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Playdate Season 2 review: Shadowgate PD and CatchaDiablos

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Earlier in this Playdate season, I commented in a review that I “love a game that pisses me off a little.” Well, I may have shot myself in the foot with that one. Week four of Playdate Season Two brings us not one game that got my blood boiling, but two. CatchaDiablos is a roguelike with a unique movement mechanic that is both pretty cool and absolutely infuriating: running in circles with the crank. Shadowgate PD, on the other hand, is a remade-for-Playdate version of the classic point-and-click adventure that’s filled with tricky puzzles and hidden death traps.

This week is not for the faint of heart. Am I having fun? Yes. Am I suffering? Also yes. I haven’t yet had a chance to check out the latest update to Blippo+ because I’ve been fighting for my life with these two titles, but I sure am looking forward to turning my brain off soon and getting lost in that strange, strange world as a treat after all this.

A still from the Playdate game CatchaDiablosA still from the Playdate game CatchaDiablos

Amano

Amano, the developer behind CatchaDiablos, kind of has a knack for games featuring unusual methods of movement. Amano previously gave us Pullfrog Deluxe, a Tetris-like (that I highly recommend checking out) in which you rearrange falling blocks as a frog that pulls stuff around using its tongue. In CatchaDiablos, things are a bit more complicated. You play as something of a demon wrangler on an unnamed moon, rounding up “Diablos” that are scattered all over the place. Of course, as any witch knows, the way to do this is by drawing a chalk circle around the entity, so that’s exactly what you do. But, following the chalk line is also the only way you can move.

CatchaDiablos basically throws you right into the deep end. There is a very brief tutorial at the beginning to introduce you to the idea of traveling along an arc of pre-determined length, but then you’re on your own to take on swarms of the little devils. To make a circle, you aim using the crank and, once you’ve got the outline placed where you want it, you hold the A button to draw. You have to draw a complete circle around a monster (or a group of monsters, for more points) in order to catch it, but when it comes to moving, you can stop the drawing at any point and you’ll only move as far as the chalk extends.

Doing this while trying not to run into any Diablos — you take damage every time one touches you — is hard. It gets even harder when some of those Diablos start firing projectiles at you, and they’re surrounding you in greater and greater numbers. Everything descends into chaos and it becomes really difficult to try and think fast enough to outmaneuver the Diablos while also trying to run in haphazard half-circles by swinging the crank. And after some time has passed (three eyes at the top of the screen will open), a boss will show up to make things even worse. This is a roguelike, so once your health is depleted, you’re dead for good and have to start it all over.

I want to be clear: I really, really like this game. I found it hard to put down once I got going, and it’s another fun example of how the crank can be used in unexpected ways. It’s just kicking my ass. A lot. CatchaDiablos isn’t entirely unforgiving, though. As you catch monsters, a status bar on the right side of the screen will start to fill up, and you’ll eventually be rewarded with power-ups that can dramatically improve your odds. These come in the form of discs that will pop up in random places and bring perks like extra health spaces, the ability to draw a wider chalk circle and faster movement.

Roguelikes aren’t for everyone, but if you are into them, this is a great one for the Playdate. As a plus, there’s a “Diablory” bestiary of sorts where you can see drawings of every type of creature you’ve encountered so far. You can access this from the title menu, and it’s really worth flipping through after you’ve sunk a good deal of time into the game.

A still from the Playdate game ShadowgateA still from the Playdate game Shadowgate

Pixel Ghost

“You seem to be wasting your time.” It wasn’t exactly a good sign for me when Shadowgate hit me with this message repeatedly in the first room of the damn game, where I found myself stuck for much longer than I’d like to admit and clicking on literally everything in my desperation. Anyone familiar with Shadowgate (1987) or the NES version (or the several other versions beyond that) might already have been braced for the difficult path forward from the get-go, but as someone who never played the original… let’s just say we got off to a rougher start than expected. Such a rough start that I was forced to do something I generally avoid at all costs: look for a guide online.

So, I must concede that while I have navigated the treacherous castle halls, I had a good amount of help in doing so, which makes it feel like much less of an accomplishment. Bruised ego aside, though, Shadowgate makes for a really cool game on the Playdate. You must explore the castle room by room, solving puzzles, picking up keys and items to access locked areas along the way, defeating enemies and generally just trying not to die. It’s a lesson in persistence, really.

