The Arduboy FX-C is an excellent time killer you might forget you’re carrying
The Arduboy FX-C squeezes a lot of entertainment into a thin, credit card-sized handheld. As handheld consoles continue to grow and push the limits of what you can actually hold in your hands, the Arduboy FX-C comes in a refreshingly pocketable package. It manages to squeeze the best features of past models and some welcome upgrades into a handheld that’s still no larger or thicker than a few credit cards. It’s the best version of the Arduboy so far, particularly for gamers who want to jump into the handheld’s ever-expanding library of games and apps right out of the box, but one of its most compelling upgrades isn’t quite ready for primetime. The original Arduboy was a Tetris-playing business card created by Kevin Bates to show off his electronics skills. It went viral in 2014 prompting Bates to turn the idea into a commercial device a year later that was both a tiny open-source gaming device and...
The Arduboy FX-C squeezes a lot of entertainment into a thin, credit card-sized handheld. As handheld consoles continue to grow and push the limits of what you can actually hold in your hands, the Arduboy FX-C comes in a refreshingly pocketable package. It manages to squeeze the best features of past models and some welcome upgrades into a handheld that’s still no larger or thicker than a few credit cards. It’s the best version of the Arduboy so far, particularly for gamers who want to jump into the handheld’s ever-expanding library of games and apps right out of the box, but one of its most compelling upgrades isn’t quite ready for primetime.The original Arduboy was a Tetris-playing business card created by Kevin Bates to show off his electronics skills. It went viral in 2014 prompting Bates to turn the idea into a commercial device a year later that was both a tiny open-source gaming device and a tool that could help would-be developers learn to code.
Arduboy FX-C
Where to Buy:
$79 at Amazon
$79 at Arduboy
After over a decade of minor iterations, the Arduboy FX-C looks very much like the original. The controls are limited to six b***ons, four of which function as a D-pad. They have a minimal amount of travel given the device is just 5mm thin, but a satisfying amount of click when pressed. The piezoelectric speaker is high pitched but more than loud enough, and its 1.3-inch, 1-bit OLED screen is bright enough to be playable outdoors.While the 37-year-old original Game Boy could display four shades of greenish-gray, the Arduboy FX-C’s screen is monochromatic and limited to only white pixels. Developers have to rely on visual tricks like dithering or flickering to create grayscale graphics. Equally limiting is the FX-C’s ATmega32u4 processor that’s paired with just 2.5KB of RAM. Compared to other black-and-white handhelds like the Playdate, the Arduboy FX-C feels primitive but its limitations have forced game developers to get creative and experimental, which is a big part of this platform’s appeal.My biggest frustration with the original Arduboy was its minimal storage that had me regularly connecting the device to my laptop when I wanted to play a different game. In 2020, Bates introduced the Arduboy FX with an extra flash chip on board that could hold 250 games. The FX-C inherits that chip, but a slightly larger version, bumping its included library of games to over 300, while also upgrading the device from microUSB to USB-C.It’d be nice if the FX-C had a color screen, a proper D-pad, dedicated volume b***ons, an improved sound chip, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and even a microSD card slot, but none of those upgrades really feel necessary. It’s a handheld that feels pared down to the absolute bare necessities for gaming, but it works.A tiny switch on the top edge of the FX-C powers up the handheld but it can occasionally be a challenge if, like me, your fingernails are short. After a near instant boot up, you’re presented with a simple homescreen and menu system. The bundled games are sorted into several categories including Action, Adventure, Arcade, Runner, Puzzle, and Racing you cycle through by scrolling left and right. Games in each category are instead scrolled vertically by pressing up or down. It’s simple and easy to navigate, however I would like to see one additional category that lists all the games alphabetically.All of the games that have been developed for the Arduboy are distributed for free, so you’re not going to find any classic 8-bit games you recognize like Super Mario Bros. or Castlevania that Nintendo is still making available on platforms like its Switch. But there are plenty of excellent doppelgängers that are similar enough to scratch a nostalgic itch while also being unique enough to keep lawyers at bay. Surprisingly, despite the FX-C’s limited processing power, there are far more than just side-scrollers and falling block puzzle games included. You’ll also find first-person shooters, dungeon crawlers, and racing games with excellent frame rates.There’s a lot of fun to be had, but don’t expect games that will take you weeks to finish. The Arduboy FX-C is better suited for quick pick-up-and-play sessions when you’ve got a few minutes to kill.Unfortunately, the feature that convinced me to buy a pair of FX-Cs isn’t quite ready. I haven’t been able to get multiplayer over USB to work, although some users on the Arduboy community forums have been successful. Bates says the feature is still in development. Arduboy multiplayer cleverly takes advantage of the extra conductors on modern USB cables to pass game data back and forth, as Bates explains in a forum post, but it requires a more expensive USB 3.0 or Thunderbolt cable to work. After testing several different USB 3.0 cables from Amazon, I’ve had no success. It’s a feature I know can work and I expect hiccups to be sorted out eventually, but if that’s your only reason for grabbing a pair of FX-Cs, I’d hold off for now.The Arduboy FX-C is still a solid upgrade. The original was one of the last devices I had to keep microUSB cables around for, but the huge collection of bundled games sourced from the Arduboy development community is the real reason to snag one. I’ve barely tried 10 percent of them at this point, and while the quality varies, it’s hard to feel disappointed when you’re not actually paying for them. A console is only as good as its library of games, and over the past decade, the Arduboy has managed to cultivate a devoted community developing hundreds. If you go in with an open mind and don’t worry about what it’s missing, you’ll absolutely enjoy this handheld.Photography by Andrew Liszewski / The Verge
Windows XP wasn’t better, it was just simpler — and Windows 11 forgot that lesson
Windows XP has been out of support for over 12 years now. Despite that, people still run Windows XP, and many fondly remember it as one of the best Windows iterations to date. It wasn't the most secure or even the most powerful, if we look at it in present...
