Your Tactical Role-Playing Game Setup deserves a better Command Deck. Meet the ONE BOX 4.0

Board game nights typically end the same way: scattered tokens, bent cards sliding across the table, dice that have rolled onto the floor for the third time. The chaos becomes part of the experience, tolerated because storage solutions only address what happens after everyone goes home. ONE BOX 4.0 takes a different approach by treating organization as something that belongs inside the game itself, using modular wooden compartments that stay open and active throughout play. The whole thing behaves less like a box and more like a portable command deck that happens to collapse into something the size of a pencil case. You unfold it, and the table suddenly has lanes, stages, and zones instead of a single flat battlefield where everything fights for the same square inches.

CHENGSHE.design built the system from mortise and tenon joinery, the kind of traditional woodworking that holds furniture together without screws or glue. Each unit comes in beech, teak, or black walnut, and the natural grain variations mean no two boxes look identical. The modules include card display stands, contained dice rolling areas, and phone holders that keep digital rulebooks accessible without crowding the play surface. The parts interlock into a single carryable brick, then fan out into a full tabletop system in a couple of moves. It feels like someone took the logic of a good travel tool roll, mixed it with a GM screen, and then asked an architect to make it beautiful without turning it into furniture cosplay.

Designer: ONE BOX 4.0

Click Here to Buy Now: $59 $119 (59% off). Hurry, only a few left!

The design addresses three distinct phases of a session: setup, active play, and teardown. Before play, the modules unfold from a single case into multiple zones in a matter of seconds, with dividers and trays already proportioned for cards, dice, tokens, and reference materials. During play, cards sit upright in angled stands, which keeps information visible and reduces edge wear from constant handling. Dice move through a contained rolling lane that prevents table escapes and limits collisions with card stacks or miniatures. After the session, components return to defined compartments, which then recombine into a unified case for transport and shelf storage.

Underneath the pretty wood, the logic is very modular and very modern. One set of modules can handle a deck-heavy Euro game one night and a crunchy TRPG session the next, simply by rearranging dividers and stands. The dividers are adjustable, so you can create narrow lanes for standard 63.5 by 88 mm cards or open wider slots for tarot or oversized character sheets. A lot of “board game accessories” assume a single flagship game and then become useless when your group rotates titles. ONE BOX 4.0 behaves more like a system-level accessory, closer to a camera cage or modular tool chest that expects you to change the loadout constantly. The fact that this is the fourth generation shows in that ecosystem thinking.

The mortise and tenon construction is not a decorative flex either. That joint style is pretty resilient when you are opening and closing something hundreds of times, applying torsion in slightly different directions every session. Screws back out, cheap hinges loosen, glued butt joints fail at the worst moment. Properly cut mortise and tenon joints share load across surfaces and age with the wood rather than against it. Combined with hardwoods like teak and black walnut, you get a product that can take the mild abuse of transport and table slams without turning into a rattling box of regret.

The other design decision that lands beautifully is backward compatibility. If you bought ONE BOX 3.0, you do not have to retire it to adopt 4.0. The new modules plug into the old ecosystem, which is the kind of long horizon thinking you usually only see in camera mounts, bike standards, or pro audio racks. That matters because people build habits around their table setups. If you already have a certain arrangement for card lanes and dice trays, you can add a new TRPG-focused module or that OB Infinite Pen without rethinking everything. This is how you build a niche platform instead of a series of isolated products that age out every two years.

The OB Infinite Pen and erasable whiteboard module signal a clear orientation toward TRPG and scenario driven gameplay. By dedicating space to writing tools and a reusable surface, the system supports initiative tracking, hit points, quick maps, and ad hoc notes without adding disposable paper clutter. The pen shares the same wood material language as the box, which unifies the visual identity and reinforces the idea that note taking is an integrated part of the experience. For groups that run mixed digital and analog setups, the phone and tablet holder aligns with this approach, parking screens at the edge of the system instead of scattering them across the main play field.

Visually, this is the opposite of RGB acrylic chaos. Natural wood, clean chamfers, visible grain, and a restrained color palette of light beech, warm teak, and dark walnut. On a table, it reads more like a compact piece of joinery than a toy, which is exactly what you want if your “game table” is also your work desk or dining surface. There is a subtle psychological trick here: when the tools of play look like serious objects, people tend to treat the whole session with a bit more focus. You are less likely to fling dice across a carefully built wooden lane than across a bare laminate tabletop.