There are many different ways to die, and much of the fun in games like these for me lies in keeping track of all those that I succumb to. There are the classic deaths, like plummeting after a floor suddenly drops away or getting incinerated by a dragon, and then the silly, unexpected ones, like tripping in the dark and falling flat on my face… fatally. (You really need to pay attention to your torch use). Thankfully, you’ll be revived in the room where you died so you don’t lose too much progress every time. The art and music really elevate the whole experience. The atmosphere is just right.



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Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 dummy looks svelte in hands-on video

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Not long after our first round of renders for Samsung’s upcoming foldable, we’re getting a glimpse of a Galaxy Z Fold 7 dummy unit that really puts this year’s rumored changes into perspective.

Korean YouTube channel TheSINZA uploaded a full hands-on video with a Z Fold 7 dummy unit, complete with comparisons to last year’s Z Fold 6 and the China-and-Korea-exclusive Z Fold SE. After years of minimal changes to Samsung’s foldable design — all while competitors caught up and, in many ways, surpassed the Z Fold series — it’s clear Samsung is taking its fellow challengers seriously with this phone.

In many ways, this video confirms what yesterday’s renders already promised us. This is a significantly slimmer, larger foldable than the Z Fold 6, measuring in at just 4.5mm when unfolded. That’s slightly bulkier than what initial reports had suggested, but still equates to a sub-10mm folding phone, which I’d argue is the modern standard. The design changes introduced last year — the squared edges, the slick metal frame — are all sticking around for another generation, making for what I think is a pretty excellent looking smartphone.

The Z Fold 7 dummy unit next to the Z Fold 6 head on

Still, there are downsides to making a foldable that’s not much bulkier than a Galaxy S25 Ultra. The camera module, for example, protrudes extremely far out from the phone’s back, so don’t expect a stable desktop experience without a case. Likewise, the volume rocker and power button — which doubles as the fingerprint sensor — both look pretty slim, even by foldable standards. It’s tough to say if that could cause issues when using the phone without holding it ourselves.

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If it wasn’t for the slimmer chassis, the sheer increase in size is likely what would catch our eye in the first place. Compared to the 6.3-inch outer panel on the Z Fold 6, the Z Fold 7 looks more in line with the Galaxy S25 Ultra than its actual predecessor. Samsung has long been the sole holdout on bringing a standard display shape to the front of its Z Fold-series, even as rivals like OnePlus and Google flocked to this design. With the Galaxy Z Fold 7, you’re looking at a pretty standard display.

We’ve still got a few weeks left to go until Samsung’s rumored July 9th Unpacked event, but so far, the Z Fold 7 is stacking up to be the change plenty of us have wanted from the company for generations.

Judging by the leaks, what do you think of this foldable so far?

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Country music legend refunds all tickets mid-show, saying ‘I don’t give a damn’

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It hasn’t been the best month for one of country music’s greats.

Luke Bryan had a viral moment, and not in a good way, recently when he forgot the lyrics to his hit “Strip it Down” during a show in Orlando.

This week, at a show in Arkansas, Bryan’s voice was giving him trouble.

“This is the weirdest thing I’ve ever dealt with in my life,” Bryan said, as seen in a TikTok video taken at the Thursday show on June 19. “I cannot have my voice in this venue for some reason. It happens every time. I don’t know why.”

Bryan went on to thank fans for coming out year after year to see him perform.

“So I don’t give a damn. I’m going to refund everbody their tickets tonight, and we’re going to keep doing the damn show, OK?” he said, referencing that he had once seen fellow country star Luke Combs do the same thing.

His voice is scratchy during the exchange with fans.

“So we’re going to make the most of it,” he said. “Let’s do it.”

One comment on the video referenced “Arkansas allergies” as a possible reason for Bryan’s voice troubles.

“Arkansas allergies takin everybody out,” the comment read.

Several people commented in agreement:

“You ain’t kidding!!!” one read. “I’ve been coughing for 10 days straight,” wrote another.

In a Facebook post on Friday, the day after the show, Bryan wrote that “due to illness” he was rescheduling two shows this weekend in Dallas, Texas, and Lafayette, Louisiana. He will play Lafayette on Sept. 11 and Dallas on Sept. 12.

“Please hold on to your tickets — they will be honored for the new dates. Thank you for your understanding,” he wrote.

