Valve’s latest Steam beta lets you add your PC’s specs to game reviews

An upcoming update to Steam includes a helpful improvement to game reviews. As part of the Steam Client Beta update Valve released on February 12, users will now be able to attach information about their hardware specifications when they post a new game review or update an old one.

It’s not uncommon to find negative reviews that complain about a game’s performance, information that’s hard to draw a conclusion from without knowing what kind of hardware the reviewer is using. With specs attached, the usefulness of complaints becomes a little bit easier to gauge. A game’s sales performance and discoverability on Steam is heavily influenced by its review average, a data point Steam users sometimes manipulate for reasons unconnected to the quality of a game. Provided reviewers actually attach their specs — at least in the beta, the feature is entirely optional — Valve’s mercurial reviews ecosystem could end up becoming more nuanced overall.

Alongside the new option in reviews, Valve is also experimenting with a way for users to share “anonymized framerate data” with the company. When framerate sharing is enabled, “Steam will collect gameplay framerate data, stored without connection to your Steam account but identified with the kind of hardware you are playing on,” Valve says. The feature is specifically focused on devices running SteamOS, Valve’s Linux-based operating system for the Steam Deck and some third-party handhelds. The extra information could help the company’s attempts to improve game compatibility using software like Proton.

The beta update also includes bug fixes, and a tweak to how Valve collects feedback about whether a game should be Deck Verified. Now when Steam prompts you to confirm whether you agree with a game’s rating, if you disagree, you can provide a reason as to why.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/valves-latest-steam-beta-lets-you-add-your-pcs-specs-to-game-reviews-195038078.html?src=rss

John Wick AAA Game Trailer Unleashes High-Octane Action With Keanu Reeves

John Wick AAA Game Trailer Unleashes High-Octane Action With Keanu Reeves
Sony’s PlayStation State of Play conference has several highlights, but one that particularly sticks out to us is the confirmation of a new John Wick AAA game targeted at PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. John Wick has previously been tackled in some lower-budget titles, but this is the first we’ve seen of a full-budget adaptation.

The

These Viture Luma Pro Smart Glasses Are Cheaper Than Ever During Amazon’s Early Presidents Day Sale

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Augmented reality smart glasses blend digital content directly with the physical world, enabling hands-free device use, but a persistent pain point remains: Low brightness can make them unusable in certain settings. Many models max out at 400 to 600 nits, but a rare few exceed that, making them more practical in different conditions—like the Viture Luma Pro AR glasses, which can hit 1,000 nits of brightness.

Right now, the Viture Luma Pro AR glasses are over $200 off during Amazon’s early President’s Day sale, bringing them to an an all-time low of $424 (originally $629).

The Viture Luma Pro glasses earned high marks from PCMag, which labeled them the “brightest smart glasses [we’ve] ever seen.”  This higher peak brightness makes the glasses more functional in well-lit settings. They boast a 52-degree field of view (which translates to a 152-inch virtual screen) and have a 1200p (1920×1200 per eye) resolution with up to a 120Hz refresh rate. Along with a bright picture, they have dimmable lenses and focus adjustment dials for nearsighted users. In real-life testing at max resolution, some blurry edges can occur, these specs deliver deliver a bright, crisp, and sizable digital picture overall. 

On the audio side, the built-in Harman-tuned speakers perform well but may struggle in a very noisy environment. The glasses don’t have integrated head-tracking features, but you can enable 3DOF with the brand’s free SpaceWalker software available for desktop and mobile and compatible with iOS, Android, Windows, and MacOS.

For those seeking a visually impressive monitor or virtual workstation that they can wear on their face (and reliance on software for motion-tracking isn’t a dealbreaker), the Viture Luma Pro AR glasses excel in most areas.

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Spotify Says Its Best Developers Haven’t Written a Line of Code Since December, Thanks To AI

Spotify’s best developers have stopped writing code manually since December and now rely on an internal AI system called Honk that enables remote, real-time code deployment through Claude Code, the company’s co-CEO Gustav Soderstrom said during a fourth-quarter earnings call this week.