Folded shut, the core ONE BOX 4.0 package is roughly pencil box sized, which means it goes into a backpack alongside a laptop and a rulebook without much negotiation. Unfolded, it spreads to cover a player station or GM area without requiring a dedicated gaming table. That portability is what separates this from the beautiful but immovable wooden tables that dominate the aspirational side of tabletop culture. You can take this to a cafe, a friend’s apartment, or a convention hall, and your setup logic travels with you instead of being rebuilt from scratch every time.

The ONE BOX 4.0 comes in three primary wood options: beech for a pale, almost Scandinavian tone, teak for a warmer mid tone, and black walnut for a darker, more saturated look. Configurations range from a single core box setup to multi box “command station” style bundles that add dedicated dice rollers, erasable whiteboard modules, storage bags, and the OB Infinite Pen in matching wood. Up to 50 early backers can grab the beech variant for as low as $59, while the next tier for all wood versions sits at $79 (which includes the ‘recording kit’ featuring the OB Infinite Pen and erasable whiteboard modules). Throw in an extra twenty, and the $99 tier also gets you a dice roller. The ONE BOX 4.0 is open for preorder and ships globally starting May 2026.

Click Here to Buy Now: $59 $119 (59% off). Hurry, only a few left!

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Wall-Clock inspired by a Pile Of Leaves tells time but also a Nature-inspired Visual Story

“Foglie” is the Italian word for leaves, and Tobias Sartori makes no effort to obscure the reference. His Foglie Wall Clock is built from dozens of hand-carved pine leaves, each shaped with a carved central ridge that mimics a real leaf’s midrib, arranged into a pointed, flame-like cluster that functions as the clock face. Branch-carved hands in a contrasting darker finish sweep the hours from a movement housed at the center. The result sits between decorative object and wall art, and it does so with enough material confidence to hold that ground convincingly.

Sartori first worked with leaf forms in a jewelry project, carving wooden pendants for necklaces, and the motif followed him home. A beech hedge outside and a botanical wallpaper inside reinforced the idea, together suggesting that an entire clock could operate in the same visual vocabulary. Several layout sketches followed before two strong candidates emerged. The chosen design is the one where every individual carved leaf echoes the overall silhouette of the piece, creating a quality that feels grown from the inside out.

Designer: Tobias Sartori

The final piece has a remarkable sense of depth and texture, a direct result of its meticulous construction. Because each pine leaf is an individual component, hand-carved and set at a slightly different angle and height, the clock creates a dynamic topography of light and shadow that shifts throughout the day. This layered arrangement gives the object a living quality, changing its character as the sun moves across the room.

The choice of pine, with its warm and expressive grain, gives the clock an approachable, organic feel that invites a closer look. The darker, more delicate hands provide just enough contrast to ensure legibility without overpowering the woodwork. It is a quiet object that reveals its handmade complexity gradually, rewarding careful observation with subtle details that a mass-produced item could never replicate.

Sartori’s process sketches reveal another, more traditional round variant that he ultimately set aside, a decision that proved critical to the design’s integrity. The circular concept, while pleasant, felt more like leaves applied to a conventional clock shape. The final, elongated form, however, feels like a clock that grew directly from the leaves themselves. This distinction is the core of its success. By housing a simple, reliable clock movement within a form that feels completely natural, Sartori allows the artistry of the woodwork to remain the main story. The Foglie clock successfully integrates function into a form that feels elemental and intentional, as if a gust of wind had gathered the leaves on the wall in a moment of perfect, fleeting composition.

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OFIS Rebuilt This 122sq.m. Post-War Home Without Losing Its Soul

Settled quietly within Naselje Murgle, one of Ljubljana’s most thoughtfully conceived residential neighborhoods, the House Under the Poplars is a 122-square-meter reconstruction and extension that speaks softly and means it. Completed in 2025 by OFIS Arhitekti, the project reads less as a statement of ambition and more as an act of architectural respect, a house that earns its place not by standing out but by understanding exactly where it stands.

Murgle was never meant to be remarkable in a conventional sense. Designed by Slovenian architects France and Marta Ivanšek and built through self-construction phases between 1965 and 1982, the settlement became a quietly radical model of ecological, human-scaled living long before sustainability entered the architectural vocabulary. Its distinctly Scandinavian character, shaped in part by the Ivanšeks’ time in Sweden, gave the neighborhood a collective identity rooted not in signature gestures but in shared, low-tech intelligence.

