let’s unpack what was leaked, look at the studio pulling the strings behind the scenes, and discuss why this pricing model might change how AAA publishers launch games.

      Mark Your Calendars: Late Summer Deployment

      If this leak holds true—and given the source’s track record, it almost certainly will—you won’t have to wait until the winter holidays to command your squad.

      The Launch Date: Star Wars Zero Company is locked in for a August 27 release.The Platforms: The game is bypassing last-gen hardware entirely, launching natively on PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X/S.

      When I saw the August date, I actually smiled. Late August is a brilliant sweet spot. It gets ahead of the chaotic autumn rush where every massive franchise competes for your wallet, giving a tactical RPG breathing room to completely dominate the conversation.

      The Price is Right? Breaking Down the Editions

      Here is where the leak gets genuinely shocking. In an era where publishers are aggressively pushing standard game prices to $70 or even $80, EA seems to be taking a step back into consumer-friendly territory.

      PlatformStandard Edition (Physical & Digital)Deluxe Edition (Digital Only)PC$49.99$59.99Consoles (PS5 / Xbox)$59.99$69.99

      I find this tiered pricing incredibly refreshing. By keeping the base PC version under fifty bucks, they are lowering the barrier to entry for strategy fans who might be on the fence about a turn-based title.

      The Anti-Early Access Twist

      There is another fascinating detail buried in the report: The Deluxe Edition will not include Early Access.

      Lately, the trend for major AAA publishers has been to hold a game hostage for three to five days behind a $100 premium paywall. I’ve always found that tactic incredibly greedy because it pre-emptively spoils the story for everyone else on social media. If the leak is right, everyone boots up Zero Company on the exact same day: August 27. No shortcuts, no artificial tiered waiting rooms.

      Who is Building This? (Why You Should Be Excited)

      If you are wondering whether a tactical Star Wars game can actually live up to the hype, you need to look at the pedigree of the developers. The game is being built by Bit Reactor, working in close collaboration with Respawn Entertainment (the geniuses behind Jedi: Fallen Order and Survivor) and Lucasfilm Games.

      For those unfamiliar, Bit Reactor was founded by veteran developers from Firaxis Games—the literal architects of modern XCOM and Civilization.

      My Takeaway: This isn’t a casual mobile cash-grab. We have the best tactical minds in the gaming industry handling the mechanics, backed by Respawn’s masterful storytelling and world-building capabilities.

      The Story: Gritty Mercenaries in the Clone Wars

      The campaign is a single-player journey set squarely during the chaotic chaos of The Clone Wars.

      Instead of playing as an all-powerful Jedi slicing through battle droids, you control a rough-around-the-edges mercenary squad known as “Zero Company.” Led by a hardened former military officer named Hawks, this group of outcasts has to survive high-stakes tactical encounters while dealing with internal friction. I love this approach. Seeing the Star Wars galaxy from the mud, gears, and tactical planning of non-Force users always makes for a far more compelling, grounded story.

      Are We Witnessing a Strategic Pivot?

      I’ve been thinking about why EA chose this lower price point. Turn-based strategy is a deeply passionate genre, but it historically lacks the mass-market appeal of a first-person shooter like Battlefront. By lowering the price and skipping the predatory early-access windows, they are showing immense respect for the tactical community. It builds instant goodwill.

      Summer Game Fest is right around the corner, and we are still going to get the cinematic and gameplay trailers we’ve been craving. But knowing the logistical details now makes me even more eager to see how those XCOM-style grid mechanics look under a coat of beautiful, modern Star Wars paint.

      How do you feel about a slower, turn-based tactical Star Wars game? Do you prefer commanding a squad from a bird’s-eye view, or do you strictly want to swing a lightsaber in first-person? Let’s talk in the comments below!

      You Might Also Like;



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      Stoffa the designer Part 2: The clothes

      Stoffa the designer Part 2: The clothes


      Stoffa the designer Part 2: The clothes

      Friday, June 5th 2026

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      Last week, I wrote about why Stoffa is my favourite designer brand. They’re a designer to the extent that they create less-classic garments, and are design (particularly fabric) led. Yet they also have many of the characteristics that we value on Permanent Style, such as quality, craft and authenticity. 

      That was more of an opinion piece. Today I’m going into more product detail, using a try-on session I had with Agyesh (Madan) and Nick (Ragosta) to talk about what makes a few pieces special, and also revealing about Stoffa. 

