Jack Skellington's debut in Disney Infinity has been a hit. WIRED caught up with the game's creators to learn about the process of bringing the 20-year-old character to the game.
You know the story. You remember the blood. But nearly 40 years after the publication of Stephen King's high school horror Carrie and the film adaptation that followed, somehow we haven't learned its lesson about the horrors of bullying and ...
Novelist Dave Eggers new book the Circle calls to mind one of the most detailed and entertaining accounts of life at Google, a 2005 novel called Virtual Love written by a then-Google executive named Kim Malone Scott.
Hunky time-traveling Ichabod Crane has made Chris Baker lose his head. Why is every other TV show an updated version of some classic fairytale or children's story?
The Fifth Estate could've been a great film about the rise of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, but instead it falls into the traps of many cyber-thrillers before it.
Just like the Marvel movies, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. enjoys adding references to the more obscure details of the Marvel Universe as tiny presents for longtime readers of the comic books. And we enjoy breaking them down.
Remember the scene where Littlefinger leaned over to Sansa during a jousting scene in Game of Thrones and whispered, "How do you feel about people who go, 'Hadouken'?" No? You will once you watch the Bad Lip Reading video spoof ...
There's a new video by the maker of "Friday" called "Chinese Food." While it's as hilariously terrible as "Friday," it's different in one important way: It's racist.
Cosmo Wright is the world's fastest player of The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker. He understands the inner workings of Nintendo's HD remake of Wind Waker better than anyone, including its makers.
"Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." was only the beginning. A new report claims that Marvel Studios is now offering five new TV projects to cable and digital providers.
With only one new show debuting this week, the CW's Reign has a lot to live up to -- which, as long as you don't care about history, it shamelessly does.
Head over to the National Museum of Play in Rochester, New York, and you can get your hands on some of the few working examples of the world's rarest arcade games.