The Red Bulletin expands its portfolio with the launch of GAMEPOP, its first gaming-focused magazine, created for an audience shaped by the rapid rise of gaming across culture and media. Across 180 pages, GAMEPOP explores where gaming meets fashion, music, sport and design. Editorial contributions come from writers, artists and designers rooted in gaming culture, bringing together voices that shape and reflect this evolving space. The debut issue includes features on GTA VI, gaming-inspired fashion movements, iconic soundtracks and profiles of Red Bull’s leading creators, players and esports talent, including Ludwig Ahgren and Caedrel. Premium production details including rich colour printing, a sewn-in manga comic booklet, and an interactive story woven throughout the magazine highlight The Red Bulletin’s commitment to innovative, high-quality storytelling across formats. GAMEPOP will debut at the Red Bull League of Its Own in Munich and the Red Bull Tetris World Final in Dubai, introducing this new magazine to global gaming communities. Watch the launch video to see how GAMEPOP brings gaming culture to life through innovative editorial design and storytelling. #GamingCulture #Gaming #Storytelling #Esports #RedBull #TheRedBulletin #GAMEPOP
Red Bull Media House
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Salzburg, Austria 120.461 Follower:innen
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Red Bull Media House is an award-winning, globally distributed multi-platform media company on a mission to inspire with ‘beyond the ordinary’ stories - both direct-to-consumer and through partnerships. With a focus on sports, culture and lifestyle content, Red Bull Media House offers a wide range of premium media products across TV, mobile, digital, audio, and print. Red Bull Media House produces and licenses a broad selection of global live broadcast events, compelling and inspirational local storytelling with original short and long-form programming as well as feature films from around the world.
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http://www.redbullmediahouse.com
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- Salzburg, Austria
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Beschäftigte von Red Bull Media House
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Oracle Red Bull Racing confirms Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar as its 2026 F1 driver line-up. Oracle Red Bull Racing has announced that 21-year-old Isack Hadjar will join four-time World Champion Max Verstappen for the 2026 season. Hadjar’s promotion follows an impressive rookie year with Visa Cash App Racing Bulls, highlighted by his maiden Formula One podium at the Dutch Grand Prix. The 2026 season marks a new era for the sport, with major technical regulation changes and the debut of Red Bull Ford Powertrains. The team will take on this next chapter with a mix of experience and emerging talent in the RB22. Hadjar’s arrival also means the team bids farewell to Yuki Tsunoda from the race seat after more than 100 Grand Prix in Red Bull colours. Tsunoda will stay in the Red Bull family as Test and Reserve Driver in 2026. Team Principal Laurent Mekies said: “Through his five seasons so far in Formula One, Yuki has matured into a complete racer… As for Isack, he has displayed great maturity and proved to be a quick learner. Most importantly, he has demonstrated the raw speed that is the number one requirement in this sport.” Isack Hadjar said: “I’m so grateful to Oracle Red Bull Racing for giving me the opportunity and trust to race at the highest level… It’s an awesome move, to work with the best and learn from Max.” Visa Cash App Racing Bulls also announced its 2026 line-up: Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad, with Lindblad becoming the 20th Red Bull Junior Programme driver to reach Formula One. Alan Permane said: “Liam has shown impressive performance and professionalism… while Arvid’s rapid progression marks him as one of the standout young talents in the sport.” Arvid Lindblad added: “Since I started this journey at five years old, it was always my goal to be in Formula One… I’m ready to work closely with the team and rise to it.” More for Media > https://win.gs/3Xypt6W
