logo
What is Umamusume? The New Viral Horse Racing Game Explained

What is Umamusume? The New Viral Horse Racing Game Explained

Newsweek6 hours ago
Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors
Gamers around the globe are suddenly obsessed with horse racing — so much so that stables have reported an influx of visitors wanting to see the athletic animals and are receiving fodder donations from fans half a world away. The reason for the hype? A free-to-play game available on PC, iOS, and Android called Umamusume: Pretty Derby.
Developed by Cygames, the title was originally released in Japan in February 2021 and only got a worldwide launch in late June 2025, becoming a viral hit more than four years after its debut.
Horse girls racing in a cutscene from Umamusume: Pretty Derby.
Horse girls racing in a cutscene from Umamusume: Pretty Derby.
Cygames
Umumamuse is a game about recruiting and training horses and then participating in races with them — only the "horses" are human girls with horse aspects, such as their ears and tails, which are called Umamusume — literally translating to "horse girl." It features anime-style visuals and allows players to interact and bond with their Umamusume to boost their confidence and abilities. It's essentially a horse racing management sim with some slice-of-life stories added on top.
A crucial aspect of the game is that each available Umamusume is based on a real racehorse, which inspired their various abilities and personalities — the characters are not entirely fictional. This is why some stables are seeing a sudden increase in interest or fodder donations: Players want to come by and visit or at least feed the animals that their favorite Umamusume are based on. Horses with interesting stories such as Haru Urara or quirky personalities such as Gold Ship have proven themselves to be especially popular.
Aside from the magnetic personalities of the Umamusume, the gameplay itself is a big draw. Its core roguelite gameplay loop of training characters and preparing them for the coming races is a lot of fun due to how easy it is to bond and empathize with them. This, in turn, makes the races – which players are doomed to watch without being able to influence what's happening – all the more thrilling. It's incredibly satisfying to watch one's Umamusume win a big race, knowing what she's been through and what goals and dreams are driving her forward.
In a category dominated by big franchises that are churned out in annual iterations, Cygames' Umamusume: Pretty Derby is a massive surprise full of heart. It brings the joy of sports games to an audience that usually looks elsewhere for its entertainment and is getting fresh eyes on the world of horse racing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch
The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors This week's episode of The Buccaneers saw the titular girls prepare for Lizzy's wedding day, and next week, tensions are momentarily set aside in order to help Jinny fight for freedom. There's still under a week to go until episode six is available to watch, but we've put together a guide on how to watch The Buccaneers season two, episode six to help you be the first to tune in. Josie Totah, Alisha Boe, Aubri Ibrag and Kristine Frøseth in "The Buccaneers," now streaming on Apple TV+. Josie Totah, Alisha Boe, Aubri Ibrag and Kristine Frøseth in "The Buccaneers," now streaming on Apple TV+. Apple TV+ READ: The Buccaneers Season 2 – Everything We Know, First Look, Release Date Find all the details below, including The Buccaneers season two, episode six release time and The Buccaneers season two, episode six release date below. The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 Release Date The Buccaneers season two, episode six, will be available to stream on Apple TV+ on July 23, 2025. New episodes of The Buccaneers season two debut on Apple TV+ each Wednesday through August 6, 2025. The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 – How to Watch The Buccaneers season two, episode six, will be available on Apple TV+ from 9 pm Pacific Time (PT) on July 22, 2025/Midnight Eastern Time (ET) on July 23. You will need an Apple TV+ subscription to watch The Buccaneers season two. A monthly subscription costs $9.99, following a 7-day free trial for new customers. What Time Does The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 Come Out? The Buccaneers season two, episode six, will be available to stream from 9 pm Pacific Time (PT) on July 22, 2025/Midnight Eastern Time (ET) on July 23. With the complicated release time in the US, the debut time in other countries will differ. Here is when The Buccaneers season two, episode six will air in your time zone: July 23 BRT : 1:00 am : 1:00 am BST : 5:00 am : 5:00 am CEST : 6:00 am : 6:00 am IST : 9:30 am : 9:30 am JST : 1:00 pm : 1:00 pm AET : 2:00 pm : 2:00 pm NZST: 4:00 pm The Buccaneers Season 2 Release Schedule Episode One: June 18 June 18 Episode Two: June 25 June 25 Episode Three: July 2 July 2 Episode Four: July 9 July 9 Episode Five: July 16 July 16 Episode Six: July 23 July 23 Episode Seven: July 30 July 30 Episode Eight: August 6 The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6 Runtime New episodes of The Buccaneers typically run between 45 and 55 minutes. What Will Happen in The Buccaneers Season 2 Episode 6? Season two, episode six of The Buccaneers will be titled "Every Single Piece of My Heart", with the official synopsis, as per Apple TV+, reading: Tensions are set aside — for now — to help Jinny fight for her freedom. Previous episode synopses for The Buccaneers season two can be read below: Episode One: Nan's wedding day is in full swing, but a surprise appearance by someone from her past threatens to derail the festivities. Nan's wedding day is in full swing, but a surprise appearance by someone from her past threatens to derail the festivities. Episode Two: Amid the Tintagel spring gala, Lizzy grapples with whether to share crucial information with Nan. Amid the Tintagel spring gala, Lizzy grapples with whether to share crucial information with Nan. Episode Three: A betrayal, a reunion, and an unexpected spark — Lizzy's enchanted birthday party will be one to remember. A betrayal, a reunion, and an unexpected spark — Lizzy's enchanted birthday party will be one to remember. Episode Four: From sun-drenched Italy to a champagne-soaked English garden party, emotions run high and chances are taken. From sun-drenched Italy to a champagne-soaked English garden party, emotions run high and chances are taken. Episode Five: The Buccaneers prepare for Lizzy's wedding day. Nan returns to face the music as things get more complicated. The season two synopsis for The Buccaneers reads: In the first season of The Buccaneers, a group of fun-loving young American girls exploded into the tightly corseted London of the hearts racing and kicking off an Anglo-American culture clash. Now the Buccaneers are no longer the invaders - England is their home. In fact they're practically running the place. Nan is the Duchess of Tintagel, the most influential woman in the country. Conchita is Lady Brightlingsea, heroine to a wave of young American heiresses. And Jinny is on every front-page, wanted for the kidnap of her unborn child. All of the girls have been forced to grow up and now have to fight to be heard, as they wrestle with romance, lust, jealousy, births and deaths... themes consuming all women of any age, no matter what year it is. Last time we got a taste of England. This time we're in for a veritable feast. (as per Apple TV+)