      I hope you find it a useful extension, and nice geeky detail for all you product lovers. Note that the pieces are deliberately from a range of seasons, so some of them aren’t currently online (I’ve linked to the ones that are). But the ones that aren’t are available made to order. 

      Long-sleeve camp shirt

      Taupe wool/silk/linen

      This piece is a good example, for me, of the use of made to measure at Stoffa. I love the style of this shirt, and the unique material, but when I tried it on the length was too short and the body too A-line. This is often the case on roomier shirts, as I’m slimmer than average for my chest size, and taller. 

      Unlike elsewhere, however, I could have one made to measure and add both a little bit to the length and take in the body. Interestingly, Nick said people actually sometimes have these shortened, because they want a bigger look – they go up a size or two for that really loose, 90s style, but don’t want the length down to their knees. 

      It’s also interesting that made to measure is being used here not to achieve precision – as you generally do with tailoring – but to create a different style, a different expression of the piece.

      Suede popover

      Fig suede

      This popover is most useful as an illustration of what constitutes Stoffa style. But the materials are revealing too. 

      Regular readers will know I have an Hermes popover that I adore. But despite its orange colour, that piece is more classic than this Stoffa version. The Stoffa piece has a larger collar, a deeper opening, no buttons and a blousier fit, combining to make it showier/sexier/more expressive. 

      That style goes across the Stoffa range (the knit polos are similar – bigger opening, no buttons) and it’s something you shouldn’t really try and change with made to measure (a mistake I talked about in part one). But it doesn’t mean other pieces won’t be for you – I might not wear the popover, but I would wear the polo for instance, or the shirts, which also have a bigger collar. 

      On materials, our conversation revealed a lot of the work and thought process that goes into these. “We wanted the lining to be soft enough to wear against the skin, but also slippy enough to get on and off easily,” said Nick. “You want it breathable, so it doesn’t get too sweaty, and also not too heavy; you can’t use yarn of 200g or more as it ruins the point of having lightweight suede. It took a while to find the right one, but we got there.”

      Most brands would just pick a standard lining (I know, I’ve been in those conversations) and they certainly wouldn’t use a wool/silk for the ribbing. 

      Double breasted shirt jacket

      Chocolate tropical wool

      As you’d expect, this is one I found particularly interesting because it was closest to tailoring. Talking to Nick and Agyesh about it, however, they emphasised the shirt side of things, as well as how materials can make two very different versions. 

      “We call it a shirt jacket deliberately,” said Nick. “Yes it’s shown in an elegant way, but it’s not that idea you have in your head of a tailored jacket. It has no side panel, no darts, and is completely unlined. It’s made like a shirt.”

      And yet, this is the first thing I’d want to have made to measure, because the style is as complicated as a jacket – the length, the volume, where the waist sits. A shirt is an easy thing to tweak remotely, but a jacket is more complicated. Apparently most agree, because most of these shirt-jackets are ordered MTM, in store. 

      The second point was that the design is done that way to fully express certain fabrics. A wool is picked because it’s soft and fluffy, whereas a particular wool/silk is chosen because it’s slippy and has a lot of lustre. A lot of the point of the garment is about the fabric, which is not the way round we’re used to thinking about things.

      This is actually a problem I know readers have when they commission things such as overshirts from tailors. They use tailoring materials, because that’s what’s available, but those materials are not always suited to something completely unstructured. It’s an area where design-led brands are nearly always better.

      Raglan coat

      Anthracite silk/cotton/linen

      If a coat isn’t that warm, and it isn’t waterproof, what’s the point? I know it’s a question that readers think (and ask) fairly frequently. The answer I think, as with this coat, is style. During in-between seasons, some people prefer a three-quarter length piece like a field jacket, while others prefer something longer. 

      In fact, London is the kind of place where an in-between coat is most useful – where it can be cold in the morning but warm in the afternoon; where you often have to layer; where there is more likely to be brief showers than the storms you get in New York. This week has been rather like that in London actually.

      It was also interesting talking to Agyesh about waterproofing, as it’s a nuanced topic that often just gets reduced to ‘Is it waterproof?’. He doesn’t use treatments, but he picks materials that are more water resistant – it makes a big difference if the material is a tighter weave, a slightly brushed finish, wool rather than cotton and so on. Those kinds of things mean the water doesn’t penetrate the material instantly, and so create natural resistance. 