Designer: OFIS Arhitekti

Led by Rok Oman and Špela Videčnik, OFIS Arhitekti approached the project with the kind of cultural sensitivity that most renovations only gesture toward. The intent was never to impose a new architectural language onto an existing one but to refine and carefully elevate what was already there. The studio leaned into Murgle’s founding principles, treating them not as limitations but as the clearest possible brief for what this house needed to become.

The new glazed façade opens generously toward the garden, framing a mature birch tree with an ease that feels entirely uncontrived. Vertical timber slats line the side glazing, offering privacy to the main living space without cutting it off from the broader landscape. The covered atrium connects the primary bedroom and its ensuite bathroom to the rest of the house, creating a sequence of spaces that feel considered without ever feeling overcalculated.

Inside, timber cladding runs across the walls and ceiling in a move that unifies the interior and gives the whole house its warmth. A wine cellar sits beneath a glass floor panel in the living room, one of the project’s more unexpected gestures, and all the better for it. The rest of the program stays deliberately modest: a single additional bedroom suite and a small study, a reminder that restraint, when properly applied, is its own kind of luxury.

The House Under the Poplars does not try to reinvent Murgle. It tries to honor it, and in doing so, quietly sets a standard for what thoughtful, sensitive reconstruction can look like in a neighborhood that has always asked its residents to think beyond themselves. As a project, it resists easy categorization. It is not a restoration, not a reimagining, but something far more useful: a considered continuation of an idea that was already worth keeping.

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Mark Zuckerberg testifies in social media addiction trial that Meta just wants Instagram to be ‘useful’

Mark Zuckerberg took the stand Wednesday in a high-profile jury trial over social media addiction. In an appearance that was described by NBC News as "combative," the Facebook founder reportedly said that Meta's goal was to make Instagram "useful" not increase the time users are spending in the app. 

On the stand, Zuckerberg was questioned about a company document that said improving engagement was among "company goals," according to CNBC. But Zuckerberg claimed that the company had "made the conscious decision to move away from those goals, focusing instead on utility," according to The Associated Press. "If something is valuable, people will use it more because it’s useful to them,” he said. 

The trial stems from a lawsuit brought by a California woman identified as "KGM" in court documents. The now 20-year-old alleges that she was harmed as a child by addictive features in Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok. TikTok and Snap opted to settle before the case went to trial. 

Zuckerberg was also asked about previous public statements, including his remarks on Joe Rogan's podcast last year that he can't be fired by Meta's board because he controls a majority of the voting power. According to The New York Times, Zuckerberg accused the plaintiffs' lawyer of "mischaracterizing" his past comments more than a dozen times.  

Zuckerberg's appearance in court also apparently prompted the judge to warn people in the courtroom not to record the proceedings using AI glasses. As CNBC notes, members of Zuckerberg's entourage were spotted wearing Meta's smart glasses as the CEO was escorted into the courthouse. It's unclear if anyone was actually using the glasses in court, but legal affairs journalist Meghann Cuniff reported that the judge was particularly concerned about the possibility of jurors being recorded or subjected to facial recognition. (Meta's smart glasses do not currently have native facial recognition abilities, but recent reports suggest the company is considering adding such features.)

The Los Angeles trial has been closely watched not just because it marked a rare in-court appearance for Zuckerberg. It's among the first of several cases where Meta will face allegations that its platforms have harmed children. In this case and in a separate proceeding in New Mexico, Meta's lawyers have cast doubt on the idea that social media should be considered a real addiction. Instagram chief Adam Mosseri previously testified in the same Los Angeles trial that Instagram isn't "clinically addictive."

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/mark-zuckerberg-testifies-in-social-media-addiction-trial-that-meta-just-wants-instagram-to-be-useful-234332316.html?src=rss

Transformers-inspired Shapeshifting Machine Splits Into An Entire Road-Construction Robot Fleet

Road construction has a complexity problem. Getting a stretch of road built in a remote region, a disaster zone, or difficult terrain typically means coordinating multiple heavy machines, multiple skilled operators, and a logistical chain that can collapse at any point. Yan Zhang and Jialu Hou, two designers from Shandong University of Art and Design, spent several months in 2024 working on a concept that treats all of that complexity as a design challenge worth solving from scratch.