Windows XP has been out of support for over 12 years now. Despite that, people still run Windows XP, and many fondly remember it as one of the best Windows iterations to date. It wasn't the most secure or even the most powerful, if we look at it in present terms, but there was something unique about Windows XP that every discussion about Windows somehow circles back to. If you ask me, it was simplicity that made Windows XP a hit.
Michael Johnson Chicago
Published by: aplhsindia.in
I built a local voice a**istant that doesn’t need the internet, and it actually understands me
Any smart home user knows the familiar irritation of asking a cloud-based smart speaker to turn off a desk lamp. You will find that the audio is recorded, shipped over the internet to a corporate data center, processed, and then sent back. When it fails, you get the spinning red...
Any smart home user knows the familiar irritation of asking a cloud-based smart speaker to turn off a desk lamp. You will find that the audio is recorded, shipped over the internet to a corporate data center, processed, and then sent back. When it fails, you get the spinning red or orange ring of doom and a robotic voice complaining about connection issues. If it succeeds, you will find that it took so much longer to turn off your desk lamp than if you had just gotten up and done it yourself.
Jane Smith Los Angeles
Published by: aplhsindia.in
The Steam Deck taught PC handheld makers the wrong lesson
If you take a look at the modern handheld landscape with devices like the ROG Ally X, the Lenovo Legion Go, and the MSI Claw, the numbers are just jaw-dropping, with 8-core CPUs, 24GB of DDR5 RAM, and massive screens. On paper, these devices absolutely annihilate the Steam Deck's aging...
If you take a look at the modern handheld landscape with devices like the ROG Ally X, the Lenovo Legion Go, and the MSI Claw, the numbers are just jaw-dropping, with 8-core CPUs, 24GB of DDR5 RAM, and massive screens. On paper, these devices absolutely annihilate the Steam Deck's aging custom APU, but in practice you plug them in, boot up a game, and watch the battery drain 1% every minute while the fans shriek like a server rack.
Naja Madsen Denmark
Published by: aplhsindia.in
I made Claude Code worse by giving it too much freedom, and here’s how to keep it laser focused
I don't really need to convince you that AI tools go haywire pretty easily. You ask them a simple question, they give you an answer that answers nothing you actually asked. You ask them to tidy up your desktop, they wipe the whole thing. At a company called PocketOS, a...
I don't really need to convince you that AI tools go haywire pretty easily. You ask them a simple question, they give you an answer that answers nothing you actually asked. You ask them to tidy up your desktop, they wipe the whole thing. At a company called PocketOS, a Claude-powered coding agent casually deleted the entire production database in nine seconds when doing a routine check. When the founder asked what had happened, the agent confessed that they had guessed instead of verifying it. All that to say, an AI agent going haywire and making bad decisions is a very real concern right now.
Becky Pierce Australia
Published by: aplhsindia.in
Forget hunting for working CRTs, this is how I nailed the retro look for my emulation catalog
It's always exciting to wake up one day and remember a game you used to play. You download it immediately, but the joy lasts only 10 minutes until the first Game Over screen, after which you promptly forget about it. Part of that comes down to how these old games...
It's always exciting to wake up one day and remember a game you used to play. You download it immediately, but the joy lasts only 10 minutes until the first Game Over screen, after which you promptly forget about it. Part of that comes down to how these old games were actually meant to look. There were a lot of rough edges in older games that motion blur, pixel art, and the softness of CRT displays helped to mask. Playing them on a razor-sharp modern monitor can sometimes make them feel... sterile.
Jane Smith Los Angeles
Published by: aplhsindia.in
My Fire TV Stick is infinitely better ever since I enabled this hidden setting
By default, Amazon locks your device down to its curated ecosystem. This means you miss out on powerful media players, custom launchers, and niche streaming tools.