      Lastly, I don’t own any of the current pieces above, but I do have several I wear a lot, so for greater context those are:

      Spread collar shirt in cotton/silk slub (sand with ivory)

      Available MTO, or in other models/colours 

      U-neck vest in cashmere (walnut)

      Currently available in cotton but not cashmere

      Field blouson in wool/hemp (sand)

      Available made to measure in different materials

      Hooded sweatshirt in cotton terry (bone)

      No longer offered

      They are all pictured below. If anyone has any other questions about these or other pieces, let me know and I can try to answer from this experience, or push them onto Nick and Agyesh. 

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      Stablecoins Under Siege: How Infrastructure Vulnerabilities And State-Backed Evasion Are Reshaping The 2026 Crypto Threat Landscape | Metaverse Post

      Stablecoins Under Siege: How Infrastructure Vulnerabilities And State-Backed Evasion Are Reshaping The 2026 Crypto Threat Landscape | Metaverse Post


      In Brief

      CertiK’s 2026 Stablecoin Threat Report maps a shifting attack landscape and documents how state-backed actors are weaponizing stablecoin architecture to bypass Western sanctions enforcement.

      Stablecoins Under Siege: How Infrastructure Vulnerabilities And State-Backed Evasion Are Reshaping The 2026 Crypto Threat Landscape

      Web3 security firm CertiK released the “2026 Stablecoin Threat Report,” highlighting that the stablecoin ecosystem faces dual challenges in terms of technological security and regulatory compliance. The report shows that stablecoins have evolved far beyond speculative trading instruments to become critical settlement infrastructure processing trillions of dollars in cross-border transactions annually — and that this maturation has made them an increasingly attractive target for both opportunistic attackers and state-level threat actors seeking to circumvent Western sanctions.

      Shifting Attack Surfaces: From Smart Contracts to Operational Infrastructure

      According to the report, the most consequential shift in the 2026 threat landscape is not the volume of attacks but their direction. Cross-chain bridges and interoperability protocols remain the single most costly attack surface, with bridge-related incidents totaling over $328 million in losses in 2026 alone. The April breach of Kelp DAO — a wallet compromise resulting in $291 million in losses — accounted for the bulk of that figure and illustrated a broader trend the report identifies as defining: wallet compromises have displaced code exploits as the primary attack vector.

      Across the major DeFi incidents catalogued in the report’s first half, wallet compromises dominate the loss figures. Of the top five incidents by financial damage — Kelp DAO, Drift Protocol, Step Finance, Resolv, and IoTeX — four involved private key or wallet-level breaches rather than vulnerabilities in on-chain logic. The report frames this as a structural shift in attacker methodology: rather than searching for flaws in smart contract code, adversaries are increasingly targeting the operational and custodial layers surrounding stablecoin infrastructure, including private key management systems, cloud configurations, and access control frameworks.

      The report also documents the expansion of the attack surface beyond DeFi itself. As compliant stablecoins deepen their integration into traditional payment systems, attackers have begun targeting KYC service providers, payment APIs, and sanctions screening systems. Some 2026 incidents, the report notes, were oriented not toward stealing on-chain funds but toward disrupting settlement flows or exploiting vulnerabilities at the intersection of blockchain architecture and legacy financial infrastructure — a profile that closely resembles traditional financial crime rather than early-era crypto exploitation.

      A7A5: The Anatomy of State-Backed Sanctions Evasion

      The report’s second section offers a detailed case study of A7A5, a ruble-backed stablecoin issued in January 2025 by Old Vector LLC, a Kyrgyzstan-registered entity acting on behalf of A7 LLC — a Russian cross-border settlement company co-owned by sanctioned oligarch Ilan Shor and Promsvyazbank (PSB), a sanctioned Russian state bank that serves the country’s defense-industrial complex. Within less than a year of launch, A7A5 processed over $110 billion in on-chain transactions and captured approximately 43% of the global non-dollar stablecoin market.

      The report’s analysis frames A7A5 as a deliberate architectural response to Western enforcement. Its technical design closely mirrors Tether’s USDT smart contract — including centralized minting, blacklisting, freeze, and burn functions — but with a critical distinction: the issuer, collateral custodian, and compliance controls are all positioned outside Western jurisdictional reach. Every layer of the structure, from Old Vector LLC as nominal issuer to PSB as reserve bank to the Tokeon platform as transaction processor, involves entities under overlapping U.S., UK, and EU sanctions. No independent reserve attestation has been published.

