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Is the UK finally waking up to the power of video games?

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The Bafta Games Awards take place later, celebrating the achievements of global video game developers and British studios alike.

This year smash-hit role-playing game Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 looks set to sweep the board with 12 nominations in total.

Made in France, the game's developers, Sandfall Interactive, have twice been publicly praised by president Emmanuel Macron, and even honoured by the country's Ministry of Culture.

But do video games get the same recognition in the UK?

Hugely popular series including Grand Theft Auto, Tomb Raider, Lego: Star Wars and Football Manager were made in Britain.

But some in the industry would argue that, despite their cultural and economic contributions, games aren't placed on the same pedestal as other creative sectors.

According to industry body UK Interactive Entertainment (UKIE), Britain's video game industry was worth £8.76bn in 2025 – an increase of 7.4% on the year before.

They said this was made up of spending on:

At the same time, the global video games industry has endured one of its biggest periods of uncertainty in recent years with thousands of developers losing jobs and studios closing.

Alanah Pearce, who's worked as a video game writer, actress and journalist since starting her career in the industry in 2012, tells BBC News it's a "frustrating" situation.

While the industry is still "incredibly profitable", she says, it is struggling to attract investment in the same way it used to, especially with artificial intelligence (AI) swallowing up huge amounts of cash.

"Most of the investors who are propping up the games industry have frankly fled to AI to a tremendous degree," says Pearce.

"So because that's happened for a lot of our publicly traded companies, they're just very nervous to make anything that isn't almost guaranteed profit, which is very difficult.

"How do you even guarantee profit in this day and age?"

Video game companies large and small are facing increased competition for people's attention, from social media platforms such as TikTok, AI apps and an ever-growing number of competing games being published.

"As a result of that," says Pearce, "All the bigger companies, but it goes the whole way down to indie as well, just got scared and thus have been funding things a lot less, unfortunately."

The UK games industry has also been hit by a lack of investment, with industry body TIGA recently warning it had seen a "record downturn" in employment and a "collapse" in the number of start-up companies.

This week the government announced a £28.5m games fund to support video game studios, with grants of £20,000 for new companies and up to £250,000 for those looking to expand.

Creative industries Minster Ian Murray said the value of video games to the British economy "has been overlooked" for too long, and the government had "thrown its full support behind the sector".

It's part of the Creative Industries Sector Plan, which will also offer £75m of grants for TV and film productions, plus up to £30m for "emerging UK music artists".

Developer Adam Riches, of indie studio Robust Games, told BBC News the different levels of funding could be good news for companies like his.

It has so far published one game, point-and-click adventure Loco Motive.

"As indie developers, we're used to working with smaller budgets, so the newly proposed grants look really generous from our perspective," he says.

"This feels like a good fit for our team, so we'll definitely be looking into the finer details."

Journalist Christopher Dring, editor of The Game Business, tells BBC News the funding was "a strong statement from the government that it is taking video games seriously as an economic and cultural force".

But he says it still didn't quite match support for other industries.

Dring says that, while many major series are developed wholly or partially by British studios, many of them are owned by global companies such as Microsoft.

Following Expedition 33's success, Dring adds: "The drive is to see more home-grown IP flourish on the international stage".

And the UK does have smaller, sustainable studios that punch above their weight.

Two Point Studios, based in Farnham, Surrey, was founded in 2016 by veterans from legendary UK studios Bullfrog and Lionhead.

Its comedic simulation games, which put players in charge of managing hospitals and university campuses, found a dedicated audience thanks to their British humour, unique visuals and ease of play.

"We wanted to be in that more niche space and and do really good games that aren't necessarily trying to be a household name," director and co-founder Gary Carr tells BBC Newsbeat

The studio's latest game, Two Point Museum, earned a nomination in the British game and family game categories at this year's Baftas.

It's also had commercial success too, and allowed the studio to grow to about 50 employees – a modestly sized developer.

"We haven't tried to blow the company up because we've had some successes," says Carr.

"We've kind of wanted to stay a very bijou, boutique studio… we're not too big, we're quite keen to stay a sensible size where everyone can feel like they're involved."