Bryan is currently on his “Country Song Come On Tour.” The tour includes an Aug. 8 show at Xfinity Center in Mansfield. Fans can shop for tickets using reliable third-party ticket sellers like StubHub , VividSeats and SeatGeek.





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Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab closes on $2B at $10B valuation

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Thinking Machines Lab, the secretive AI startup founded by OpenAI’s former chief technology officer Mira Murati, has closed a $2 billion seed round, according to The Financial Times. The deal values the 6-month-old startup at $10 billion. 

The company’s work remains unclear. The startup has leveraged Murati’s reputation and other high-profile AI researchers who have joined the team to attract investors in what could be the largest seed round in history. According to sources familiar with the deal cited by the FT, Andreessen Horowitz led the round, with participation from Sarah Guo’s Conviction Partners. 

Murati left OpenAI last September after leading the development of some of the company’s most prominent AI products, including ChatGPT, DALL-E, and voice mode. Several of her former OpenAI colleagues have joined the new startup, including co-founder John Schulman.

Murati is one of a handful of executives who left OpenAI after raising concerns about CEO Sam Altman’s leadership in 2023. When the board ousted Altman in November of that year, Murati served as interim CEO before Altman was quickly reinstated.



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NYC proposes 5 percent raise for rideshare drivers in a bid to appease Uber and Lyft

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New York City’s Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) have settled on new minimum-wage rules for rideshare drivers, Bloomberg reports. Drivers will receive a five percent raise under the new proposal, a compromise to keep Uber and Lyft from locking drivers out of their apps.

The proposal needs to be voted on by the TLC’s board of commissioners before it goes into effect, but assuming it does, it’ll end months of uncertainty for drivers working in the city. Uber began sporadically locking drivers out of its app in May 2024, preventing them taking rides and earning money. The company was blocking access to its app to avoid having to pay drivers who were working but not actively taking rides. Besides introducing a minimum wage for drivers that started around $18 per hour in 2022, New York also included stipulations in its law that required drivers be paid for the downtime between rides, something Uber and Lyft naturally had a problem with.

Bloomberg writes that the TLC initially proposed a 6.1 percent raise in an attempt to disincentivize Uber and Lyft from locking drivers out. The proposal would adjust how driver pay is calculated, in exchange for an upfront raise and a guarantee that drivers are warned before they lose access to a rideshare app. Settling on a five percent raise and a commitment to not raise wages yearly and instead based “changing industry dynamics,” is a further capitulation. One that’s still not enough for Lyft, apparently. The company told Bloomberg that, “while these changes are a step in the right direction, we still have concerns that the underlying pay formula will still deprive drivers of earning opportunities, drive up prices for riders and reduce ride availability.”

Uber and Lyft have long had a contentious relationship with city and state governments over driver protections. In comparison to the passing of Prop 22 in California, which reclassified gig workers as contractors after another law did the opposite, even a diminished minimum wage law in New York is better than nothing.



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Every Google app with the fullscreen Account switcher redesign

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Google is redesigning the Account switcher that appears in the top-right corner of every first-party app to be a fullscreen experience instead of a floating window that preserves context.

Update 6/20: With Gmail, most Google Workspace apps are now using the fullscreen Account switcher.


Original 5/26: This gives the UI more space than before and matches the experience on the web. Your email address appears in the very first line. That’s followed by a larger circular avatar, greeting (“Hi, [name]!”), and “Manage your Google Account” button. The “Switch account” dropdown appears next on this page.

Old vs. new

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With Material 3 Expressive, the background uses a much more vibrant shade of Dynamic Color. In most apps, the Google Account switcher is used for nothing but its namesake. This is the case with Workspace apps.

Other apps without nav drawers use this menu to list key navigation elements, including settings. In these cases, you get a “More from [app]” heading to remind users where they are. 

My main complaint with this redesign is that it removes spatial context by making the Account switcher a fullscreen interface when it doesn’t necessarily need to be. You’re very much taken out of the app you’re using. Fortunately, you can skip this page and still swipe up/down on the corner switcher like before.


