Nintendo Switch Gets Netflix-Style Classics Library

Nintendo says Switch owners will be able to subscribe to a library of classic games. It’ll be an unlimited use, Netflix style setup.

The service will cost $4 a month, $8 for three months or $20 a year. As well as the classic games, the fee will cover online multiplay, though you’ll need a separate (free) smartphone app to handle the matchmaking and chat features.

The original plan for Nintendo Switch Online was to have one classic game free to play at any time, with the title changing each month. Once a game’s free month was over it would be available for an additional fee.

That didn’t get a great reception so Nintendo is now going for a full library of titles included in the subscription. At launch it will be NES games only and will include Balloon Fight, Dr Mario and Super Mario Bros among others. Nintendo is still weighing up whether to add SNES titles as well. It’s also yet to confirm how regularly titles will be added to the library and if or whether any will be removed.

[Via: Kotaku]



Stranger Things Pocket POP! Keychains

Even though the second season of Stranger Things won’t be here until Halloween 2017, you can still express your love of the show with these super cute pocket keychains!

Never wonder again where you left your keys with one of these Stranger Things Funko Pocket POP! Keychains. At just 1 1/2″ tall, they look like your favorite Funko POP! figure, only tinier, which means you can carry one around instead of leaving them out for display. Choose from Barb, Demogorgon, Dustin, or Eleven, and always have a tiny friend (or Demogorgon, which we assume is not your friend) with you.

[Stranger Things Pocket POP! Keychains]

iPhone Screen Repairs Could Get Easier

Apple is to let third-party repairers use an authorized machine to make it easier to fix cracked iPhone screens. It denies proposed state laws have pressured it into doing so.

The move isn’t so much about simple cracks, but rather those where either the damage itself or the process of restoring it could affect functionality. A key example is when the crack affects fingerprint sensors, which can’t simply be replaced without the phone processor being updated to recognize the new sensor.

Reuters has revealed that Apple stores and repair centers use a dedicated “Horizon Machine” that pairs the sensor and processor, as well as physically testing the touch features of the replacement screen.

By the end of the year those machines will be available to around 400 independently run repair centers, around eight percent of the total. This will include some countries which don’t have any official Apple stores or repair facilities. The testing function will be particularly important given independent repairers have to use non-Apple components.

According to Apple, the move has nothing to do with proposed “right to repair” laws in eight states that would force it to sell official replacement parts and diagnostic tools to repairers and the public, as well as supplying repair manuals. Apple argues that would make life easier for people looking to hack the phones and compromise security.

The World’s Largest Parkour Course [Video]

From Calen Chan:

My name is Calen Chan, and this is a FULL POV RUN of the Skyladder Parkour course at Tianman Mountain in China! I had the wonderful opportunity to come and play here at this beautiful location called Heaven’s Gate. It has an average incline of 45 degrees, and is 999 steps long (about 3 football fields)! Obviously this was difficult, and I physically couldn’t sprint down the entire path of deadly drops without slowing down, but I did my best! I am the only person to do the whole thing with a GoPro in my mouth, so please help a guy out and give it a share! ;)

[Calen Chan]

The USB Cable Placement on This Knock-Off Pikachu Charger is Hilariously Wrong

So yeah, I’m not sure if you’ve noticed, but this knock-off Pikachu charger from China (Where else?) has a rather unfortunatly placed USB cable. Also, the removable ears and the way you need to plug Pikachu in the power outlet screams for disaster, especially if you have young kids at home.

[Source: Octinn | Via NA]