Carr also believes the UK industry is "resilient" and supportive of others working within it – a sentiment shared by Two Point design director Ben Huskins.

The studio is down the road from Guildford, one of the UK's major game development hubs and home to multiple studios.

"We all have worked together at some point in our careers, so we look after each other and we look out for each other."

Huskins says game development is now more accessible than ever, which creates more competition but can also mean "amazing games" come out.

"I think it's fairer that everyone's got a crack of the whip," he says.

Carr says there has been a tendency to "wave the banner of success" when things are going well in the industry, but it's important for support to be there when things aren't so good.

"I definitely don't like to see game studios struggle when we are such an important part of what Britain does well," he says.

Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

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'My instinct was to help him': Runners help exhausted man finish Boston Marathon

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Two runners sacrificed personal bests to come to the rescue of an exhausted competitor at the Boston Marathon.

Aaron Beggs was first to stop to pull Ajay Haridasse up off the ground after he fell and could not get up.

With Haridasse still struggling to stay on his feet, another runner, Robson De Oliveira, stepped in and the pair put their arms around Haridasse to help him across the line.

The incident was filmed by several spectators who witnessed Haridasse falling shortly after the 26 mile (41.8km) mark.

On the 85th anniversary of the Blitz and ahead of a new play about it, BBC News NI talks to 93-year-old Reggie who lived through it.

Liz Kimmins acknowledged the decision was taken against a difficult funding backdrop for the public transport company.

Farmers say they are being hit on several fronts, with the price of fuel and fertiliser all facing a hike.

The remains of two adults, a young child and six babies were found during a dig in 2018.

Five people from Northern Ireland are hoping for success at the upcoming European sport stacking championships.

Aimee Oliver's problems began in her 20s following the birth of her first child.

Marie McGrath was diagnosed with bowel cancer at the start of 2026

They are among hundreds of thousands of ship plans and documents made widely accessible.

Drivers caught speeding on a stretch of road outside a rural school are being taught some lessons by the pupils.

He said he would be back and now, decades after he came to Belfast as a young bodybuilder, Arnold Schwarzenegger has returned to the city for a special honour.

There are only fewer than 200 men registered to work as a midwife in the UK and just six in Northern Ireland – and Fraser Morton is one of them.

Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she was murdered by Stephen McCullagh in December 2022.

A real estate professor warns property rent rises in Belfast are not sustainable.

Stephen McCullagh has been found guilty of murdering Natalie McNally in her Lurgan home in December 2022.

A woman diagnosed with anal cancer has said Northern Ireland should have a clinic for patients who have had pelvic radiotherapy.

Chris Wynne, from Danske Bank, says scammers pretend to be someone from the fraud team so customers hand over information.

The grandstand at Casement Park is being removed as the demolition of the 73-year-old Belfast stadium enters its final stages.

A total of 42 umbrellas – double the original number – have now been finished to endure the Belfast weather for many years to come.

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Lebanon accuses Israel of targeting journalist killed in air strike

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Lebanon's prime minister has accused Israel of war crimes after Israeli air strikes killed one journalist and wounded another in southern Lebanon on Wednesday.

The strike killed Amal Khalil, who worked for a Lebanese newspaper, and injured freelance photographer Zeinab Faraj.

Officials in Lebanon say they were deliberately targeted as they sought shelter in a home after an initial air strike hit the vehicle in front of them, killing two men.

The officials also accused the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) of intentionally targeting a marked ambulance as it tried to reach the journalists in the village of Tayri.

The IDF denied that it was preventing rescue teams from reaching the area and said it did not target journalists.

Journalists Khalil, 43, who worked for Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar, and Faraj, a freelance photographer, were travelling together. The two men who died have not been named by officials.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said: "Targeting journalists, obstructing access to them by relief teams, and even targeting their locations again after these teams arrive constitutes described war crimes."

He accused Israel of repeatedly targeting media workers in southern Lebanon in what he described as "an established approach".

Salam offered condolences to Khalil's family and said that Lebanon would "pursue the crimes before the competent international forums".

