The ultra-complex card game that will take over your weekend

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 27, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, hello, you’re awesome, and also, you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage. Oh, and send me some recommendations! The more the merrier!) 

This week, I’ve been playing Assassin’s Creed Nexus on the Quest 3, reading about obsessive ramen makers and Noah Kahan’s journey to TikTok superstardom, finally watching Dune so I can be ready to see the sequel, also finally watching Patriot, and trying desperately to learn to make crispy Brussels sprouts.

I also have for you a mega-viral new camera, a better way to manage your smart home, a new book about Twitter, and a whole bunch of awesome games to play this weekend.

And I have a question. What’s your favorite food-related stuff on the internet? I’m talking recipe apps, cooking blogs, creators you like, shows you can’t get enough of, those silly people who exclusively cook rage-baitingly bad stuff, anything. We’re going to do a whole food-internet issue here in the next few weeks, and I want to know everything you like. (Thanks to Michael for suggesting this, too. This’ll be super fun!)

(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What are you reading, playing, watching, charging, transmogrifying, or building right now? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, or you want to get it in your inbox a day before it hits the web, you can subscribe here.)

  • Balatro. Roughly two-thirds of the internet appears to be into this game right now: a poker roguelike game in which you use special cards to upgrade your hands and build your deck to solve puzzles. It’s complex and delightful. (This was by far the most popular recommendation this week — thanks to everyone who sent it in!)
  • The Fujifilm X100VI. The sequel to the internet’s favorite camera is here, and it is gorgeous. (Obviously.) The big news this year seems to be that you might actually be able to get your hands on one — and the early reviews seem to say it’s as good and fun as ever.
  • Elle Cordova. I have sent Cordova’s “Inventions hanging out” video to approximately half the people I know this week. You might have seen their “Fonts hanging out” series, too. This is my kind of comedy. 
  • The Amazon Echo Hub. It’s so telling to me that this even needs to exist: a $180 dedicated device for controlling all the stuff in your smart home that doesn’t require you to constantly unlock your phone or yell at a voice assistant. Buttons! Single-purpose devices! You love to see it!
  • ButterDocs. I am so into this: a Google Docs-like collaborative writing app that also has a bunch of really useful outlining and notes-app-style features like backlinking? Yes please. $100 per user per year is… a lot, but there are some really cool ideas in this app.
  • Formula 1: Drive to Survive season 6. If you like racing, you already watch this show. But even if you don’t care about F1 or cars or racing, the sheer human drama here is just spectacular (and at least… mostly real). And if you watch it and get super into F1 like I did, hit me up. Let’s talk McLaren.
  • Battle for the Bird. More Twitter books! This one is a great companion to Zoë Schiffer’s Extremely Hardcore. Kurt Wagner has tons of Elon Musk drama, of course, but also spends a lot of time on the pre-Musk era at Twitter, particularly Jack Dorsey’s deeply weird leadership style and legacy. There’s some overlap between the two books, but I’ve been enjoying both.
  • Share Spatial Everything. A crowdsourced database of spatial video and panoramas to give Vision Pro and Quest 3 users cool stuff to watch and look at. It’s like scrolling through a travel-heavy Instagram feed, but all the pictures are humongous.
  • Sonos co-founder John MacFarlane on How I Built This. Sonos is such a weird company — it’s based in a beachy town in California, has resisted so many of the normal trappings of tech companies, and just kept chugging along. But there’s still a ton of drama, a lot of it unresolved, in this story. (I’m also digging HIBT’s new AI series so far.)
  • Signal usernames. Signal is trying to move past the phone number, because phone numbers are both incredibly useful and incredibly problematic things to use as usernames. You have to download the beta to get a username for now, but you should! And hit me up: I’m davidpierce.11.

Francesco D’Alessio might be the only person on the planet who has used more productivity apps than I have. He has a website, Tool Finder, dedicated to the best of them and is perpetually reviewing new stuff on the Keep Productive YouTube channel as well.