Latest news with #Yoshida


Time of India
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Final Fantasy XIV Live Letter 87 Update, Patch 7.3 Release Date and More
Image via: Square Enix With excitement over Final Fantasy XIV's upcoming 7.3 Dawntrail expansion recently increasing after this week's reveal of new playable races, Live Letter 87 brought more than just the typical news, delivering information that laid groundwork for what promises to be one of the more exciting encounter setups in FFXIV history. Patch 7.3 will be due out in early August 2025, bringing what the developers are calling an emotional and poignant climax to Dawntrail's main narrative, in addition to major revisions addressing recent player complaints. The Story Reaches Its Apex Yoshida reconfirmed that Patch 7.3 will be the climactic turning point of the Dawntrail storyline. A new dungeon The Meso Terminal and a climactic trial against a nameless enemy catapults the story conflict to a boiling point. Even more exciting is how fans can look forward to callbacks rich with lore, specifically to Final Fantasy IX and XI, giving additional depth to long-time franchise veterans. FFXIV: Letter from the Producer LIVE Part LXXXVII 87 Summary Echoes of Vana'diel : San d'Oria Returns Keeping the nostalgia trend going, 7.3 will bring the 3rd chapter of the Echoes of Vana'diel alliance raids. This 24-player raid has adventurers going up against legendary foes from Final Fantasy XI, including the recently teased appearance of Kam'lanaut. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Free P2,000 GCash eGift UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo Given the stellar production values these raids have come to be known for, this entry might just end up being the crown jewel of the patch. Quality-of-Life Enhancements Answer Player Feedback Yoshida started Live Letter 87 off with a rather uncharacteristic blunt apology, taking the blame on what has been perceived as a slide in quality assurance with hotfixes and maintenance windows becoming an all too common occurrence. While he promised better communications going on and spent some time responding to criticism on two of the game's most recent systems, Occult Crescent and Cosmic Exploration. Players will be able to do so with 48-player preformed alliances with Enmity Patch 7.3 coming next week. The return of Sword of the Sands as the next Forked Tower raid will mark the arrival of both Normal and Savage modes in Patch 7.5, a shift in progression inspired by player demand. LIVE LETTER REACTS! First Look at 7.3 | Final Fantasy XIV Side Quests, and New Challenges For non-combat content, crafters are really going to enjoy themselves. A new Allied Society questline with the Yok Huy will offer a fun, alternative path to leveling from 90 to 100! Other new content includes a new Deep Dungeon, the next chapter in the Hildibrand series, and the Phantom Relic Weapon questline all set to release after launch. Follow all the live updates, scores, and highlights from the India vs England Test match here . Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here


San Francisco Chronicle
12-06-2025
- Politics
- San Francisco Chronicle
What WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans and Trump's immigration crackdown have in common
Douglas Yoshida and his family are intimately familiar with the negative consequences of scapegoating and unjust imprisonment. After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, many Americans were angered. The hate, some of it fueled by anti-Asian racism, was directed at anyone of Japanese heritage in the U.S. Were they spies? Where do their loyalties lie? The suspicion led to Executive Order 9066, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1942, which authorized the forced removal of people deemed a national security threat from the West Coast to 'relocation centers.' While the order didn't specify any group for removal, the result was the incarceration of about 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry (and a small number of Germans and Italians) — most of them U.S. citizens — in prison camps. A generation of Japanese Americans had their rights taken from them, and in many cases, lost their homes and businesses due to their incarceration. The Japanese American experience during World War II is reminiscent of what's happening today with the use of presidential powers to detain people without due process. The Trump administration is also repeating the American tradition of scapegoating immigrants for all that's wrong in the country when really, most of our problems have nothing to do with immigration — just like Japanese Americans played no role in Japan's attack on the U.S. 'I feel compelled to write this to do something to fight back against the Trump administration's cruel mass detention and deportation agenda,' Yoshida told me. 'The parallels for my family and what my parents experienced as survivors of Japanese internment are particularly potent in this moment and cannot be ignored.' Yoshida is an emergency physician at the Stanford Tri-Valley Medical Center in Pleasanton. He was part of the team that provided health care to inmates at the Federal Correction Institution in Dublin, which was a women's prison. He saw firsthand the flaws of the federal prison system. The Dublin prison closed in 2024 after several guards were convicted of sex crimes. The government agreed to pay $115 million to 103 women who were sexually abused. His family's imprisonment during World War II gives Yoshida insight into the injustice of the Trump administration's attacks on immigrants and what's at stake. 'Even though I was born after internment, the anger, shame and injustice of our community's experience shaped my own identity growing up,' Yoshida said. 'So I know that the detentions we're seeing now will continue to have intergenerational impacts.'
