Features
Inside the music festival scored by fireworks and heartbreak anthems
Capturing the JBL Sound Fest 2025 through the lens of the OPPO Find X9
Attending the JBL Sound Fest 2025 felt like entering a tropical Coachella built on cold winds and adrenaline.
The air carried the pulse of a crowd that came to celebrate music and the people who keep its magic alive.
Lines curled around the Parklinks open grounds long before sunset. Fireworks lit the sky above when the show started.
People came dressed as if the night itself was an event worth courting. Sequins tried to outshine stage lights while denim jackets and jeans fought the cold.
I had missed the Sound Fest two years in a row because my life had revolved around training schedules and a calendar that refused to breathe.
This year, Cup of Joe appeared on the lineup like a sign I could not ignore. Then, the roster looked like a music scene ready to let you sing your heart out.
There was Kat DJ, Sean Archer, December Avenue, Flow G, Ashtine Olviga, HORI7ON, and Rico Blanco.
A car-mageddon worthy of a pre-show
The festival took over the Parklinks Open Grounds on December 6.
I stayed at EDSA Shangri-La and believed it would take twenty minutes to get there. Metro Manila’s traffic jam had other plans, though.
My plus one arrived to pick me up at 6:30 p.m., exactly when the show started. I knew the gates opened at four and I could have avoided the rush, though I underestimated the gridlock that wrapped itself around the city that afternoon.
Friends I gave VIP passes to texted me before cellular reception collapsed. They said the grounds looked like a festival pulled from a fever dream; like a mini Coachella filled with sequins and crop tops.
I wanted to be there early enough to take it all in, but I was in a car on EDSA holding a Shake Shack sandwich like a pre-battle ration.
We reached Parklinks at 8:30 p.m. December Avenue had just stepped on stage. Missing half the festival never felt so worth it. I was squealing while running towards the gates.
When old songs return without breaking you
December Avenue and Cup of Joe revived my faith in OPM in 2023.
Their songs felt like chapters from a life I lived too loudly. They reminded me why music can hit like a diary written by someone who never met me but somehow knew exactly what I felt.
Their songs scored the rise and ruin of a relationship that made my heart misbehave. “Huling Sandali” was my heartbreak anthem, when I would sit with the ache of loving someone who could not name what we were.
Hearing it live did not break me the way it used to. It felt like meeting an old version of myself and recognizing that I survived him.
My voice remembered the lyrics even when my heart no longer carried their weight. For the first time, hearing “Bulong”, “Eroplanong Papel”, “Saksi ang Langit” live felt like hearing stories rather than seeing them as scars.
Tastes like gin, stage lights, and people you love
Flow G’s set shook the earth. I followed the vibrations to the concessionaire area to find my cousin, who was battling a water line that stretched across the field. We spent the wait taking photos and laughing at the crowd energy that kept rising.
When Ashtine Olviga sang, I returned to SVIP and surrendered to Rose Quartz Gin & Tonic. Friends drifted in and out of the circle like constellations forming and dissolving.
There were conversations shouted over bass drops, and moments caught in the glow of the crowd’s light sticks.
Then HORI7ON arrived. The crowd ignited and people surged forward. When they performed “Like JENNIE”, the energy shot through the audience as if someone plugged the entire field into a power source.
I might have screamed a little too loud and danced more than I planned.
The headliner of my heart
Cup of Joe entered the stage while I was in a portalet, which is the most on-brand plot twist my life could deliver.
I sprinted like an athlete in the last five hundred meters of a race. My plus one and I made it back to the walkway near the stage just in time for their visuals to unfold like a cinematic opening.
Their production felt massive. It reminded me of my early years dreaming of building audio-visual experiences that could move people, when I used to work in live events. I watched the lights bloom in time with the music and realized I no longer needed that life to love it.
My OPPO Find X9 captured every moment unfolded. The clarity was unshakeable, even at night, and the color accuracy stunned me. Every frame felt like it acknowledged the way I experienced the night.
Cup of Joe sang “Patutunguhan”, “Silakbo”, “Misteryoso”, “Estranghero”, “Pahinga”, “Tingin”, “Sandali”, and “Multo”, which recently won Song of the Year at the 2025 Filipino Music Awards.
The crowd sang louder with every track, showing how music can pull strangers together in one heartbeat.
A night that ends softly
Fireworks lit the sky at midnight as their set ended. I slipped out of the grounds before Rico Blanco performed since my body started asking for rest.
There were rumors about scheduling delays because he wanted to perform last, although it no longer mattered. The night had already offered everything I needed.
Cup of Joe was JBL’s newest ambassadors and the show’s headliner, and they gave me what I came for. Hearing them live was a dream I postponed for years.
I once imagined hearing them with someone I loved deeply. Instead, I heard them with friends who feel like home, and with a heart that no longer trembles at old memories.
