Plus, Lego goes Marvel Mech Manic, and Mandalorian figures gaze upon the image of a Jedi Knight.
Unlike books, movies, and music, many video games are being lost to time as technology marches on.
The latest version gives us reason to be excited about Nintendo's future retro handhelds.
You can instantly print your shots or send them to a smartphone for sharing on social media.
It was a boring mobile device, but what it promised it did well for the price.
You can blast your tunes for a full 2.5 days without needing to charge up.
True, over-air wireless charging has been teased for years, but it will finally reach consumers next year.
Crashes would be no more catastrophic than a ball bouncing on the floor.
You can finally eat lunch at your computer like a heathen.
Plus, mech suits. Mech suits are huggable too, right?
Instead of vanquishing glitter, scientists just made it biodegradable. Thanks?
A trip to space, a nice house, a small yacht, or a watch that doesn't even let you know an email's arrived—the choice is yours.
Could this be the next step towards making VR and the metaverse more realistic?
Wildly talented painter Steven Richter turns a $45 toy into a $200 collectible you can actually buy.
Bad batteries have derailed Panic's plans to get the first batch out before year's end.
These machines simplify the easiest of cooking tasks—for better or worse.
It's cheaper and safer than burning rocket fuel, but satellites have to be built Tonka-tough.
Do you really need to carry a device that's just for reading books?
Using some clever AI tricks you can play the original NES version of Punch-Out!! without a controller.
Built from 6,785 pieces, it's the second-largest Star Wars Ultimate Collector Series Lego set to date.