惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
J
Java Code Geeks
U
Unit 42
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
H
Help Net Security
T
Tenable Blog
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Jina AI
Jina AI
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
T
Threatpost
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
A
About on SuperTechFans
I
InfoQ
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
B
Blog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
K
Kaspersky official blog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
C
Check Point Blog
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
A
Arctic Wolf
Y
Y Combinator Blog
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Latest news
Latest news
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
腾讯CDC
I
Intezer
爱范儿
爱范儿
F
Fortinet All Blogs
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes

Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics

How To Watch The Android Show: Google I/O Edition On May 12 Teenage Engineering Just Released A Stereo Mixer That Physically Connects To Its EP-Series Samplers Spotify Now Lets AI Agents Like OpenClaw Generate Personal Podcasts Qualcomm reveals two new affordable phone chips with Smooth Motion UI tech - Engadget Angry Birds And FIFA International Soccer Join The World Video Game Hall Of Fame Spotify's AI-Powered Personal DJ Expands To More Languages And Countries Google Is Turning The Fitbit App Into A Unified Portal For Your Health And Fitness Data The Survival Horror Game Hollowbody Launches For PS5 And Xbox Series X/S On June 5 The Google Fitbit Air Is An AI-Infused Take On Whoop Wearables DJI's Osmo Mobile 8P Gimbal Has A Detachable Screen Remote HP EliteBoard G1a Review: It's A Desktop In A Keyboard! But It's Not For You Chrome Downloads A 4GB AI File Without User Consent, Researcher Alleges Remakes Of Myst And Riven Are Coming To PlayStation, Xbox And The Microsoft Store The Steam Controller Sold Out Super Quickly And Valve Is Working On A Restock ChatGPT's New Default Model Is More Factual And Better At Personalization Book Publishers Accuse Meta And Mark Zuckerberg Of Copyright Infringement Alexa+ Is Now Available On A Bunch Of Bose Speakers Chrome On Android Will Now Let You Share Your Approximate Location Google Will Livestream The Android Show: I/O Edition On May 12 Game Pass Additions For May Include Subnautica 2 And Forza Horizon 6 The Creator Of Citizen Sleeper 2 Is Making Two New Games Horizon Hunters Gathering Is Holding Another Playtest On May 22 Meta Is Using AI Bone Structure Analysis To Detect And Remove Underaged Users Samsung Galaxy A37 Review: A Solid Deal Even In This Economy Bose's New Lifestyle Home Audio Lineup Includes A Speaker, Soundbar And Subwoofer Google's Pentagon AI Deal Reportedly Drove The DeepMind Team To Unionize Apple Said To Be Talking To Intel And Samsung About Building Key Device Processors Mini Motorways Is Letting Players Vote For Its Next City Map How To Watch Xbox's Stranger Than Heaven Showcase Sony Will Soon Settle A PlayStation Store Class Action Lawsuit For $7.8 Million Oura Adds More Detailed Hormonal Health Insights To Its Series 3 And 4 Rings Engadget Podcast: Is The Valve Steam Controller Worth $100? Meta Says It May Withdraw Its Apps From New Mexico If Judge Agrees To The State's Demands The ROG Xbox Ally X Is Getting Some Updates, Including Automatic Super Resolution ChatGPT Developed A Goblin Obsession After OpenAI Tried To Make It Nerdy The Upcoming Resident Evil Movie Looks Legit Scary In Its First Trailer Spotify's New Verification Badge Shows That Music Is Not AI-Generated Vine Reboot App Divine Arrives With A Ban On AI Slop Motorola's Latest Family Of Razrs Includes Its First Book-Style Foldable YouTube TV Gets A Fully Customizable Multiview Feature, With Availability For All Channels It Runs Doom: AI Chatbot Edition You Can Now Book A Hotel Via The Uber App Apple reportedly testing out four different styles for its