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Boston Red Sox' Masataka Yoshida provides injury update
BOSTON — Red Sox outfielder Masataka Yoshida had a cortisone shot Sunday after he has continued to feel pain when he throws. 'When I stretch out to 120 feet, that's when I kind of feel the pain,' Yoshida said through translator Yutaro Yamaguchi in the Red Sox clubhouse Tuesday. Advertisement The 31-year-old underwent a right shoulder labral repair on Oct. 3 in Boston. He will not throw for at least another three days after receiving the shot. 'I'm going to have to let it sit and see how I feel,' Yoshida said. He said the trainers told him post-surgery that he would have to tolerate some pain throughout the 2025 season. 'That's something that I kind of have to be dealing with throughout the year,' Yoshida said. 'At least this year I will have to deal with the pain.' Yoshida said he still has no issues with hitting. He would be able to be activated from the IL if he only had to hit. He spent last year as Boston's DH. But the Red Sox plan to use him in the outfield this season with Rafael Devers serving as the primary DH and playing no third base. Boston also has no plans to ask Devers to play first base following Triston Casas' season-ending surgery Sunday. Advertisement 'As far as the hitting, no problem,' said Yoshida who appeared in 11 Grapefruit League games during spring training and batted .286 (10-for-35) with a homer and double. Yoshida had hope at the beginning of spring training that he would be ready for Opening Day. He said there have been no real setbacks. 'But I'm not recovering or making the progress at the pace that I wanted to,' Yoshida said. 'Let's put it that way.' He's in the third season of the five-year, $90 million contract that he signed with Boston in December 2022. He has batted .285 with a .343 on-base percentage, .433 slugging percentage, .775 OPS, 25 homers, 54 doubles, three triples, 128 RBIs, 116 runs, 61 walks and 133 strikeouts in 248 games for Boston. Advertisement 'I just want to go back out there as soon as I can,' Yoshida said. 'That's my hope.' Manager Alex Cora added, 'I know he's frustrated. I think we all are. It was major surgery. It was. We haven't rushed him through the process. We've been very patient. And we will stay patient with him. He wants to play. And we've gotta get it going throwing-wise. It's been a challenge. But it's not lack of effort. It's not lack of resources. I think our guys have done an amazing job. Just it hasn't happened yet.' More Red Sox coverage Read the original article on MassLive.


Metro
19-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Metro
People shouldn't complain about £80 games says ex-PlayStation boss
Sony veteran Shuhei Yoshida has defended the rising costs of games, as he supports the idea of variable pricing. Between the anger around Nintendo's £74.99 price tag for Mario Kart World and increased costs across Xbox games, it's clear game prices will be a big topic for months to come. GTA 6 looks set to become a key talking point in this debate, with analysts predicting it could cost upwards of £100 when it launches on May 26, 2026. Rockstar hasn't officially announced the price, but Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick recently stressed its commitment to variable pricing, with Mafia: The Old Country launching at £44.99 later this year. In a new interview, former PlayStation executive Shuhei Yoshida, who recently expressed his disappointment with the Switch 2, has addressed concerns around rising game prices – and he doesn't think it's a bad thing. Speaking to Critical Hits, Yoshida expressed his support for variable pricing: 'I don't believe every game has to be priced the same. Each game has different value it provides, or the size of budget. I totally believe it is up to the publishers – or developers self-publishing – decision to price their product to the value that they believe they are bringing in.' While he believes there should be no standard price for games, Yoshida states that the most expensive titles – now priced at $70 or $80 (UK prices are expected to work out as £80, based on prior conversion rates) – are still a bargain when compared to other forms of entertainment. 'In terms of actual price of $70 or $80, for really great games, I think it will still be a steal in terms of the amount of entertainment that top games, top quality games bring to people compared to other form of entertainment,' Yoshida said. 'As long as people choose carefully how they spend their money, I don't think they should be complaining about [it].' While defining a game's worth based on its length is always messy, if you use this metric, most games outclass film and television in terms of value for money. More Trending Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, for example, is moderately priced at £50 and takes around 30-40 hours to beat. When compared to the average £15 cinema ticket for a two hour film, there's no contest. In terms of franchises like Mario Kart, which releases new games very infrequently, there's an argument the £74.99 price point for Mario Kart World is justified, based on its quality and staying power as a multiplayer title; especially given £70 titles like EA Sports FC and Call Of Duty are released every year. However, the acceptance of these price points has perhaps become difficult to swallow due to the influx of free-to-play titles. When you can play Fortnite or Apex Legends for free, the idea of paying £80 for a game suddenly looks outdated and unappealing. It remains to be seen if these increased price points will actually affect sales, but it's easy to see Yoshida's point of view – even if it's not one that will be greeted with much enthusiasm by the average gamer. Email gamecentral@ leave a comment below, follow us on Twitter, and sign-up to our newsletter. To submit Inbox letters and Reader's Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here. For more stories like this, check our Gaming page. MORE: Marathon delay predicted as concerns mount over the future of Bungie MORE: Games Inbox: Should there be a GTA 6 spin-off on Nintendo Switch 2? MORE: Nintendo Switch 2 is going to be a third party port machine – Reader's Feature
