A sequel is a dangerous thing. How do you give fans more of what they loved, improve on what came before, and avoid compromising what made it great? It's a tightrope walk that Nintendo has excelled at since 1988's Zelda II: The Adventure of Link—the follow-up to The Legend of Zelda—and the first entry of a franchise that would later include one of the highest-selling video games of all time. You might've heard of it: 2017's The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. So how could such a well-loved, near-perfect video game surprise audiences with its sequel—which is easily one of the most anticipated titles of the past decade? Well, gamers, that's what I'm here to find out. Earlier this month, Nintendo invited Esquire to try Tears of the Kingdom for about two hours. If the full game is anything like my early playthrough, Tears of the Kingdom will compete with its predecessor in many a best-of-all-time list. |
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It's a supremely versatile American icon. |
| Also: Who is Citadel? When is Citadel? Why is Citadel? |
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Blasphemy, I thought. There it was, a prepackaged mojito in a grocery store. This was about a decade ago. Still, I was curious to try it, because a canned cocktail that was actually good? That could be a gateway to converting pedestrian drinkers into cocktail nerds. Sadly, there was no craft in that canned mojito. No love. It confirmed my conviction that quality drinks must be mixed, not mass-produced. Recently, however, I popped open a daiquiri from Tip Top, an Atlanta-based company specializing in classic cocktails served in Lilliputian cans. It was, shockingly, sublime. The simple yet difficult-to-balance daiquiri is often considered a litmus test to separate ordinary bartenders from great ones. The fact that a version that stellar came from a can was revelatory. Ready-to-drink cocktails—or RTDs, as the industry calls them—are no longer what they used to be. As demand surged during the pandemic, more serious bartenders and distilleries began producing them using real spirits instead of industrial malt alcohol or vodka. Now we're living in a golden age of the canned cocktail. |
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The mattresses we sleep on, the BBQs we grill on, the pans we cook in, and everything in between—shop 71 winning products we actually own. |
| The latest in the case of Happiest Place On Earth v. DeSantis. |
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In high school I became, I wouldn't say "addicted," but I was very into male enhancement. My best friend and I would go to the gym together. We got into everything—pre-workout, SARMs, steroids. We tried it all. Putting shit into our bodies and we didn't even know what it was. One day this dude at the gym was like, "Dude, I have this stuff. You gotta try it. It makes you so good in bed." That's how I started using Cialis, which was the gateway into all of this. That solved my performance problem so I started to think about ways that I could make it bigger. I would watch YouTube videos of people saying how much size matters. Thing is, it's true. I don't care what anybody says about the motion of the ocean. To get the top girls, you gotta bring something to the table. |
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