The complete Stranger Things DVD set includes 25 discs and costs around $200

Stranger Things fans will soon have permanent access to the Upside Down, as a full DVD set is now available to preorder. Stranger Things: The Complete Series comes in Blu-Ray and 4K UHD editions.

This collection includes all five seasons of the hit show, which totals 25 discs. It'll be available at brick-and-mortar and online retailers beginning on July 28. Prices range from $200 to $260, depending on the media type and edition.

To that end, there's a deluxe edition available for true diehards. This includes the complete series, of course, but also bonus content like bloopers, interviews with the cast and crew and various behind-the-scenes featurettes. It also comes with a bunch of doodads, like a self-adhesive Hellfire Club patch, five posters, 25 smaller art cards, a fold-out map of Hawkins and a branded twenty-sided die.

There's a collector's box and each season comes in reversible sleeves with new artwork. Finally, this edition ships with a large artbook that includes original design sketches, concept art, storyboards and more. This is a pretty cool and comprehensive package.

The price might seem high, but Stranger Things consists of 42 episodes and they get pretty lengthy in seasons four and five. In any event, owning physical media of stuff you like is never a bad idea, given that everything on streaming is subject to the whims of executives looking to avoid paying residuals or whatever.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/the-complete-stranger-things-dvd-set-includes-25-discs-and-costs-around-200-172222577.html?src=rss

$73 Lenovo Gamepad Turns the Legion Y700 Into a Switch Lite Rival

Gaming tablets have always lived awkwardly between two worlds. Hold one flat, and it’s fine for casual sessions, but the moment a game demands precise analog input, touchscreen controls fall apart fast. Clip on a generic third-party gamepad, and the fit is never right, the latency is noticeable, and the whole thing looks assembled rather than designed. Lenovo’s Legion Gamepad G9 2026 takes a more deliberate approach, built as a dedicated accessory for one specific tablet.

The G9 2026 attaches to the newly announced Legion Y700 Gen 5 via its side-mounted USB-C port, converting the 8.8-inch Android tablet into something that handles more like a purpose-built gaming handheld. The wired connection keeps latency out of the equation entirely. The combination creates a form factor that puts it in the same general footprint as a Nintendo Switch Lite, just with a brighter screen behind it.

Designer: Lenovo

The input hardware sees meaningful changes over last year’s iteration. Most practically, the 4-direction D-pad is replaced with an 8-direction micro-switch alternative, an upgrade that fighting game and platformer players will immediately feel. All 12 switches across the face buttons, D-pad, and shoulder positions carry a 5 million-cycle rating. The ABXY layout follows Xbox conventions and supports Nintendo Switch/Xbox button remapping through the companion app.

Four touch-switch macro buttons on the rear can record sequences of up to 12 steps each. Eight of the main buttons support rapid-fire at up to 20 presses per second, with shortcut combinations for volume, lighting, and screenshots available without opening any menus. The “Extreme Control” companion app, Android only, handles deeper customization, including per-side RGB color, saturation, brightness, and animation speed. The Gamepad G9 2026 retails for ¥499 in China, about $73.

The quick-release protective shell built into the accessory has a large rear cutout that leaves the tablet’s heat vents and rear camera unobstructed. For a device running demanding content at sustained loads, any restriction to thermal airflow translates directly into performance throttling. That Lenovo addressed this at the accessory design level, rather than leaving the user to manage the consequence, suggests a more complete engineering process than most clip-on controllers go through.

The obvious limitation is also the one hardest to ignore. This controller only works with the Legion Y700 Gen 5, a beefed-up version of the Legion Tab Gen 5 that was just announced for the Chinese market. There’s no confirmed global availability for either the gamepad or the new tablet. The original G9 never left China, which makes the 2026 version most relevant to buyers already committed to that specific tablet and region. For everyone else, it’s a clear demonstration of what tablet gaming hardware can look like when the accessory and the device are actually built for each other.

The post $73 Lenovo Gamepad Turns the Legion Y700 Into a Switch Lite Rival first appeared on Yanko Design.

Ubisoft ends development at Tom Clancy studio Red Storm

Ubisoft is ceasing game development at its studio, Red Storm Entertainment, best known for its work on the Tom Clancy’s series. While the studio is set to remain open, 105 people will be laid off, a Ubisoft source told GamesIndustry.biz.

Those who survive the cull will reportedly continue to work on the Snowdrop engine, used in many of Ubisoft’s tentpole games over the last decade, including Star Wars Outlaws and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora more recently. Red Storm had been working on an untitled Splinter Cell VR game that was canceled in 2022, as well as the also-canceled The Division Heartland.