Yahoo
13-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
The first federal court hearing on Trump's tariffs did not go so well for Trump
A federal court held the very first hearing on President Donald Trump's wide-ranging, so-called Liberation Day tariffs on Tuesday, offering the earliest window into whether those tariffs — and potentially all of the shifting tariffs Trump has imposed since he retook office — will be struck down. The case is V.O.S. Selections v. Trump. It is unclear how the three-judge panel that heard the case will rule, but it appears somewhat more likely than not that they will rule that the tariffs are unlawful. All three of the judges, who sit on the US Court of International Trade, appeared troubled by the Trump administration's claim that the judiciary may not review the legality of the tariffs at all. But Jeffrey Schwab, the lawyer representing several small businesses challenging the tariffs, also faced an array of skeptical questions. Many of the judges' questions focused on United States v. Yoshida International (1975), a federal appeals court decision which upheld a 10 percent tariff President Richard Nixon briefly imposed on nearly all foreign goods. That is understandable: Yoshida remains binding on the trade court, and the three judges must take it into account when they make their decision. It is not, however, binding upon the Supreme Court, whose justices will be free to ignore Yoshida if they want. Ultimately, that means it is unclear how much influence the trade court's eventual decision will have over the Supreme Court, which is likely to have the final word on the tariffs. At the heart of V.O.S. Selections are four key words in the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (IEEPA), the statute Trump relied on when he imposed these tariffs. That statute permits the president to 'regulate' transactions involving foreign goods — a verb which Yoshida held is expansive enough to permit tariffs — but only 'to deal with an unusual and extraordinary threat with respect to which a national emergency has been declared.' It is likely that the trade court's decision will turn on what the words 'unusual and extraordinary threat' means. While Yoshida offered guidance on 'regulate,' there appears to be few, if any, precedents interpreting what those four words mean. In his executive order laying out the rationale for these tariffs, Trump claimed they are needed to combat 'large and persistent annual US goods trade deficits' — meaning that the United States buys more goods from many countries than it sells to them. But it's far from clear how this trade deficit, which has existed for decades, qualifies as either 'unusual' or 'extraordinary.' Schwab seemed to flub several direct questions from the judges asking him to come up with a universal rule they could apply to determine which 'threats' are 'unusual' or 'extraordinary.' When Judge Gary Katzmann, an Obama appointee, asked Schwab to name the best case supporting his argument that a trade deficit is neither unusual nor extraordinary, for example, Schwab was unable to do so. That said, some of the judges sounded outright offended when Eric Hamilton, the lawyer for the Trump administration, claimed that the question of what constitutes an unusual or extraordinary threat is a 'political question' — a legal term meaning that the courts aren't allowed to decide that matter. As Judge Jane Restani, a Reagan appointee, told Hamilton, his argument suggests that there is 'no limit' to the president's power to impose tariffs, even if the president claims that a shortage of peanut butter is a national emergency. The overall picture presented by the argument is that all three judges (the third is Judge Timothy Reif, a Trump appointee) are troubled by the broad power Trump claims in this case. But they were also frustrated by a lack of guidance — both from existing case law and from Schwab and Hamilton's arguments — on whether Trump can legally claim the power to issue such sweeping tariffs. Early in the argument, Schwab appeared to be in trouble, as he faced a barrage of questions about how the Yoshida decision cuts against some of his arguments. As Restani told him at one point, the argument that a statute permitting the president to 'regulate' does not include the power to impose tariffs is a nonstarter, because Yoshida held the opposite. That said, all three judges proposed ways to distinguish the Nixon tariffs upheld by Yoshida from the Trump tariffs now before the trade court. Restani, for her part, argued that the Nixon tariffs involved a 'very different situation' that was both 'new' and 'extraordinary.' For several decades, US dollars could be readily converted into gold at a set exchange rate. Nixon ended this practice in 1971, in an event many