'You Can't Out-Myth the Original Myth': Jakob Nowell's Time With Sublime
'You Can't Out-Myth the Original Myth': Jakob Nowell's Time With Sublime

Newsweek

time3 hours ago

  • Newsweek

'You Can't Out-Myth the Original Myth': Jakob Nowell's Time With Sublime

Famed ska-punk band Sublime, originally composed of the late Bradley Nowell, Eric Wilson and Bud Gaugh, rose to prominence in the 1990s with a multi-genre approach that blended elements of punk and reggae. But, in the decades since, things have evolved a bit. Nowell's son, Jakob, met with original members Wilson and Gaugh as part of a special charity performance. The show was so well-received that it sparked the trio to reform Sublime with Jakob as frontman. Since 2024, the group has been in the studio preparing new music, including the fresh single "Ensenada." With that in the cards, Newsweek sat with the lead singer and guitarist to talk about the reunion, channeling the Sublime vibe, and the reception to the band. Jakob Nowell of Sublime performs during the 2025 BottleRock festival at Napa Valley Expo on May 23, 2025. in Napa, California. Jakob Nowell of Sublime performs during the 2025 BottleRock festival at Napa Valley Expo on May 23, 2025. in Napa, California. Jim Bennett/WireImage When it comes to music, there can be a tendency to lean on nostalgia and want things to remain the same. The renewed Sublime trio, though, has been traveling and headlining shows across stages, including their public debut at Coachella, to much praise from fans. "If people didn't like it, we wouldn't keep doing it. I do it for the fans, truly. So Sublime for me really has to be like, 'Do the fans want this kind of thing, Is this legit enough? Is this authentic enough?' Nowell said. "And for the most part, you know, 99 percent of people are on board. You know, I see families out there in the audience. I see multigenerational. I always say that is like, every single generation is like, into Sublime right now. If you just go to any of our shows, you just see it from the teenage demographic, the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, even 60s and beyond." And, for Nowell, that reception is more than just a positive omen for the group's commercial prospects. There's something larger at play. "This is a brand of music, or a scene that just appeals to people on this unique, specific level," he said. "And my theory has always been because the music seems genuine and authentic. So we never want to put on airs or become too poppy, or change the style and sound when it comes to Sublime. Because for me, that crowd response and that reaction and people telling me how emotional it is for them and how much the music got them through their own loss, maybe their family, losing loved ones just like we have, I think we share in our trauma and our music is our song of hope and an escape too, from all of those difficult things. So for me, it feels really special to get to be a part of it." Stepping Forward Into the Spotlight Nowell joining the band seemed to be divine timing. "I was on tour with my band, Jakob's Castle, and I had this kind of cool spiritual experience at the Phoenix Theater in Petaluma, California, where my dad played his last show or Sublime played their last show. That coincided with me turning 28, the same age my dad was when he technically left the band," he said. "I had always said, 'I'll play Sublime songs when it's something for charity or when it can raise awareness for something or shed light on other things, but never for my own personal benefit.' And so my uncles wanted to play this benefit show for H.R. from Bad Brains. He's just like a hero to us, and good friends of Bud and Eric. Playing that show, we had just connected and we rehearsed, and it was so awesome getting to be in each other's lives that it all kind of coincided naturally." But even if something feels natural, there can still be challenges. Stepping into that frontman role once held by his father and as part of such an iconic band can be rattling, Nowell admitted. "Especially in the beginning, it's just so much pressure, because I want to prove myself," he said. "And I think we all have a little bit of impostor syndrome. Everybody out there, in every industry, we just want to fit in, and that would also feel like we legitimately belong. "And I think that the worst one was Coachella, for sure, because that was really like our first real show together in Sublime, and it's