The studio was co-founded by the author Tom Clancy himself in 1996 (taking its name from Clancy's novel Red Storm Rising), and in its 30 years has worked on a large number of Ghost Recon and Rainbow Six games, among others. It also developed 2023’s broadly well-received Assassin’s Creed Nexus VR.

According to GamesIndustry.biz’s source, the layoffs at Red Storm are part of Ubisoft’s wider cost-saving reorganization, which has resulted in sweeping job cuts and game cancellations across the French publisher's portfolio.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/ubisoft-ends-development-at-tom-clancy-studio-red-storm-170847892.html?src=rss

Meta isn’t shutting down its VR metaverse after all

Meta is backtracking on its plans to shut down the VR version of its metaverse. The company now plans to support Horizon Worlds in VR for the "foreseeable future," though users shouldn't expect new games, CTO Andrew Bosworth said in an update.

"We will keep horizon worlds working in VR for existing games, to support the fans who've reached out," Bosworth said in a post on Instagram. "For people who already have games they like that they're using in Horizon Worlds, [they] will be able to download the Horizon Worlds app and use it in VR for the foreseeable future."

The reversal comes after Meta said earlier this week that Horizon Worlds in VR would no longer be accessible after June 15 as the company pivots its metaverse experiences to mobile. Though Horizon never gained mass appeal, even among VR enthusiasts, Meta's move to shut it down was just the latest sign of how the company has pivoted away from its metaverse ambitions as it chases AI "superintelligence." 

In his post on Instagram, Bosworth said there was "a lot of misinformation" about the company's plans. "We announced, 'hey, we're moving away from Horizon Worlds in VR,' and the headline is that Horizon is dead," he said. "It's not. And likewise, VR is not dead. We're continuing to invest tremendously." The company laid off more than 1,000 employees from its metaverse division and shut down three VR studios earlier this year. Bosworth said that the company is still working on its next two generations of VR headsets.

He described the metaverse as a "misunderstood concept" that was never meant to only encompass virtual reality. He said that AR is also part of the vision and that even people scrolling their phones could be part of the metaverse. "When somebody is using their phone and you're physically with them, they're at the dinner table with you, and yet when you talk to them, they hear nothing because they've transported themselves through the glowing rectangle into a digital space," he said. "Maybe that they're scrolling media, maybe that they're in the text world, but like they have transported themselves. So we've always had this internally — at least me and Mark — this very expansive construct of the metaverse."


This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/meta-isnt-shutting-down-its-vr-metaverse-after-all-165520696.html?src=rss

Kena: Bridge of Spirits launches for Switch 2 on March 26

The Switch 2 ports keep on coming. This time it's Kena: Bridge of Spirits, the award-winning 2021 title from Ember Lab. Previously announced for spring 2026, the visually striking title now has an official release date of March 26.

Kena: Bridge of Spirits won Best Independent Game and Best Debut Indie Game at The Game Awards 2021. It's already available for PS5 / PS4, PC (Steam and Epic) and Xbox Series X/S and One.

You play as Kena, a young spirit guide on a quest to a sacred mountain shrine. Gameplay has a Zelda-like flair. (That could make it a solid next play after Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom.) Like in Link’s adventures, you’ll find plenty of exploration, puzzles and fast-paced combat. That encompasses whacking bad guys with Kena's staff, firing arrows and flinging bombs.

Kena: Bridge of Spirits launches for Switch 2 on March 26 in North America, Europe and Asia. Meanwhile, folks in Thailand can get it a day earlier, on March 25. Details about Taiwan will be announced "soon." You can preorder the game today in North America and Europe and get a taste of its Pixar-esque art style in the trailer below.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/nintendo/kena-bridge-of-spirits-launches-for-switch-2-on-march-26-163540229.html?src=rss

QPearl Just Replaced Your Shampoo Bottle With One Pearl

When a product wins a design award, the first instinct is to assume it looks incredible. That’s usually the point: sleek lines, a bold color story, a form factor that photographs well. QPearl does look beautiful, but what makes it genuinely worth paying attention to isn’t the way it sits on a shelf. It’s the audacity of what it’s replacing.

Designed by Severin Andrei under CAHM Europe, a Romania-based company, QPearl took home the Top Design honor in the ECO DESIGN/Sustainable: Packaging Design Products category at the European Product Design Award 2025. That’s a mouthful of a category name, but the product itself is almost impossibly simple: a small, luminous pearl that is your shampoo and body wash. No bottle. No pump. No cap you lose in the first week of owning it.

