Enhance, the studio that spun Tetris Effect into a hypnotic masterpiece, just pulled back the curtain on Lumines Arise at the June 2025 State of Play, and it’s shaping up to be a dazzling mash-up of music, visuals, and puzzles that’s as easy to pick up as it is tough to put down. If you missed the Lumines craze when it hit the PlayStation Portable back in 2004, it was a rhythm-puzzle lovechild that blended block-dropping with a pulsing soundtrack. Now, 21 years on, Enhance is giving it a modern glow-up that’s ready to mess with your senses in the best way.
Matthew Perks, the inventor behind DIY Perks on YouTube, has a habit of making wild ideas feel real, and his latest project—a desk that wirelessly powers everything from monitors to speakers with zero visible cables—might just be his most innovative project yet. Teaming up with Etherdyne Technologies, Perks has built a workspace that looks ripped from a sci-fi flick, marrying a clean aesthetic with some seriously clever tech.
The HOVERAir X1 selfie drone is great for capturing aerial shots when on vacation, and you can get one for $298.99 shipped, originally $399. Weighing just 125 grams—lighter than most smartphones—and folding down to the size of a small notebook, it slips into a jacket pocket or backpack with ease. Product page.
LG Electronics just dropped a beast of a monitor that’s got finance pros and IT fanatics interested: the LG UltraFine 40WT95UF, a 40-inch 5K2K display that’s the world’s first to rock Thunderbolt 5. This isn’t just a screen—it’s a productivity powerhouse built to handle sprawling spreadsheets, dense code, and everything in between with a mix of crisp visuals, blazing-fast connectivity, and a workspace that feels like a digital playground.
Photo credit: Infestor | CC BY-SA 4.0
The internet’s been chugging along, powering 4K streams, cloud gaming, and AI’s number-crunching frenzy, but its fiber optic backbone is starting to sweat under the load. Enter Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), which just smashed records with a mind-boggling 1.02 petabits per second data transfer over 1,808 kilometers (NYC to Minneapolis or Berlin to Lisbon). That’s enough juice to download Netflix’s entire catalog in one second flat.
June 5, 2025, kicks off a new chapter for handheld gaming with the Nintendo Switch 2 hitting shelves, and before reviews could even drop, YouTube’s ProModding ripped it apart in a 17-minute teardown video that’s a testament to the console’s revamped design.
Photo credit: MVRDV
A residential tower that looks like it was yanked from the pixelated plains of Minecraft is set to rise in Taipei’s Tianmu neighborhood. Dutch architecture firm MVRDV, known for its boundary-pushing designs, has unveiled Out of the Box, a 25-story residential structure that’s as much a playful nod to blocky aesthetics as it is a clever response to Taiwan’s complex building regulations.
Photo credit: NASA/MSFC/David Higginbotham
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope just gave the Sombrero Galaxy—Messier 104—a mind-blowing makeover, catching this cosmic icon 30 million light-years away in a way that leaves Hubble’s classic shots in the dust. Unlike Hubble’s visible-light pics, where a glowing core and stark dust lane steal the show, Webb’s near-infrared image flips things, spotlighting a dazzling central bulge while the dust fades into the background, building on its trippy mid-infrared view from late 2024.
Photo credit: TechTalkTV
Samsung hints at a device that promises an “Ultra experience,” but is this the Galaxy Z Fold 7, the next iteration of Samsung’s book-style foldable? Or could it be a premium Galaxy Z Fold Ultra, a new flagship flexing its muscles in the foldable arena? Whatever the case may be, it’s rumored to be revealed at the summer Galaxy Unpacked event.
High above the sunny fields of Salinas, California, a futuristic electric aircraft named Midnight carved through the sky last week, marking a pivotal moment for Archer Aviation. This wasn’t just another test flight—it was the first time a human pilot, Archer’s chief test pilot Jeff Greenwood, took the controls of the Midnight eVTOL (electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft). Reaching speeds of 125 mph and climbing to 1,500 feet, the flight showcased the aircraft’s ability to perform a conventional takeoff and landing (CTOL), rolling down a runway like a traditional plane.