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Infinity Nikki's latest update lets you build your dream home, and pal up with a Stardew Valley Junimo
Game Reviews

Infinity Nikki’s latest update lets you build your dream home, and pal up with a Stardew Valley Junimo

by admin September 2, 2025


Infinity Nikki has kicked off a surprising new cross-over with its latest update. The new patch, version 1.9, is live now, and heralds the start of a new season alongside the aforementioned collaboration.

You may have assumed that there’s already a lot of cross-over between Infinity Nikki players and Stardew Valley players. Infold Games clearly agrees, because the developer is teaming up with the farming simulator for this next event.


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Patch 1.9 arrived in the game following the usual maintenance. Some parts of the update were available to download ahead of time through the game’s launcher. 1.9 is a fairly substantial patch for Infinity Nikki, not least because of the season it comes with.

Music Season is where the Stardew Valley collaboration lives. The new season is available until September 22, and as the name suggests, there’s music and rhythm games-inspired content here.

A Junimo from the world of Stardew Valley has arrived in Miraland, befriending Nikki. The two will take part in an adventure. Complete it and you’ll earn exclusive collaboration furniture for your home, and an outfit for Nikki.

Watch on YouTube

The story of the update itself doesn’t actually revolve around Stardew Valley. Instead, it’s about Nikki coming across a brooch that belongs to the Evermelody Troupe, which sets her off on a quest to investigate. You’ll visit the Box Theater (haunted by a new enemy) as part of this, and even witness a live rehearsal.

Supporting all that are the new rhythm game mechanics, which include dancing with town NPCs. The update also adds the ability to transform into small animals to uncover clues around Miraland.

The big new gameplay feature in 1.9 is the ability to build a home in Miraland. You can create your own living space, with the help of Yardlings. This is available as part of the Set Off for a Warm Place quest, which will teach you the basics. You can save your home designs, and even share them with others using a unique code.

Before jumping in, make sure you check our updated list of Infinity Nikki codes for September.



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September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Segway Navimow X350 on reviewer's lawn
Product Reviews

Segway Navimow X3 Series robot mower review: ultra-speedy, super-accurate and a dream to control

by admin August 30, 2025



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We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Segway Navimow X3 Series: two-minute review

The Segway Navimow X3 Series robot lawn mowers are built specifically for sizeable lawns. And when I say sizeable, I mean sizeable – the range covers lawns from 0.5 acres / 1,500 square meters right up to a massive 2.5 acres / 10,000 square meters. To make them suitable for such vast spaces, these bots are designed to operate quickly, efficiently and accurately, with batteries capacious enough to allow for long mowing periods, without having to make the arduous journey back to the dock to recharge.

To see if this lawnbot could deliver on these promises, I sought out the largest yard I knew of. The lawn at my sister’s home, measures around 1,000 square meters / 0.25 acre (although Segway sent me the X350, which is designed for even larger areas still). The first thing I was struck by is the speed of the mower. It rolls along at quite the pace, navigating with confidence, even when traversing under trees.

The lawnbot itself is really quite large (and the same size as the other X3 Series models), but if you have a lawn big enough to need one, that’s not going to matter so much. It feels solid and high quality, with a friendly orange and grey color scheme and slightly retro-feeling dot-matrix screen to provide key information.

(Image credit: Future)

A big reason as to why the experience of using the Segway Navimow X3 Series is so enjoyable is down to the design of the companion app. It’s intuitive to use, walking you clearly through all the steps required to complete each process, and providing background information – rather than leaving you to figure things out by yourself. There are plenty of setting options to explore, and planning a schedule is straightforward.

In terms of performance, I had no issues. Throughout the test period, the bot behaved exactly as I’d hoped, mowing neatly and within boundaries, taking a logical route and never missing any spots. It also reliably avoided medium (soccer ball-sized) obstacles, although it did mow over a satsuma-sized ball (understandable, given it was sitting below camera height). Since this bot is two-wheel drive rather than four-wheel, it might struggle with especially rough terrain; but for the average yard, it will be absolutely fine.

