For those who attended Comic-Con 2022 in San Diego, a massive 14-foot-tall LEGO Bowser may have greeted you. This isn’t a simple solid statue that was 3d-printed or assembled by a machine, but rather designed on a computer and then hand-built by brick artists using 663,900 bricks over 137 days.
The Mario Kart 8 Deluxe Booster Course Pass Wave 2 is set for release as a DLC for the Nintendo Switch on August 4th. Featuring the Sky-High Sundae course, which makes its first appearance in the Mario Kart series, along with the neon lights of New York Minute from the Mario Kart Tour mobile game as well as a giant pinball machine in the DS Waluigi Pinball course.
Photo credit: Aditya Pandharpure
If the NES game console was turned into an AM/FM radio, it would probably look like this fan-designed Nintendo Radio. Not only are there buttons modeled after the ones found on the original NES controller, but a D-pad as well, but unfortunately, the screen does not double as a functional panel to play games on.
Always wanted a gaming PC that had all of the latest video game consoles built in? If so, then look no further than Origin PC’s ‘Big O V3’, which was built exclusively for Unbox Therapy. The high-end gaming PC is powered by an AMD Ryzen 5950X processor, 128GB of Corsair Dominator Platinum 3200MHz RGB RAM, a 2TB Corsair 4TB MP500 Core Gen4 SSD, and a Hydro X Cooled NVIDIA 24GB GeForce RTX 3090 graphics card.
Photo credit: Rex Sowards
Back in 1989, Apple released the Macintosh Portable, but it wasn’t exactly something you could fit in a pocket or even a standard backpack for that matter, as it weighed 16-pounds. Unfortunately (or fortunately), it was discontinued after 2-years, possibly due to its $16,790 USD price tag (adjusted for inflation). Industrial designer Rex Sowards wanted to change that with the Macintosh Pocket.