The result is PaveLink, an autonomous modular road-building system that arrives as a single articulated electric train and deploys into a coordinated fleet of AI-guided construction robots on site. One system. One delivery. A drone overhead, autonomous modules on the ground, and an intelligent command hub managing all of it in real time.

Designers: Yan Zhang and Jialu Hou

The truck head is a blocky, panoramic-windshield command center with a drone launch platform built right into the roof. When PaveLink reaches its target location, that drone lifts off first, ascending to map the terrain using aerial sensors and streaming data back to the cab in real time. The drone itself is worth a second look: shaped like a swept-back arrowhead with a multi-rotor configuration, it looks aggressive and purposeful in the air, matching the amber and gunmetal black palette of the ground units working below it.

Four distinct unit types detach from that spine: a front-loader with a wide scoop bucket, an excavator arm for breaking ground, a grader for leveling, and a heavy steel drum compactor for finishing the surface. On their own, each unit looks almost insectoid, riding on two or three fat rugged wheels with articulated limbs that flex and angle across uneven ground. Together, working in coordinated parallel, they turn what would normally require a crew of operators and days of staging into something that functions more like a synchronized performance.

All the modules stay tethered to the system via cables, which serve double duty as power lines and data channels. PaveLink runs fully electric, so there’s no diesel cloud hanging over the operation, and the continuous cable connection means the modules never need to stop and recharge independently. The drone keeps feeding updated terrain data overhead, flagging hazards and fine-tuning the AI’s workflow decisions as ground conditions change.

PaveLink is aimed squarely at the places traditional road construction struggles most: disaster-hit zones, remote regions with no skilled operators, and rugged terrain that conventional machinery can’t navigate efficiently. The modular autonomous approach answers all three problems at once. Fewer humans in harm’s way, fewer separate machines to transport in, and an AI coordination layer that adapts to whatever chaotic ground conditions it finds on arrival.

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Dyson announces the PencilWash wet floor cleaner

Last year Dyson introduced the PencilVac, which it immediately declared the "world’s slimmest vacuum cleaner." Presumably, then, the title of world’s slimmest wet floor cleaner goes to the newly unveiled PencilWash.

Promising a "lighter, slimmer and smaller solution to wet cleaning without compromising on hygiene," the PencilWash is designed to let you clean everywhere you need to with minimal hassle. Like the vacuum cleaner with which it shares the first part of its name, the handle measures just 1.5 inches in diameter from top to bottom, and the whole thing weighs little more than 2kg.

The ultra-thin design allows the cleaner to lie almost completely flat, allowing you to get into tight corners or under low furniture, where more traditionally bulky devices might struggle. Its slender proportions also make it easier to store if your home is on the smaller side.

Dyson says the PencilWash only applies fresh water to floors, and after swiftly eliminating spills and stains it should dry up pretty quickly. Its high-density microfiber roller is designed to tackle both wet and dry debris in one pass, and because it doesn’t have a traditional filter, you won’t have to worry about trapped dirt or lingering smells.

Above the power buttons there’s a screen displaying remaining battery level, and the handle can be slotted into a charging dock when not in use.

The Dyson PencilVac will cost $349, with a release date yet to be announced.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/dyson-announces-the-pencilwash-wet-floor-cleaner-230152299.html?src=rss

The Modular Cat Habitat That Turns Playful Curiosity Into Living Architecture

What if we designed homes the way cats would design them? Not human homes with a token scratching post in the corner but true spatial systems built around curiosity, vertical exploration, territorial comfort, and play. The N Plus Magic House begins precisely at that question, reframing pet furniture not as an accessory but as architecture scaled for feline psychology. Instead of treating a cat house as a static object, this project treats it as a living spatial framework, one that evolves alongside its inhabitant.

Today’s pet owners increasingly see their cats as emotional companions rather than animals that merely coexist in domestic space. That shift has quietly created a design problem. Traditional cat houses, even elaborate ones, tend to be fixed structures. They may be visually impressive, but they impose constraints on placement, adaptability, and long-term usability. The N Plus Magic House flips that paradigm by introducing modularity as its core philosophy. Rather than selling a finished form, it offers a system of standardized units that can be assembled, rearranged, expanded, or reduced as needed. The result is less like furniture and more like a customizable habitat kit.

