Yes. Yes, they are.
Like how whale sharks are categorically sharks; basketballs being balls, and catfishes being fishes. But, this isn’t a debate on semantics over compound words. In fact, it isn’t a compound word at all. When people strip it to the fundamental description, it’s gamers who play on their mobile phones.
Knowing that the gaming community has long debated the legitimacy of each hardware you played games on, it’s clear the answer you see above isn’t brain science or rocket surgery. That was a joke by the way in case that flew by you.
Why we can’t have nice things
Let me put it simply: you don’t evaluate software or the legitimacy of a community around the software, with hardware. It’s like calling shit, food because it’s on a plate. That just isn’t it, chief.
Video games have always been delegitimized as an industry. From game development to esports, it’s always been the unwanted child of entertainment or that’s what they’ve long been portrayed as. So, I understand.
When you get a fat paycheck from taking it seriously or how seriously people are now taking it, you don’t want to be clumped up with people who play Candy Crush. But you need to see it in a technical and rational sense, not by how hurt your ego is.
No tea. No shade. Just facts
Alright. Enough of the condescension. Let’s talk about ROG Phone 3. Did I just write paragraphs explaining the legitimacy of mobile gamers to talk about a gaming phone? Yes. Yes, I did. Let me explain.
The ROG Phone 3 gets called the best gaming phone and the most powerful phone to date. And, we needed to get to the bottom of whether a phone this fast and powerful is even necessary. The answer is yes. Why? Because if it won’t necessarily instantly make you good at games, it does open the floodgates of opportunities for mobile games and consequently, mobile gamers.
Gaming with reckless abandon
The phone is decked out with all the good-good gaming specs you’d want on a phone. But before we get into that, let’s talk aesthetic build. ASUS ROG stuck to the same size and shape for the ROG Phone 3 to its predecessors to make sure all those accessories stay compatible. They did tone down on the flashy designs, making the phone mostly black with a small window showing off its aerodynamic cooling system.
It’s got a stunning 6.6-inch OLED 4K display with a 144Hz refresh rate. On top of that, it joins the top-notch phones with a Snapdragon SD865+ processor with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of internal storage. If you’re poorly mistaken worrying about the phone lasting a day out, the 6000mAh battery can take more than just a beating.
Too hot to handle
No, really. I mean that in the most literal sense. The ROG Phone 3 got too hot for me to hold or use when testing daily mobile use. I hadn’t even played on it at this point. This brings me to a cool snap-on accessory the phone comes with, the AeroActive Cooler 3. This is a dedicated cooling fan to make sure the system doesn’t overheat. Now, as much as the phone didn’t seem performance-wise bothered by the heat it was emanating, it would stunt the phone’s longevity. And, no one wants to be holding a freshly heated hot pocket as a phone.
Here’s a nitpicky crutch: with the AeroActive Cooler 3, the phone is invasively bulky. No one is putting this in their pockets. It’ll look like a mangled wallet. It won’t do you any favors, boys. I think, all things considered, the bulk and the heat is a downside but strangely expected from a gaming phone. Ultimately, if it hadn’t been marketed as a gaming phone, ASUS ROG would have been quickly roasted for it.
Where it puts other gaming phones to shame
Most “gaming phones” barely get to show off other features besides gaming spec-heavy features. The ROG Phone 3 cannot just take a beating on the mobile gaming end but, it delivers on capturing good photos. It’s decked out with a triple camera set-up with a 64MP wide, 13MP ultrawide, and a 5MP macro.
The ROG Phone 3 boasts perfect features for gamers, but it delivers on more than just that. The phone’s OLED 4k display is perfect for watching movies, shorts, and TV shows. With the phone’s extensive battery life, it had no problem tearing through hours of binge-watching on Netflix.
Is this your GamingPhoneMatch?
The ROG Phone 3 won’t save you from feeding or being bad at a game but, it does make it all the more fun! Nothing screams fun like seeing your character fail in full detail. Joking aside, gaming on the ROG Phone 3 may not make you good but, it could (with tons of practice) help you get good. If you’re a gamer who dabbles into accessing multi-platform games on your phone while you’re away or a mobile gamer, this is the phone for you.
Save the salt
Mobile games are not just convenient, portable, and efficient, it’s also mostly for free — and that’s why despite the memes and childish slap fights, its popularity has grown incrementally. Games are no longer a sensible debate between hardware, and it shouldn’t have been, to begin with.
Games like Wild Rift, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Among Us, Genshin Impact, and Identity V have proven that games that go multi-platform and dive into iOS and Android grow a huge following and community. So, next time you feel like judging a game by what people play it on, consider the context of usage, availability, and accessibility.
Automotive
Inside the BYD Di-Space Museum
I unearthed my inner science geek at BYD’s first new energy vehicle museum!
Going to Zhengzhou felt like slipping into the past version of me. The nerdy, excitable kid who used to memorize science books like bedtime stories. Except, I never looked like a nerd. I had no braces or oversized glasses.