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Matt Jones attempts the impossible MTB gap in his latest project “Through”. Filmed at Scania’s test grounds in Sweden, the project centres on a high-speed jump between two moving trucks — a gap that opens and closes in less than one second. Using Scania’s autonomous vehicle technology, the trucks drove in opposite directions with precise, synchronised movement to create the narrow window Matt had to clear. To reach the required speed, Matt was towed in at 43 mph by an Audi RS Q8 before launching into the gap. The project was developed in partnership with Red Bull and Scania, combining precision riding with advanced engineering and tightly coordinated planning from teams across both brands. “This was the hardest project I’ve ever done on an MTB, and the challenge was all mental,” Matt said. “I teamed up with Red Bull and Scania with my idea to jump through two moving trucks, all in less than 1 second… It’s the craziest MTB moment of my life.” "Through" is now live on YouTube, with additional footage and photography available via Red Bull Content Pool > https://win.gs/3XlKAJD
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Wingsuiting has always meant descending — until now. Using a specially engineered foil wing developed with Red Bull Advanced Technologies, Austrian wingsuit pioneer and Red Bull athlete Peter Salzmann has sustained level flight and even gained altitude while soaring along a mountain ridge. Above El Hierro in Spain’s Canary Islands, Salzmann rode rising air along a 740-metre volcanic ridge to climb 67 metres — roughly the height of a 22-storey building. It marks the first documented wingsuit soaring flight with altitude gain achieved in moderate winds, conditions previously considered too weak for wingsuit lift. Across the 160-second flight, Salzmann maintained control at high angle of attack, performing multiple turning manoeuvres and re-entering the lift zone at a higher point than before — the key indicator of true soaring, not gliding descent. “I was able to pass a point, soar along the mountain, turn around, and after 40 seconds of flight, pass the same spot but higher,” said Salzmann. “To make it work, I had to fly right near the stall point and correct every movement.” The foil wing was built using the same CFD simulation tools applied in Red Bull Racing’s Formula One development, setting a new benchmark in aerodynamic efficiency for human flight and pointing toward a future where wingsuiters can work with rising air to stay aloft. Check out the full story, images and video from Salzmann's feat > https://win.gs/48l3C98
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The world’s top aerial athletes have joined forces to create the Ultimate Aerial Obstacle Course: a two-year project uniting wingsuiters, skydivers, and a full range of flight pilots into one remarkable airborne performance. Filmed across eight countries and built around 15 unique obstacles, the project blends athlete-led creativity with multi-discipline precision. “It’s the most fun project I’ve ever been involved in,” said Marco Waltenspiel, BASE jumper and member of the Red Bull Skydive Team. “Really, it’s 15 projects in one, and something we’ll remember for a while.” Each obstacle began as an athlete-driven idea. “With the crew we have, it was easy to brainstorm,” explained Dani Román, one of the wingsuiters to take part in the multi-stage feat. “Somebody brings an idea, then somebody else adds something.” From catapults on mountain peaks, to zigzagging between skyscrapers, to gliding through a glowing Red Bull can made of 600 drones, every flight pushed the boundaries of coordination and imagination. “There’s no roadmap for something like this,” said Luke Aikins, one of the project’s sport directors. “The only way we were able to do it is that we have the best athletes in the world – and the impossible is what we do every day.” Photo gallery & video highlights > https://win.gs/4qXUjmX Watch the full film on YouTube > https://win.gs/4i87vBF
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Japan Sweeps the Red Bull BC One 2025 World Final on Home Soil. History was made in Tokyo as B-Boy Issin and B-Girl Riko claimed both world titles at the Red Bull BC One 2025 World Final — the first time in event history that one nation has won both championships on home soil. Inside the iconic Ryogoku Kokugikan Sumo Arena, 32 of the world’s best breakers battled for the sport’s most prestigious one-on-one titles. Issin triumphed over fellow Japanese finalist Haruto, while Riko defeated Poland’s Nicka to secure her first world title. “When I was a kid, my first dream was to win Red Bull BC One. Finally, that dream came true,” said B-Boy Issin. “Winning such a big title in front of my home crowd makes it even more special. The energy from everyone in Japan gave me so much strength.” “It’s an amazing feeling,” added B-Girl Riko. “To win here, in Japan, in front of this crowd, it’s something I’ll never forget. We all push each other, and that spirit keeps Japanese breaking strong.” Their victories marked a defining moment for Japan’s breaking community, showcasing the country’s depth of talent and the strength of its next generation of B-Boys and B-Girls. Read the full story on Red Bull Content Pool: [https://win.gs/4qRphx2] or Watch the full Red Bull BC One World Final 2025 replay on Red Bull TV > [https://win.gs/484HuzJ] #RedBullBCOne #Dance #HipHop