      The report also highlights A7A5’s “digital promissory note” system, a hybrid financial instrument redeemable via Telegram bot into local fiat or back into the token. This mechanism extends the network into physical cash distribution in jurisdictions with weak banking infrastructure, dramatically complicates on-chain tracing — funds entering the paper layer disappear from the public ledger entirely — and functionally mirrors the shell-company and false-invoice architecture historically used to build large-scale trade-based money laundering networks.

      Enforcement Gaps and the Limits of Multilateral Sanctions

      International regulatory response to A7A5 has been, by the report’s account, historically unprecedented. The EU’s 19th sanctions package, effective November 25, 2025, became the first instance globally of a specific cryptocurrency being named in a trading prohibition. The subsequent 20th package, effective May 24, 2026, introduced a categorical ban targeting Russian crypto asset service providers by operational model rather than by entity name — a strategic evolution designed to close the loophole exploited when Garantex rebranded as Grinex after its March 2025 seizure.

      Yet the report’s on-chain data tells a sobering story about the limits of these measures. A7A5’s holder count on Tron grew in a near-perfect linear trajectory from approximately 13,000 in February 2025 to around 29,000 by May 2026, with no discernible inflection at any sanctions milestone. The report attributes this resilience to the user base’s composition: predominantly non-Western individuals in Russia, Kyrgyzstan, and Belarus, for whom Western enforcement mechanisms carry no practical consequence.

      The most urgent unaddressed risk the report identifies is Africa. Russia has already established A7 offices in Nigeria and Zimbabwe, with Togo as a likely next target, and the Russian Foreign Minister extended a public invitation to all African nations at the Russia-Africa Partnership Forum to join the A7 settlement network. As the report points out, no African regulatory authority has yet engaged formally with OFAC, the UK Treasury, or the EU regarding A7A5-related risks — a gap that exposes locally Western-aligned banks to potential secondary sanctions liability. Closing it, the report concludes, will require proactive multilateral outreach from Western enforcement agencies paired with correspondent banking guidance specifically designed to help financial institutions recognize A7-linked transaction patterns before exposure materializes.

      Disclaimer

      In line with the Trust Project guidelines, please note that the information provided on this page is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of advice. It is important to only invest what you can afford to lose and to seek independent financial advice if you have any doubts. For further information, we suggest referring to the terms and conditions as well as the help and support pages provided by the issuer or advertiser. MetaversePost is committed to accurate, unbiased reporting, but market conditions are subject to change without notice.

      About The Author


      Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.

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      Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.








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      The Worst R-Rated Superhero Movies Revealed | MarkMeets Media

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        The Worst R-Rated Superhero Movies Revealed | MarkMeets Media


        The genre of superhero films has seen explosive growth over the last few decades, evolving from niche segments into gigantic box-office behemoths. However, not every superhero flick has found success; some have fallen far short of expectations. Among these, R-rated adaptations, which might have benefited from their mature themes, often ended up as colossal misfires. Before the emergence of successful R-rated films like Deadpool, many superhero projects failed to capture the magic, landing them squarely in the category of the worst R-rated movies.

        This article explores a selection of these cinematic disappointments, especially those that mismanaged their R-rating, yielding confusion, excessive gore, and cheap thrills instead of quality storytelling. The worst R-rated movies not only misfired on charm and creativity but also struggled to find a cohesive identity, leaving audiences longing for something deeper and more engaging.

        A Brief Look Back at R-Rated Superhero Films

        The Early Years

        Before the turn of the century, the world of R-rated superhero films was riddled with failures. The genre lacked the influence, identity, and integrity that later productions would come to embrace. Many early R-rated attempts were characterized by their focus on violence and gore rather than cohesive narratives. It wasn’t uncommon for films of this era to prioritize shock value over storytelling, which often resulted in dismal reviews and audience rejection.

        The Rise of Quality R-Rated Films

        Eventually, as the new millennium unfolded, filmmakers began to forge a path toward creating better R-rated superhero offerings. The success of films like Deadpool and Logan has shown that there is indeed potential for greatness within this category, raising the standards for future projects. However, many others still languish in obscurity, having shown all the signs of a project destined to be among the worst R-rated movies of their time.