Walking out of Parklinks, I realized something unexpectedly. I can sing the songs without bleeding. I can dance, scream, laugh, and live through the music without thinking of who I lost.
For the first time in a long time, I can enjoy the night for what it was.
Features
This is the history of basketball videogames since the ’73 Knicks
Did you know that the first basketball videogame was invented in 1973?
Knicks fans, rejoice; your long, long wait is finally over! The New York Knicks are once again the NBA Champions. As you’ve probably heard so many times by now, the last time that New York’s own was on top of the basketball pyramid was in 1973, 53 years ago.
Here’s a fun fact that you might not know, though: The last Knicks championship is tied to the history of the basketball in videogames. Did you know that the very first basketball video game was invented in 1973, the exact same year that the Knicks won their last championship?
But, of course, a lot of things have happened since then, and a lot of videogames have come and gone. Here are the most notable basketball games you might have played (or missed playing) in history:
NBA 2K
It would be pointless to start a list of basketball games without stating the obvious first. The NBA 2K series is the quintessential hooper sim today. When you think of the sport in videogames today, you can’t spend two seconds without thinking of the long-running franchise.
Now an annually releasing series, NBA 2K started in 1999 for the Sega Dreamcast. At the time, it was just another drop in a sea of ‘90s basketball games. Now, it’s an institution with constantly updating graphics and mechanics.
NBA Live
Around the time that NBA 2K first started, NBA Live was the king of the jungle. Up until 2018, it was another annually releasing series going alongside (and against) the behemoth known as 2K.
But it’s had a storied history as well. It started off as the NBA Playoffs series. The first one, 1989’s Lakers versus Celtics and the NBA Playoffs, featured eight teams who were part of that year’s playoffs. This went on until 1993 when it evolved into NBA Showdown, one of the first games to feature every NBA team. In 1994, Showdown reinvented itself once again into NBA Live and turned into an annual series before its unfortunate cancellation in 2018.
NBA Street
If sports simulators aren’t your thing, NBA Street is an arcade-style series that has ups the fun with trick shots and streetball rules. It features three-on-three hooping with 29 teams and 5 players from each. Whereas NBA 2K and NBA Live helped gamers live out their dreams to become an NBA superstar, NBA Street was one for the gamers who just wanted a fun time.
The series spawned a few sequels since 2001 but eventually met its end in 2007. Now, however, you can continue the legacy in the recently launched NBA the Run, a spiritual successor created by developers of the original NBA Street games.
NBA Jam
“Boomshakalaka! He’s on fire!”
Even if you’ve never played NBA Jam before, you’ve probably heard its most iconic catchphrase. NBA Jam was so influential that it’s considered one of the most important games of the SNES and the arcade cabinet generation.
Besides impressive graphics for its time, it was a spectacle. Because it had no fouling system, you can physically bully people out of your way. You can catch fire if you’re too good at shooting, hence the “he’s on fire” line. You can jump to gravity-defying heights to make a dunk. Plus, the game features so many fun Easter eggs, including one that turns you into a literal tank on the court.
Double Dribble
Technically a sequel to Konami’s Super Basketball, 1986’s Double Dribble was a fairly straightforward simulator that attempted to feature realistic gameplay in a very two-dimensional time. For its time, the game was remarkable because it featured highly detailed animations for fancy moves like slam dunks.
However, the game came out before the rise of the NBA’s massive popularity in media. It doesn’t have a license to feature actual teams or players. Then again, haven’t you heard of the Boston Frogs or the New York Eagles?
One on One: Dr. J vs. Larry Bird
Contrasted to the above’s five-versus-five or three-versus-three formats, 1983’s One on One featured, as the title says, a mano-a-mano duel between Julius Erving and Larry Bird. With an isometric half-court layout, either player takes turns dunking or shooting over the other.
While one-versus-one modes are available in today’s games, One on One let players live out their fantasies as two of the biggest basketball stars at the time. It even let you shatter the backboard Though the game isn’t much of a talking point nowadays, it was so popular for its time that it helped establish Electronic Arts as a household name in gaming.
Atari’s Basketball
As the father of modern basketball games, 1978’s Basketball, built for the Atari, was the first game to feature the full-court format so popular today. Like One on One, Basketball features only two players. The game was so rudimentary that the two hoops were represented with two sticks, and the two players were different colored blobs.
However, in 1979, Atari released an updated version with detailed graphics. It was also controlled with a trackball, the first of its kind to do so. Though it didn’t have named superstars or teams, it’s clearly the predecessor of the games we all know and love.
Basketball!
And now, we’ve come to the beginning. Released on 1973, Basketball! is officially the first basketball video game in history. Since it’s on the Magnavox Odyssey, the very first home gaming console, that comes as no surprise.