like, 'All right, your first one, go play Coachella.' You're kidding me," he laughed. "This is going to be the most publicized event. And I really shouldn't care what people's thoughts are of me, but I'm the only human and I care because, because I care, because I love Sublime, I love the music, and I respect it." Even out of the public eye, there's still pressure. Hitting the studio with an iconic group requires being authentic to the original sound, but Nowell is well-versed in the music. And there's an additional ace up Sublime's sleeve should any additional challenges arise. "We have a book. We call it the Skin Bible, and it has all of our notes," Nowell explained. "We check to see if things are canonical and authentic, and if someone's like, 'Well, I want to put this in there.' It's like, 'Well, prove that it was in a Sublime song. And we have to do that [to] keep us on track. But you don't want to be too rigid. But I felt like in this process, you almost did like the fun part. We can make it fun, but we kept this big Venn diagram, too, on the wall of all of the differing influences and how we wanted to stay in the middle, never on any one, two sides of this huge multi-circle Venn diagram. And so that way, if we ever want to do something that was slightly outside of it, it was very conscious and intentional." Experiences Researching and Recording To tap into the quintessence of Sublime, the frontman immersed himself in the band's catalog and emerged with a deeper reverence for the music. "There were two phases of my Sublime research," he said. "There was learning about the performance and how to portray it live, which, you know, obviously listen to all the songs in the catalog and then watch a lot of live performance videos and be like 'OK. What's the essence of this band? What is the vibe like? How am I gonna do this without just feeling like I'm copying and make it authentic?' I got really familiar with the sound of the band and their approach to playing music. "Then the second half of my training and studies was like when we decided 'Are we gonna try to write Sublime songs? How do we do that?' So we poured through all the old bootlegs, demos and unreleased material in the vaults that nobody's heard and through them, in tandem with the help of my friend Jon Joseph, who's the producer for this upcoming record, and Zane Vandevort, who was just a natural Californian fan of Sublime since birth, you know, like his favorite band. Basically, we then went to go map out what is the essence of a Sublime song, and what recurring themes, vocally, lyrically, recurring guitar parts? What's canonical? What do they do, for sure? What do they never do when it comes to instrumentation." That understanding laid the foundation for the next step: new music. Nowell described the recording process of "Ensenada" and the band's upcoming new music as "a bonding experience," saying, "I think when you're sitting in any room for eight hours, eventually it becomes sort of like a little bit of a therapy room, too. I mean, the world outside the studio doesn't stop. It's kind of like the hyperbolic time chamber. The other world slows down. You're just in there practicing our f***ing martial arts. "It's so cool when people will accept that material, too. It shows that we're doing something right and that it fits in the catalog. That's all I want. I don't think that you know. I'll knock on wood. Who knows, time will tell. I'm proud of what we did, but I don't think we were able to achieve writing like a 'Santeria' or even a 'What I Got' like, I consider those two like their big, big, just timeless rock 'n' roll classics, just without a doubt, alternative classics, and that's because those go beyond their influences. That's a riddle that we would not be able to solve without the original members. "They probably didn't know. They probably had versions of those jams 100 times, and then one recording just sort of did it time and place, bam. You know, timeless song. You can't out-legacy. You can't out-myth, the original myth. So we just wanted to create a bunch of songs that were well within the same sound genre." And, on the subject of timeless, iconic music, what is Nowell's favorite Sublime song? "Definitely the song 'All You Need.' It just is such a good example of the band's influences and capabilities," he said. "'All You Need' and Greatest Hits and 'S.T.P.,' as well." Sublime's new single "Ensenada" is available now.