I grew up looking like a himbo (still do, if you ask me), yet my brain has always been wired to understand the language of technology better than most.
So when ACMobility, the distributor of BYD cars in the Philippines, invited me to the BYD Di-Space Museum in Zhengzhou, it felt like a homecoming staged on glossy floors and wheels powered by the future.
It’s BYD’s first national new energy vehicle (NEV) science museum, designed to immerse visitors in the world of clean mobility, design, and technology.
For the first time in my life, I got ridiculously excited about a museum. Me? Geeking out? Maybe I’ve been hiding my true self all along.
First encounters
The museum sits in Zhengzhou’s Erqi District, about 30 minutes by bus from the InterContinental Zhengzhou Zhengdong, where I stayed like a king for nearly a week.
It sprawls across 15,000 square meters, with another 8,500 outside for supporting facilities. It’s divided by four floors, each one like a chapter of a novel about energy and innovation.
The first floor welcomed me with a story: the evolution of transportation energy. From fossil-fueled beginnings to the clean energy of electric vehicles, the narrative unfolded like a history lesson I didn’t want to skip.
Then came the rise of BYD Auto itself, tracing its journey from battery maker to global NEV leader.
Of course, no museum would be complete without a brand culture space. There were plenty of BYD merchandise and accessories to choose from.
And there’s a café where I could buy an Oatmilk Latte with AliPay via my GCash QR code. Though, when I asked Google Translate to decode the Chinese characters, it told me my drink was “poison milk.”
And you know what? Maybe it was right. Oatmilk is my poison, one I’ll gladly sip until my final breath.
The heart of innovation
The second and third floors were the real showstoppers. Here, BYD peeled back the curtain to reveal how design, engineering, and experimentation transform into actual cars.
It’s like watching haute couture get stitched together, except instead of gowns, you get vehicles meant to save the planet.
READ: 4 electric car myths, debunked
Every corner flaunted BYD’s core technologies. First was the Blade Battery. It’s a slim, elongated battery designed not just for power, but for safety. It’s called the Blade because of its shape and also its resilience.
Engineers literally put it through nail penetration tests and crush tests to prove it won’t explode. Although, I already saw this part when I visited the BYD Headquarters in Shenzhen, where the nail penetration test was full-on display.
Then came the E4 Platform. Think of it as BYD’s secret stage for performance. With motors on each wheel, the system allows precise control and hair-raising acceleration, making NEVs not only efficient but exhilarating.
On another side, there was the Yun Nian System. This is where BYD gets poetic. Yun Nian, meaning “cloud chariot,” is a suspension technology that reads the road like it’s fluent in empathy, smoothing out bumps and keeping rides graceful even on unforgiving terrain.
Then, there was the fifth-generation of DM Hybrid Technology. It’s BYD’s latest dual-mode hybrid tech that blends electric power with gasoline efficiency. It’s proof that clean energy doesn’t mean compromise, it just means extending choice and control.
On another wall, you will find the Patent Waterfall, a massive installation housing over 35,000 patents BYD has earned over the years. Yes! Thirty. Five. Thousand. Patents.
More than a museum
The Di-Space Museum isn’t just a shrine to BYD. It’s a stage for the public to fall in love with the future of mobility and to understand clean energy without needing an engineering degree. It’s a way to imagine what a green society could look like.
And here’s the part that got me a little sentimental: I wish we had something like this in Manila. A place where science feels cinematic, and where sustainability is presented not as sacrifice but as lifestyle. I want a place where kids — and grown-up kids like me — can dream.
Because this museum is more than a milestone for China’s NEV industry. It’s a promise. A powerful declaration that the future is electric, and it’s dazzling.
P.S. I filmed a full video tour using my favorite toys: the DJI Osmo Nano, Insta360 X5, and my iPhone 16 Pro. The future is green and it looks even better on screen.
@gadgetmatch We went on a tour at BYD’s Science Museum in Zhengzhou, China! #BYD #Zhengzhou #China ♬ original sound – GadgetMatch
In recent conversations with some close confidantes, I’ve expressed how I stumbled into a life I didn’t necessarily dream of. My work has taken me to places I never even imagined going to. One of those is London in the United Kingdom. Armed with the CANON EOS R50 V, I asked my friend, Jane, who has lived there for around seven to eight years to show me around.
Being in a new place always feels a little overwhelming. Thankfully, I had a local show me around. I only had two requirements: I wanted to see spots shown on the film Spider-Man: Far From Home (yes, I’m a webhead), and the Big Ben. That’s it. Everything else would be gravy.
And so, our little city trek began.

Didn’t realize there was someone looking at the camera when I shot this. Sun was pretty high up that day.
The first thing we spotted from afar is the City Mayor’s office. It’s this oval-looking thing. Definitely not your typical City Hall design.
After walking a few spaces, we spot these food trucks with the Tower Bridge in the background. If I remember correctly, Jane told me these food trucks aren’t a permanent fixture here – usually a summer thing.