Engineers can fix bugs or add features to the iOS app from Slack on their phones during their morning commute and receive a new version of the app pushed to Slack before arriving at the office. The system has helped Spotify ship more than 50 new features throughout 2025, including AI-powered Prompted Playlists, Page Match for audiobooks, and About This Song. Soderstrom credited the system with speeding up coding and deployment tremendously and called it “just the beginning” for AI development at Spotify. The company is building a unique music dataset that differs from factual resources like Wikipedia because music-related questions often lack single correct answers — workout music preferences vary from American hip-hop to Scandinavian heavy metal.


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Lenovo Reveals Ultra-Fast And Capacious 96GB LPCAMM2 Memory At 9600 MT/s

Lenovo Reveals Ultra-Fast And Capacious 96GB LPCAMM2 Memory At 9600 MT/s
Let’s talk memory form factors, friends. You’re surely familiar with DIMMs, and SODIMMs, and maybe you’ve even fooled around with RDIMMs, or LRDIMMs. Well, the number of memory module formats in the computing world has exploded over the last few years. This isn’t an explainer, so we won’t go over all of them, but rather we’ll focus on the

You Can Pick Up a Refurbished Kindle Paperwhite for $115 During Amazon’s Early Presidents Day Sale

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Presidents’ Day sales are around the corner, and the deals are coming in early; right now, Amazon has the latest Kindle Paperwhite from 2024 in “Like-New” conditions for $114.99 (originally $143.99). This Paperwhite in new condition would cost you $159.99, making the refurbished version a much cheaper choice to get while it lasts (discounted Kindle Paperwhites usually sell out quickly).

The Kindle Paperwhite is the most popular reading tablet from Amazon, and it’s the best for most people, according to PCMag’s “outstanding” review. It offers many improvements over the 11th-generation version from 2021—mainly a larger seven-inch display and a much faster boost in performance. It still retains all of the great attributes that made the previous version great, like a fully waterproof design with an IPX8 rating, enough storage to hold more than 10,000 books, and unlimited cloud storage. If you want an ad-free experience with some better features, get the Signature Edition.

If you’re not sure if this is the right Kindle for you, check out the Colorsoft version—it offers color, so it can make reading manga or comics more lively. We also have a breakdown of every kind of Kindle to help you decide. If you already own the 11th generation, there might not be enough here to warrant an upgrade, unless you just want the latest Amazon has to offer. However, any devices older than that may be worth an upgrade for features like Bluetooth compatibility, which is great for audiobooks.

The screen features a 300 ppi (pixels per inch) display with 16 levels of background lighting, and optional warm lighting as well. I use this feature to read before bed and not strain my eyes. I also love the absurdly long battery life. This one is estimated at up to 12 weeks on a single charge, depending on your use and brightness settings.

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How the Race Was Lost: Box Hill Survival (ZRL on London Loop)

Tuesday was the last race of Zwift Racing League Round 3, and we were in London for a two-lapper of the classic London Loop. That meant 30km of racing but, more importantly, two trips up Box Hill! This was going to hurt…

Planning and Warmup

Heading into the race, we were scrambling to line up enough riders. We brought on a new Coalition teammate, Neale, and Captain Neil signed on to race even though he was going to be racing an earlier edition with another Coalition team that was short on riders. So our starting lineup was:

  • Captain Neil
  • Enrico
  • Dylan
  • Neale
  • Fabian
  • Myself

I pulled my S-Works Aethos out of the garage and installed the ENVE 4.5 wheels, because I wanted every advantage I could get on Box Hill. I got out on course early, so I could take my time with a 20-30 minute warmup. Then I signed onto Discord, downed a SIS gel, and got ready to rumble!