Overall, a very strong recommendation for those looking for an efficient, fuss-free mower to take care of larger lawns. That’s the short version; read on for my full Segway Navimow X3 Series review.

Segway Navimow X3 review: price & availability

  • List price: from $2,299 / £2,199
  • Available: US, UK, AU
  • Launched: Spring 2025

The Segway Navimow X3 Series was unveiled in spring 2025, and is available to buy in various countries including the US, UK and Australia. You can only purchase direct from Segway Navimow in the US, and in general these lawnbots aren’t stocked widely online (you won’t be adding one to your Amazon Prime order). Instead, you might need to check the Segway Navimow site for distributors local to you.

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When it comes to pricing, brace yourself: the Segway Navimow X3 Series doesn’t come cheap. The cheapest in the lineup costs $2,299 / £2,199 at list price, and the priciest is $4,999 / £4,299. That’s a significant investment, and if you don’t have a large yard – or a yearning for ultra-speedy mowing – there are plenty more affordable alternatives. However, for those in need of large-scale mowing, the Navimow’s pricing isn’t too far away from what you’d pay elsewhere on the market.

Let’s say you want something for a 1-acre / 3,000m² lawn. The Mammotion LUBA 2 AWD 3000 costs $2,499 / £2,549 at list price, and the Navimow X330 is $2,799 / £2,599. The LUBA 2 has slightly more advanced features all round, including all-wheel drive and two cutting decks, which makes it a better-value buy at full price. Nevertheless, both are excellent, advanced, high-quality lawnbots.

Overall, my experience with the Navimow X3 series was extremely positive, and it felt well built and thoughtfully designed, so I think for large lawns it’s worth the investment.

  • Value for money score: 4 out of 5

Segway Navimow X3 specs

Swipe to scroll horizontallyHeader Cell – Column 0

Segway Navimow X350 (reviewed)

Segway Navimow X315 (cheapest)

Recommended lawn size:

1.5 acres / 5,000m²

0.5 acre / 1,500㎡

Cutting width:

9.3in / 23.7cm

9.3in / 23.7cm

Cutting height:

0.8-2.8in / 2-7cm

0.8-2.8in / 2-7cm

Drivetrain:

2-wheel drive

2-wheel drive

Incline ability:

50% / 27 degrees

50% / 27 degrees

Waterproof:

IP66

IP66

Lawnbot size (L x W x H):

27.5 x 21.7 x 12.1in / 69.8 x 55 x 30.7cm

27.5 x 21.7 x 12.1in / 69.8 x 55 x 30.7cm

Lawnbot weight:

43.7 lbs / 19.8kg

43.2 lbs / 19.6kg

Charge time:

80 mins

60 mins

Mowing time per charge:

200 mins

120 mins

Cutting blades:

6

6

Segway Navimow X3 review: design

  • Available in versions with different batteries for different lawn sizes
  • On-bot info via a screen, and cameras on three sides for obstacle avoidance
  • Comes with RTK receiver (option to add a second) and charge station

The Segway Navimow X3 Series is a big bot for big lawns. There are a few options in the lineup, all of which are identical in design and specs, except the ones at the top end of the range have a bigger battery and as such are suitable for larger areas. These are the options:

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Model

Recommended mowing area

Runtime per charge

Charge time

X315

0.5 acre / 1,500m²

120 mins

60 mins

X330

1 acre / 3,000m²

160 mins

65 mins

X350 (tested)

1.5 acres / 5,000m²

200 mins

80 mins

X390

2.5 acres 10,000m²

240 mins

100 mins

Moving on to the lawnbot itself, and the brand has opted for a friendly look, with a dark gray and bright orange color scheme, and a dot matrix screen to provide key information in real time. On test I found this limited in its practical usefulness, although it is quite fun. There are physical buttons for Go, On/OK and Return to charge, plus a big emergency stop button. However, for the most part you’ll be controlling the bot via the companion app, which I’ll cover in detail in a separate App section below (there’s also support for voice control via Alexa or Google Home, if you prefer).

