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MenaRD pumps his fist after making it into the Top 8 at Evo 2025.
Esports

Justin Wong and MenaRD face off at PlayStation’s Ultimate FGC Round Table

by admin August 18, 2025



PlayStation brought together some of the biggest names in the fighting game community for the Ultimate FGC Round Table, where legends and champions debated everything from legacy players to which games take the most skill.

Justin Wong, MenaRD, Arslan Ash, and Nitro all weighed in on whether veterans get too much respect. “I do think legacy players do get too much respect,” Wong admitted, before Mena countered that early pros had to grind without modern resources, adding, “They were godlike anyway.”

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The panel quickly turned competitive when Mena claimed he could beat Wong in Street Fighter 4. Wong immediately fired back with a $10,000 wager, leading to a one-game exhibition on stage that Wong ultimately won.

Other hot topics included retirement ages in the FGC, with Arslan suggesting champions in their 40s are proving what’s possible, and which game requires the most skill to win. Multiple players agreed that Street Fighter 6 is the toughest title to dominate, even for the best in the world.

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The roundtable closed with players praising PlayStation’s Road to Evo qualifiers, highlighting how online tournaments give new competitors the chance to break onto the biggest stage.

Watch the full Ultimate FGC Round Table now via PlayStation.



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Govee Table Lamp 2 Pro X Sound by JBL review: light up your party
Product Reviews

Govee Table Lamp 2 Pro X Sound by JBL review: light up your party

by admin June 19, 2025


The most surprising thing about Govee’s colorful smart lamp with a speaker built-in is that we didn’t get something like this sooner. We’ve had color-changing smart home lights that sync to music via an app, and we’ve had Bluetooth speakers with RGB lights — putting the two together feels like the natural next step.

The Govee Table Lamp 2 Pro X Sound by JBL ($179.99) combines snazzy lighting effects and decent sound into one fun, portable package. Unlike most RGB Bluetooth party speakers, it’s a functional lamp, and it also syncs with your smart home. And while it doesn’t pack enough power to rock a real rager, it’s the perfect size to add a little punch to your next gathering. It’s a smart light with party speaker aspirations.

$180

The Good

  • Vivid, colorful lighting effects
  • Can control the light with voice and automations
  • Can sync with other Govee lights
  • Speaker has strong mids and vocals
  • Built-in ambient sounds
  • Light supports Matter

The Bad

  • Limited bass
  • Indoor only
  • No AirPlay 2 support
  • No smart home support for the speaker
  • No handle

The speaker / smart lamp combo isn’t totally new; Ikea’s (now discontinued) Symfonisk Lamp had a Sonos speaker built in (though you had to put a smart bulb in it to have a smart lamp). Govee also has a floor lamp with a Bluetooth speaker. But its new table lamp is more practical, more portable (thanks to a 5,200mAh battery), and a lot more fun. Individually controllable RGB and tunable white LEDs offer both fabulous party effects and practical task lighting when needed.

The Govee Table Lamp does a nice job with tunable white light alongside fun, RGB effects.

An upgrade to Govee’s smart Table Lamp 2, the Pro was first announced at CES earlier this year and is now available to buy. It sits 10 inches tall, with a 360-degree LED array sitting on top of a 10W full-range 2.5-inch JBL speaker. The Pro’s big additions over the Lamp 2 are the speaker and the battery. It also has a larger base, a wider lamp, and a top speaker grille with buttons for power, volume, playback, and cycling through preset scenes.

The lamp features 210 LED beads that can display full color as well as tunable white light up to 600 lumens, bright enough for a reading lamp. The base includes RGB lights that sync with the main display.

The Lamp Pro 2 uses a standard barrel plug, but can also be powered by its internal battery.

The plug connects underneath, and there’s a cable channel. It also has squidgy “feet,” making it easy to set down on most surfaces.

The power button is a physical button; the rest are touch capacitive. Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

It weighs just over 5 pounds and I could carry it comfortably in one hand. Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

The lighting effects, of which there are over 100 presets as well as 16 that sync with music, are controlled in the Govee app, over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. There are a number of built-in sound and light scenes. My favorites include Forest, with tweety bird sounds and luminescent greens and yellows; Wave, with its ocean acoustics and wobbly blue lights; and Sprinkle, which sounds like a gentle rainstorm with a lovely aquamarine light soup.

Of course, you can also stream any music you like to the speaker via a Bluetooth connection to your phone. Sadly, there’s no option to stream over Wi-Fi or AirPlay 2 support. Unlike some party speakers, only one phone at a time can connect to its Bluetooth radio. You can have it listen for music from your phone’s speaker, but that feels rather pointless.