        The List of the Worst R-Rated Superhero Movies

        10. Kick-Ass 2 (2013)

        Directed by: Jeff Wadlow

        The original Kick-Ass, directed by Matthew Vaughn, became a cultural touchstone, blending interests in superhero culture with a unique sense of dark humor. However, its sequel, Kick-Ass 2, failed to replicate its predecessor’s success, earning a place among the worst R-rated movies due to a muddled plot and a noticeable loss of focus.

        Critics pointed to the absence of Vaughn as a significant blow to the sequel’s quality. Try as it might, Kick-Ass 2 could not capture the blend of wit and violence that characterized the first film. Despite Chloë Grace Moretz’s noteworthy return as Hit-Girl, the film became an incoherent mess that long-time fans are still shocked by, wishing for an actual continuation that respects the original’s essence.

        9. Spawn (1997)

        Directed by: Mark A.Z. DippeSpawn

        Spawn arrived during a time renowned for its poor quality superhero adaptations, yet it has maintained a place in the conversation. The film’s vibrant visuals attempted to distract from its incoherent storyline, making it a glaring example of the worst R-rated movies.

        Despite a loyal comic book following, the film fell short in delivering a compelling narrative. Heavy reliance on 90s computer graphics and visual spectacle overshadowed any possibility of genuine emotional depth or character development. For fans seeking quality adaptations, Spawn only served as a painful reminder of missed opportunities and was ultimately a hindrance to the character’s cinematic future. If anyone is interested in Spawn, the animated series released in the same era offers a far more thrilling experience than its live-action counterpart.

        8. Blade: Trinity (2004)

        Directed by: David S. GoyerBlade: Trinity

        The Blade trilogy began with promise, but Blade: Trinity marked a steep decline in quality. This film threw Wesley Snipes’ character to the side in favor of an ensemble cast featuring Jessica Biel’s Abigail Whistler and Ryan Reynolds’ Hannibal King. Unfortunately, these new characters didn’t add composition but rather diluted the overall narrative strength.

        The action sequences lacked weight and significance, betraying the franchise’s legacy of thrilling combat. As a result, Blade: Trinity painfully demonstrates what happens when a successful formula is tampered with without due consideration, ultimately earning its place alongside the worst R-rated movies.

        7. Punisher: War Zone (2008)

        Directed by: Lexi AlexanderPunisher: War Zone

        While some viewers find enjoyment in Punisher: War Zone, many agree it mostly amounts to a chaotic display of excessive violence. The film has been lovingly dubbed a “guilty pleasure,” but for many fans of The Punisher franchise, it offered a dismal experience that lacked the depth the source material deserves.

        What stands out in War Zone is the overwhelming reliance on action and profane language, creating a sense of fatigue rather than excitement. The film’s inability to create a compelling narrative ultimately removed any redeeming qualities, solidifying its reputation among the worst R-rated movies.

        6. The Punisher (1990)

        Directed by: Mark GoldblattThe Punisher

        Long before anyone knew the darker depths of the character or experienced the electrifying storytelling in later adaptations, The Punisher starred Dolph Lundgren in a forgettable portrayal of Frank Castle. While there is action a-plenty, this 1990 effort manages to feel dull and draining rather than engaging.

        With an execution that focuses on the action while neglecting the deeper complexities of the character, The Punisher falls flat in nearly every regard. Watching it is akin to witnessing an uninspired interpretation of a character bursting with potential—showcasing why it has found a place on the list of the worst R-rated movies.

        5. The Crow (2024)

        Directed by: Rupert SandersThe Crow

        After the cultural phenomenon that was the original The Crow, many hoped for a revival but were met with another ill-fated attempt. The 2024 release failed to connect with audiences in a meaningful way, earning its spot in the annals of the worst R-rated movies.

        A half-baked storyline paired with poor dialogue and lackluster direction showcased a film that felt disjointed and lifeless. Fans wishing for a return to the franchise’s glory were left with a bitter reminder of how far removed it departed from its predecessor.

        4. Judge Dredd (1995)

        Directed by: Danny CannonJudge Dredd

        With Sylvester Stallone at the helm, one might have high hopes for Judge Dredd. Yet, it disappointingly transforms into a bland and lifeless adaptation of the comic book character. The R-rating felt wasted, as the film struggled to merge thrilling content with an incoherent plot.

        The miscasting of Stallone did little to help the film’s fate; rather, it compounded issues intrinsic to the film. Regrettably, Judge Dredd embodies exactly what can go wrong when an R-rated superhero film neglects character depth and intelligent storytelling, leading it straight into the rankings of the worst R-rated movies.