Lap 1

63 riders rolled out of the pens to begin the first of two London Loops. We all got feather powerups at the lap arch, and we all tucked them away for safekeeping. We knew what was coming up the road.

The first little effort of the race was short climb (Northumberland Avenue) you hit when you turn a hard right away from the Thames 3.5km into lap one. It wasn’t bad, though – just 30 seconds of slightly higher effort. The feathers still weren’t flying, and none of us was brave enough to attack in earnest this early.

An average of just 250W brought me (and all 63 starters) from the start of the race to the bottom of Box Hill. That’s where the action began.

While I know Box Hill is a ~7-minute effort for me, I don’t think of it that way. Rather, I mentally break it into a few sections:

  • The Lead-In: The bit before we turn a hard right and the climb gets steep. Nobody pushes hard this early.
  • The Steep Bit: The first long stretch averages 7-8% until it eases a bit before the left hairpin. This is where the pack quickly separates and elastic snaps, and it’s where I’ve been dropped in the past. I used my feather to help me hold a good position near the front. Sauce showed the front group had shrunk to 44 by the end of this section.
  • The Middle: When we “zag” back to the left, the pack tends to ease a bit, and the road even flattens momentarily, although it pitches back up and ends up averaging around 5%. Things often come back together a bit in here, but not for long.
  • The Long Haul: Turn a hard right and hit the white painted roads – this is the long final haul to the top. Some riders held their feathers for the end of this bit, which made me work harder than anticipated. I was close to being on my limit, but I also knew what was up the road, so I knew I could push hard here since recovery was waiting. Sauce showed 32 riders left at the top of this section.
  • The Flat Finish: Turn right at the top of the Long Haul, and you’ve got a flattish final 600 meters to the KOM banner. If I’m still in touch with the group at this point, I know I’ve survived the climb. And I was still in touch! Sauce showed 26 left in the group as we went through. This was the selection. This group of 26 would stay together to the end of the race.
Using my feather on the steep bit
On the middle
The Long Haul
90-day Box Hill PR (7:13)!

Instead of the promised anvil powerup at the KOM arch, I saw the standard powerup animation pop up through the KOM arch, flipping between Draft, Aero, and Feather. I got a feather, which I used on the short kicker that comes just before the long descent of Fox Hill.

We all took a big breath as we flew down Fox, put in a quick dig to get up and out of The Underground, then spun our way to the finish of the first lap.

26 riders had survived in the front group… but only 2 of us (Enrico and myself) were Coalition. Clearly, this wasn’t going to be a team win for us, but if I could hang on over the second Box Hill, I would have a shot at the podium. That became my only goal.

Continuing the powerup weirdness, we all got feathers at the end of Tower Bridge (there’s a white line on the road there that acts as a sort of “invisible arch” marking the start of some routes). I could have used my feather right there for a bit of relief, but I wasn’t convinced there was another one waiting for me at the lap banner, and I knew I wanted one for Box Hill. So I just held onto the feather I had.

Lap 2

The lead into Box Hill #2 was unremarkable, with some riders putting in harder pulls on the front, but never hard enough to drop any riders. All 26 of us arrived at the bottom of Box Hill, ready for the next big battle.

This time around, I decided to hold onto my feather until the end of the climb, unless I felt like I was getting dropped. It seemed like everyone else had the same idea: I only saw a couple of feathers fly before we reached the final stretch of The Long Haul near the top of Box Hill.

Even though the second climb was a bit slower (7:25 at 326W average vs the first lap’s 7:13 at 340W average), this second Box Hill effort was tougher than the first. I could feel that I was even closer to being on the limit, but I also knew everyone was suffering. This is bike racing, after all. So I kept digging, and eventually the road flattened, and I was still in the wheels. I’d made it! Hurray!

The powerup spinner at the top gave me a feather, which was not ideal (more on that later). I decided to hold onto it for use on the ramp out of The Underground.

