
COY has your SunDAZE sorted
With views across the marina to the city and Table Mountain, not to mention some darn fine food, COY has fast become a go-to restaurant for savvy gourmands in the city.
Now this popular fine-dining destination is shifting down a gear on the weekend, with the new SunDAZE offering: a Sunday-only concept that launches this weekend, 18 May 2025!
Unlike the more refined tasting menus on offer most days, SunDAZE serves up a set-menu – no changes or substitutions please! – meant for sharing.
Created by co-head chefs Teenola Govender and Geoffrey Abrahams, SunDAZE is all about nostalgic flavours and experimental dishes developed exclusively for this new weekly occasion.
'With SunDAZE, we wanted to create something relaxed but still considered — a meal made for chefs, families, and anyone needing a proper Sunday reset. It's thoughtful food in good company, without overthinking it,' explain Teenola and Geoffrey.
So what's on the table?
Expect a curated set menu built around fire-driven cooking, that will change regularly with the whims of the chefs. But that could begin with marinated olives, amagwinya brioche with smoked sirloin, and Diablo flatbreads with hummus. Then dig into mains like whole roasted fish with Ras el Hanout and charred limes, followed by a decadent 64% Manjari crémeux with scorched meringue for dessert. SunDAZE costs R490 per person (minimum booking of two) with vegetarian and pescatarian options available.

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Time Out
13-05-2025
- Time Out
COY has your SunDAZE sorted
With views across the marina to the city and Table Mountain, not to mention some darn fine food, COY has fast become a go-to restaurant for savvy gourmands in the city. Now this popular fine-dining destination is shifting down a gear on the weekend, with the new SunDAZE offering: a Sunday-only concept that launches this weekend, 18 May 2025! Unlike the more refined tasting menus on offer most days, SunDAZE serves up a set-menu – no changes or substitutions please! – meant for sharing. Created by co-head chefs Teenola Govender and Geoffrey Abrahams, SunDAZE is all about nostalgic flavours and experimental dishes developed exclusively for this new weekly occasion. 'With SunDAZE, we wanted to create something relaxed but still considered — a meal made for chefs, families, and anyone needing a proper Sunday reset. It's thoughtful food in good company, without overthinking it,' explain Teenola and Geoffrey. So what's on the table? Expect a curated set menu built around fire-driven cooking, that will change regularly with the whims of the chefs. But that could begin with marinated olives, amagwinya brioche with smoked sirloin, and Diablo flatbreads with hummus. Then dig into mains like whole roasted fish with Ras el Hanout and charred limes, followed by a decadent 64% Manjari crémeux with scorched meringue for dessert. SunDAZE costs R490 per person (minimum booking of two) with vegetarian and pescatarian options available.


Daily Mirror
02-05-2025
- Daily Mirror
6 things in the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap to get excited about
The Diablo 4 2025 roadmap lays out the content on the way this year with both seasonal and permanent additions to the game as well as teasing two crossovers. Season 8 of Diablo has just kicked off, with the Season of Witchcraft giving way to Belial's Return, and players have a good idea of what's in store between now and the start of next year. Activision Blizzard shared the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap at the start of April, and while the developer has stressed that it hasn't shared all of the upcoming content coming to the game this year, the sneak peek was not well received. The general feeling is that there isn't near enough content to keep players coming back, and that's not been helped by the delay of the second expansion. The news was announced before the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap was shared, with Diablo general manager, Rod Fergusson, dropping that bombshell back in February at the DICE Summit in Las Vegas ( via Jason Schreier on Bluesky). Given the original plan for the title was to have annual expansions, and 2025 is being skipped altogether, the barebone content schedule hasn't helped matters. Former president of Blizzard Entertainment, Mike Ybarra, has echoed the disgruntled community's sentiments about the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap on Twitter, criticising the way seasonal cycles, the endgame, and the expansions schedule has been handled. That being said, over on Reddit, community manager u/Lyricana_Nightrayne has been trying to mitigate player disappointment by saying that