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Walking around Barcelona with the Xiaomi 14, Watch S3

A quality pair

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Xiaomi announced a banger set of products during MWC 2024 and we were fortunate enough to use a couple of them during the conference. Here’s our brief experience walking around Barcelona with both the Xiaomi 14 and the Xiaomi Watch S3. 

Light as a feather 

Xiaomi 14

The first thing I noticed after unboxing both devices was how light they were. This isn’t surprising for the 6.4-inch Xiaomi 14. But the Watch S3 looked pretty large that its weight really caught me off guard. It was a welcome discovery though as I know what it’s like wearing a heavy smartwatch on your wrist and I certainly don’t wanna go back to that. 

Xiaomi Watch S3

So, for roughly around 4-5 days in Barcelona and beyond I had both in tow. The Xiaomi 14 as a pocket camera with smartphone powers, and a smartwatch to keep track of my steps. 

Stunning pocket shooter 

Xiaomi 14

As of writing DxoMark has revealed the Xiaomi 14 to be ranked third in premium smartphones list. While their rankings aren’t the end-all-be-all, they’re a pretty good gauge of how smartphone cameras perform. 

Hardware-wise, this is what you’re getting with the Xiaomi 14: 

  • 50MP f/1.6 Leica Light Fusion 900 main camera
  • 50MP/32MP (total/effective) f/2.0 floating telephoto camera
  • 50MP f/2.2 Leica ultra-wide camera

But we all know with smartphone photography, it’s more than just hardware. Computational photography as well as other built-in features play a huge part in the overall experience. 

I’ve already shown some of what the Xiaomi 14 can do with the Xiaomi MWC 2024 Booth Tour photos. But it shines even more outside of the halls of Fira Gran Via. 

Xiaomi SU7

I unintentionally kept the watermarks on these photos. I personally find them tacky but it serves my purpose here since you’ll notice that many of these shots were taken with the 35mm Portrait filter. That was my go-to while walking the streets of Barcelona and oh my, did it add a certain level of cinematic goodness to a lot of the shots. 

Here are a few shots taken one night while I was walking for some place to eat. 

Xiaomi 14

Xiaomi 14

Xiaomi 14

Xiaomi 14And here are some day shots when I visited the famed La Sagrada Familia church. 

Xiaomi 14

Xiaomi 14

Xiaomi 14

The whole shooting experience gave me flashbacks to my time snapping pictures with the Samsung Galaxy S22. They share the same screen size and have a similar overall footprint making them easy to hold. Both also have a versatile triple camera setup that lets you seamlessly switch between them to get the shot you want. 

The Xiaomi 14 is low-key my personal favorite smartphone camera right now because of its size combined with its photo-taking prowess. 

Stylish walking companion 

Xiaomi Watch S3

The Xiaomi Watch S3 was more a time-teller and step-counter more than anything else during my brief time with it. But it’s largely my fault. I was wielding four different smartphones daily and felt like I had to switch the pairing to whichever I was using the most on any given day. This is why I couldn’t fully take advantage of a few things, most especially the receiving notifications part.

I deal with hundreds of messages daily from different apps sent by teammates, work partners, friends, and more. It’s an advantage for me to be able to see part of the message to make it easier for me to mentally prepare how and when I’ll respond. I dole out micro-decisions every work day and this is an integral part of my overall process that I missed out on a little bit. 

The reason being that the notifications require a blanket permission for the Mi Fitness app to access everything on your smartphone. Not ideal for someone in the field, switching to different phones daily. 

Xiaomi Watch S3

However, this also meant it wasn’t spending as much battery. That’s why I only ever charged it once during the whole MWC 2024 coverage along with the subsequent Final Fantasy VII Rebirth event coverage a day later. 

Even with notifications on, I imagine you’ll be able to squeeze out 4-5 days of battery life on the Xiaomi Watch S3 without needing to charge.

But one of the bigger draws of this device is how it has plenty of straps and bezels available at launch. It literally has every kind of look to match your style. 

I personally went with the pedestrian but classic silver-bezel, black straps setup. Can’t go wrong with neutrals.

A quality pair

I wish I stuck with just pairing these two together instead of moving the watch around. The Xiaomi 14 and Xiaomi Watch S3 make for a fine pair that’ll elevate your image – on social media because of how much better your photos will look, and in real life because of how stylish they appear.


The first-day sale for Xiaomi 14 at authorized Xiaomi stores and retailers nationwide will be on March 8. It will also be available on e-commerce platforms Lazada and Shopee. 

When customers pre-order from March 1 to 7, they get a free Xiaomi Watch S3 and 6 months of 100GB cloud storage from Google One. The promo also comes with a 1+1 year warranty with free screen replacement worth P7,000.

  • 12GB+512GB: PhP 47,999
  • 12GB+256GB: PhP 45,999

If you miss the pre-order, you can get the Xiaomi Watch S3 separately for PhP 6,499.