        3. The Crow: Salvation (2000)

        Directed by: Bharat NalluriThe Crow: Salvation

        As part of an unfortunate lineage, The Crow: Salvation marked the third entry in the series. Despite the expectations, it failed to provide anything meaningful or stimulating, consistently recycling themes introduced in the original film while falling short in execution.

        The result was yet another dismal entry into a franchise that had seen better days. With its amateurish acting and clumsy dialogue, this particular sequel compounds its problems by squandering its R-rating, landing it among the worst R-rated movies in superhero history.

        2. The Crow: City of Angels (1996)

        Directed by: Tim PopeThe Crow: City of Angels

        The Crow: City of Angels, billed as the first sequel to the beloved original, aimed for a thrilling continuation but instead replicated many of the themes without understanding or respecting the foundations that made its predecessor work. For viewers, it raised more questions than answers.

        Struggling with low production values and a sense of sloppiness, City of Angels did little to justify its existence, merely inflating a beloved franchise with disappointment. The film’s handling of its R-rating is a gross mismanagement that further cements its place among the worst R-rated movies.

        1. The Crow: Wicked Prayer (2005)

        Directed by: Lance MungiaThe Crow: Wicked Prayer

        Earning the dubious distinction of achieving a shocking 0% on Rotten Tomatoes, The Crow: Wicked Prayer may be one of the most significant disasters in superhero film history. This iteration feels more like a satirical take on its subject than a serious entry point, drowning in a pool of inept storytelling and poorly executed performances.

        Even when considering the occasional redeeming moments—such as Edward Furlong’s dedication to his role—the overall production lacks cohesion or purpose. The essence of a meaningful R-rated film is glaringly absent, resulting in a project that some would argue was doomed from the start. Undeniably, The Crow: Wicked Prayer exemplifies all that goes wrong within the worst R-rated movies, leading audiences through a torturous experience.

        Conclusion: The Legacy of Bad R-Rated Superhero Films

        As we reflect on the list of the worst R-rated movies, it is vital to recognize the potential within the genre, hindered by productions that failed to harness the maturity of their rating effectively. Many of the aforementioned films are reminders of how far R-rated superhero adaptations have journeyed, especially with recent successes demonstrating the value of storytelling over merely sensational elements.

        Despite their shortcomings, these films serve a purpose in the grand narrative of cinema: showcasing what happens when creative vision meets a lack of focus. As audiences, we hope to witness more refined R-rated superhero films in the future that learn from the mistakes of the past, developing scripts that allow room for genuine character arcs, emotional depth, and an engaging narrative. Perhaps one day, the dark terrain of R-rated superhero films will lead to more gems instead of these enduring examples of filmic disappointment.

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        Crypto Market News: AlphaPepe To Announce First CEX Partnership as XRP Price Prediction Hits $8.00 | Web3Wire

        Crypto Market News: AlphaPepe To Announce First CEX Partnership as XRP Price Prediction Hits .00 | Web3Wire


        MONACO, June 04, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Crypto market news is turning toward AlphaPepe after the project confirmed that its first centralized exchange partnership reveal is now expected within weeks. The presale has crossed $1.46 million in total capital raised, Stage 17 is live at $0.01858, and holder growth has climbed past 9,200 while AlphaSwap demo traction and audit completion continue to support the project’s pre-listing profile.

        The upcoming CEX partnership reveal gives AlphaPepe a clear company catalyst as XRP price prediction headlines continue to track higher long-term targets, with Standard Chartered’s earlier XRP roadmap pointing toward $8.00 in 2026 if regulatory clarity, ETF demand, and institutional adoption strengthen.

        AlphaPepe To Announce First CEX Partnership Within Weeks

        AlphaPepe’s upcoming centralized exchange partnership reveal marks one of the project’s most important pre-listing milestones so far. The team has confirmed that the first CEX partnership will be announced within weeks, giving the presale a visible exchange-related catalyst before public trading begins.

        The presale has now crossed $1.46 million, with Stage 17 active at $0.01858 and the holder count above 9,200. That continued growth shows the project is moving through stage progression, community expansion, and exchange preparation at the same time.

        The CEX partnership reveal is important because centralized exchanges can expand visibility beyond the presale audience. A first confirmed exchange relationship can place AlphaPepe in front of a wider trading base, improve market awareness, and give participants a clearer view of how the project is preparing for its next phase.