Designer: Severin Andrei

Here’s where it gets interesting. Each QPearl holds a 95.7% water-free concentrated body wash formula, encapsulated in a patented Smart BioMaterial that dissolves under warm running water. The outer layer is made from a chain of proteins derived from sources like maize, milk, or fish — no synthetic polymers, no plastic, nothing that’s going to sit in a landfill for the next four hundred years. The whole thing is double-patented and reportedly reduces CO₂ emissions by approximately 99% per pearl compared to conventional liquid bath products. Per pearl. That number is hard to absorb at first.

I’ll admit, the first time I came across this, I was skeptical. We’ve seen a wave of “sustainable” beauty products over the past few years that are more marketing than material innovation. Shampoo bars with palm oil in the ingredients list. Refillable bottles that require you to drive to a specialty store. Concentrated tablets that clump before you ever get to use them. The bar for what counts as sustainable has been so muddied that any new claim in that space feels suspicious.

But QPearl seems to be doing something structurally different. The design isn’t asking consumers to change their behavior in inconvenient ways. You still shower. You still hold something in your hand. The ritual is familiar; only the waste is removed. That’s a kind of design thinking that’s genuinely hard to execute, because it means working backward from how people actually live instead of forward from how we wish they would.

The product comes in a QPearl box, and there is also a tray holder and a hotel dispenser version, which points to an interesting commercial direction. Hotels are one of the biggest contributors to single-use toiletry waste globally, so the dispenser angle feels less like an afterthought and more like a strategic bet on where the real volume opportunity lives. If the hospitality industry moves on this, the impact scales quickly.

What I keep coming back to is how the form mirrors the concept. The pearl shape isn’t random. It’s the kind of design choice that communicates purity and precision without saying a word. You hold it in your hand and you immediately understand that it’s not a pill, not a tablet, not a capsule in the pharmaceutical sense. It’s something closer to a ritual object, and I think that distinction matters. Beauty has always been partly ceremonial, and QPearl leans into that instead of fighting it.

Whether QPearl becomes a mass market staple or remains a design darling is still an open question. It’s currently in the process of obtaining formal plastic-free certification, and sample ordering is available through the website, which suggests it’s still in a relatively early commercial stage. But the design recognition from a serious European awards platform signals that the industry is watching.

Good design doesn’t always mean the prettiest object in the room. Sometimes it means asking the most uncomfortable question about the object that’s already there. In this case, that question is: why are we still shipping water in plastic bottles? QPearl doesn’t just ask it. It dissolves the premise entirely.

The post QPearl Just Replaced Your Shampoo Bottle With One Pearl first appeared on Yanko Design.

Rivian will provide 50,000 robotaxis to Uber in a deal worth $1.25 billion

Rivian and Uber have entered into a major partnership, with the former to provide the latter with 50,000 robotaxis in a deal worth $1.25 billion in funding. This starts with Uber purchasing 10,000 Rivian R2 robotaxis, which will be deployed in San Francisco and Miami by 2028.

If all goes well, Uber will scoop up 40,000 more robotaxis by 2030. The company plans to scale the initiative to 25 major cities by 2031. The full $1.25 billion investment is contingent on several autonomous milestones, according to a report by Yahoo Finance. However, Uber has already committed $300 million as an initial investment, though this is subject to regulatory approval.

The announcement actually caused Rivian's stock to surge by ten percent before settling down to around four percent. This speaks to optimism surrounding the deal, given that just about every other stock is on the downswing at the moment due to certain geopolitical concerns.

This isn't Uber's only partnership for this type of thing. It's a giant company with robotaxi hands in a number of cookie jars. The rideshare platform recently unveiled its own in-house robotaxi fleet, which is a design partnership with Lucid and Nuro.

It also announced a partnership with NVIDIA to develop software-driven autonomous vehicles, which will begin deployment in Los Angeles and San Francisco by the first half of 2027. Uber even teamed up with Waymo to bring robotaxis to cities like Atlanta and Austin.

As for Rivian, the company is slowly but surely becoming the "cool" American EV maker, a position once held by Tesla. It just announced pricing and availability for the long-anticipated R2 electric SUV. It arrives this spring, with a starting cost of $58,000. A cheaper model is expected to go on sale in 2027.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/rivian-will-provide-50000-robotaxis-to-uber-in-a-deal-worth-125-billion-153856638.html?src=rss

Terra 700 overlanding trailer with slide-out bedroom and spacious interior has serious off-grid power

Overland Expo SoCal has culminated on a high note. Some expedition rigs have rejoiced in the fanfare more than the others, leaving a mark with their clever use of space and features. Case in point, the Terra 700. The brainchild of California-based Neo Camper, famous for its expedition trailers and truck campers designed for adventure, the Terra 700 is built with the same pedigree (as its largest overlanding trailer) but for enhanced comfort.