smart glasses that will rival Meta Ray-Bans The US government wants Reddit to snitch on one of its users through a grand jury OpenAI says Elon Musk is orchestrating a last-minute 'legal ambush' before trial Rockstar Games has confirmed it was hit by third-party data breach The first European country to get Tesla’s Full Self-Driving Supervised will be the Netherlands IBM settles its DEI lawsuit with the DOJ for $17 million Engadget review recap: ASUS ZenBook A16, AirPods Max 2, Sonos Play and LG Sound Suite X's messaging app, XChat, may be available soon The Artemis II astronauts are back after a 10-day journey around the moon The FAA is encouraging gamers to get jobs in air traffic control Epic is reportedly building an extraction shooter for Disney A man allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman's house Estonia is the rare EU country opposing child social media bans Garmin may be working on a Whoop competitor Amazon Luna ends support for third-party subscriptions and game purchases French government says au revoir Windows, bienvenue Linux Google adds E2E encryption to Gmail for iOS and Android enterprise users Google has reportedly started to add Polymarket data to News results How to watch the Artemis II landing Sony Bravia Theater Bar 5 review: A basic TV sound booster YouTube Premium’s US pricing is going up Microsoft starts removing unnecessary Copilot buttons in Windows 11 The Morning After: Amazon pledges its satellite internet starts this year Google removes Doki Doki Literature Club! from the Play Store OpenAI has a new $100 ChatGPT Pro plan to better match up with Claude Apple is closing three US stores, including the first to unionize The Metal Gear Solid movie is back on, with Final Destination: Bloodlines directors in charge A maverick hacker got Mac OS X running on a Wii Instagram comments can now be edited (within 15 minutes) Jazzy stealth-action game Thick as Thieves hits PC on May 20 Netflix adds three Jackbox games to its TV app Another Don't Starve game is on the way Mountain climbing sim Cairn is getting free DLC this summer Co-op pirate survival game Windrose hits PC in early access on April 14 Tesla may be working on a smaller and cheaper electric SUV Razer just released some new gaming earbuds with low latency and fast switching between devices Indie game Neverway will launch this October, just in time for spooky season 1000xResist devs reveal their wild-looking second game about convincing an AI it's not human Amazon's satellite internet service is scheduled for mid-2026 availability Rhythm Heaven Groove comes to Switch on July 2 Roku will stream Savannah Bananas games, along with the entire Banana Ball Championship League Google introduces AI-generated avatars to YouTube Shorts OpenAI 'pauses' its Stargate UK data center plan Google bakes NotebookLM, its research tool, into Gemini Spotify now lets you turn off all video JBL Live 780NC and 680NC review: Great leaps, greater missteps Dyson just announced its first-ever handheld fan, with a motor that spins up to 65,000 RPM You'll have one more chance to buy Samsung's pricey Galaxy Z TriFold this Friday DoorDash and Wing are expanding their drone delivery partnership to Atlanta You'll soon be able to hide games from your Xbox achievements list How to watch the Triple-i Initiative showcase on April 9 Meta's Muse Spark model brings reasoning capabilities to the Meta AI app Greece will ban all kids under 15 from using social media The Nintendo Switch 2 version of 007 First Light is delayed until later this summer No Man’s Sky now has Pokémon-style creature battles GoPro to lay off over 20 percent of staff by the end of 2026 Forza Horizon 6 gives would-be racers another gorgeous open world to explore Fender Elie review: Handsome speaker/amp hybrids with excellent clarity
Marauding minotaurs, more CloverPit and other new indie games worth checking out
By Kris Holt April 11, 2026 7:00 am EST · 2026-04-11 · via Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics

We may receive a commission on purchases made from links.

Welcome to our latest roundup of what's going on in the indie game space. As always, we're here to tell you about a bunch of new games you can play this weekend, as well as several upcoming titles. 

The latest edition of the Triple-i Initiative showcase was packed with cool stuff, including a first peek at the fascinating next game from 1000xResist developer Sunset Visitor, word of a Don't Starve follow-up, a release date for stealth title Thick as Thieves and an announcement of when pirate survival sim Windrose will hit early access.

We also got a release window for Neverway, a life sim with gorgeously creepy pixel art. The prologue is available to play now on Steam, and it doesn't take long at all before things become delightfully strange. I'll run through a few of the other Triple-i highlights below.

Before we get to the new releases, though, I want to touch on something I spotted a little too late to include in last week's roundup. On Reddit, the developer of mixed reality game CoasterMania shared a video showcasing an update that lets players use their hands to build and interact with rollercoasters. I think this looks just swell. This is the most I've ever been interested in picking up a Meta Quest headset (which I'd inevitably use for a grand total of about 45 minutes). 

I don't like to overwork my brain when I'm playing games. I'm focused all day at work and afterwards, I just want to switch off for a bit. That's a big reason why I play a ton of Overwatch and don't really gel too well with most puzzle games. Minos, though, hits the sweet spot of brain engagement for me.

In this roguelite from Artificer and publisher Devolver Digital, your aim is to stop glory-seeking adventurers from finding and killing a minotaur. You'll shape a labyrinth as you see fit in order to defend the beast from these warriors. You can set up the maze by building and knocking down walls, and setting traps. The adventurers will follow a set path to the minotaur's lair, then make a beeline for the monster when they discover it's hiding elsewhere. 

There are a lot of ways to dispose of the interlopers and you'll need to be thoughtful about how to set everything up to take out each wave of attackers. Many traps can only be placed on certain spots, so it's important to work around those. You'll need to adjust your setup after every wave — you'll gain more traps and have to re-arrange them to fend off different types of enemies. 

Minos is more active than a lot of tower defense and strategy games I've played, as the minotaur can reset certain traps after they trigger and, if need be, try to kill the adventurers head-on. I found myself spending quite a bit of time thinking through each enemy's path through my domain and how I was going to eliminate them. Sometimes, I miscalculated and brought my run to an end. Being able to improve the minotaur's stats and unlock new powers between runs helped me keep coming back for more. 

I'm really enjoying Minos, and I wouldn't be surprised if this ends up being one of my favorite games of the year. You can snap it up on Steam now for $18. A demo is available too.

Spring has finally bloomed in my neck of the woods. I planned to spend a chunk of my weekend outside after a long winter. But now I might need to bring my Steam Deck with me, because the first DLC for CloverPit, one of my favorite games of last year, suddenly arrived during the Triple-i Initiative showcase. 

CloverPit is a Balatro-style incremental roguelite from Panik Arcade and publisher Future Friends Games. It tasks you with breaking the rules of a slot machine to meet increasingly high coin targets in order to pay off a debt. You can pick up charms that modify the machine, and the Unholy Fusion DLC is all about those totems. You'll be able to use a new device called the Surgery Machine to fuse charms into more powerful items (à la Ball x Pit). It seems like that will free up valuable space for more charms too.

The DLC adds 30 fusion charms, 11 new base charms, a secret ending and other features. I've played CloverPit for dozens of hours (I'm far from the only one, as the game's pulled in more than 5 million players). I suspect I'm about to sink a whole lot more time into this DLC.

The Unholy Fusion DLC usually costs $3, but there's a 10 percent discount on Steam until April 23. The base game is typically $10, though you can get 30 percent off on Steam until the same date. You'll save an extra five percent if you buy a bundle with both. CloverPit is also on Game Pass, and you can buy a bundle of the base game and DLC on Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One and Xbox on PC for $11.49. On iOS and Android, you can snag CloverPit for $5 and the DLC for $2.

Another title had a surprise, sudden release during the Triple-i Initiative showcase: battle royale typing game Final Sentence. I really enjoyed the demo for this one, even though I'm not the fastest or most accurate typist around — I made four typos in this sentence alone. Make too many mistakes or fail to beat everyone else who's bashing away at a typewriter and it's curtains for you, courtesy of a creepy figure with a revolver that's standing by your desk.

Final Sentence, from Button Mash and Polden Publishing, is available on Steam. It'll typically cost $10, but if you pick it up before April 23, you'll save 10 percent. (Sidenote: I enjoyed a Steam review that read, "finally... a way for millennials to beat Gen Z at a battle royale game.)