In a statement, the IDF said it "does not target journalists and acts to mitigate harm to them while maintaining the safety and security of its troops".

The IDF said it identified two vehicles that had "departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah".

One of the vehicles had approached Israeli troops in a manner that was an "immediate threat" after crossing a "forward defence line", violating a ceasefire, the statement said.

The IDF said the Israeli Air Force then struck one of the vehicles, and that the "structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck".

The Lebanese health ministry said the IDF "pursued" Khalil and Faraj, "who had taken refuge from the first raid in a nearby house, targeting the house where they had sought shelter".

When a Lebanese Red Cross ambulance arrived to treat the wounded, Israeli forces directed a stun grenade and gunfire toward it, preventing it from reaching them, the ministry said in a statement.

"This constitutes a blatant double violation: obstructing the rescue efforts of a citizen known for her civic media activism, and targeting an ambulance clearly marked with the Red Cross emblem," the health ministry said.

Clayton Weimer, the executive director of Reporters Without Borders, said the IDF had received messages from the organisation, as well as journalists, asking that it allow ambulances to get to Khalil.

"The Red Cross signalled they were unable to get through because of ongoing Israeli bombardment. So that is callous disregard, on top of what appears to be a deliberate and targeted killing of a journalist."

Faraj was eventually evacuated along with two of the dead, the statement added. Khalil's body was later recovered by emergency teams, according to Lebanon's civil defence agency.

Al-Akhbar said in an article on her death that Khalil "remained steadfast in her humanitarian and professional duty".

The Guardian's William Christou, who covers the Middle East for the paper, described her in a post on X as a "professional, kind and dedicated journalist, and always a pleasure to run into in the field".

The IDF acknowledged reports that two journalists were injured as a result of the strikes, but insisted it was not preventing further rescue teams from reaching the area. It has not acknowledged Khalil's death.

The US-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said it was "outraged" by Khalil's death.

"The repeated strikes on the same location, the targeting of an area where journalists were sheltering, and the obstruction of medical and humanitarian access constitute a grave breach of international humanitarian law," said CPJ Regional Director Sara Qudah.

In 2024, Khalil said had been the target of an "Israeli death threat" that warned her to leave southern Lebanon, local media reported. CPJ said the report raised "serious concerns of deliberate targeting".

Earlier this month, two journalists were killed in separate Israeli strikes in Lebanon – Ghada Dayekh, a presenter with privately-owned radio station Sawt al-Farah, and Suzan Khalil, a reporter and presenter on Al-Manar TV, which is affiliated with the armed group Hezbollah.

Last month, three Lebanese journalists were killed in a targeted Israeli strike in the town of Jezzine, their employers said.

Ali Shoeib, a reporter for Hezbollah-affiliated Al Manar TV, and reporter Fatima Ftouni and her brother, cameraman Mohamed Ftouni, both from Al Mayadeen channel, were killed in the strike.

At the time, the IDF confirmed it killed Shoeib and Mohamed Ftouni, describing them as "terrorists" from Hezbollah's military wing, while saying it was aware of reports a female journalist was also killed.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called the killings a "brazen crime" that broke the "most basic rules" of international law by targeting reporters, "who are ultimately civilians performing a professional duty".

At least 2,475 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Lebanon since the latest war began, and more than 7,500 wounded, according to the Lebanese authorities, whose figures do not differentiate between civilians and combatants. The number includes at least 274 women and 177 children.

The Lebanese health ministry said last week that at least 100 medical workers had been killed in Israeli attacks during the war, and that more than 120 Israeli attacks have been recorded on ambulances and medical facilities. Israeli attacks have killed seven journalists In Lebanon, according to the CPJ.

Israeli authorities say Hezbollah attacks have killed two civilians in Israel since 2 March, and that 13 Israeli soldiers have been killed in combat in Lebanon.

Both Hezbollah and Israel have accused each other of violating the ceasefire agreement. The IDF said earlier on Wednesday that Hezbollah launched an attack on Israeli forces in southern Lebanon.

