The silly word game you didn’t know you needed

  News, Rassegna Stampa
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Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 15, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you’re new here, hello, sorry in advance for all my terrible jokes, and also, you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) 

I also have for you a new webcam, a new word game, a new show about monsters, a new iMessage hack, and a whole bunch more. Oh, and a favor to ask: we’re doing a survey on how people use The Verge and what you might want from a “Verge subscription.” If you have thoughts and are up for helping us out, please take a second to fill out the survey. Thanks in advance!

We’re off next week for a Thanksgiving break, so I hope you all get a wonderful and restful break, and I hope there’s enough here to keep you busy for a couple of weeks.

And of course, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. If you find a new app this week, discover a new podcast, crack open a new book, build a new Minecraft world, or anything else, I want to hear about it. Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, forward it to them, and tell them to subscribe here.

Alright, lots of fun stuff this week. Let’s dive in.

  • Gubbins. Imagine Scrabble, except you’re trying to build the whole board in one turn, and there are a bunch of trumpets trying to help you and monsters trying to stop you. It’s pure word-game chaos, and I love it so far. (This was easily the most popular recommendation this week, too — thanks to everyone who sent it in!)
  • Microsoft Loop. It’s a collaborative, customizable productivity… you know what, it’s Notion. Microsoft made Notion. And after months in beta, it’s now available to everyone! It’s a nice app, though Notion’s much better, and I officially don’t understand why Loop, Planner, and OneNote all need to exist. But that’s for another day.
  • The Opal Tadpole. Opal’s first webcam, the C1, looked really good and didn’t work very well. (I think I even underestimated the issues some people have had with it.) But the Tadpole, which is explicitly made to clip to your laptop, both looks good and works well. It’s now a staple in my travel bag.
  • “Cobell Energy.” Adam McKay’s production company made an entire relatively high-production show that exists only on social platforms, a few minutes at a time. There’s a whole What It All Means thing here that is truly fascinating, but the show is so weird! And also funny! 
  • Google Notes. Google’s plan for search is weirdly bifurcated: it’s both trying to replace the whole internet with generative AI and also trying to help you find more human voices and human content. This experiment, which lets you annotate search results so others can see them, is a neat idea but really hard to do well at scale.
  • The Netflix Cup. I’m honestly not sure I’d recommend watching this entire thing, which felt like a livestreamed golf tournament created by people who had never heard the words “golf” or “tournament” before. But this is a Cultural Moment just the same: Netflix is trying hard to carve out its own part of the future of sports TV, and the show might be the beginning of something big.
  • Nothing Chats. We’re in the middle of a truly fascinating trend: companies figuring out how to hack iMessage onto other platforms in increasingly brazen ways. Beeper did it; Texts did it; now, Nothing is doing it for the Phone 2 and basically daring Apple to stop it. 
  • Rooms. Remember a couple of years ago when everyone was suddenly trying to build interesting digital spaces for people to hang out? I wish they were all like Rooms: a super customizable, really charming tool for creating almost any kind of space. This is my kind of metaverse.
  • Monarch: Legacy of Monsters. The premise of this Apple TV Plus show — half Godzilla-style caper, half history-of-monster-movies Wikipedia page — is only ever going to be great or terrible. But so far, the reviews lean great. And I mean, the trailer alone made clear that I’m going to watch this whole thing no matter what.

It’s gift guide season! Friends, I will not lie to you, I love a good gift guide. And the niche-ier and weirder the better. It’s also about to be Black Friday, though Black Friday sales are starting earlier than ever this year. Deals for everybody! But shopping on the internet is somehow more confusing and complicated than ever, so I figured it might be a good time to dig in a bit on a few simple tricks I’ve found for deal hunting and gift searching.