(Image credit: Future)

The Navimow X350 is rather large, and for the times you might need to manually maneuver it, Segway has added a big handle around the rear of the bot. Unfortunately, there’s no grip area at the front – so unless you stick your hand in the charge slot, which goes against an important lesson I learned as a toddler, you’ll need to make do with crouching and dragging rather than picking it up.

It’s fairly common for modern lawnbots to come equipped with a camera for object identification and avoidance, but the X3 Series has not one, but three: one at the front and one on either side, delivering a 300-degree field of view. Alongside one of the side-mounted cameras you’ll find an Expansion Bay section, where you can attach add-ons. There’s an edge trimmer attachment that already exists in a few countries (I didn’t test this), and open API access means if you have the skills, you can create your own additions.

Also hidden somewhere on the top is a compartment for a tracker, should you wish to add one for added security reasons (there’s also an out-of-bounds alarm, lift alerts and GPS tracking to guard against theft).

(Image credit: Future)

There are two main wheels, plus two smaller wheels at the front. Since this bot is a two-wheel drive machine, it isn’t designed for very uneven terrain, although it can still handle slopes up to 50%, and will be more than up to handling the average yard (or football field).

Flip it over and you’ll find the cutting deck, which consists of six blades mounted on a rotating disc, which can be raised or lowered automatically via the app (it can cut at heights of 0.8-2.8in / 2-7cm). The whole thing is designed to avoid the mechanism becoming clogged up with cuttings. Like most lawnbots, there’s no grass collection here – instead you’re meant to use it regularly enough that the tiny cuttings end up mulching back into the lawn. The Navimow delivers a generous cutting width of 9.3in / 23.7cm.

(Image credit: Future)

Additional components

The X3 Series is at least partially reliant on satellites for navigation, so in the box you also get an RTK receiver to improve the accuracy of the satellite information. You’ll need to find a good spot for this – ideally it needs to sit somewhere high up, with a wide, uninterrupted view of the sky. Since I was only borrowing this machine, I just stuck it on the provided lawn-mount spike, and it worked remarkably well even in this sub-optimal position, as you’ll learn in the Performance section. You can purchase a secondary antenna to act as backup if you have an especially large lawn.

(Image credit: Future)

You’re also provided with a charge station, where your lawnbot will return to juice up. This needs to sit on flat ground, with access to a power source.

The lawnbot is IP66 rated, which means it’s resistant to both water (everything apart from complete submersion) and dust. Even so, I tend to think a plastic garage roof is a good idea for a little extra protection from the elements in the long term.

(Image credit: Future)

Features

Let’s look quickly at what’s going on under the hood. Like most modern lawnbots, the X3 Series doesn’t require boundary wires, but instead uses a combination of RTK satellite navigation, cameras and sensors to find its way around (here’s more on how lawnbots navigate, if you’re interested).

To ensure the bot always knows where it is, even when being used on a palatial lawn, Segway has introduced a number of navigation upgrades. The RTK system has been improved and can apparently deliver 40% better observation, to keep it moving in potential blind spots such as narrow pathways or under rooftops.

(Image credit: Future)

Inside, two complementary wayfinding systems work together to help the bot find its way about: VSLAM, which relies on recognizable visual cues; and VIO, which is great for new, featureless areas. All of that, added to the wide field of view provided by the three onboard cameras, should mean this bot is an absolute pro when it comes to navigation.

Segway Navimow X3 review: performance

  • Neat, thorough and very speedy mowing
  • Confident, accurate navigation, even under trees
  • Strong obstacle avoidance, although can’t spot very small items

Let’s start with setup, which I found fairly painless. There’s a bit of self-assembly required of the base station and RTK receiver, but if you hook up the app first then it walks you through the process quite clearly (there’s also a paper instruction booklet, if you prefer). The app also guides you through the mapping process.

