The T-1000 is the relentless liquid-metal assassin as seen in Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991). Sent by Skynet to kill young John Connor, this new and updated T-model is a shapeshifting killing ...
Get ready for Judgement Day as Hot Toys has unveiled the return of the T-1000 with a few new Version 2.0 upgrades. The T-1000 is a highly advanced, shape-shifting terminator and was the main villain ...
“Guest characters are always a challenge,” says Nick Nicastro, design manager at Mortal Kombat developer NetherRealm Studios. But there’s at least one thing that’s easy about bringing Mortal Kombat ...
There will also be a Ghostface avatar from "Scream" and one in the likeness of Arnold Schwarzenegger's Conan the Barbarian. Robert Patrick certainly gets props for returning to a role after such a ...
As is often the case with these gameplay trailers, NetherRealm has included a tease for T-1000’s Animality. While we don’t get to see the Animality play out in full, T-1000 will turn into a German ...
We’re still a few weeks away from the debut of T-1000 in Mortal Kombat 1, but NetherRealm Studios is wasting no time building hype for the newest Kombatant. The company has released a new teaser ...
The cooperative game with multiple endings pits one to three players against Skynet ...
NetherRealm Studios has unveiled the first official gameplay video for its last known DLC fighter in Mortal Kombat 1: the T-1000 from Terminator 2: Judgement Day. The trailer also confirms that Madam ...
A study published in the journal Matter demonstrates robots that can switch between solid and Liquid Metal forms with "Magnetoactive Liquid-Solid Phase Transitional Matter." In Terminator 2: Judgement ...
How is real life like the plot of the movie Terminator 2? Let me count the ways. A scarily powerful artificial intelligence based on a neural network? Check. Humanity as close as it's ever been to an ...
What we know about the Terminator 2 Board Game According to the announcement, the game will allow players to embody the ...
Researchers are studying how self-propelled liquid metals might move around, eventually creating a revolution in electronics...or an apocalypse. Eric Mack has been a CNET contributor since 2011. Eric ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results