Specs: Govee Table Lamp 2 Pro X Sound by JBL

  • Price: $179.99
  • Power: 5,200mAh rechargeable battery, barrel plug power adapter
  • Playback time: 4.5 hours on battery
  • Speaker: 10W full-range 2.5-inch speaker, with dual passive radiators
  • Light: 600 lumens, RGBICWW, 2700 to 6500 kelvins
  • IP Rating: Indoor use only
  • Dimensions: 6.1 inches in diameter, 10.1 inches high
  • Weight: 5.3 pounds
  • Connectivity: Matter over Wi-Fi, BLE (classic), Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz)

The dynamic lighting scenes roll, pop, twirl, blob, kaleidoscope, or spiral in sync with the music, and sync remarkably well to the beat (Govee claims a 32ms response time). The colors are vivid, and the effects are a lot of fun. Like a lot of Govee’s effects, some can be a bit intense, but there are several “soft” options, too. You can also create your own scenes.

When you’re done with dance parties, ambient options, such as a crackling fireplace or a soothing sunset, are nice, although the colors are still fairly intense. Settings for reading, work, and illumination make the lamp usable as a task light, too, and sleep settings with lullabies make this a nice addition to a nursery. Still, it’s too large and bright for bedside use, even at the lowest setting.

While you can use the lamp and app just with Bluetooth, connecting it to Wi-Fi lets you control the lamp through your smart home. It works with Amazon Alexa and Google Home over Wi-Fi, or you can add it via Matter to most platforms, including Apple Home. I added it to Apple Home and was able to turn it on or off, and change single colors with automations and voice — it responded instantly to Siri voice commands. There’s not currently a way to sync Govee’s scenes through Matter, though, so you’re limited to static lighting.

Smart lamp, standard speaker

The Govee Table Lamp is a similar size and shape to Apple’s HomePod smart speaker (left), but it has a smaller speaker grille and its main body is a plastic lamp.

This is a smart lamp, not a smart speaker. There’s no voice assistant, and you can’t control the speaker via smart home apps (although you can change songs with your phone’s voice assistant while connected over Bluetooth). It’s also a fairly basic JBL Bluetooth speaker. While it gets plenty loud, it has limited bass, but delivers clear vocals and decent mids — making it ideal for podcasts or radio.

Physically, it slightly resembles a full-size HomePod, but in sound quality, it’s more like a HomePod mini. It made a great exercise companion during my morning dance workouts, with Chappell Roan’s voice coming through clear and high as she hits those Pink Pony notes. Even cranked up to 93 percent volume, there was no distortion. But as mentioned, there’s hardly any bass. I tested it with Bad Bunny against a full-size HomePod; no contest.

I tested it with Bad Bunny against a full-size HomePod; no contest

You can pair two lamps together for stereo sound, and that’s your best option if you’re looking for a party atmosphere. On its own, it’s fine for a small gathering or to add some oomph to a workout, but for some real vibes, you’ll want two. I only had one unit, so I didn’t get to test this out. You could pair two HomePod Minis or two Alexa fourth-gen speakers together and get comparable sound for less money, but without the fun lighting effects.

The lamp isn’t weatherproof, but it is portable, thanks to its built-in battery. There’s no handle, so I had to sort of cradle it like a baby, but at 5 pounds, it’s light. I took it to the patio on a dry day, and my chickens joined the dance party.

My chickens got to enjoy an al fresco dance party.

For a more permanent outdoor party solution, something like the Sonos Move ($449) is a better bet, with bigger sound, longer battery life, and an IP56 rating. Or, if lights are a must, a proper party speaker like the JBL Pulse 5 ($249), which has built-in RGB lighting, an IP67 waterproof rating, and a nice big handle — but no Wi-Fi connectivity, so no smart home control.

I set an Apple Home automation that turns on the lamp when the porch door unlocks

I ended up using the Govee lamp mostly in my screened-in porch, listening to the news with morning coffee or enjoying music with an evening tipple, safe from the elements. I set an automation in Apple Home that turns on the lamp when the porch door unlocks, so it’s ready to go when we walk out.

The lamp can also pair with other Govee lights to sync them all to the music using its Dreamview setting. I have a tunable white set of Govee’s outdoor string lights on my porch, but if I had the RGB version, I could turn my porch into a party space.

Despite its world salad of a name, the Govee Table Lamp 2 Pro X Sound by JBL is a fun, reasonably priced combo of music and lights. It’s not the best speaker out there, and it’s a shame it’s not more versatile (a handle and some weatherproofing would go a long way), but with its smart home control and impressive lighting effects, it’s a useful and entertaining gadget.

Photos by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge





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June 19, 2025 0 comments
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Decrypt logo
Crypto Trends

Bitcoin, Ethereum Dip as Trump Tariffs Back on the Table

by admin May 30, 2025



In brief

  • Bitcoin fell nearly 3% after a U.S. appeals court temporarily reinstated Trump’s tariffs, reversing a trade court decision that declared them unconstitutional.
  • U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs snapped a 10-day streak of inflows, with $347 million in net outflows Thursday, the worst since March 11.
  • Analysts say the sell-off reflects institutional repricing, not panic, as investors adjust to policy risk and broader macroeconomic uncertainty.

Bitcoin slipped almost 3% Thursday as the U.S. appeals court temporarily revived President Donald Trump’s controversial tariffs on Thursday, just hours after a trade court struck them down as unconstitutional.