My test lawn has unclear boundaries and tree coverage, so I opted to create a map manually, by remote-controlling around the perimeter of the area I wanted mowing and then editing the results in-app. I found the process straightforward. If you have a very simple lawn, you’d use AI Assist Mapping, where the bot will automatically map the area for you.

The first thing I was struck by when I started mowing was how speedy the Navimow proved. I was promised efficiency, and the Segway Navimow has delivered. The X3 rolls confidently along at an impressive pace compared to other bots I’ve tested.

I mostly used the Standard speed for my tests, but bumped it up to Efficient at one point but couldn’t really notice a difference. The app states that it’s 0.2m/s faster in this mode, which would be noticeable over time if you were mowing an especially large lawn.

(Image credit: Future)

I was also very impressed by navigation. My test lawn has a number of large trees, which I thought might cause the X3 to get lost – especially given the RTK receiver was just stuck in the ground, rather than elevated above the trees and buildings, as it really should be. However, all the test-runs were free of issues. The bot made its way around confidently, covering the full lawn in a logical pattern. It also accurately avoided a no-mow zone I’d set up in the center of the lawn, on a patch of ground that had recently been re-sown with grass seed. I guess whatever Segway Navimow has done to “improve the RTK performance by 40%” has worked.

(Image credit: Future)

I also ran a couple of specific object avoidance tests by placing large (a toddler’s ride-on car), medium (soccer ball) and small (a tangerine-sized ball) obstacles in the X3’s path. It had no issues spotting the car or football, duly skirting around each one, even when I kicked the football about to try to confuse it, but the smallest ball met a grizzly end beneath the X3’s blades.

We’ve yet to test a lawnbot at TechRadar that can spot small obstacles such as this, so it isn’t a particular failing on Segway Navimow’s part. However, it’s worth noting if you have, for example, a dog that likes to poo in your yard, and you don’t want to spend an afternoon cleaning it out of wheel crevices.

  • Performance score: 4.5 out of 5

Segway Navimow X3 review: app

  • Lots of useful explanations and info, with diagrams
  • Plenty of fine-adjustment options
  • Well laid out and easy to navigate

From the off, I was super-impressed with the Segway Navimow app. It provides plenty of information and clear explanations – often with diagrams – to walk you through everything from setup to how to map. Other lawnbot apps I’ve tested use opaque language and leave you to mostly figure things out for yourself, which can be especially confusing if it’s your first robot lawn mower.

(Image credit: Segway Navimow / Future)

Here, however, everything is logically laid out and easy to navigate. There are also plenty of options to fine-tune your mowing. There’s a straightforward schedule-maker, where you can select days, times and zones for cutting. You can also choose between three mowing speeds (Quiet, Standard and Efficient) and grass length (20-70mm, in increments of 5mm).

(Image credit: Segway Navimow / Future)

There’s a section for Map management, where you can split, add or remove sections, or add no-go zones (or, as Segway Navimow whimsically calls them, “BioLife Islands”). It will let you select where you want to start on the map, with the bot cleverly driving itself over to your chosen spot, and then the app will guide you to drive the new boundary line using remote control. I found this process straightforward and logical – again, not always a given.

Segway Navimow also offers a range of “Advanced” features, too. There’s an “Animal friendly” mode that will see the bot stop if it spots an animal and take a new route so as not to disturb it, rather than just skirting around it. You can also toggle on “Traction control” for particularly muddy or challenging terrain.

Should you buy the Segway Navimow X3 Series?

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Attribute

Notes

Rating

Value

Very much a premium lawnbot, but performance and features help justify the investment.

4 / 5

Design

Rather large, well-built lawnbot with RTK station and charge dock. Two-wheel drive and cameras to the front and both sides, plus a dot matrix screen on the bot itself.

5 / 5

Performance

Neat, fast, efficient mowing. Confident navigation even in challenging conditions, and solid obstacle avoidance (bar very small objects).

4.5 / 5

App

Extremely usable and well designed, with plenty of useful, clear information.