On the same day, Hezbollah issued four statements saying it had struck Israeli targets in south Lebanon, "in response to the Israeli enemy's violation of the ceasefire", according to the AFP news agency.

Last week, a meeting hosted by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio brought Lebanese and Israeli envoys together for the first direct, high-level contact in three decades between the two countries.

Following the talks, their governments agreed to implement a 10-day cessation of hostilities that began on Friday in order to "enable good-faith negotiations toward a permanent security and peace agreement", the US state department said.

Ahead of Thursday's follow-up talks in Washington, Lebanon's president confirmed that efforts were under way to extend the ceasefire.

Aoun said preserving Lebanese sovereignty over all of its territory was his top priority, and that Lebanese negotiators would seek an end to Israeli attacks, the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon, release of Lebanese prisoners in Israel, deployment of Lebanese troops along the Israeli border, and the beginning of reconstruction process, according to a statement from his office.

A Lebanese official told AFP news agency that Lebanon would request a one-month extension of the ceasefire at the talks.

In a speech to Israeli diplomats, Israel's foreign minister said the two countries should "work together against the terror state that Hezbollah built".

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US Navy chief leaving post 'effective immediately', Pentagon says

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US Navy Secretary John Phelan is leaving the Trump administration, the Pentagon announced on Wednesday.

His departure will be "effective immediately", Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said in a social media post.

Navy Undersecretary Hung Cao will serve as acting secretary, Parnell added.

Phelan is the latest high-ranking military leader to leave the administration in recent months. His departure comes amid the US-Israel war with Iran and the continued US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

"On behalf of the Secretary of War and Deputy Secretary of War, we are grateful to Secretary Phelan for his service to the Department and the United States Navy," Parnell wrote. "We wish him well in his future endeavors."

The Navy did not provide a reason for Phelan's departure.

It comes just weeks after US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth asked Army Chief of Staff Randy George to step down from his post.

Two other Army officials, Gen David Hodne and Maj Gen William Green, have also been removed from their roles recently.

Since entering the Pentagon, Hegseth has fired more than a dozen senior military officers, including the chief of naval operations and the Air Force's vice chief of staff.

The secretary's role is largely administrative and includes formulating policies, recruiting, training and equipping the Navy, as well as overseeing budgeting and logistics like construction, and repair of naval ships and facilities.

Phelan, a civilian who had not previously served in the military, was sworn in as Secretary of the Navy in March 2025 after being nominated by President Donald Trump in 2024. The businessman was a major donor to Trump's campaign.

The two appeared alongside one another at Mar-a-Lago last December when Trump announced that the US would commission a new series of heavily armed Navy "battleships" named after himself – part of a revamped "Golden Fleet" which Phelan supported.

Andrew Peek, a former State Department deputy assistant secretary, told the BBC that the president was clear that he wanted to expand the country's merchant and civilian fleet.

"Eventually, somebody was going to take the fall for the lack of movement on that. I would bet that's about 30% of this," Peek said.

"The other 70% – Phelan's replacement is very well known to the MAGA base, I would bet it's a simple replacement with someone he likes and trusts better," he added.

Phelan's replacement, Cao, became undersecretary in October 2025 and is a 25-year Navy veteran.

He ran an unsuccessful campaign for the US Senate in Virginia in 2024, endorsed by Trump, against incumbent Democratic Senator Tim Kaine. During a campaign debate, he criticized the military's diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

Speaking about Navy recruiting during the debate, Cao said: "What we need is alpha males and alpha females who are going to rip out their own guts, eat them and ask for seconds. Those are the young men and women that are going to win wars," the AP reported.

The Navy's change in leadership comes as Trump said the US blockade of Iranian ports would continue amid a ceasefire in the war. Clashes have continued in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global shipping route that supplies much of the globe's oil, with Iran announcing that it had "seized" two ships in the strait.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the president is "satisfied" with the ongoing US naval blockade on Iranian ports, and "understands Iran is in a very weak position".

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran's chief negotiator in talks with the US, said on Wednesday that it is "not possible" for the Strait of Hormuz to be re-opened due to "the blatant violations of the ceasefire" by the US and Israel.

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