Spider-Man: Far From Home spots
I usually go solo on these foreign city walkabouts. But having a companion meant I could take these touristy photos.
And yes, this is also the bridge in Spidey Far From Home. I was clearly giddy.
Quite close to it – but still not as close as the Far From Home film made it seem – is The Shard.
This was where Fury and Maria Hill (who turned out to be Skrulls) were stationed during the final act of the movie.
I might be mistaken but it was also along this path where we saw the Traitor’s Gate. There were several people taking photos at this area so it’s most certainly a tourist attraction.
It served as the entryway for many Tudor-era prisoners brought to the Tower of London. Originally constructed by Edward I, it functioned as a water gate within St. Thomas’ Tower — a section of the fortress built to offer extra living quarters for the royal family.
Yes, I got that off of Wikipedia. Sue me.
Along the walk we spotted these City Cruises. They looked nice from afar. But I’ve been on something like this before and I was terrified – I’m not exactly fond of being in big-ish bodies of water.
I can’t remember if we crossed or just went by it – but we were on the Tower Bridge. It was filled with people and those double deck buses that I didn’t get a chance to ride.
You also get a nice view of The Shard from the Tower Bridge.
At this point we were already looking for a spot to get some grub. We stopped by a pub but they didn’t have what we wanted to order so we walked some more.
Fish, chips, and more
Along the way, we spotted this residential back alley. I thought the view made for a nice little corner-of-the-city shot.
Along the way hunting for a pub that served fish and chips, I shot the photo above. I’m a sucker about the concept of parallel universes and this shot kind of had that vibe. Sorry. Nerd.
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We eventually settled here at The Raven.
I finally had my first authentic British fish and chips.
We stayed here for a while before continuing the trek.
On the way to Big Ben/ Elizabeth Tower, we passed by Borough Market. Although, we didn’t linger too much nor buy anything. But hey, at least I could say I was there.
Around the area is the Clink Prison Museum. A quick Google search says it’s one of the oldest prisons. It’s been around since 1144. Old indeed. There were plenty of these gibbet-type things. That’s how they executed people back then.
Around the bend, there’s this nice view of the Southwark Cathedral. I didn’t want to spontaneously combust so we didn’t go in.
Along the way, we also spotted this wall with heart graffiti. I was lucky enough that a couple seemed to be walking beside it when I took a shot.
Plenty of paces away we came across the Millenium Bridge with St. Paul’s Cathedral in the background. This is easily one of my favorite shots from this walkaround.
A little further down and we spotted these two red pillars that don’t really connect anywhere. A quick Gemini search told us that these are the remains of the original Blackfriars Railway Bridge.
Right next to it is the current Blackfriars Bridge which has been around since 1869.
Approaching Big Ben
Moving along, we ended up at Regent’s Park where the National Theater is located. Jane tells me this is one of her favorite spots in the city.
Not too far off is the BFI IMAX Cinema in London. The facade of the place is also known for hosting major ads. At the time we walked by, it had Adidas Superstar ads splattered all over.
When the game God of War: Ragnarok came out, this place also had ads for it.
At this point, we were quickly pacing through the spots as we were supposed to meet another friend. We passed through London’s Eye rather quickly. The area had a festive vibe with people gathered around stages.
[Big Ben facade]
At long last, we finally made it to Big Ben. This was a nice photo spot right across the Elizabeth Tower which hosts the Big Ben. It’s part of the larger Palace of Westminster.
Naturally, we had to take some touristy photos. While making our way across the bridge, “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters was blasting through the speakers of one of the vendors there. Truly a global phenomenon.
Had a closer look at Big Ben after making our way across. It looked absolutely majestic.
Wrapping up the trek
We started making our way to Buckingham Palace after. Before that, I snapped this real quick without realizing that it’s a closer look at St. Paul’s Cathedral.
Buckingham Palace is surrounded by a large area of different parks. I believe this particular spot is already the Buckingham Palace Garden. But there are several parks around it where people run or just spend some quiet time in.
As expected, the Buckingham Palace was filled with people. I couldn’t really get shots I was totally satisfied with so I leave you with this one of the Palace gates.
I went back a few days later to take more photos but this time with the HONOR Magic V5.
We capped off the trek by meeting with our friend at this familiar place.
There were plenty more shots, spots, and musings that I couldn’t share here. Overall, the CANON EOS R50 V was a very nice companion for travel treks like this.
Convenient Smart Home
This is the BRIGHTEST 4K Projector In Its Class!
Meet the XGIMI HORIZON 20 Max
Since THE Michael Josh lives in New York, space is an ultimate premium.
While he has space for a huge TV, having a big black piece of glass imposing itself on his entire living room isn’t the vibe.
Thankfully there’s a better option that lets him have his home cinema and a luxe flat.
Cue the XGIMI HORIZON 20 Max!
It’s gotta be the ultimate all-in-one home entertainment 4K cinema solution without all that bulk and clutter.
Head over to XGIMI HORIZON 20 Max on the spotlight to know everything about the brightest 4K Projector in its class!
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