        AlphaPepe’s product layer continues to support the presale momentum. AlphaSwap, the project’s AI-powered decentralized exchange, has already surpassed 5,000 active demo users. That gives the project a working product environment before its exchange debut, separating it from many presales that enter public markets with only a roadmap.

        AlphaSwap includes AI contract screening, whale wallet tracking, and cross-chain execution on BSC. The contract screening layer is designed to detect risky token behavior before users interact with a smart contract. The whale tracking layer gives traders visibility into large wallet movements as they happen. The cross-chain execution layer is being built to make meme coin trading faster and less fragmented.

        The 10/10 BlockSAFU audit adds another layer of credibility before the token reaches exchanges. Combined with 9,200+ holders, over $1.46 million raised, Stage 17 momentum, AlphaSwap demo usage, instant token delivery, and an upcoming CEX partnership reveal, AlphaPepe is building a stronger pre-listing profile than many early-stage meme projects in the current cycle.

        XRP Price Prediction Hits $8.00

        The XRP price prediction debate has returned to higher upside targets, with Standard Chartered’s earlier roadmap pointing toward $8.00 in 2026. The bullish case depends on regulatory clarity, ETF demand, institutional adoption, and XRP gaining deeper use across payments and tokenization infrastructure.

        The $8.00 XRP price prediction remains a bullish scenario, not a guaranteed outcome. For AlphaPepe, the nearer story is internal execution, with Stage 17 active at $0.01858, over $1.46 million raised, 9,200+ holders, AlphaSwap already tested by more than 5,000 demo users, and the first CEX partnership reveal now expected within weeks.

        Conclusion

        AlphaPepe’s latest update gives the project a defined company catalyst while broader crypto traders continue watching XRP price prediction targets. The presale has crossed $1.46 million, Stage 17 is live at $0.01858, the holder count has passed 9,200, and the first centralized exchange partnership reveal is now approaching.

        The $8.00 XRP price prediction shows how institutional adoption, ETF demand, and regulatory clarity continue to shape major altcoin narratives. But AlphaPepe’s roadmap is unfolding on a shorter timeline, with presale progression, AlphaSwap demo traction, audit completion, and exchange preparation all converging before public trading begins.

        For participants tracking early-stage crypto opportunities, the current setup is clear. AlphaPepe has capital raised, holder growth, working product traction, audit credibility, instant token delivery, and CEX partnership momentum moving together. Stage 17 remains active at $0.01858, with the first exchange reveal now expected within weeks.

        CLICK TO VISIT ALPHAPEPE OFFICIAL WEBSITE

        FAQs

        What is AlphaPepe’s latest update?AlphaPepe has confirmed that its first centralized exchange partnership reveal is expected within weeks. The presale has raised over $1.46 million, Stage 17 is live at $0.01858, the holder count has passed 9,200, and the AlphaSwap AI DEX demo has surpassed 5,000 active users.

        What is the $8.00 XRP price prediction?The $8.00 XRP price prediction refers to a bullish scenario from Standard Chartered’s earlier XRP roadmap. The target depends on regulatory clarity, ETF demand, institutional adoption, and XRP gaining broader use across payments and tokenization infrastructure.

        About AlphaPepeAlphaPepe is building AlphaSwap, an AI-powered decentralized exchange designed to make on-chain meme coin trading safer, faster, and more transparent. The platform includes AI contract screening, whale wallet tracking, and cross-chain execution on BSC, giving traders additional tools before interacting with early-stage tokens.

        AlphaPepe has raised over $1.46 million in its presale, passed 9,200 holders, surpassed 5,000 active AlphaSwap demo users, and completed a full 10/10 BlockSAFU security audit. Stage 17 is live at $0.01858, with instant token delivery, no vesting, no claim delay, and the first centralized exchange partnership reveal expected within weeks.

        Contact:Jack Duffycontact@alphapepe.io

        Disclaimer: This content is provided by AlphaPepe. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. We do not guarantee any claims, statements, or promises made in this article. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing in crypto and mining-related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. It is possible to lose all your capital. These products may not be suitable for everyone, and you should ensure that you understand the risks involved. Seek independent advice if necessary. Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector—including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining—complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility. Globenewswire does not endorse any content on this page.

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        A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0c74f766-8c70-45fc-9696-03d162080791

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