By default, Amazon locks your device down to its curated ecosystem. This means you miss out on powerful media players, custom launchers, and niche streaming tools.
Leif Smedstad Norway
Published by: aplhsindia.in
Windows won the desktop by being compatible with everything, but that’s starting to look like a drawback
When comparing Windows, macOS, and Linux, Microsoft's offering has one gigantic advantage: 99.9% of PC apps work on it. While Linux has made a ton of headway with Wine, and macOS has its own exclusive apps, stuff just runs on Windows the vast majority of the time. If you want...
When comparing Windows, macOS, and Linux, Microsoft's offering has one gigantic advantage: 99.9% of PC apps work on it. While Linux has made a ton of headway with Wine, and macOS has its own exclusive apps, stuff just runs on Windows the vast majority of the time. If you want to run something like Claude Code, a new video game, or any powerful app, there's an extremely good chance it has a native Windows app, and a very low chance that it has any others.
Mar Fuentes Spain
Published by: aplhsindia.in
Your old gaming PC is overkill for a home server, and that’s exactly why it’s perfect
If you’ve been a part of the PC master race for as long as I have, you’ve probably upgraded your gaming machine enough times to have some spare hardware lying around. Or maybe you skipped the Ship of Theseus situation altogether by replacing your entire system with a shiny new...
If you’ve been a part of the PC master race for as long as I have, you’ve probably upgraded your gaming machine enough times to have some spare hardware lying around. Or maybe you skipped the Ship of Theseus situation altogether by replacing your entire system with a shiny new PC. Either way, if you’re not actively using your old gaming companion, there are a bunch of ways to breathe some new life into it – like turning it into a home server.
Emily Brown Houston
Published by: aplhsindia.in
I’ve started sharing NotebookLM notebooks with friends instead of just my notes
NotebookLM has long exceeded expectations in the functionality department, making it easier to use than any other publicly available LLM with user-added guardrails to perform similarly. Although this AI tool shares the Gemini LLMs with other Gemini-branded Google utilities, its standout feature remains minimal hallucinated info in results because each...
NotebookLM has long exceeded expectations in the functionality department, making it easier to use than any other publicly available LLM with user-added guardrails to perform similarly. Although this AI tool shares the Gemini LLMs with other Gemini-branded Google utilities, its standout feature remains minimal hallucinated info in results because each notebook is limited to the sources you're supplying.
John Doe New York
Published by: aplhsindia.in
I canceled ChatGPT, Claude, and Copilot subscriptions just to go back to this powerful AI tool
It’s easy to get caught up in the LLM race. For a while, my monthly credit card statement read like a lineup of premium AI subscriptions: ChatGPT Plus, Claude Pro, and Microsoft 365 Premium with Copilot.
It’s easy to get caught up in the LLM race. For a while, my monthly credit card statement read like a lineup of premium AI subscriptions: ChatGPT Plus, Claude Pro, and Microsoft 365 Premium with Copilot.
Sophia Wilson Atlanta
Published by: aplhsindia.in
Welcome to Night Vale host Cecil Baldwin shares his tech pet peeves
Cecil Baldwin is a busy man with some dope boots. | Image: Cecil Baldwin Cecil Baldwin's résumé includes appearances on Gravity Falls, narrating the documentary Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street, and performing as part of the New York Neo-Futurists theater company. But he is best known as the...
Cecil Baldwin is a busy man with some dope boots. | Image: Cecil Baldwin Cecil Baldwin's résumé includes appearances on Gravity Falls, narrating the documentary Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street, and performing as part of the New York Neo-Futurists theater company. But he is best known as the host of the podcast Welcome to Night Vale, a long-running fiction show that blends macabre Lovecraftian horror with absurdist comedy. As Cecil Palmer, the voice of Night Vale Community Radio, Baldwin keeps the people of the titular town abreast of all the goings ons with the Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Home and offers tips on how to best maintain their Bloodstone circles. He also cohosts Random Nu …Read the full story at The Verge.
John Doe New York
Published by: aplhsindia.in
Backrooms is a certified blockbuster with a $38 million opening day
The Kane Parsons' film Backrooms is expected to earn up to $90 million in its opening weekend after pulling down $38 million on Friday alone. That's not only above expectations, but absolutely obliterates A24's previous opening weekend record of $25.5 million for Alex Garland's Civil War. It's also a better...
The Kane Parsons' film Backrooms is expected to earn up to $90 million in its opening weekend after pulling down $38 million on Friday alone. That's not only above expectations, but absolutely obliterates A24's previous opening weekend record of $25.5 million for Alex Garland's Civil War. It's also a better opening day than The Mandalorian and Grogu, which only pulled down $33.7 million on its way to a total $81.6 million for the weekend. That also means that Backrooms is an incredibly profitable movie, with an estimated $10 million budget. By comparison, the latest Star Wars disappointment cost $165 million and was considered affordable c …Read the full story at The Verge.