As of today, 16 first-party apps have the fullscreen Google Account switcher redesign on Android:

[New] Gmail

[New] Google Calendar

[New] Google Chat

Google Docs

Google Drive

Google Home: Help, Feedback

Google Keep

Google Maps: Turn on Incognito mode, Your profile, Your Timeline, Location sharing, Offline maps, Add your business, Your data in Maps, Settings, Help & feedback

Google News: Notifications, My Activity, News settings, Help & feedback 

Google Sheets

Google Slides

Google Tasks: Settings, Help & feedback

Google Translate: Saved transcripts, History, Downloaded languages, Settings, Help & feedback

[New] Google TV: Manage services, My Activity, Google TV settings, Help & feedback

Google Wallet: Wallet tips, Payment setup, Payment methods, Password manager, Your data in Wallet, Settings, Help & feedback

[New] Pixel Tips

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Kristian Campbell, other Red Sox refute ‘false’ reports Rafael Devers took issue with rookie learning 1B

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SAN FRANCISCO — Much has been said — and written — about Rafael Devers’ final months with the Red Sox in the five days since Boston sent him to the Giants. Amidst it all, there’s one narrative that has people on both sides quite confused.

In the wake of the Devers’ trade, reports surfaced that the three-time All-Star was upset that rookie Kristian Campbell had been willing to learn first base on the fly, which Devers was not. The anecdote stood out as an example of Devers poisoning the proverbial well and aiding a poor clubhouse culture. But as ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported Friday — and multiple sources on both sides of the messy divorce have said over the last few days — Devers took no such stance on Campbell. Even Campbell himself, on his first day in Worcester after being demoted on Triple-A called the reports “false.”

“That was false,” Campbell said. “First off, Raffy never came to me. I never had a problem with it. We were always cool. He’s an extremely great player, extremely great person. He’s a very kind person and a good teammate.”

“Second, I would say I’ve never went to the Red Sox to to to first base,” Campbell said. “They came to me and asked me if could play first base, because we didn’t have one at the time, that’s when Casas went down. I said if it would make the team better, I’ll be willing to play that position.”

Red Sox sources, in the wake of the Devers trade, do cite fostering a team-first culture that rubs off on young players like Campbell, Roman Anthony and Marcelo Mayer as a huge factor in shopping — and eventually dealing Devers. Inarguably, team brass thought it was important that a young team didn’t view Devers’ reluctance to switch positions, on multiple occasions (and public feuding with the team) as anything resembling normal or acceptable. While that’s true, nothing as overt as Devers expressing his frustration with Campbell — or expressing that to the rookie in any capacity — took place. Devers mostly kept to himself in his final weeks in Boston and despite his own disdain for the club’s communication with him, wasn’t one to interfere in the business of others.

“I didn’t say anything like that,” he said Friday at Oracle Park. “I really don’t want to talk about it. I just want to concentrate on what’s ahead for me.”

Campbell did not — as the reports contend — volunteer to play first. The Red Sox, in the mode of exploring options after Devers refused to take ground balls at the position and with a platoon of Romy Gonzalez and Abraham Toro as their short-term option at the position, asked the versatile Campbell if he could do it. The 22-year-old, who has already logged time at second base, center field and left field as a rookie, was amenable.

“Got to learn the position, obviously. It’s gonna take some time,” he said on May 16 as pregame workouts at first base began. “But it’s something I’m willing to do to help the team.”

The Red Sox eventually tabled the Campbell-to-first experiment for two reasons. One, Toro was producing offensively and the platoon was working better than expected. Perhaps most importantly, working Campbell out at first base was, in large part, designed to open up second base for Marcelo Mayer, who was producing at Triple-A. Once Alex Bregman went down with a quad injury and Mayer came up to replace him at third base, there was no need to shoehorn a spot for him.

Campbell will play some first base now that he’s in Worcester as the Red Sox try to make him as versatile as possible. There, no one will scoff at his positional crash course, much like no one did in Boston last month.

“I never heard about it until it came out,” Cora said of the Devers/Campbell reports Friday. “I talked to K.C. two days ago. First thing’s first: He didn’t volunteer. I asked him to do it. So let’s put that one to rest. With that, I don’t know how accurate that is.”



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Rippling spy says men have been following him, and his wife is afraid

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If becoming a spy sounds like an exciting way to live like a Le Carré character, let this newest affidavit from confessed Rippling spy Keith O’Brien serve as a warning.