Convenient Smart Home

This is the BRIGHTEST 4K Projector In Its Class!

Meet the XGIMI HORIZON 20 Max

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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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Gaming

Match Pulse: ROG Xbox Ally X

The handheld finally feels like it belongs in your hands.

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ROG Xbox Ally X

We’ve spent enough time with the ROG Xbox Ally X to say this: it’s no longer just a novelty, it’s a handheld that finally knows what it wants to be.

The first Ally from 2023 was exciting — a bold step toward making PC gaming portable. But after a few sessions, it felt more like a prototype for what was coming next.

This one? It feels complete.
So, in this edition of Match Pulse, let’s talk about how the Ally X grips better, plays longer, and why it finally deserves the Xbox badge printed on it.

First look

ROG Xbox Ally X

The first touch felt awkward — the kind of feeling you get when you’re not sure how to hold something new. But the longer you hold it, the more it starts to make sense.

The redesigned grips, patterned after Xbox controllers, give it a natural curve that rests well in your palms. It still doesn’t dig in as much as I’d like to – the way it does on the Legion Go S – but it’s certainly an improvement.

It’s subtly heavier than the original, but the weight works in its favor. The balance feels right. The texture, more grounded. It feels made for long sessions, not quick demos.

This is where ASUS seems to have listened. What was once a bit slippery now feels like an extension of your hands. The matte finish stays clean, the edges no longer bite. It’s a small but significant shift — and one that makes a world of difference in how it’s used.

First date

ROG Xbox Ally X | NBA 2K26

We tested it the same way we tested the original Ally: unplugged, Turbo mode, 25W TDP, NBA 2K Quick Play.

Back then, we couldn’t finish more than a single game and a few minutes of freestyle practice before the battery flatlined.

This time, it’s double that.

Two full games before reaching for the charger — and that’s without dialing down the settings. The new 80Wh battery doesn’t just promise endurance; it delivers it.

The cooling system has also been reworked, quieter yet just as efficient. It’s the kind of update that doesn’t make headlines, but you hear it – or I guess In this case, not hear it as much.

Together, these tweaks make the Ally X something the original never quite managed to be — a handheld that lets you play longer unplugged.

First impressions

ROG Xbox Ally X

The Xbox influence is everywhere, and it’s not just branding. The Ally X now boots straight into the Xbox app, with the familiar button logo acting as your home key. Press it, and you’re instantly back in the Xbox ecosystem.

It feels less like a PC pretending to be a console, and more like a handheld that understands both worlds.

You can still jump into Steam or Game Pass with ease, but the default experience is unmistakably Xbox — intuitive, familiar, and cohesive.

All these refinements add up to something simple but powerful: this finally feels like a true successor.

The ROG Xbox Ally X doesn’t reinvent the idea of handheld gaming, but it refines it where it matters — in the way it feels in your hands, in how long it lasts, and in how effortlessly it connects to what you want to play.

If the original was a promise, this one is fulfillment – still with room for improvement, sure, but I trust you get the gist.


Learn more: https://ph.rog.gg/playALLYourgames2025
Where to buy: https://ph.rog.gg/wheretobuy2025 

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Automotive

What it’s like to spend a day at BYD’s All-Terrain Circuit

It’s a showcase of extremes and a reminder that driving dreams evolve with technology.

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I never realized I’d love learning and testing cars, at least not until a rally driver sat beside me during a slalom run, speaking words that would calm even the most restless heart.

“Don’t worry about the cones,” he said as I wobbled through my first lap. And when I drifted into something close to perfection, he whispered “you’re good” more times than I deserved.

Those words stuck more than the speed, and definitely more than the skid marks.

This wasn’t in my bingo card. After winning at the 24th Henry Ford Awards, I thought I’d already said my parting words to automotive coverage.

I poured myself into a passion project tied to my life as an endurance athlete, and when that wrapped, I thought I’d simply move on.

Yet here I was, in Zhengzhou, China — invited by ACMobility — to witness BYD’s first all-terrain circuit, one of the first in the country built exclusively for new energy vehicles.

Arriving at a playground built for new energy vehicles

It was a cold Thursday morning when I boarded a bus to the circuit. The ride stretched over an hour, the kind that lulls you into a half-sleep, half-reverie.

My head bobbed against the window, eyes occasionally opening to marvel at the changing landscape outside. Blue skies meeting industrial romance.

When we finally arrived, I was greeted not just by the sheer expanse of the All-Terrain Circuit but also by the stars of the day: the BYD eMax 9 and Sealion 8, parked like models awaiting their cue.

Before diving into the schedule, I warmed myself with a familiar oatmilk latte from the BYD Café and gawked at the base version of the Yangwang U9 — one of the world’s fastest production car — gleaming under the lights as if to remind us that speed, too, can be art.

We were told the facility housed eight experience zones, each a playground for machines and a test of our courage. And with that, the adventure began.

