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On July 2nd Gamestop updated their Wii bundles listed online to include three new bundled items. You can either get a rubber duck, water gun, or a pirate tattoo set bundled with your new Nintendo Wii. They are priced at $249.99 at Gamestop and only available online.
No. Seriously.

Xbox announced at E3 that there were going to be more details about their partnering with Last.Fm and here they are! Xbox Live Silver users can now access Last.fm, but only for limited time. How much limited time you may ask? Three hours a month. If you have a Gold account you will have unlimited access to Last.fm streaming. But, of course since you aren't paying Last.fm you will have to sit through ads and video advertising. If you want to stream Last.fm on your Xbox with no ads indefinitely, head over to Last.fm and sign up for the service, which is a whole $3 a month.
We at Split Infinity Radio don't condone piracy and other related naughtiness and shenanigans, but it seems Pirate Bay has been purchased and is looking to go all legal and respectable. Software company Global Gaming Factory X AB has reportedly bought the site for a cool US$7.8 million.
This acquisition looks to be the first step towards transforming the Stockholm-based peer-to-peer server which has made video games, movies and music available for "sharing" among users for many years.
Pirate Bay was in the news lately after a raid by Swedish police and a high profile court case which resulted in a guilty verdict for its founders.
Times are a changing though for the site as Hans Pandeya, CEO of Sweden's Global Gaming Factory has said "We would like to introduce models which entail that content providers and copyright owners get paid for content that is downloaded via the site." Which at least suggests it may become a paid service for I'm assuming will be paid for by the site's users.
Currently, and especially after the recent controversies and coverage surrounding the site, Pirate Bay is said to be in the top 100 most visited sites on the internet, and according to Pandeya it needs to change. "In order to live on, The Pirate Bay requires a new business model, which satisfies the requirements and needs of all parties, content providers, broadband operators, end users, and the judiciary," he said, adding that "content creators and providers need to control their content and get paid for it." What's more, Pandeya adds, file sharers need "faster downloads and better quality."
Global Gaming Factory X AB will actually acquire The Pirate Bay this August but according to a statement from The Pirate Bay, "If the new owners will screw around with the site, nobody will keep using it. That's the biggest insurance one can have that the site will be run in the way that we all want to."
Pirates going legitemate? And the say strange things happen at sea...

(The full skinny after the break!)
Apparently EA is tired of paying a bunch of executive level salaries, so they decided to merge BioWare and Mythic together, and in the process kicked Mythic's General Manager Mark Jacobs to the curb. The singular team will be lead by BioWare's General Manager Ray Muzyka and the new "RPG/MMO studio group" will have BioWare's Greg Zeschuk as the "group creative officer." Mythic's chief operating officer Rob Denton will become general manager and report to Muzyka.
At this point, effectively, Mythic is now being managed by BioWare. It should be very interesting to see what happens with Warhammer Online now that the brains behind BioWare are at the helm.
A formal announcement will apparently be made later today, so keep your eyes peeled.






