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

H
Help Net Security
博客园 - 聂微东
Jina AI
Jina AI
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 叶小钗
P
Proofpoint News Feed
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
B
Blog
D
Docker
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
S
Schneier on Security
G
Google Developers Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
量子位
Security Latest
Security Latest
S
Secure Thoughts
T
Tor Project blog
E
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
D
DataBreaches.Net
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
B
Blog RSS Feed
IT之家
IT之家
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
C
Check Point Blog
V
V2EX
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
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
L
LangChain Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
博客园_首页
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
腾讯CDC
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题

CNET

Netflix: 29 of the Best Sci-Fi TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now Wait! Don't Buy the Galaxy S26 Ultra. This Cheaper Phone Is Just as Good Best Cheap Phone of 2026: You Don’t Need to Pay a Lot for Your Next Phone Best Streaming Services of 2026 44 of the Best Movies on Netflix You Should Stream Now Best Live TV Streaming Services of 2026 7 of the Best A24 Movies You Can Stream Free on Your Next Movie Night Hisense's Colorful RGB TV, the UR8, Hits Shelves From $1,300 60 of the Best TV Shows on Netflix That Will Keep You Entertained I Need Apple to Finally Launch Its Foldable iPhone Flip in 2026 Best Senior Phone Plans of 2026 Apple Should Steal These Android Camera Tricks for the iPhone 18 Pro Disney Plus: 30 Best TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now Get the Best Deals Handpicked and Texted to You Prime Video: 23 of the Best Sci-Fi TV Shows You Need to Stream Right Now Prime Video: 11 of the Best Sci-Fi Movies You Should Stream Right Now AI Chatbot Pricing Comparison: Here's What You Get When You Pay Best TVs for 2026: Expert Tested and Reviewed Apple TV: 28 of the Best Shows You're Probably Not Watching YouTube TV vs. DirecTV vs. Hulu Live and More: Which Has the Most Must-Have Channels Out of 100? Amazon Support for Older Kindles Ends Today. What to Do Now Best MacBooks We’ve Tested (May 2026) After Brewing 17 Bags of Grocery Store Coffee, These Are the 5 Beans I'd Buy Again I Tested the Best Budget TVs Head-to-Head. This One Was Shockingly Good Best Laptops of 2026: Top Picks Tested by CNET Netflix: 24 Fantasy TV Shows You Should Absolutely Stream Right Now AI Is Watching Your Every Move on the Road. These State Laws Are Pushing Back Trump Phone Looks Different, Has No Launch Date, Isn't Made in America Best T-Mobile Plans: How to Choose and Which Ones to Pick in 2026 Apple TV's 16 Best Sci-Fi Shows You Should Stream Right Now The Apple Watch Series 12 Is Rumored to Revive a Retired iPhone Feature Does Tech Actually Suck Now or Have I Just Become a Grumpy Old Man? I've Tested Dozens of 3D Printers and These Are the Best for Everyone Best Cellphone Plans of 2026: Our Top Picks Best Family Phone Plans for 2026 Best Prepaid Phone Plans for 2026 Gaming at the Gym? Here's How to Sneak Some Playtime Into Workouts I Resurrected My Favorite Childhood Games Using Gemini Vibe Coding Best VR Headsets of 2026: My Favorite Hardware Right Now Verizon's Streaming Deals Let You Watch Netflix, Disney Plus and More, for Less Motorola's $150 Moto Watch Fell Short of Its Fitness Promises in My Tests Best Home Theater Systems of 2026 Motorola's Razr Is Days Away From Its iPhone Moment Apple iPhone 20: Everything We Know About the Radical Redesign Coming in 2027 Play One of the Best Games of 2025 Right Now on Xbox Game Pass Don't Wait for the iPhone 18. Just Get Apple's iPhone 17 Motorola Razr 2026 Rumor Roundup: Everything We Know About The New Razr Flip Phones Need to Scan Your Tax Documents Before Deadline? Use Your iPhone's Hidden Scanner Samsung Galaxy S26 vs. Google Pixel 10: How Each Flagship Phone Compares Premier League Soccer 2026: Watch Chelsea vs. Man City Live 5G From the Sky: New Internet Infrastructure Takes Flight I Think the RedMagic 11 Air's Best Feature Is Its Price for the Hardware Best Unlimited Data Plans for 2026 Double Dazzle: The First of April's Two Meteor Showers Is About to Begin Signs It’s Time to Tune Up Your Treadmill, Exercise Bike and Rowing Machine iOS 26.4.1 Isn't a Big Update, but You Should Download It Anyway Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 12 #770 Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 12, #1036 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 12, #1758 Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Sunday, April 12 Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 12, #566 A Trio of Stars: The Spring Triangle Is Here. How to See It Watch a Robot Stuff Cash Into a Wallet Just Like You Do This Animation Startup Wants to Make It Easier to Tell Open-Ended Stories The 9 Best Places to Buy Reading Glasses Online (Zero Prescription Required) The 23 Best Graduation Gifts for 2026 Grand National 2026 Livestream: How to Watch Aintree Horse Racing From Anywhere Amazon Luna to Drop Support for Third-Party Games and Subscriptions in June YouTube Premium Is the Latest Streaming Service to Hike Prices Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Saturday, April 11 Elden Ring: Tarnished Edition for Switch 2 Reignites Controversy Over Game-Key Cards Artemis II Astronauts Are Home Safe Comcast Adds New StreamSaver Bundles: HBO Max, Disney Plus, Hulu Now Part of the Lineup Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7 Just Got a Price Hike, 9 Months After Its Release Microsoft Is Scrubbing the Copilot Name From Some Windows 11 Apps 'I'm Alarmed': Senator Opens Inquiry Into the Ways Tech Companies Report Suspected Child Abuse These $299 Glasses Are Like an HDR TV on Your Face Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 11, #565 After a Lifetime of Gas, I Switched to an Induction Stove. I'm Never Going Back How to Make Sure Your Private Signal Messages Aren't Still Lurking on Your Phone Apple AirPods Max 2 Review: Seemingly Small Changes Make a Substantial Difference Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 11, #1035 Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 11 #769 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 11, #1757 Encrypted Emails Are Now Available for Some Gmail Phone App Enterprise Customers Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov Fight: When to Watch the Action on Netflix The Many Times Apple Products Left Earth Over Half of Us Have Faced Possible Malware, Yet Some Are Ignoring Cybercriminals Best VPN for Mac for 2026: Improve Your Privacy for Web Browsing, Streaming and Gaming Best Soundbars of 2026 Apple iPhone Fold, Google Pixel 11, Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Other Phones Left to Launch in 2026 iPhone 17 vs. iPhone 16: Should You Upgrade? Best Samsung Phone of 2026 iPhone Fold: Every Leak and Rumor on Apple's 2026 Foldable Best Bluetooth Speakers of 2026 The 25 Best PS5 Games Right Now Best Headsets for Working From Home in 2026, According to CNET's Audio Expert Trust Me: All Photographers Need These 3 Types of Cameras Best Gaming Chair for 2026 I Tested the iPhone 17 Pro Max. It's Part Midlife Crisis and Part Battery-Life King
Bad Magpie Is a Delightful Game About Destructively Avoiding Your Emotions
David Lumb · 2026-06-14 · via CNET

