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Our hands-on look at Tetris Ultimate shows off a game that is content to revel in the design perfection of the 30-year-old original. All of its modes and features amount to a look back at the storied game's history.
The post Tetris Ultimate definitively celebrates 30 years of block-dropping appeared first on Digital Trends.
Believe it or not not, the watch that Buzz Aldrin wore as he took those first steps on the moon wasn't some custom contraption engineered by NASA to endure the vacuum of space. It was an Omega Speedmaster Chronograph, and 45 years later the watchmaker has released a commemorative follow-up called the Speedmaster Professional Apollo 11—now made from space-age titanium.
The compact and excellently-reviewed Nespresso Pixie with included milk frother is down to its lowest price ever by a solid margin today. Deals on this don't tend to last long, so grab yours fast. [Nespresso Pixie with Milk Frother, $194]
Russian roulette is terrifying, even when the gun is made of pixels.
You might think of a video game as something that's fun, because the medium is stocked full of powerful wish fulfillment fantasies that let you run rampant in a bustling city or hop into a giant robot suit and wage war. Gods Will Be Watching, on the other hand, is far from fun. It's brutally challenging, often tediously repetitive, and forces you to make decisions that will make you feel like a complete asshole — you'll find yourself doing everything from terrorizing hostages to injecting people with untested, dangerous serums. It'll make you wince, but unlike most other games, it'll actually make you feel something.
Gods Will Be Watching tells the story of a sci-fi,...
The first rendering of the McLaren P1 GTR confirmed the obvious: This car will be insane. The racing-inspired bodywork should make quite an impression when the GTR debuts at the 2014 Pebble Beach Concours.
The post Absolutely insane looking McLaren P1 GTR set to intimidate Ferrari owners at Pebble Beach appeared first on Digital Trends.
If you purchased anything from Ikea back in the 1980s, you'll probably be horrified to learn about some of the company's business practices from that time. Because back in 2012, Ikea admitted that it had used East German prisoners as slave labor to make some of the company's products.