Designer: Taizhou Hake Technology Co., Ltd

The genius of the design lies in its simplicity. Each module functions independently yet connects securely through precision-engineered connectors. Owners assemble structures by inserting panels into slots and stacking them like building blocks. No technical expertise, tools, or installation manuals are required. This intuitive construction method does something subtle but powerful. It turns pet care into participation. Instead of buying a finished object, users become co-designers of their cat’s environment. That interaction strengthens the emotional bond among the owner, the pet, and the space.

Material choices reinforce the system’s practicality. The structure combines impact-resistant PP resin, transparent PET panels for visibility, and carbon steel mesh for structural integrity. These materials balance durability with safety while allowing owners to monitor their pets without disturbing them. The manufacturing processes, such as injection molding and automatic wire welding, ensure consistency, precision, and reliability across units. Every element reflects careful alignment with feline behavior and safety requirements.

Behind the scenes, the development team approached the project with a research-driven mindset. They studied cats’ behavioral patterns, analyzed existing products on the market, and mapped owner expectations. One of the biggest technical challenges was maintaining structural stability while preserving modular flexibility. The solution was a custom connector engineered to withstand pressure and weight while preventing slippage. Its textured surface increases friction, ensuring modules remain firmly locked during use. This small component is arguably the system’s unsung hero. It transforms a playful concept into a reliable architectural structure.

Developed in Taizhou, Zhejiang Province, between July 2023 and November 2024 and later exhibited internationally, the N Plus Magic House represents a broader shift in product design thinking. It signals a move away from static ownership toward adaptive systems, objects that respond to changing needs over time. In a world where personalization defines modern consumer expectations, this approach feels less like a novelty and more like a glimpse into the future of domestic product design.

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2026 Mercedes-Benz Marco Polo camper van arrives with smarter pop-up roof and luxury upgrades

Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen have produced some of the best camper vans on the market, and they’ve long shared a common collaborator. Now, with Mercedes-Benz taking the complete production of its Marco Polo under its wings, Volkswagen and other competitors can expect some serious competition. The newly updated 2026 Marco Polo is the first new addition to Mercedes in-house van life portfolio and flaunts an interesting pop-up roof, which is its main talking point.

According to Mercedes-Benz press information, the body of the V-Class Marco Polo is built at the company’s Vans plant in Vitoria, Spain. The vehicle is then converted into a pop-up camper van at the Ludwigsfelde plant in Germany. The overall in-house production of the Marco Polo means it’s of the “highest quality standard” and that the company has complete control over every detail and pace at which it is produced.

Designer: Mercedes-Benz

Substantiating the fact, Sagree Sardien, head of sales & marketing Mercedes-Benz Vans said, it is a “Mercedes-Benz through and through,” which is designed to offer buyers a more sophisticated home on wheels. “A home that effortlessly combines travel and everyday life – while making a stylish statement,” he said.

To that accord, the Mercedes-Benz 2026 Marco Polo is a compact, luxury camper van featuring a pop-up roof, convertible downstairs seating, kitchen, and ambient lighting to uplift the mood when you’re inside the van. The major update from the 2024 model of the van is focused around the improvement to the lifting roof space. The double-skinned aluminum pop-top makes for an additional 4 inches of headroom and is provided with an ambient LED system that allows the space to feel lively and inviting.

Downstairs, the Marco Polo doesn’t make many changes. It comes equipped with a kitchen featuring double burner gas stove, a sink, mini fridge, and a swiveling bench that can easily facilitate dining and sleeping. During mealtime, you have a folding table that reaches out of the kitchen block, and during the night it folds up to make room for the convertible sofa to create a double bed.

MBAC infotainment suite is another interesting facet of the new Mercedes camper van. Sitting in the cockpit, the smart touchscreen can control the interior components like the vehicle’s upgraded eight-speaker audio system and pop-up roof lighting. The infotainment system also has instant control to pop-up roof. You can deploy or retract the lifting roof remotely, while also maintaining the temperature of the van home.

The new Marco Polo will be available to order soon, Mercedes notes. It also mentions in the press release that the launch of Marco Polo Horizon is also on the cards. This model shares similar features except for the built-in kitchen unit, making it suitable for weekend outings or short holidays only.