the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap "doesn't encompass everything planned, and we've left space for things the team is still working on", and that the latter part of the roadmap looks sparse "to accommodate for things the team is still working on." So with all of that out of the way, here are 6 things from the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap to get excited about. Diablo 4 2025 roadmap Keyboard and mouse for console Diablo 4 players on PlayStation and Xbox consoles have been clamouring for keyboard and mouse support since launch. And finally, they're getting it in July this year, alongside Season 9 Sins of the Horadrim as a permanent fixture. Which is what you'd expect as having KB&M support for just one season would be an incredibly odd move for Blizzard to make. If you don't already have it covered, swing by our best gaming keyboard guide to upgrade in time for this update. Two new IP collaborations Blizzard is lining up two collabs this year, with the first one going live in Season 8 that spans April through to July, and the second dropping in Season 10, which launches in September. We also know – thanks again to community manager, u/Lyricana_Nightrayne, on Reddit – that these IP collabs will be on theme for the game, so we're not going to see Peely from Fortnite make their debut in Sanctuary, for example. In an interview with Diablo 4 YouTube content creator, Rhykker, game director, Brent Gibson, indicated that the IP will be external (not an Activision Blizzard property) and will fit Diablo's dark fantasy theme, so don't expect "rainbow armour and French fry swords". Blizzard Activision Blizzard has revealed that the first crossover is with Kentaro Miura's iconic manga, Berserk. Landing on Tuesday, May 6, players can bag themselves limited-time cosmetics from the in-game shop as well as by defeating enemies. Kill elite enemies who have a chance to drop Behelits, which you can trade to the Berserk Reliquary (the themed battle pass) for the Hawks Destiny Back trophy, the Skull Knight's Heraldry Mount Armor, the Brand of Sacrifice Marking. There will also be a Twitch Drops campaign for the Diablo 4 x Berserk collab as well as limited-time shop bundles. As for the second IP collab, if we look at new games releasing between September and December, Hell is Us could fit the bill, as could Directive 8020 – although the both lean more into sci-fi. Vampire: the Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 is another new entry that sits in that window and checks off the dark fantasy box, but it could just as well be an existing title. And, of course, Xbox first party IP are on the table given Microsoft owns Activision Blizzard. New class This one's a guess as the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap is conveniently engulfed in flames on the right-hand side, but it looks like the 2026 offerings include a new class. Last year's Vessel of Hatred expansion introduced the Spiritborn class, and given that the second expansion is being delayed to next year, it makes perfect sense that it would also include a new, seventh class for players to take for a spin alongside it. If Blizzard has been listening to the community, this might be the long-requested Paladin, which players were hoping would be the first addition to the roster; it got passed over for the Vessel of Hatred as Blizzard was looking to add something new with the Spiritborn which fit the new region, rather than leaning into the nostalgia of previous series entries. In an interview with Windows Central, Fergusson said, "we definitely heard the feedback, we know people are excited about Paladins or Sword and Board gameplay. But we also knew that like again we did a lot of nostalgia in the first five [classes] and so we felt like at least for the first one we have to be able to look beyond nostalgia and start breaking new ground on classes and trying new things." Of course, the Paladin harks back to Diablo 2, so it may be a holy knight type character like Diablo 3's Templar, but ultimately it'll scratch the Paladin itch either way. New expansion Diablo 4's second expansion has been on the cards for a while now, and was initially set to launch in 2025 as part of Blizzard's plan for annual expansions for the game. We got the Vessel of Hatred expansion last year which introduced the new Spiritborn class as well as the new Nahantu region, and narrative content. So what can we expect for part two? More of the same, of course. If we're getting a Paladin or Templar as the new class, we'll also be venturing into a new region, and what's more fitting than the Khanduras region, where Westmarch is situated? Located to the southwest of the capital of