Everyone lit it up on that ramp, so the feather helped. I found myself in 2nd position, in fact, chasing on to a long attack from Allois (TSE). I quickly decided that was a bad idea, though, as my legs needed a break. So I sat up, getting in the wheels, and waited to time my final effort.

As we left the Tower Bridge, we got another feather powerup. I used it right away, hoping it would give me a bit of relief, because I figured it wouldn’t be much help on the downhill finish. I was sitting in 6th in a strung-out group, and Allois was 2 seconds up the road.

With a few hundred meters left, the road tilted down a bit, and the powerups started to fly. First the feathers and the draft boost vans. The near the end, the aero boost helmets. I hammered with all my tired legs had, and came across the line in 8th.

See my ride on Strava >

Watch the Video

Results and Takeaways

I’m going to break this section up for clarity…

Finishing Position Inconsistency

While the on-screen results showed me in 8th, ZwiftPower (and WTRL’s final results) show me in 9th.

In the grand scheme of things, this doesn’t matter much at all. But it could have been a really big deal, because:

  • My team tied with another team (ART) in total points for this race, meaning it goes to whoever had the highest finishing points (not counting podium bonus points). That means ART beats us. But had I finished in 8th, we would have beat ART.
  • It turns out, we held onto 2nd place for Round 3. But just barely (by 2 points).

Look, we all know that, if Zwift wants to be taken seriously in the e-racing space, they need to solidify the finishing position experience. It’s been an issue for a long time. But this particular issue is a weird one I haven’t seen before: how is the game showing one result, while ZwiftPower/WTRL are showing another? That shouldn’t be possible, right? Aren’t both of those based on the same server-side system?

Powerup Madness

Can we talk about powerups… again?

If you watch the finish of this race (video above), you’ll see that nearly all (or possibly all, it’s hard to tell) of the riders who finished ahead of me had draft or aero boost powerups. (Reminder: I had a feather.)

Let me remind you: we were all supposed to get anvils at the KOM arch. Everyone was supposed to get the same powerup, and therefore have the same advantage in the finish.

But that wasn’t the case. A bug/misconfiguration of all the races on the day meant we got a random pick of three powerups at the KOM. I, unfortunately, got a feather. Had I landed a draft or aero boost, I can promise you I would have held onto it for the finish, used it wisely, and finished higher than 8/9th place.

This is the second time in Round 3 that my ZRL result was affected negatively by how powerups were handed out in the race (read about the first time here). And while I’m happy to take the blame for a poor race result, it’s irritating and demotivating to know that the finishes to these races were, in some part, determined by the “luck of the draw.” It shouldn’t work that way.

My opinion: powerups shouldn’t be randomly assigned, unless it’s an event like a Crit City race, where you’ve got lots of chances to get powerups, and thus the choice to use or hold them becomes a strategy in itself.

Personal Performance

I’m happy I survived in the front group in this race, as that was far from a foregone conclusion. Could I have played my cards better for a better result? Probably. Easing a bit more out of The Underground on lap 2, then saving my feather for the final 30 seconds may have gained me a few places.

Apart from that, I’m not sure if I’d change anything else about how I raced this one.

Final Team Result for Round 3

Despite an unimpressive 7th-place finish on the day, my team managed to hold onto 2nd place overall for Round 3. Congrats to TSE, who beat us once again, just like Round 2:

We finished off the round with our traditional team Discord photo:

It was good racing with you lads. See you in Round 4!

What about you?

How did your last race of Round 3 go? Did you win at powerup roulette? Share below!

FTC Ratchets Up Microsoft Probe, Queries Rivals on Cloud, AI

The US Federal Trade Commission is accelerating scrutiny of Microsoft as part of an ongoing probe into whether the company illegally monopolizes large swaths of the enterprise computing market with its cloud software and AI offerings, including Copilot. From a report: The agency has issued civil investigative demands in recent weeks to companies that compete with Microsoft in the business software and cloud computing markets, according to people familiar with the matter. The demands feature an array of questions on Microsoft’s licensing and other business practices, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss a confidential investigation.