5 / 5

Buy it if…

Don’t buy it if…

Segway Navimow X3 review: alternatives to consider

Swipe to scroll horizontallyHeader Cell – Column 0

Segway Navimow X330

Mammotion Luba 2 3000

Mammotion Yuka Mini S (US) / Yuka Mini 600 (UK)

Recommended lawn size:

1 acre / 3,000m²

1 acre / 3,000m²

0.15 acres / 600㎡

Cutting width:

9.3in / 23.7cm

15.7in / 40cm

7.5in / 19cm

Cutting height:

0.8-2.8in / 2-7cm

1-2.7in / 2.5-7cm

0.8-2.4in / 2-6cm

Drivetrain:

Two-wheel drive

All-wheel drive

Two-wheel drive

Incline ability:

50% / 27 degrees

80% / 38 degrees

50% / 27 degrees

Waterproof:

IP66

IPX6

IPX6

Lawnbot size (L x W x H):

27.5 x 21.7 x 12.1in / 69.8 x 55 x 30.7cm

27.2 x 20.2 x 27.3in / 69 x 51.3 x 27.3cm

20.7 x 16.3 x 11.1in / 52.5 x 41.3 x 28.1cm

Lawnbot weight:

43.7 lbs / 19.8kg

41 lbs / 18.6kg

23.4 lbs / 10.6kg

Charge time:

65 mins

120 mins

90 mins

Mowing time per charge:

160 mins

190 mins

55 mins

Cutting blades:

6

12

5

How I tested the Segway Navimow X3

I tested the X350 model of the Segway Navimow X3 Series. I used it for several weeks in the garden of my sister’s home. The test lawn measures around 1,000 square meters, and has unclear borders and several large trees. I set up the bot myself from scratch, following the instructions in the app, including constructing the charge station and RTK receiver. I mapped the lawn into different mowing zones and added no-mow areas. I assessed the lawnbot based on the neatness and speed of mowing, accuracy of navigation, and general ease of use. I also explored the different options in the app to see the extent to which I could fine-tune settings, and ran object avoidance tests using different-sized obstacles. I then compared all of my findings to other lawnbots I’ve used, while also weighing everything up against the price to gauge whether the bot offers good value for money.

Read more about how we test

  • First reviewed August 2025



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August 30, 2025 0 comments
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Original PRUSA CORE One
Gaming Gear

Open hardware dream collapses as Prusa slams China’s subsidies, patents, and aggressive tactics that reshaped 3D printing from an open playground into a corporate battlefield

by admin August 25, 2025



  • State-backed rivals have made open source 3D printing nearly impossible
  • Chinese subsidies shift global competition in desktop 3D printer production
  • Cheap Chinese patents create obstacles far beyond Europe’s market borders

The open source movement in 3D printing once thrived on shared designs, community projects, and collaboration across borders.

However, Josef Prusa, head of Prusa Research, has announced, “open hardware desktop 3D printing is dead.”

The remark stands out because his company long championed open designs, sharing files and innovations with the wider community.


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Economic support and patent challenges

Prusa built his early business in a small basement in Prague, packing frames into pizza boxes while relying on contributions from others who shared his philosophy.

What has changed, he now argues, is not consumer demand but the imbalance created when the Chinese government labeled 3D printing a “strategic industry” in 2020.

In his blog post, Prusa cites a study from the Rhodium Group which describes how China backs its firms with grants, subsidies, and easier credit.

This makes it much cheaper to manufacture machines there than in Europe or North America.

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The issue grows more complicated when looking at patents. In China, registering a claim costs as little as $125, while challenging one ranges from $12,000 to $75,000.

This gap has encouraged a surge of local filings, often on designs that trace back to open source projects.

Prusa’s earlier machines, such as the Original i3, proudly displayed components from partners like E3D and Noctua, embodying a spirit of community, but were also easy to copy, with entire guides appearing online just months after release.

The newest Prusa printers, including the MK4 and Core ONE, now restrict access to key electronic designs, even while offering STL files for printed parts.

