A young Indigenous man relates his experience of moving away from his village for the first time to live in Altamira, one of the Amazon’s most heavily deforested cities
After proclaiming “to hell with this hellish life,” the author of Macunaíma sailed the Amazon and Madeira rivers “before saying enough already.” In his travel-diary-turned-book, emotions overflow and Nature overwhelms
In this interview, Ehuana Yaira talks about the indivisible relationship between the Forest and the female body. The Yanomami artist and writer was the first member of her people to give a public talk in Europe, as part of the series “Rainforest is Female,” held at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
Sky: Children of the Light has long occupied a rarefied space in contemporary games: a meditative social adventure that privileges quiet beauty, cooperative exploration, and ritualized moments of connection over rushes of action or conventional progression loops. Any update to its distribution formats or platform availability—especially under labels like “ROM” or “NSP”—immediately raises both technical questions and cultural ones: about preservation, accessibility, monetization, and the boundaries between official releases and community-driven distribution. This editorial examines those dimensions with attention to the update’s implications for players, creators, and the ecosystems that host games like Sky.