One of the most interesting things about People of Note is that Iridium Studios tried to make this musical adventure as approachable as possible. It's an RPG with turn-based battles, but you can skip the fights if you like. That's appealing to someone like me, who enjoys story-driven games but often struggles to engage with turn-based combat. Puzzles are skippable too. Great! People should be able to play non-competitive games however they want.

I dug the demo when I played it a while back. The approach to battles here is interesting, as the protagonist, pop singer Cadence, recruits other musicians to join her band — in other words, your party. The combat is based around music, and you can create mashups of battle tracks based on the genres that your collaborators specialize in. 

People of Note, from publisher Annapurna Interactive, will normally run you $25, though there's a 10 percent launch discount. It's available on PS5 (the discount on that platform is only for PlayStation Plus subscribers), Xbox Series X/S, Xbox on PC, Nintendo Switch 2, Steam and the Epic Games Store.

Tamashika is a fast-paced first-person shooter with a neat twist. The game only has one level available at any time. There are no checkpoints, and it'll take about 10 minutes to complete a successful run. The level gets a procedurally generated revamp once per day.

A tantō blade, a pistol, your movement and your aim are the only weapons you have to defeat the enemies and reach the goal. I had to watch the trailer a few times to get it, but the quirky hand-drawn aesthetic is growing on me.

Tamashika — from QuickTequila and publisher Edglrd — is available on Steam, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and Switch for $20.

A Hidden Object Fest is running on Steam until April 13, and a few new games have debuted as part of that. One of those is Nippets by Blink Industries. It's a hand-drawn game with lots of secrets and, at least judging by the trailer, charming animations. It seems like a very relaxing counterpoint to some of the more intense games out this week. It's pretty digestible too, as it has around two to three hours of gameplay, depending on how sharp your observation skills are.

Nippets is available on Steam and Itch for PC and Mac. It costs $13, though there's a 10 percent discount on Steam until April 21. A demo is available on both storefronts too.

Dead As Disco has some momentum after 1.2 million players checked out the demo, and this rhythm-based beat 'em up now has an early access release date. It's coming to Steam and the Epic Games Store on May 5.

At the jump, you'll be able to play the first arc of a larger narrative and be able to take out bad guys to the beat of a soundtrack that has more than 30 songs, including original tracks, covers and licensed tunes. You can load in your own music as well, though I can't imagine being able to adeptly play this to the rhythm of Angine de Poitrine's wild time signature swings. 

Brain Jar Games expects the game to remain in early access for around a year as it adds new bosses, moves and other features, and makes adjustments based on player feedback. A co-op mode is planned too. You can get a taste of Dead As Disco now by checking out the Steam demo, though I would argue that disco is still very much alive.

Those looking for a puzzle game of a Lovecraftian persuasion may be interested in Call of the Elder Gods, a sequel to 2020's Call of the Sea. The follow-up is bound for Steam, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and Switch 2 on May 12. It'll be available on Game Pass and it's priced at $25 on the eShop.

You seemingly won't need to have played Call of the Sea before diving into the sequel, though you'll surely get more out of Call of the Elder Gods if you have. You'll switch between two characters — professor Harry Everhart and student Evangeline Drayton — to solve puzzles from a first-person perspective and try to find out what happened to the pair's missing loved ones.

I'd seen Long Gone at another showcase some time ago, but the name of it slipped from my memory. No such issues after it made an appearance in the Triple-i Initiative stream though, as this project from Hillfort Games and co-publisher Outersloth is now firmly on my Steam wishlist.

It's a narrative-driven game set amid a zombie outbreak in which you'll solve environmental puzzles to learn about the lives of people who are no longer around. It's ostensibly a point-and-click adventure that looks very heavily inspired by a certain post-apocalyptic series from Naughty Dog, right down to the backpack-wearing protagonist. There are platforming sections too.

I'm absolutely going to be interested in any game that smooshes together The Last of Us and the Monkey Island series. I'm really looking forward to playing Long Gone sometime next year.