Bowling alleys are all about the crash of pins, the rumble of balls speeding down shiny lanes, and the occasional cheers as well as sighs from players. But what’s it like to be the ball? Corridor Crew, a YouTube channel famous for their visual effects wizardry, decided to find out. In their latest stunt, bowling nut Wren Weichman and engineering genius Erik Beck stuffed an 8K Insta360 X5 camera into a clear bowling ball, capturing a wild, first-person ride that’s as thrilling as it is eye-opening.
The Lenovo Legion Go handheld gaming PC is a nice alternative for those looking for a machine that doubles as a full-fledged computer, and you can get one for $499.99 shipped today, originally $699.99. This machine packs an 8.8-inch QHD+ (2560 x 1600) IPS touchscreen with a 144Hz refresh rate, dwarfing the 7-inch panels on competitors like the Steam Deck and ASUS ROG Ally. Product page.
Meet the Unihertz Titan 2, a rugged Android beast with a physical keyboard that channels the BlackBerry Passport’s vibe while packing enough modern tech to hold its own. Its Kickstarter campaign quickly exceeded its $100,000 goal, proving there’s still a market for smartphones that break away from standard design.
A Toyota Corolla became an unlikely stunt car in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, when a heatwave turned a quiet road into a ramp. Caught on video by bystander Albert Blackwell, the sedan soared skyward after hitting a buckled pavement.
Microsoft and Meta have teamed up to drop a sleek, limited-edition Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition VR headset that’s all about blending Xbox gaming with a touch of virtual reality. This $399.99 bundle wraps a 128GB Meta Quest 3S in Xbox’s iconic Carbon Black and Velocity Green colors, giving it that unmistakable console colorway.
Curiosity, NASA’s battle-scarred rover, has been exploring the Red Planet since 2012 like a cosmic detective, and now it’s stumbled into a strange area near Mount Sharp. The ground here is etched with boxwork patterns—delicate, crisscrossing ridges that look like nature’s take on a waffle iron.
In 1989, Hudson Soft unveiled a peculiar accessory for NEC’s PC Engine console, a device that feels like a time capsule from an era when saving your game was a luxury, not a given. Meet the Ten no Koe 2, a memory bank that promised to preserve your progress in a world of fleeting passwords and fleeting patience. Its name, translating to “Voice From The Heavens,” nods to a mythical save system from Hudson’s Famicom classic, Momotarou Densetsu.
A little slip-up on Amazon India has the internet talking, and it’s all thanks to Spigen, the case maker that might’ve just spilled Apple’s big 2025 plans. Their listing for a screen protector casually name-dropped the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro, hinting that both phones will rock a 6.3-inch screen. That’s a bigger canvas for the regular iPhone, which has been stuck at 6.1 inches for years.