With the demands, which are effectively like civil subpoenas, the FTC is seeking evidence that Microsoft makes it harder for customers to use Windows, Office and other products on rival cloud services. The agency is also requesting information on Microsoft’s bundling of artificial intelligence, security and identity software into other products, including Windows and Office, some of the people said.


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The Easiest (and Cheapest) Ways to Turn Your Attic Into Useful Storage Space

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If you own a home with an unfinished attic, you’ve probably thought about all that precious space and how you might make it more useful. Your attic already serves an important purpose in temperature and moisture regulation in the house, of course, but that doesn’t mean it can’t do more. If you’ve got the budget, you can transform an attic into a bedroom or office space, or a crisp, well-lit storage option.

If you don’t have the budget to really build out your attic, though, you can still make it into a more useful space, even if it’s small or slightly scary. With just a few modest purchases (and possibly some sweat equity), you can make your attic an ideal storage space.

Install easy, modular flooring on the attic’s floor

Your first step towards making your attic useful is to make it safe to walk around. Even if your attic is shallow and standing up straight is impossible, having a stable surface will reduce your chances of falling through the ceiling.

Putting down plywood or oriented strand board (OSB) is a cheap and relatively easy option, but it’s also labor-intensive and pretty permanent. If you want a faster solution, floor panels like these from Attic Dek are sized to fit most standard joist spacings and are designed to just snap together, allowing you to quickly drop a floor into place without needing to cut them. They come with screws, and it’s a good idea to secure them in place, but if you just need a temporary floor that can bear weight (up to 250 pounds) you can just click them into place and bolt them down later.

Add no-wiring lights to the attic’s ceiling

If your attic isn’t wired up or lacks light fixtures, you don’t need to hire an electrician and spend a mountain of cash. Just pick up one or two of these rechargeable ceiling lights and stick them to the ceiling or overhead joist (literally—you place a magnetic sticker on the ceiling and that holds the light in place—no screws required). It’s motion-activated, so every time you haul yourself up into the attic, the light will come on and save you from stumbling about in the dark.

Install adjustable storage that fits the space

Once you have a sturdy, safe floor in your attic, you can start installing storage options. You could, of course, just pile up some boxes or bins and call it a day, but you can do a lot better than that without breaking the bank:

  • Installing some hanging rods designed for slanted surfaces (like an attic ceiling or rafters) will give you the option of hanging clothing or storage bags without cluttering up the floor.

  • A few cheap, adjustable shelving units like this one can add all the shelf space you need to keep bins of stuff organized and off the floor, making it easy to store or retrieve items.

  • If your attic is tight and trusses make it difficult to store anything, you can install some truss-friendly shelving. This can be a relatively easy DIY job involving screwing some support brackets into the trusses (as seen here). If you don’t have a floor in your attic, you have to avoid placing heavy storage boxes or bins directly on insulation—compressed insulation isn’t very effective. You can purchase some truss brackets that support plastic bins or other storage boxes off the floor.

Install a way to transport your stuff into the attic

Once you’ve got storage, you need a way to get stuff up into the attic, which can be more challenging than you expect. Carrying awkward, heavy boxes up flimsy, pull-down attic stairs is a recipe for accidents, so consider rigging up some mechanical assistance. You can spend a fair amount of money on a fancy lift system that will make bringing stuff up to your attic pretty easy, but if that’s too rich for your blood, you could opt for a simpler winch system that will allow you to haul up to 440lbs of stuff up there at a time. If that’s still a little too much, you could also opt for a classic pulley system, using good old-fashioned mechanical advantage to get your stuff up into the attic.

Quest 3S On Sale For $250 With Batman: Arkham Shadow Again At Walmart

Walmart is offering Quest 3S for $250 again, $50 off, and it comes with the $50 VR blockbuster Batman: Arkham Shadow.

