Features
7 scary games to freak you out on Halloween
Video games might just be the best way to experience horror. It’s not you watching a character in a movie or TV show go into a haunted mansion or hide from a maniacal murderer; it’s you who has to put that ghost to rest or escape the clutches of a serial killer. Here are seven of the latest video games to play for fun, fright-filled nights this Halloween!
Outlast 2
During your coverage of a grisly murder of an unidentified pregnant woman, you and your fellow journalist/wife get entangled in the deranged rituals of a religious death cult. Find out what’s really happening in the eerie town of Temple Gate, and confront the disturbing truths when faith gets twisted to exploit people in Outlast 2. As a standalone sequel to the surprise indie horror hit Outlast, it improves on some of the core exploration and hide-and-seek mechanics of the first, throwing intense moment-to-moment thrills right at your face.
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One
Little Nightmares
Trapped inside a ship, you’re a small, helpless child that needs to escape by solving environmental puzzles and evading capture from creepy creatures in Little Nightmares. It’s a 3D side-scrolling adventure with a surreal art style that’s both awesome and unsettling. Like the worst of bad dreams, the visuals straddle that line of looking just real enough that when you notice oddities intrude the space, you get that skin-crawling feeling of knowing something’s not quite right, and you just want to get away as soon as possible, hoping to wake up any second now.
Available on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Windows
The Evil Within 2
Fight and sneak your way through the monster-infested simulated suburbia of Union to rescue your daughter in the action horror game The Evil Within 2. You’ll be doing battle with beasts and your own brain, as the very space you’re traversing can shift radically at a moment’s notice. The game follows the open-world structure, so you have the option to explore and tackle side quests, revealing answers and sometimes even more questions about the nature of the narrative.
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One
Observer
There are many reasons to fear the future, but have you ever considered how much scarier it could be if the gadgets we relied on to connect to reality got tampered with to literally change what we see with our own eyes? In Observer, you’re a mind-hacking cyborg detective who has to solve gruesome crimes in a seedy, claustrophobic tenement. It’s Blade Runner as survival horror, with psychedelic imagery that will make you scrutinize your sanity and a story that will have you doubting technology.
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One
Resident Evil 7
Unravel the mystery behind the disappearance of your wife you once thought dead while trying to survive inside the ramshackle residence of a cannibalistic clan. It’s the newest installment in the storied Resident Evil franchise, and it captures the essence of what made the first game so memorable. You’re stuck in a horror house with very few resources, plenty of puzzles, and grotesque dangers waiting around every corner. It’s playable with a VR headset, so put one on for a freak show you literally can’t look away from.
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One
Friday the 13th: The Game
If you’ve ever shouted at the teens in the Friday the 13th films for doing the dumbest things that lead to their demise, try putting yourself in their shoes in this online multiplayer game with the official movie license! See if you can stop yourself from panicking when another player stalks you down as the unstoppable hockey-masked murdering monstrosity that is Jason. The fun part though is when you get to play as Jason and have to systematically hunt down other players!
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One
Detention
The all-too-real terror inflicted by an oppressive government on its people reinforces the supernatural dread that the ghost story of Detention tells. You are Ray, a student of Greenwood High School; after a series of unfortunate events, you wake up to a nightmarish version of the campus, surrounded by malevolent spirits with no easy way out. Slink past spectral threats and collect clues in ever-changing 2D levels to uncover the grim secrets of the school and learn about Taiwan’s true history of martial law. It’s a chilling reminder of how politics always impacts personal lives, and sometimes to the most tragic and terrifying extents.
Available on Windows, PlayStation 4, and macOS
SEE ALSO: Acer Predator Triton 700 vs ASUS ROG Zephyrus (GX501): Best slim gaming laptop?
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Reviews
Close without crossing: A Xiaomi 17T Pro photo essay
Distance and closeness are not always opposites.
I have spent the better part of the last few weeks grappling with multiple emotions.
I feel silly referencing this but as a “feel” type, my days are guided by vibe and mood. It’s been a challenge trying to reconcile and make sense of everything.
Thankfully, the Xiaomi 17T Pro presented an unexpected outlet.
So no, this isn’t exactly a review of the Xiaomi 17T Pro. This is yours truly, once again, processing feelings through a telephoto essay.
The “T” is for Telephoto
When being briefed about Xiaomi’s latest device, my favorite part was when a guest photographer jokingly attached the T in the Xiaomi 17T series to “telephoto.”
It’s not official or anything. But in this case, it made perfect sense.
My relationship with Xiaomi’s T series has always been a little complicated. For a while it felt like it was searching for an identity. One year it was positioned as a performance-focused device. Then it became an all-rounder.
