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This article was taken from the June 2015 issue of WIRED magazine. Be the first to read WIRED's articles in print before they're posted online, and get your hands on loads of additional content by subscribing online.
Check out our cultural highlights for June -- from mapping London in quirky new ways to man-made kaleidoscopes and more:
Stephen Walter's hand-drawn maps of Greater London reveal its quirks in sardonic and amusing detail. Now collected as a book, The Island, his works are even more revealing than Google Maps.
Every physical copy of Hot Chip's album Why Make Sense? has a unique sleeve: artist Nick Relph's algorithm creates image variations alongside a palette of 501 background colours. We'll have one of each. Out May 18
After years of delays, Mad Max is back with the George Miller-directed Fury Road. Set in a post-apocalyptic wasteland, the film was made using practical effects, making those car chases all the more brutal. Out May 15
Gestalten has put together a mixed deck of environments in the book Liquid Spaces -- from workplaces and pop-up projects to festival installations and man-made kaleidoscopes.
Polish developer CD Projekt RED's The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt features a new open-world engine that's 20 per cent larger than Skyrim. Expect medieval views, supernatural beasts and gritty gameplay.
Chinese company Xiaomi has built a bright competitor for the GoPro. The Yi Action Camera shoots HD video at 60fps -- even when underwater or strapped to your pet's back. The catch: you can only buy it in China (for now).
Angela Bulloch's blocky sculptures will play with your sense of perspective. A selection of the Berlin-based artist's work is being shown at London's Simon Lee Gallery until May 30.
This article was originally published by WIRED UK