“The judgments and the permanent injunctions entered by the Court of International Trade in these cases are temporarily stayed until further notice while this court considers the motions papers,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit wrote in its May 29 ruling.

The stay, which consolidated two ongoing appeals, gives the government room to fight the U.S. Court of International Trade’s earlier decision that struck down tariffs enacted under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

“If allowed to stand, this would completely destroy Presidential Power — The Presidency would never be the same,” Trump posted on Truth Social following the trade court’s decision.

The legal back-and-forth over Trump’s tariff imposition is injecting uncertainty into markets already grappling with inflation, interest rate swings, and geopolitical instability.

Bitcoin sank 2.7% to a daily low under $106,000, though remains up 11.5% over the past month, per CoinGecko. On Myriad, the decentralized prediction market platform launched by Decrypt’s parent company DASTAN, sentiment was broadly neutral, with 51% predicting Bitcoin would remain over $106,000 by June 1.

Ethereum (ETH) slid 3.8% to $2,621, while Solana (SOL), XRP (XRP), and Binance Coin (BNB) all posted similar declines in the last 24 hours.

“This recent court ruling is just another brick in the wall of economic uncertainty,” Tracy Jin, COO of crypto exchange MEXC, told Decrypt.

“Crypto’s softness right now is less about a drop in demand and more about it all just being uncertainty-adjusted—policy risk, geopolitical tension, and over-the-top positioning,” she noted, pointing to the downturn across Bitcoin and major altcoins.

Bitcoin ETF flows turn negative

Alongside the appeals court intervention, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs ended a 10-day streak of net inflows that had brought in $4.26 billion.

On Thursday, the 11 funds saw almost $347 million in net outflows, the worst single-day exit since March 11, per Coinglass data.

Fidelity’s FBTC recorded the largest net outflow at $166.3 million, followed by GBTC (with $107.5 million outflows) and ARKB ($89.2 million).

Jin argued that the major spot Bitcoin ETF outflows “should not be perceived as a panic event, but rather an institutional repricing happening in the real-time.”

Only BlackRock’s IBIT posted an inflow on Thursday, adding $125 million to extend its streak to 34 consecutive trading days. IBIT has now pulled in nearly $4 billion over the past two weeks, per data from Farside Investors.

“The important thing to see this dip is in the context of the broader economy,” Ganesh Mahidhar, investment professional at Further Ventures, told Decrypt, adding that, “ETF flows are primarily funded by retail, and this is a reflection of the retail sentiment.”

Mahidhar said policy uncertainty was dampening capital flows into risk assets but added that the outlook could shift quickly if clarity returns.

The analyst expects the sentiment to recover once trade tensions stabilize, noting that, “there is expectation among firms for this debate to settle soon around an equilibrium of either low tariffs or no tariffs, looking at a reasonable uptick in asset prices in the medium term.”

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May 30, 2025 0 comments
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JPMorgan to allow clients to buy Bitcoin, ETF access reportedly on the table
GameFi Guides

JPMorgan to allow clients to buy Bitcoin, ETF access reportedly on the table

by admin May 20, 2025



Banking giant JPMorgan will allow clients to buy Bitcoin, CEO Jamie Dimon said at the firm’s annual investor day.

Speaking to CNBC, Dimon said clients would soon be able to buy Bitcoin, though the bank itself won’t hold the asset. 

“We’re not going to custody it,” he noted, adding only that Bitcoin will appear “in statements for clients.” No additional details were disclosed.

The move marks a notable shift for the largest U.S. bank, particularly as rival Morgan Stanley already offers access to spot Bitcoin ETFs for qualifying clients.

JPMorgan is expected to offer access to Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs), according to sources cited by CNBC. Until now, the bank’s exposure to crypto has been limited to futures-based products rather than direct investment options.

Still, Dimon made it clear his personal stance on Bitcoin hasn’t changed. He pointed to its association with criminal use cases, including money laundering, sex trafficking, and terrorism. 

“I don’t think you should smoke, but I defend your right to smoke. I defend your right to buy Bitcoin,” he was quoted as saying.

The remarks echo what he told CBS News back in January, when he said he doesn’t believe Bitcoin has intrinsic value and likened its users to smokers, acknowledging their right to own it while discouraging it personally. 

At the time, he insisted he wasn’t against crypto as a whole but remained firmly opposed to Bitcoin’s utility.

Dimon’s skepticism dates back years. In 2021, during a Senate hearing, he called Bitcoin “worthless” and claimed its only real use case was among “criminals, drug traffickers, and tax avoiders.”

In 2018, he called it a scam and even threatened to fire JPMorgan traders who dealt with it. At Davos earlier this year, after Bitcoin surged past $100,000, he dismissed it again as “the pet rock,” insisting it “does nothing.”

Despite his criticism, JPMorgan has found itself increasingly involved in the decentralized space. 

The bank is listed as an authorized participant in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust and has praised blockchain technology, even as its CEO continues to distance himself from Bitcoin specifically.



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May 20, 2025 0 comments
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