Vintage CRT Monitor 4K Gaming
Gamers who remember the old days understand why CRT screens are so popular. Instant responsiveness to every command, no screen tearing, and images that feel alive in a way that newer flat screens cannot match. Found Tech has taken that magic and pushed it all the way to nearly 4K on something you wouldn’t expect, a dusty old IBM 275 monitor that’s been around since the turn of the century.

Dreame Nebula NEXT 01 Jet Edition Electric Supercar
Engineers at Dreame, a Chinese company known for its robot vacuums and hair dryers, chose San Francisco for the American debut of the Nebula NEXT 01 Jet Edition. They parked their five-seat fastback on stage and let the truly amazing figures do the talking. Two solid rockets mounted on the back produce an amazing 100 kilonewtons of thrust in 150 milliseconds flat. That’s in addition to an electric powertrain that produces 1,876 horsepower as standard, with the Jet Edition delivering around 2,000 horsepower.

Anker Prime Power Bank Black Myth Wukong Edition
When Black Myth Wukong fans pick up this special edition Anker Prime power bank, priced at $139.99 (was $199.99), they’ll notice a difference immediately. Anker collaborated with the game developers to create the exterior a look straight out of the game, resulting in a Phantom Black finish with eye-catching raised 3D patterns reminiscent of worn paintings. When you hold it, the combat textures on all sides provide a firm, sticky feel, and the built-in screen comes alive with custom game animations as soon as you start charging.

KitKat Panama Chocolate Wrapper Faraday Cage
People all over the world have experienced taking their phone for a quick check and being lured into a vortex of unending feeds, only to lose half an hour doom scrolling. KitKat Panama collaborated with the Colombian firm Ogilvy to develop Break Mode, a Faraday cage wrapper that keeps the phone’s connection turned off even after you’ve finished the chocolate.

NIO ONVO L80 SUV EV
NIO’s ONVO brand started taking preorders for the L80, a brand new five-seat electric SUV based on the same architecture as the larger L90. Official sales start on May 15th. Early buyers can expect to pay 245,800 yuan ($35,949) for the base model, which includes the battery pack as standard, or 159,800 yuan ($23,371) for the battery-as-a-service plan. That makes the L80 not only a fascinating alternative, but also a relatively reasonable one, as it is currently priced 17,700 yuan ($2,588) lower than a Tesla Model Y in China.