The Nextruder system is fully proprietary, marking a clear retreat from total openness.

Prusa argues Chinese firms are effectively locking down technology the community meant to share – as while a patent in China does not block his company from selling in Europe, it prevents access to the Chinese market.

A bigger risk emerges when agencies like the US Patent Office treat such patents as “prior art,” creating hurdles that are expensive and time-consuming to clear.

Prusa cited the case of the Chinese company, Anycubic, securing a US patent on a multicolor hub that appears similar to the MMU system his company first released in 2016.

Years earlier, Bambu Lab introduced its A1 series, also drawing inspiration from the same concept.

Anycubic now sells the Kobra 3 Combo with this feature, raising questions about how agencies award patents and who holds legitimate claims.

Meanwhile, Bambu Lab faces separate legal battles with Stratasys, the American pioneer whose patents once kept 3D printing confined to costly industrial use.

Declaring the end of open hardware may be dramatic, but the pressures are real.

Between state subsidies, permissive patent rules, and rising disputes, the foundation of open collaboration is eroding.

Via Toms Hardware

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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The creators of Deadly Premonition and No More Heroes are releasing a typically over-the-top roguelite 'fever dream' next month
Gaming Gear

The creators of Deadly Premonition and No More Heroes are releasing a typically over-the-top roguelite ‘fever dream’ next month

by admin August 22, 2025



HOTEL BARCELONA – Xbox Launch Trailer | Coming September 26, 2025 – YouTube

Watch On

Back in 2019, Goichi “Suda51” Suda and Hidetaka “Swery65” Suehiro announced a forthcoming horror game under typically bizarre circumstances. As Fraser reported at the time, the duo—who are responsible for No More Heroes and Deadly Premonition respectively—basically brainstormed the project during a livestream. At the time they decided it would be an indie horror game called Hotel Barcelona. The PS2 game Siren would be an inspiration, and Devolver would publish.

Six years later, it turns out Hotel Barcelona is an actual game that will see an actual release next month—on September 25 to be exact—but it has clearly evolved away from those early ideas. For one, Devolver isn’t publishing: the relatively new Cult Games will handle that duty instead. Another big departure, at least to my eyes, is that Hotel Barcelona doesn’t look scary. It’s a 2.5D sidescrolling action roguelite set in a bizarre hotel, with all the surrealist flair you would expect from this duo. If you came away from that 2019 livestream thinking “great, two of the weirdest fellows in games are making a Siren tribute”, then maybe keep your expectations in check.

The trailer above is ample evidence that Suda51’s affection for 1980s edgelord trappings remains undiminished, but as for the basic gist of what you’re doing in Hotel Barcelona, I’ll let the publisher’s note do the talking. “With trippy anime-style visuals designed by the artists behind genre-defying Japanese hits like Chainsaw Man, Persona, and Final Fantasy VII Remake, try to escape this luxury getaway turned psychedelic nightmare and defeat the hotel’s bloodthirsty new management – tough as nails brutes, psychopaths, and criminals from all over America. Suffice to say, you won’t be alive by checkout.”


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The precision-oriented combat comes with an interesting twist: as the protagonist Justine becomes drenched in the blood of her enemies she’ll build towards a special attack that unleashes Dr. Carnival, who is a “deranged murderer” she happens to share her brain with. The game will be split across seven areas, each inspired by different sub-genres of horror. There’s also three-player online co-op and PvP invasions.

Hotel Barcelona releases September 26 and it’s on Steam now. It’s also launching on Xbox Game Pass.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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With a new tandem OLED monitor that can hit 720Hz, the 1000Hz dream is almost here
Game Reviews

With a new tandem OLED monitor that can hit 720Hz, the 1000Hz dream is almost here

by admin August 21, 2025


Asus just revealed two new tandem OLED monitors at an event adjacent to Gamescom 2025, including a flagship model that’s able to hit a blistering 720Hz (!) – at a reduced resolution of 720p – or a still-scintillating 540Hz at its normal resolution of 1440p. A 1000Hz OLED has long been the goal for display enthusiasts, and by that metric we’re now the majority of the way there.

