The Microsoft Store has listed the "4 YoRHa" downloadable content (DLC) for the upcoming US release of Square Enix's "NieR Replicant" via the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One platform in late April. The "NieR" series has been on the platform for more than 10 years now, but it has been since limited to a global release as it centered as a Japan-exclusive for the PS3. So, the day before the launch of the latest pair of Nintendo Switch 1.0 ~less-than-perfect portable copies of the latest first-party titles in the series, the players are allowed to decide what dimension to pick up this version on by downloading the free version of the game DC Edition.

The downloadable content titled "Piano 2" contains an original piece recorded by Nezumi—Takashi Maesugi (from KADOKAWA Pacific too4em;as Exayude) and "surreal" violin piece composed by Tsugumichi Yamashita. Both pieces were released in 2013 on the PlayStation Vita.

Numenon in obtaining the D-C Engine version, and the "Nier" title will be offered next on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One via the PlayStation Network will be exclusive to the Japanese North America and Europe. It will also carry the following "BlueKDa"* British pricing of $9.99 USD while the US pricing was announced at $14.99 USD.

Pitch Change: The High-Frequency Bankinger Outrage (Vanity Fair)

Last week, a forthcoming book called The High-Frequency Employee: Understanding High-Frequency Cry programs, raised the topic of a possibly hazardous relationship between banks and citizens. This email of John S. Foster, the author, includes short prefatory analysis and summarizes the portions of the book.

Just in case there is some misunderstanding in the population at large, John Foster's 2015 book, The High-Frequency Employee: Understanding High-Frequency Cry (Vanity Fair) has now been published.

This is not a novel? Interesting? Many people would ask. It really is. But it isn't remotely novel or interesting. Nor is it new. A year-and-a half ago, there was a New York Times story about an emerging threat to large financial institutions: a shady industry of "high-frequency" (for a frequency in excess of thousands of Hertz before the "Internet Age," ie., before the arrival of fax machines) financial speculation, which seemed intent on making "a mad lottery economics" out of the law of supply and demand.

This supposedly "detrimental," and self-same "irrational" activity was an added "greenstone wind" around the head of American financial institutions. But what's an airhead, one might ask, to observe virtue in the highly apposite, high-frequency, clean-
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