That’s the price for the 128GB base model, and the 256GB storage model is also on sale for $50 off, bringing it down to $350.

As well as including Batman: Arkham Shadow, the offering comes with 3 months of the Horizon+ games subscription, as with all new Quest headset purchases.

Arkham Shadow was officially included with all Quest 3S purchases for the headset’s first seven months on the market, though this was effectively extended during multiple sales and honored for any SKUs with the game’s logo on the box. The game, which Meta recently canceled the sequel for, earned a 4.5-star rating in our review, and it’s a rare example of a truly made-for-VR AAA title.

Batman: Arkham Shadow Review – A Triumphant Return
Batman: Arkham Shadow is a brilliant return for the Dark Knight, and it expertly adapts the series for VR on Quest 3 and Quest 3S.
UploadVRHenry Stockdale

This is far from the only time we’ve seen Quest 3S on sale for $250, and over the holidays it even dropped to as low as $200 for Costco members. But it still remains immense value – a fully standalone and wireless VR headset with tracked controllers, hand tracking, and mixed reality for less than the price of a traditional games console.

One consideration you may want to make if you’re considering jumping into VR with this deal, however, is whether the higher-end Quest 3 or Valve’s upcoming Steam Frame might better suit your needs.

While Quest 3S can run all the same content as Quest 3, and has the same fundamental capabilities (including the same XR2 Gen 2 chipset and 8GB RAM), Quest 3 features Meta’s advanced pancake lenses which are clearer and sharper over a wider area, have a wider field of view, and have precise separation adjustment, making them suitable for essentially everyone’s eyes. Meanwhile, Steam Frame has a significantly more comfortable design and promises to make wireless PC VR seamless.

But Quest 3 costs twice as much as Quest 3S on sale, and Steam Frame is likely to cost around three times as much. If you’re looking to jump into VR on a budget, or gift a friend or loved one, it’s impossible to beat the raw value of Quest 3S.

You can find the deal at Walmart.com.

$1.8 million MST3K Kickstarter brings in (almost) everyone from the old show

Longtime fans of the cult TV show Mystery Science Theater 3000 know that the series’ one constant is change (well, that and bad movies).

The show’s cast and crew were in a near-constant state of flux, a byproduct of the show’s existence as a perennial bubble show produced in the Twin Cities rather than a TV-and-comedy hub like New York or LA. It was rare, especially toward the middle of its 10-season original run on national TV, for the performers in front of the camera (and the writers’ room, since they were all the same people) to stay the same for more than a season or two.

Series creator Joel Hodgson embraced that spirit of change for the show’s Kickstarter-funded, Netflix-aired revival in the mid-2010s, featuring a brand-new cast and mostly new writers. And that change only accelerated in the show’s brief post-Netflix “Gizmoplex” era, which featured a revolving cast of performers that could change from episode to episode. Hodgson leaned into the idea that as long as there were silhouettes and puppets talking in front of a bad movie, it didn’t matter much who was doing the talking.

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EPA Reverses Long-Standing Climate Change Finding, Stripping Its Own Ability To Regulate Emissions

President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency is rescinding the legal finding that it has relied on for nearly two decades to limit the heat-trapping pollution that spews from vehicle tailpipes, oil refineries and factories. From a report: The repeal of that landmark determination, known as the endangerment finding, will upend most U.S. policies aimed at curbing climate change. The finding — which the EPA issued in 2009 — said the global warming caused by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane endangers the health and welfare of current and future generations.

“We are officially terminating the so-called endangerment finding, a disastrous Obama-era policy,” Trump said at a news conference. “This determination had no basis in fact — none whatsoever. And it had no basis in law. On the contrary, over the generations, fossil fuels have saved millions of lives and lifted billions of people out of poverty all over the world.”

Major environmental groups have disputed the administration’s stance on the endangerment finding and have been preparing to sue in response to its repeal.


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