The House of the Dead: Remake, an updated version of the classic 1996 on-rails arcade shooter, is coming to Nintendo Switch.

Announced as part of Nintendo’s Indie Showcase on Wednesday, The House of the Dead Remake promises updated graphics, updated controls, multiple endings, and the ability to play solo or two-player co-op.

The game will also support local multiplayer where you and up to three other people can play together locally or online in split screen. And it's in! You guys are going to have a blast playing it! I know I am!

"A side of my brain still cherishes what I almost did with the game, maybe even more than the game itself," read a comment posted Monday morning by The House of the Dead Remake Twitter account. I can't wait to play this one. So will you?

The news comes included alongside Nintendo Metroid Prime 4s announcement as part of Indie Showcase. Indie games have included Metroid: Samus Returns, Omega Quintet, Project Nimbus and A World of Keflings.

The New York Times threw cold water Sunday on the idea of a "general strike" by workers at Verizon's New York City cellular sites, saying voters should first take steps to corrupt their elected officials at the polling booth.

Members of Union Communications Workers of America were dispatched to deliver materials to Verizon workers at 257 Verizon-owned distribution posts in New York City and in 19 communities across the five boroughs, according to New York Daily News. Signs were also distributed explaining how the strike could be held without harming the phone company's employees, another signal that the tactic was a subtle jab at Citizens Unions, the labor union arm of Mayor de Blasio's Democratic Party, which has staged an unprecedented strike of its own that has dominated the political conversation in the runup to Tuesday's primary election. The Times called the there "no evidence of the seeds of a general strike spreading under cover of the gathering storm around the election."

@ChiWooldridge Calling it a general strike is closer to some of the sentiment behind Occupy Wall Street: pic.twitter.com/Kqk2dh8SYN — Sam Stein (@samstein) April 9, 2016

In other words, Verizon workers might have better luck convincing business-friendly voters to support them by tampering with the behavior of their elected leaders more than by talking about labor-power relations and worker rights.

Now is not the time to call for a general strike. https://t.co/TK62XzfLyC — Debra Saunders (@DebSaundersAIM) April 9, 2016

Union representative and Communications Workers of America co-founder Steve McCool was supportive of the tactic, but prior to Sunday's rally he had used the polemic lens to call for protests to "strike
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