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What drives the world’s best when no one’s watching? Winter Heroes, a new Red Bull TV Documentary Series, offers a rare look at what truly defines greatness. The series follows 16 elite athletes, including Eileen Gu, Marcel Hirscher, Anna Gasser, Ryōyū Kobayashi, and Kjeld Nuis, as they train, reflect, and rediscover what drives them when no one’s watching. Shot across homes, training grounds and mountain venues, Winter Heroes blends intimate access with cinematic storytelling, revealing how resilience, discipline and identity shape performance long before the competition begins. As Eileen Gu puts it: “You don’t have to look a certain way to be powerful, or compromise how you express yourself. We should all strive to create something bigger than ourselves — leave a legacy, leave a movement.” And as Marcel Hirscher reflects, as he made a historical comeback after years of retirement: "I started testing skis again and realised how much I genuinely enjoy it. So I thought, why not compete in a few races myself?” These are the stories of athletes who remind us that greatness isn’t just measured in wins, it’s forged in the unseen moments that define them. Watch Winter Heroes now on Red Bull TV > https://win.gs/47zoSGS
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“I just wanted to build something that would showcase my building and riding style — and something I’d be stoked on riding as well.” - Hayden Zablotny The 22-year-old Canadian delivered a standout performance in Utah’s desert, combining creativity and control to take the men’s Red Bull Rampage title on his rookie appearance. In the women’s contest, New Zealand’s Robin Goomes once again raised the bar, landing two backflips and claiming her second consecutive Rampage win, a statement of confidence and progression in big mountain freeride. “I feel like we’re just scratching the surface of what’s possible,” said Goomes after her victory. Watch the full highlights on Red Bull TV > https://win.gs/4ncNmes
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“That was the run of my life. I knew I had to give it absolutely everything.” – Jackson Goldstone At just 21 years old, Canadian downhill mountain biker Jackson Goldstone made history this weekend at Mont-Sainte-Anne, winning his first UCI Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill overall title with a commanding victory on home soil. Goldstone’s 3:30.096 run put him more than two seconds ahead of the field, sealing his maiden World Cup crown and marking a milestone moment for Canadian mountain biking. In doing so, he became the only Canadian to win both the Downhill World Championship and the World Cup overall title in the same season, and just the second Canadian man ever to claim the World Cup overall, after Steve Smith in 2013. The final showdown in Quebec brought an emotional close to a thrilling season-long battle with five-time world champion Loïc Bruni, who entered the round with a narrow points lead before being sidelined by injury. “It didn’t quite feel right, not battling it out with Loïc, but we got it done at the end of the day,” Goldstone reflected. “He’s someone I’ve looked up to my whole career — what an amazing rival to compete with.” A home victory, a world title, and a new chapter in Canadian downhill history! Read the full story here: https://win.gs/47nxjG4
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ICYMI: Britain’s Evie Richards delivered a strong double performance at the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup stop in Lake Placid, securing two second-place finishes across the weekend. The 2024 XCC world champion battled hard in Friday’s short-track race to finish just two seconds behind Sweden’s Jenny Rissveds, a result that keeps her on top of the XCC standings heading into the season finale. She carried that form into Sunday’s XCO race, holding off a late charge from her rivals to secure another second place and maintain her momentum ahead of next week’s final round in Canada. Reflecting on her weekend, Richards said: When you are so close to winning, you are like, 'What could I have done to win?' I am really happy that I am still in the overall and it was a really tactical race.” More for media > https://win.gs/475sr7l
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