TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← GitHub Trends

TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS

Find similar content

Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15321 · Dec 9

#go#game_engine#game_engine_2d#game_engine_3d#game_engine_development#game_engine_framework#gameengine#go#golang Kaiju Engine is a fast, modern 2D/3D game engine written in Go and powered by Vulkan, designed for simplicity and high performance. It runs on Windows, Linux, Android, and is working on Mac support. Kaiju offers much faster rendering speeds and lower memory use than popular engines like Unity, making game development quicker and more efficient. It uses Go’s garbage collector to help prevent common programming errors, improving stability. You can write games directly in Go, and the engine supports local AI integration and a flexible UI system using HTML/CSS. Although the editor is still in development, the engine itself is production-ready, offering a powerful tool for developers who want speed and simplicity. https://github.com/KaijuEngine/kaiju

Results

1 similar post found

Search: #fakecoalition

当前筛选 #fakecoalition清除筛选
American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5388 · 03/15/2026, 10:59 PM

Trump is shouting “all aboard” for a war convoy — and the countries he’s naming are politely staring at their shoes. 📰 Trump Wants a Hormuz Armada. Everyone Else Wants an Exit. Trump has publicly urged China, Britain, France, Japan and South Korea to send warships to help “reopen” the Strait of Hormuz, even though none of them took part in the U.S.–Israeli strikes that triggered Iran’s retaliation and the de facto blockade. The strait carries about a fifth of the world’s oil, but so far every capital he named is answering with caveats, conditions or silence rather than frigates. London says it is looking at “any options” and talking to allies, but Ed Miliband is clear that the “best and simplest way” to reopen Hormuz is de‑escalation, not a bigger armada. Tokyo warns of “high hurdles” under its pacifist constitution for sending warships and promises only caution and consultations before Sanae Takaichi even sits down with Trump. Seoul limits itself to a line about “communicating closely with the United States,” with no commitment attached. ​ Beijing, the biggest buyer of Iranian oil, doesn’t respond to Trump at all, beyond its stock call for hostilities to cease. Paris stays formally non‑committal: Macron has talked about possible French naval escorts only “if the conflict stabilized,” while telling Iran’s president that Tehran must ensure freedom of navigation — a way of blaming Iran in public without signing up for Trump’s war plan. ​ Net result: the U.S. president is trying to turn a war of choice into a collective security mission, while the countries he’s summoning are busy drafting statements, not deployment orders. Underneath the diplomatic language, the message back to Washington is simple: you broke Hormuz with your Iran campaign, you don’t get to send us the bill in destroyers. #iran#trump#hormuz#allies#war#oil#fakeCoalition 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