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Gemini can now generate a 30-second approximation of what real music sounds like

Google has announced that using its newly incorporated Lyria 3 model, Gemini users will be able to generate 30-second music tracks based on a prompt, or remix an existing track to their liking. The new model builds on Gemini's pre-existing ability to generate text, images and video, and will also be available in YouTube's "Dream Track" feature, where it can be used to generate detailed backing tracks for Shorts.

Like some other music generation tools, prompting Gemini doesn't require a lot of detail to produce serviceable results. Google's example prompt is "a comical R&B slow jam about a sock finding their match," but after playing with Lyria 3, you can definitely get more granular about individual elements of a track — changing the tempo or the style of drumming, for example — if you want to. Outside of text, Gemini can also generate music based on a photo or video, and tracks can be paired with album art created by Google's Nano Banana image model.

Google says that Lyria 3 improves on its previous audio generation models in its ability to create more "realistic and musically complex" tracks, give prompters more control over individual components of a song and automatically generate lyrics. Gemini's outputs are limited to 30-second clips for now, but given how Google's promotional video shows off the feature, it's not hard to imagine those clips getting longer or the model getting incorporated into other apps, like Google Messages.

Like Gemini's other AI-generated outputs, songs made with Lyria 3 are also watermarked with Google's SynthID, so a Gemini clip can't as easily be passed off as a human one. Google started rolling out its SynthID Detector for identifying AI-generated content at Google I/O 2025. The sample tracks Google included alongside its announcement are convincing, but you might not need the company's tool to notice their machine-made qualities. The instrumental parts of Gemini’s clips often sound great, but the composition of the lyrics Lyria 3 produces sounds alternately corny and strange.

If you're curious to try Lyria 3 for yourself, Google says you can prompt tracks in Gemini starting today, provided you're 18 years or older and speak English, Spanish, German, French, Hindi, Japanese, Korean or Portuguese.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/gemini-can-now-generate-a-30-second-approximation-of-what-real-music-sounds-like-204445903.html?src=rss

Google Released a New Pixel 10a and It’s Basically the Same Phone From Last Year

Google would like you to meet the Pixel 10A. It has a new name, new colors, and a press release that runs to several pages. It costs $499, which is exactly what the Pixel 9A cost. It weighs the same. It measures the same. It has the same cameras, the same battery, the same chip, and the same 6.3 inch display. There is a episode of The Office where Pam preoccupies Michael by presenting two identical photo printouts as a spot-the-difference puzzle. Google has essentially done that, except the printout costs five hundred dollars.

To be precise about what actually changed: the display is about 10% brighter, the glass protecting it moved from Gorilla Glass 3 to Gorilla Glass 7i, wired charging climbed from 23 watts to 30, and wireless charging went from 7.5 watts to 10. The camera bump, already barely perceptible on the 9A, is now completely flush. In some regions, satellite SOS is supported. That is the complete list. Google did not forget to send the rest of it.

Designer: Google

The Pixel 10 and Pixel 10 Pro both run on the Tensor G5. The Pixel 10A runs on the Tensor G4, the same chip from last year’s A-series, and the year before that in the Pixel 9 Pro. For years, buying the A-series meant getting the current flagship chip in a cheaper body. That was a genuinely good deal. Google has decided, apparently, that it was too good.

Best Take, Camera Coach, Call Screening, Clear Calling, Now Playing, Gemini as a built-in assistant, and seven years of updates add up to an experience that Android competitors at this price genuinely struggle to match. The Pixel ecosystem has real pull, and Google knows it. The 10A is banking on that pull being strong enough to carry a spec sheet that would embarrass a 2024 phone.

Google looked at the Pixel 9A, decided it had not been wrong about any of it, and shipped it again with brighter glass and a new colorway called Fog. In an industry that routinely invents problems to solve, there is something almost philosophical about a company that simply refuses to fix what it considers unbroken. The Pixel 10A does not have an identity crisis. It has its predecessor’s identity, and it is completely comfortable with that.

It will sell because the cameras are good, the battery lasts, the software support is unmatched at the price, and most people upgrading to it will be coming from something two or three generations older where the difference feels significant regardless of which Tensor chip is inside. Google understands its buyer perhaps better than its buyer understands the spec sheet. The Pixel 10A is a perfectly competent phone that knows exactly what it is. But also… this smartphone announcement could have been an email.

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