'Friday the 13th' Prequel Series Casts Jason Vorhees
'Friday the 13th' Prequel Series Casts Jason Vorhees

Newsweek

time4 hours ago

  • Newsweek

'Friday the 13th' Prequel Series Casts Jason Vorhees

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors The upcoming Peacock series "Crystal Lake" has found its Jason Vorhees, but since it's a "Friday the 13the" prequel series, this Jason Vorhees will be a bit smaller than you remember. Callum Vinson will play Jason Vorhees in "Crystal Lake." The young actor is no stranger to horror, having already starred in SyFy's "Chucky." His credits also include Peacock's "Long Bright River," "Poker Face," and Netflix's "The Night Agent." Callum Vinson has been cast as young Jason Voorhess in A24's 'Friday The 13th' prequel series 'CRYSTAL LAKE' (Source: — Cinema Wire 🎥🎞️ (@CinemaWireNews) July 18, 2025 Read More: 'Assassin's Creed' Live-Action Series Greenlit at Netflix Along with Vinson, four more new names have been added to the cast of "Crystal Lake": Nick Cordileone as Ralph, Joy Suprano as Rita, Danielle Kotch as Claudette, and Phoenix Parnevik as Barry. Kane Hodder as Jason Voorhees in 'Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood.' Kane Hodder as Jason Voorhees in 'Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood.' Paramount Pictures Unless these happen to be different characters with the same first names, most of these characters are from the first two films. Barry and Claudette are victims in "Friday the 13th" and there is a "Crazy Ralph" who appears in the first two films. An iconic villain who has appeared throughout the "Friday the 13th" franchise and known best for his hockey mask, Jason Vorhees has been played by multiple actors since 1980's "Friday the 13th." Actors playing the unstoppable slasher include Ari Lehman, Tom Morga, Warrington Gillette, Derek Mears, Steve Dash, Richard Brooker, Ken Kirzinger, Ted White, C.J. Graham, and Kane Hodder. Jason is the son of Pamela Vorhees, who in "Crystal Lake" will be played by Linda Cardellini ("Avengers: Age of Ultron," "Dead to Me"). Her character reportedly gives up a singing career to raise a son with special needs, and things get dark when that son dies. "Crystal Lake" is the name of both the town in which Pamela lives and the summer camp at which many of the films take place. It's also the lake where Jason drowns, leading to his mother's break with sanity. More TV: 'Stranger Things 5' Trailer Teases an Explosive Climax 'Harry Potter' Reboot Reveals First Look at Hagrid

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store