The tandem W-OLED screens used on both the flagship PG27AQWP-W and lesser XG27AQWMG are also remarkable, with the new panels promising 15 percent higher brightness – a longtime OLED weak point – plus a 25 percent wider range of colours and even a 60 percent longer lifespan than earlier W-OLED panels, thanks to lower power requirements.

I went hands-on – or should it be “eyes-on”? – with both screens and came away impressed. The colour gamut and brightness improvements are hard to distinguish in the glaring lights of an event space – that’s why we do reviews with a colourimeter after the fact! – but the motion clarity that refresh rates this high on an OLED monitor can provide is immmediately obvious in fast-paced games like Counter-Strike 2, where you’re often trying to track (and aim at) fast-moving targets.

This monitor looks incredible from behind – which is a shame, as most people will probably put it on a desk with a wall behind. | Image credit: Eurogamer

It’s a bit hard to describe exactly how this looks in person, but the main thing is that the trails that often accompany fast-moving objects – artefacts that are called overshoot and undershoot – are basically nonexistent at this kind of speed. Everything looks smooth, with many more intermediate steps in a given chunk of time. There are even faster 750Hz TN panel monitors, to be fair, but these LCD-based panels don’t have anywhere near the raw pixel response times of an OLED – let alone the colour reproduction, contrast or viewing angles.

Of course, you will need a beastly PC to hit anything near 720fps even in older esports titles, but for a lucky few this is quite an achievement. Asus has also included a full 80Gbps DisplayPort, so you’ll be able to access that full spec without the need for Display Stream Compression (DSC). The cheaper XG27AQWMG ought to confer those tandem OLED improvements without needing an eye-wateringly powerful PC, with a 1440p 280Hz spec sheet that is a good fit for most enthusiasts, and it consequently makes do with standard HDMI 2.1 with DSC.


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Both monitors also come with a new panel coating that Asus is calling “trueblack glossy”, and it aims to combine the rich look of glossy panels without losing black depth in varying levels of ambient light. Eyes-on testing at the event with a phone torch showed concentrated reflections, unlike the diffuse reflections of matte coatings, but with a deeper black look on dark content – definitely far from the dark purple that you get on QD-OLEDs that are turned off, for instance.

The design of the higher-end PG27AQWP-W is also remarkable, with a semi-transparent rear shell that shows off some of the interesting circuitry inside. As someone that grew up with G3 iMacs and a purple see-through Game Boy Colour, I absolutely dig this. Asus has also skeletonised the monitor’s stand, presumably for aesthetic reasons, but also to reportedly reduce the amount of metal used. The XG27AQWMG is a little ordinary-looking by comparison, but does come with a more compact rectangular desk stand that allows more keyboard and mousing space.

This OLED coating demo was convincing, with the new trueblack glossy coating obviously providing better black levels and less diffuse reflections than regular glossy and regular matte coatings respectively. | Image credit: Eurogamer

There are a few feature additions too. Alongside the usual raft of burn-in countermeasures, Asus is adding a presence sensor that will automatically turn off the screen when you’re not there. “Did I leave my OLED on?” has almost become the new “did I leave the stove on?” for OLED monitor owners, so having this as a tunable option makes some sense, as long as it dims rather than turning off so that it doesn’t mess up window placements or confuse running programs.

Pricing wasn’t announced alongside the other details, but I’d guess that the flagship PG27AQWP-W to cost at least £1300, while the XG27AQWMG is likely to cost the better part of £1000, despite the less powerful panel and lower-bandwidth ports. OLED monitors are getting increasingly affordable, but tandem OLED isn’t going to come cheap – at least for a while.