Now, one of its biggest highlights is a dedicated 115mm equivalent telephoto camera. The reality is that it might actually be all of those things at once.
For this piece, however, I ignored almost everything else. I shot almost exclusively at 115mm.
No elaborate test plan, no checklist of scenarios, and no mission to prove a point. I simply carried the phone everywhere and photographed whatever caught my attention.
At first, I thought I was testing a camera. Eventually, I realized the camera was teaching me something instead.
Chasing
When the year started, I was certain about something. Or perhaps someone.
The conversations were easy. The banter felt natural. The possibility of something more lingered quietly in the background.
After a few genuine attempts, reality eventually became clear. This wasn’t going where I secretly hoped it would. I felt defeated.
But apparently, I wasn’t done learning yet.
One thing I quickly discovered about shooting at 115mm is that distance changes how you approach a subject.
You cannot simply stand where you are and expect every shot to work. Sometimes you move. Sometimes you wait. And sometimes you accept that a moment isn’t yours to capture.
The Xiaomi 17T Pro’s telephoto camera made those adjustments feel surprisingly natural. The focal length compressed scenes beautifully while still allowing me to isolate subjects from busy surroundings.
More importantly, it encouraged patience. Not every frame needed to be forced.
Blind projection
Waiting in the wings was another lesson entirely.
As a photographer, there are moments when something catches your attention immediately. A shape. A silhouette. A person. A scene.
From a distance, it looks compelling.
The problem is that distance leaves room for imagination. Sometimes too much room. You think you know what you’re looking at. But you don’t.
The more I used the 115mm lens, the more I appreciated how it could pull distant subjects closer while still leaving context around them. It gave me a cleaner view of things that initially felt obscured.
Yet photography has limits. A lens can reveal details. It cannot reveal meaning. That part still requires understanding what’s actually in front of you.
Generative longing
After some quiet reflection, I realized that much of what occupied my attention wasn’t reality at all. It was possibility. Potential.
Stories constructed from incomplete information. As it turns out, people aren’t the only subjects we do this to. Photographers do it all the time.
We imagine a frame before it exists. Then we convince ourselves the next corner might hold something extraordinary. And we chase moments that never arrive.
Sometimes they do. Most of the time they don’t.
The Xiaomi 17T Pro encouraged a different approach.
Instead of hunting for specific shots, I found myself roaming freely. Walking more. Observing more. Adjusting my position constantly to find a better composition.
After a few days, I stopped thinking about the lens itself and started understanding the space around me.
I knew how far to stand, what would fit into frame, and when a moment was worth waiting for.
The telephoto camera became less about zooming in and more about understanding my position relative to a scene.
And that’s when things started getting interesting.
Close without crossing
Something unexpected happened while reviewing this gallery. There are more people here than in any collection of sample photos I’ve ever taken.
Normally, I avoid photographing people. I’ve always worried it feels intrusive. The telephoto lens changed that.
The extra reach allowed me to observe moments without disrupting them. Most of the people here aren’t looking at the camera. Many are turned away entirely. They’re simply existing within their own space.
And perhaps that’s what fascinated me most.
After spending so much time chasing, projecting, and attaching meaning to things that only existed in my head, I found myself approaching photography differently.
There was no grand pursuit. No dramatic realization. No need to manufacture scenarios. I simply paid attention.
Telephoto photography is often associated with distance. Over the last few weeks, however, it taught me something else.
Distance and closeness are not always opposites.
Sometimes maintaining a little distance is what allows a moment to remain exactly what it is. Sometimes stepping back helps you see more clearly.
And sometimes the people, places, and experiences that matter most are not the ones furthest away. They’re already within view.
Shooting at 115mm taught me that keeping a little distance can be its own way of staying close.
Maybe that’s what this gallery ultimately became. Not a collection of subjects I couldn’t reach. Not proof of anything.
Just a record of moments I was fortunate enough to witness.
Computers
Samsung’s SECRET That Made OLED Even Better
Say hello to the new QD-OLED Penta Tandem display tech by the Korean giant
Samsung Display just unveiled QD-OLED Penta Tandem technology. This is a next-generation display structure that stacks five emission layers to improve brightness, efficiency, and overall OLED performance.
In this video, we simplify what Penta Tandem actually is, how it works, and show you two monitors that already have the technology — specifically from MSI and Dell.
For more details, check out Samsung Display here.
Google I/O 2026 was packed with AI announcements. But, one demo completely stole the show: Gemini Omni.
From hyper-realistic video generation to AI avatars that look almost indistinguishable from real people. Google’s latest AI tools are pushing into territory that feels both exciting and unsettling.
In this video, we break down the biggest announcements from Google I/O 2026, what Gemini Omni can actually do, and why this may be the moment AI content changes forever.
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