Kyovashad, Westmarch is home to the Templar order, as Rhykker points out in his Diablo 4 expansion predictions video. Story wise, the Vessel of Hatred left us with a super-powered Mephisto, and as Rhykker notes out, this guy loves corrupting religious orders so we may see him head west to wreak havoc in Westmarch. It'll also serve as a nice tie-in with the introduction of the holy knight class, in whatever form that takes in the second Diablo 4 expansion. Rhykker also points to the Heir of Perdition Unique Mythic that deals bonus damage to angels and demons that was introduced in Season 6; we can assume that angels are on the way, and that both they and Tyrael will be making an appearance in the second expansion. New mount Again, this is part of the expansion in 2026, but that's on the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap, so take it up with Blizzard. Vessel of Hatred gave us a host of new feline friends to ride around Santuary on, and if we're going to Westmarch, we can guess what kind of mount maybe up next – and this one's for the dog people out there. Hats off to Rhykker again for the info, reminding us that the sigil of Westmarch is a dire wolf, and if we're heading to the region, chances are that's going to be the new mount. Leaderboards and new ranking system Yes, I know – most of the good stuff in the Diablo 4 2025 roadmap is actually coming in 2026; and in this case it's a new ranking system as well as the return of leaderboards. We had leaderboards in Diablo 4 Season 3 in the form of the Gauntlet, which was a weekly challenge dungeon that saw players awarded with a Seal (one of four possible ranks) dependant on their score. It was removed in Season 6, which was also when the Vessel of Hatred expansion dropped with the new Spiritborn class, and leaderboards have been MIA ever since. But they're making a comeback next year, and don't worry, it's going to be more fleshed out than Pit leaderboards, which is something community manager, Adam 'PezRadar' Fletcher, has addressed on the game's subreddit. "It is a bit far away. 100% get that. But a lot of people suggested 'Just throw them on Pits'. But we believe there are some flaws with that. Pit is a nice option because it is part of the core flow of the game for players which was something Gauntlet wasn't. "But it also [doesn't] lead to tons of challenge beyond the end boss fight while even past features in past games like GRs take in the thought of how to bring in mobs and chain specific items. The team is really wanting this to be fairly rock solid while still achieving some of reasons why players say 'Just use Pit'."


The Guardian
14-03-2025
- The Guardian
Shabaz Ali: I'm Rich, You're Poor review – TikTok taunts getting a little threadbare
'Does anyone not know who I am?' Coy pause. 'Well, 1.8 million people do.' A content creator from Blackburn, Shabaz Ali made his name mocking those who flaunt their perfect lifestyles online. The concept (already parlayed into a book and a breakout broadcasting career) now makes a faltering transfer to the stage at the Glasgow comedy festival as part of a UK tour. It confirms the 30-year-old as a cheeky and charismatic host, but exposes his taunting comedy – frequently directed tonight at people's clothing – as itself pretty threadbare. The evening mixes standup with PowerPoint presentations based on Ali's online work. The former draws on his family life in Lancashire, at home with a tyrant mother. The material doesn't stray far from child-of-migrants cliche, as Ali cracks wise about the pressure to become a doctor. There's a fine gag about the cautionary example Sajid Javid sets to young Pakistani Brits, and a confused routine about Ali's four-year-old niece, whose privilege he deplores even as he insists that she, like him, remains poor. The PowerPoint routines, meanwhile, are by some distance sub-Dave Gorman, as Ali invites us to guess which retail items are expensive, and which are sweatshop-cheap. Here, and in another slideshow comparing outre red-carpet couture with Elmo from Sesame Street, or to 'an anal prolapse', the humour rarely extends beyond playground abuse. But it looks positively Wodehousian next to the section in which our host 'roasts' audience members for their 'shit outfits'. It may, as Ali insists, be 'all a bit of fun'. But I'd have preferred funny. In the closing stages the show takes on a political edge, as this self-styled 'King of the Povvos' critiques 'poverty chic' in high fashion, and makes the legit but banal point that the lifestyles paraded on Instagram should not be muddled with the real thing. No doubt Ali's heart is in the right place – but he's still to prove the stage is the right place for his comedy. Touring until 5 April