Cyberpunk 2077 is a nice place to spend time checking out a new monitor like the XG27AQWMG, and at a native 1440p 280Hz, you actually have a chance of maxing it out with a high-end GPU capable of frame generation. | Image credit: Eurogamer

On that note, Asus claimed during their event that they are the number one producer of OLED gaming monitors, but they’re largely reliant on LG and Samsung for producing the actual displays – and therefore there’s no doubt that we’ll see (potentially cheaper) options based on these same fourth-generation W-OLED panels from other brands in the near future.

Based on this early look though, tandem OLED looks just as compelling in the desktop monitor space as it does for high-end TVs – even if it comes at the same staggeringly high prices.

Disclosure: Asus paid for flights and accommodation to Cologne for Gamescom so that we could see their new products in person.



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August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Do Large Language Models Dream of AI Agents?
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Do Large Language Models Dream of AI Agents?

by admin August 20, 2025


During sleep, the human brain sorts through different memories, consolidating important ones while discarding those that don’t matter. What if AI could do the same?

Bilt, a company that offers local shopping and restaurant deals to renters, recently deployed several million agents with the hopes of doing just that.

Bilt uses technology from a startup called Letta that allows agents to learn from previous conversations and share memories with one another. Using a process called “sleeptime compute,” the agents decide what information to store in its long-term memory vault and what might be needed for faster recall.

“We can make a single update to a [memory] block and have the behavior of hundreds of thousands of agents change,” says Andrew Fitz, an AI engineer at Bilt. “This is useful in any scenario where you want fine-grained control over agents’ context,” he adds, referring to the text prompt fed to the model at inference time.

Large language models can typically only “recall” things if information is included in the context window. If you want a chatbot to remember your most recent conversation, you need to paste it into the chat.

Most AI systems can only handle a limited amount of information in the context window before their ability to use the data falters and they hallucinate or become confused. The human brain, by contrast, is able to file away useful information and recall it later.

“Your brain is continuously improving, adding more information like a sponge,” says Charles Packer, Letta’s CEO. “With language models, it’s like the exact opposite. You run these language models in a loop for long enough and the context becomes poisoned; they get derailed and you just want to reset.”

Packer and his cofounder Sarah Wooders previously developed MemGPT, an open-source project that aimed to help LLMs decide what information should be stored in short-term vs. long-term memory. With Letta, the duo has expanded their approach to let agents learn in the background.

Bilt’s collaboration with Letta is part of a broader push to give AI the ability to store and recall useful information, which could make chatbots smarter and agents less error-prone. Memory remains underdeveloped in modern AI, which undermines the intelligence and reliability of AI tools, according to experts I spoke to.

Harrison Chase, cofounder and CEO of LangChain, another company that has developed a method for improving memory in AI agents, says he sees memory as a vital part of context engineering—wherein a user or engineer decides what information to feed into the context window. LangChain offers companies several different kinds of memory storage for agents, from long-term facts about users to memories of recent experiences. “Memory, I would argue, is a form of context,” Chase says. “A big portion of an AI engineer’s job is basically getting the model the right context [information].”

Consumer AI tools are gradually becoming less forgetful, too. This February, OpenAI announced that ChatGPT will store relevant information in order to provide a more personalized experience for users—although the company did not disclose how this works.

Letta and LangChain make the process of recall more transparent to engineers building AI systems.

“I think it’s super important not only for the models to be open but also for the memory systems to be open,” says Clem Delangue, CEO of the AI hosting platform Hugging Face and an investor in Letta.

Intriguingly, Letta’s CEO Packer hints that it might also be important for AI models to learn what to forget. “If a user says, ‘that one project we were working on, wipe it out from your memory’ then the agent should be able to go back and retroactively rewrite every single memory.”

The notion of artificial memories and dreams makes me think of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick, a mind-bending novel that inspired the stylishly dystopian movie Blade Runner. Large language models aren’t yet as impressive as the rebellious replicants of the story, but their memories, it seems, can be just as fragile.

This is an edition of Will Knight’s AI Lab newsletter. Read previous newsletters here.



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August 20, 2025 0 comments
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