still refer to as the 'Nixon shock.' When he did so, he briefly imposed tariffs to protect US goods from fluctuating exchange rates. Yoshida, in other words, upheld temporary tariffs that were enacted in order to mitigate the impact of a sudden and very significant shift in US monetary policy, albeit a shift that Nixon caused himself. That's a very different situation than the one surrounding Trump's tariffs, which were enacted in response to ongoing trade deficits that have existed for many years. Restani and Katzmann also pointed to a footnote in Yoshida that said Congress enacted a new law, the Trade Act of 1974, after the Nixon shock. This footnote states a future attempt to impose similar tariffs 'must, of course, comply with the statute now governing such action.' Whatever power Nixon might have had in 1971, in other words, may now be limited by newer laws. Reif also made a similar argument, pointing out that there is a separate federal statute dealing with trade practices such as 'dumping,' when an exporter sells goods below their normal value. He questioned whether the president could bypass the procedures laid out in that anti-dumping statute by simply declaring an emergency, and then imposing whatever trade barriers the president wanted to impose under IEEPA. That said, none of the judges — and neither of the lawyers — were able to articulate a rule that would allow future courts to determine which presidential actions are 'unusual' or 'extraordinary.' Hamilton's suggestion that courts can't decide this question at all sunk like a pair of concrete shoes, with Katzmann arguing that the IEEPA's 'unusual and extraordinary' provision would be entirely 'superfluous' if Congress hadn't intended courts to enforce it. Schwab, meanwhile, earned a scolding from Restani when he kept trying to argue that Trump's tariffs are such an obvious violation of the statute that there's no need to come up with a broader legal rule. 'You know it when you see it doesn't work,' she told him — a reference to Justice Potter Stewart's infamously vague standard for determining what constitutes pornography. The three judges, in other words, expressed serious concerns about the Trump administration's argument for the tariffs. But it's not clear that they have figured out how to navigate the uncertain legal landscape looming over this case. Though the bulk of the argument focused on the four key words in the IEEPA, it's not clear that a narrow decision holding that this law does not permit these tariffs will have much staying power. Trump could potentially try to impose the tariffs again, using the somewhat more drawn out process laid out in the 1974 Trade Act, which permits the government to 'impose duties or other import restrictions' after the US Trade Representative makes certain findings. So if the courts issue a narrow ruling against these tariffs, they may have to go through a very similar dog and pony show in a few months. There are, however, two controversial legal doctrines popular with conservatives — known as 'major questions' and 'nondelegation' — which could lead to a more permanent reduction of Trump's authority. Broadly speaking, both of these doctrines empower the courts to strike down a presidential administration's actions even if those actions appear to be authorized by statute. Late in the argument, Restani seemed to latch onto the nondelegation theory. Under current law, Congress may delegate power to the president or a federal agency so long as it 'shall lay down by legislative act an intelligible principle to which the person or body authorized to [exercise the delegated authority] is directed to conform.' This 'intelligible principle' test is famously very deferential to Congress. Nevertheless, Restani asked some questions indicating that she may think that the IEEPA is the rare law which provides so little guidance to the president that it must be struck down. She noted that the law does permit Congress to pass a resolution canceling tariffs after the fact, but argued that this kind of after-the-fact review is not a substitute for an intelligible principle letting the president know how to act before he takes action. The major questions doctrine, meanwhile, establishes that Congress must 'speak clearly' if it wants to give the executive branch authority over matters of 'vast 'economic and political significance.'' By some estimates, Trump's tariffs are expected to reduce real family income by $2,800, so that's certainly a matter of vast economic importance. Thus, to the extent that the IEEPA's language is unclear, the major questions doctrine suggests that the law should be construed to not permit these tariffs. Hamilton's primary argument against this line of reasoning is that the major questions doctrine does not apply to the president at all, only to actions by federal agencies that are subordinate to the president. But none of the three judges appeared sympathetic to this argument. Restani, in particular, seemed incredulous at the suggestion. Overall, the judges seemed interested in exploring the nondelegation and major questions factors, and repeatedly rebutted suggestions that ruling on the tariffs was beyond their power. And that suggests the trade court will likely rule against the tariffs. That outcome is far from certain, however, and the trade court is highly unlikely to have the final word on this question. But the legal case for the tariffs appeared weak before Tuesday's hearing, and nothing that happened on Tuesday changes that.