Like Pong, which also found a home in the Magnavox Odyssey, Basketball! features two square dots (the players) bouncing a smaller dot (the ball) into two “hoops” on both sides of a court. The game had a static image laid over the dots to simulate an ongoing basketball game. It was so basic that it didn’t even have a computing system for point. Players had to manually tally scores on their own based on where the small dot lands.
If it’s hard for you to imagine just how long today’s Knicks fans have waited for a championship, this was the state of gaming when they got their last ring.
SEE ALSO: NBA 2K26 review: Pick and pop maestro
HYROX drew people from all over the world for a single purpose: finish the course. In Hong Kong, athletes showed up at AsiaWorld-Expo ready to run, row, and push through 8 stations of pure functional fitness.
So, we brought the Canon EOS R6 Mark III to capture one of the most demanding fitness races on the planet.
The Expo floor is a lighting nightmare, a mix of harsh overheads and deep shadows, but the 32.5MP sensor handled the contrast without breaking a sweat.
The 40fps electronic shutter and Pre-continuous shooting meant we were already capturing the moment half a second before we consciously decided to press the shutter.
Covering a race means staying mobile, and the 8.5-stop IBIS let us move freely alongside athletes without losing the shot. The Dual Pixel CMOS AF II stayed locked on athletes even when they were squinting through the final stretch.
What came out were stories of triumph and determination. Even when their bodies were screaming, they pushed through anyway.
This is what HYROX Hong Kong looked like from the inside.
Words by MJ Jucutan. Photos by Sky Rodillas.
Choosing between the Xiaomi Pad 8 and the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro feels like picking between a “sweet treat” and a “full-course meal.”
It’s deciding between a reliable travel companion and a specialized workstation. Both tablets rock a slim 5.8mm profile and a manageable 485-gram weight, and a 9200mAh battery.
However, under the hood, they are playing in different leagues. Especially since the “Pro” moniker adds serious muscle to the internals, and a solution for that glossy screen distraction.
Specs at a glance
| Product | Xiaomi Pad 8 | Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro |
| Processor | Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 (4nm) | Snapdragon 8 Elite (3nm) |
| Display | 11.2″ 3.2K IPS LCD (144Hz) | 11.2″ 3.2K IPS LCD (144Hz) |
| Surface | Ultra-Glossy Glass | Optional Matte Nano-Texture |
| Storage/RAM | Up to 12GB LPDDR5X / 256GB | Up to 16GB LPDDR5T / 512GB |
| Rear Camera | 13MP | 50MP |
| Front Camera | 8MP | 32MP |
| Charging | 45W Turbo Charge | 67W HyperCharge |
| Pricing | Starts at PhP 20,999 | Starts at PhP 38,999 |
Why you should pick the Xiaomi Pad 8
The standard Pad 8 is that “Goldilocks” device, hitting that sweet spot between price and premium hardware.
It’s ideal if your tablet usage is centered on media consumption and light productivity. Since it shares the same 11.2-inch screen size as the Pro, it fits perfectly on an airplane tray table, making it a dream for frequent flyers.
The Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 is no slouch; it still runs titles like Racing Master at 60fps on Ultra-High settings. If you’re a fan of XG or KiiiKiii, you’ll appreciate the quad-speaker setup and Hi-Res Audio support without needing to pay the “Pro” tax.
It’s the smart choice for those who want a capable second screen to complement their main laptop.
Why you should level up to the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro
The “Pro” is for those who found the standard model’s limitations — like the glossy screen reflections or the 128GB storage ceiling — to be a dealbreaker.
The biggest upgrade is the Snapdragon 8 Elite, a powerhouse chip that turns the tablet into a legitimate workstation for video editing in CapCut or heavy multitasking in HyperOS 3.0.
Beyond power, the Pro version offers a Matte Glass Edition, which completely solves the “reflection” issue that can ruin your movie sessions or drawing time under bright lights.
You also get significantly better cameras, such as a 32-megapixel front sensor for professional-looking video calls. There’s also a 50-megapixel rear camera for high-res document scanning.
Finally, the 67W HyperCharge means you spend less time tethered to a wall and more time being productive.
Which Xiaomi Pad is your GadgetMatch?
Swipe Right on the Xiaomi Pad 8 if you want the best value for your money.
It’s thin, light, and powerful enough for 90% of users. It handles gaming, writing, and music playback with ease, making it a worthy recipient of a seal of approval for anyone on a budget.
Just be sure to skip the 128GB entry model and go for the 256GB version to ensure you get those faster storage speeds.
Swipe Right on the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro if you are a “power user” who hates screen glare. If you plan to use the Focus Pen Pro for serious creative work or need 512GB of space for a massive game library, the Pro is worth the extra investment.
It’s a high-speed machine that charges faster, captures better photos, and runs every app with flagship-level fluidness.
The Xiaomi Pad 8 starts at PhP 20,999 with Normal Keyboard while the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro starts at PhP 38,999 with Touch Keyboard. Both tablets come with free Focus Pen Pro.
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