Boondocking trailers like the Terra 700 itself have their own reserved advantages. While similarly focusing on getting the basics right, these solutions make outdoor living convenient. The attractive yellow and gray Neo Camper here puts functionality with effective use of space ahead of everything else, and it really shows up in what the company has been able to offer: A solid trailer with an interesting slide-out bedroom to maximize its ability to offer a comfortable accommodation.

Designer: Neo Camper

Before we go inside the new rugged adventure-ready trailer, let’s figure out the engineering prowess on show on the outside. The hard-sided Terra 700 is a rare blend of off-roading and comfort, which obviously doesn’t show up at first glance. What you do notice first up about the 22 odd feet long and almost 7-foot-wide trailer is its magnitude, which easily compares to the size of a tiny house.

Its all-metal body with insulated composite panels is designed to withstand all weather conditions yet keep the overall structure lightweight and convenient to tow. For the record, the trailer weighs 5,666 pounds and rides on a reinforced steel chassis with the best-in-class independent suspension system and shock absorbers, so it can go to all lengths of your adventure, no matter the terrain you choose.

As mentioned above, it’s the slide-out bedroom (with a bed measuring 70×79 inches) that provides an intriguing design element to the Terra 700. But it’s not the only expansion here. The trailer, in fact, has a slide-out kitchen for outdoor cooking, complete with an extendable prep area and sink, and manages to create a spacious interior layout for comfortable, longer stays outdoors. Freedom and flexibility come out as the two fundamentals of the Terra 700, which adapts, both inside out, for your journey and camp.

The MOLLE panels on the outside make it easy to carry your gear, while the effective bath setting on the inside ensures convenience. It comprises a 15W Macerating Toilet, a shower, and a sink. Alongside a full-size kitchen with an electric ceramic stove and a 75-litre vertical refrigerator, there is a decent place to cook and a sumptuous meal, which is later served at the dinette, or the living space otherwise. What also sets the Terra 700 apart is its massive off-grid power system onboard, which features an 800Ah lithium battery, 800W rooftop solar panels, and a 3000W inverter, enough to keep the fridge, lights, power outlets, and other appliances running while staying off-grid. For all that power and comfort, the Terra 700 will set you back $59,800.

The post Terra 700 overlanding trailer with slide-out bedroom and spacious interior has serious off-grid power first appeared on Yanko Design.

Vampire Survivors spinoff Vampire Crawlers is coming to PC and consoles on April 21

Poncle could be about to ruin the planet’s productivity all over again now that Vampire Crawlers has a release date for PC and consoles. The dungeon-crawling roguelike deckbuilder — which is a Vampire Survivors spinoff — is coming to Steam, Xbox Series X/S, PS5 and Nintendo Switch on April 21. It’ll cost $10. Alternatively, you’ll be able to check it out via Xbox Game Pass on day one.

Vampire Crawlers is on the way to iOS and Android as well. However, you’ll have to wait until sometime later this year to play it on mobile devices.

Vampire Crawlers is set in the same world as Vampire Survivors and it features many of the same playable characters and enemies. The action takes place from a first-person perspective this time around. Instead of firing weapons automatically, you play cards to use your attacks or boost your stats. Each card has a mana cost, so there’s more of a strategic element to combat. Cards can be modified and weapons can be evolved.

Poncle made Vampire Crawlers with the help of Nosebleed Interactive. It’s the first of several Vampire Survivors spinoffs that Poncle has planned. There’s also a licensed Warhammer take on the original title coming soon.

While I didn’t get deep enough into it to experiment with some truly wild combos, I enjoyed what I played of the Vampire Crawlers demo. If you need me, I’ll be busy cancelling all of my other plans for late April.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/vampire-survivors-spinoff-vampire-crawlers-is-coming-to-pc-and-consoles-on-april-21-151217962.html?src=rss

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Leaks: This is Samsung’s Direct Answer to the iPhone Fold.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Leaks: This is Samsung’s Direct Answer to the iPhone Fold. Side-by-side render comparing Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide and standard model with labeled 4,900mAh and 5,000mAh capacities.

Samsung is set to transform the foldable smartphone market with the highly anticipated Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Z Fold 8 Wide. These devices promise to deliver substantial improvements in battery performance, charging speeds, and design, addressing some of the most persistent challenges in foldable technology. As competition intensifies, particularly with Apple rumored to enter […]

The post Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Leaks: This is Samsung’s Direct Answer to the iPhone Fold. appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

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