The world’s tallest artificial dune, now a test track

The first stop was the Indoor Sand Dune, a 29.6-meter vertical drop with a 28-degree slope, certified by Guinness World Records as the highest and largest dune-climbing facility in existence.

Constructed with 6,200 tons of sand, it was designed to mimic the Alxa Desert. Watching the Yangwang U8 command the terrain was nothing short of cinematic. Its wheels tore through the sand with authority, moving like a predator that knew no fear.

We didn’t get to try it ourselves, but my mind drifted to the dunes of Ilocos back home. I wondered how it would feel to tame our own desert with a machine like this, if the U8 ever makes its way to Philippine shores.

What driving through water looks like in the future

The Yangwang U8 returned to center stage at the Wading Pool, a 70-meter stretch of water that felt more like a flood zone than a testing ground.

Through the underwater glass, we watched the vehicle maneuver forward, reverse, and even turn while afloat, all thanks to BYD’s E4 platform.

It was an eerie yet comforting sight, technology meeting something similar to a calamity head-on. In a country like ours, where typhoons strike as often as heartbreaks, such a feature could be a lifeline.

For a moment, I wasn’t just watching a demo; I was imagining families safe inside, crossing flooded streets with grace instead of fear.

Riding shotgun in one of the fastest production cars in the world

Then, came the Yangwang U9. On paper, it’s a beast with 1,290 horsepower and 960 kilowatts. In reality, it was an experience that rewrote my understanding of speed.

I strapped myself in, buff and helmet in place, choosing the Moonlight Stone colorway with interiors in regal purple, which perfectly matched my lavender Nike jacket.

The acceleration was like a trail run on steroids. The heartbeat I feel when descending a mountain trail — reckless yet alive — was the same beat that coursed through me as the U9 devoured the 1,758-meter track with its nine curves and long straight stretch.

The seats hugged me like a co-conspirator, keeping me steady even as the world outside blurred. I didn’t even realize how fast we were going until I glanced at the dashboard.

Fear and euphoria danced together in my chest. Now, I get the high and adrenaline from racing cars.

Learning to let go while machines take over

The off-road testing area spanned 27 scenarios, though time only allowed us to try the Fangchengbao Bao 5 in the junior section.

Still, it was enough to excite me. The car climbed 27-degree slopes, crawled down stairways (and not feel anything), and tiptoed over rocks as if they were pebbles.

I had to fight the instinct to control everything. But these machines were designed to carry you safely even when your nerves frayed.

It was a strange kind of intimacy and learning to surrender. I realized that sometimes, letting go is the only way forward.

Drifting in circles I had no business being in

At the heart of the circuit lay a 15,300-square-meter dynamic paddock, our next stop.

The Kick-Plate simulated icy roads, throwing the car into sudden skids while professional drivers demonstrated how NEV safety systems took over with precision.

It was held in a controlled emergency situation, simulating scenarios we pray never happen but feel grateful to be prepared for.

Later, I took the Denza Z9 GT onto the Low Friction Circle, a 44-meter-diameter track laid with 30,000 basalt bricks covered in water. I had no business drifting — let alone in front of a crowd of seasoned drivers — but BYD’s millisecond-level control and Drift Mode made it possible.

For a few seconds, I found flow, spinning in rhythm with the machine. Until the instructor told me to “maintain,” and pressure snapped me out of it, spinning me like I was in a film getting in an accident.

My knees were shaking when I stepped out, equal parts embarrassed and exhilarated.

How a slalom course became my favorite part

What surprised me most was how much I loved the slalom. Maybe it’s because obstacles have always defined my life, on and off the Spartan course.

Driving the BYD Seal EV through cones and curves felt oddly personal. I wasn’t the best.

I hit cones and I apologized to the rally driver guiding me. Yet when I drifted through U-turns and roundabouts, something familiar sparked in me.

It reminded me of growing up on highways filled with those very curves, sneaking in practice at midnight when no one was watching.

This time, though, the sun was setting, and the moment felt bigger. The course ended not just with applause but with reflection. Life, like a slalom, is about moving through obstacles with grace, even when you stumble

The bigger dream behind the Zhengzhou circuit

The BYD Zhengzhou All-Terrain Circuit is more than a playground. It’s a vision of what driving could become in an age of new energy vehicles.

It democratizes technology, making once-distant innovations something you can touch, feel, and experience.

Soon, another BYD circuit will rise in Shaoxing, with a sprawling off-road area set 500 meters above sea level.

Alongside CAMF, BYD is also launching the “New Track Scheme,” a program meant to cultivate 100 professional racers and introduce racing culture to more people.

As I left the circuit, lavender jacket still smelling faintly of rubber and adrenaline, I realized that this wasn’t about cars alone.

It was about rediscovering joy in places I never thought I’d find it. Maybe that’s what the road ahead is about. Not just speed or power, but new ways of dreaming.

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