On Friday, an Irish judge granted O’Brien a restraining order against several men who have not yet been identified, according to the court order seen by TechCrunch. O’Brien testified that multiple men – two in a gray Skoda Superb on one occasion, and more often, a short-haired, heavy-set man in a black SUV, sometimes accompanied by a large dog – had repeatedly followed his car and watched his home.

O’Brien’s story has captured the imagination of the tech industry after his colorful confession in April, in which he alleged that he was a spy for Deel. He said he was paid €5,000 a month to steal Rippling’s internal data on everything from products to customers. Rippling caught him by setting up a honeypot Slack channel. On the day he was caught, O’Brien pretended to flush his phone down the corporate toilet and later smashed it, dropping pieces down the drain at his mother-in-law’s house, according to his affidavit. 

Now he’s the star witness for Rippling in its lawsuit against Deel. Rippling is even picking up the tab for his legal and related expenses, its lawyers testified. Deel is also countersuing Rippling, claiming it was spied on too, by a Rippling employee impersonating a customer. The two HR tech companies have been bitter rivals for years after Deel – once a Rippling customer – began offering competing products. 

In the latest part of the saga, O’Brien testified that he tried to lose the black SUV following his car by making sudden turns and taking roundabout ways to get home, only to see it reappear in his rearview mirror. He hired a security consulting company and feared that someone was placing tracking devices on his car.

O’Brien claims all of these incidents have created “emotional and psychological” damage for himself and his wife. “We have been experiencing anxiety at home and in public. It has affected our sleep and our concentration,” O’Brien said in his latest affidavit. They are fearful for the safety of their four children.

He and his lawyer speculated that this was intended as harassment related to his role as star witness. However, O’Brien’s lawyer also admitted in court that they had no evidence tying the men to Deel. Deel also denied knowing anything about the man in the black SUV.

According to the Irish publication Business Post, when granting the injunction, the judge apparently said, “As if they are in a 1970s cops and robbers” TV show. 

Whatever happens in the dueling court cases, O’Brien has made himself the rope in a bitter tug of war between these two well-funded HR startups. And from what he says in his testimony, it sounds painful.



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Remembering Edmund White, a writer who chronicled gay life and culture


Growing up, White tried to “cure” his own homosexuality; he later drew upon that time for his 1982 bestseller, A Boy’s Own Story. White died June 3. Originally broadcast in 1985, 1994, 1997 and 2006.





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Windows parental controls are blocking Chrome

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Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Microsoft is making it harder to use Chrome on Windows. The culprit? This time, it’s Windows’ Family Safety feature. Since early this month, the parental control measure has prevented users from opening Chrome. Strangely, no other apps or browsers appear to be affected.

Redditors first reported the issue on June 3 (via The Verge). u/Witty-Discount-2906 posted that Chrome crashed on Windows 11. “Just flashes quickly, unable to open with no error message,” they wrote. Another user chimed in with a correct guess. “This may be related to Parental Controls,” u/duk242 surmised. “I’ve had nine students come see the IT Desk in the last hour saying Chrome won’t open.”

A Google spokesperson pointed Engadget to a statement in its community forum. “Our team has investigated these reports and determined the cause of this behavior,” Community Manager Ellen T. wrote. “For some users, Chrome is unable to run when Microsoft Family Safety is enabled.”

Curiously, Microsoft hasn’t fixed the bug after 17 days. (Go figure!)

Screenshot from the Windows Family Safety app. Tiles for family members.Screenshot from the Windows Family Safety app. Tiles for family members.

Microsoft

Windows Family Safety is an optional parental control feature for families and schools. It lets them manage children’s screen time, filter their web browsing and monitor their activity.

There are a couple of workarounds while we wait for the company to take action. One is to turn off the “Filter Inappropriate Websites” setting in Family Safety. However, that removes the security feature, letting the kids run wild on the World Wide Web. (Weeee!!) A simpler fix is to navigate to your Chrome folder and rename chrome.exe to something like chrome1.exe.

Engadget emailed Microsoft for a comment. We haven’t heard back, but we’ll update this story if we do.

If you’ve ever installed Chrome on Windows, this bug may trigger deja vu. Microsoft has a long history of desperate tricks to keep you on its default products. That has included obnoxious prompts, pop-up ads for Bing and begging users to stick with Edge. At least European users will get some relief. Microsoft is scaling back its cheap tactics there to comply with EU regulations.



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