In the realm of wildlife gremlin simulators like Untitled Goose Game, Bad Magpie marries mischievous carnage with an emotional undercurrent.

Headshot of David Lumb

David Lumb is a managing editor for the mobile team, covering mobile and gaming spaces. Over the last decade, he's reviewed phones for TechRadar as well as covered tech, gaming, and culture for Engadget, Popular Mechanics, NBC Asian America, Increment, Fast Company and others. As a true Californian, he lives for coffee, beaches and burritos.

Expertise Smartphones | Gaming | Telecom industry | Mobile semiconductors | Mobile gaming

Good games obscure their emotional underpinnings with enjoyable gameplay, but the best let you be a little bastard while you do it.

Bad Magpie, the debut game from London-based indie studio Milktooth, follows the proud tradition of players controlling animals committing misdemeanor chaos, like Untitled Goose Game. They're joyful exercises in cutting loose and making life minorly worse for everyone else. But there's a thematic throughline to Bad Magpie that ties into a very human experience. 

"The idea [for Bad Magpie] came out of a very sad place: One of us was going through heartbreak, another of us had a loss in our family, and we thought it would be interesting to have a game that isn't allegory for that grief but, in particular, the avoidance coming out of grief, not being able to face up to an emotional truth," said Daisy Fernandez, design director at Milktooth.

The idea of a magpie -- a corvid that's cousin to crows and known for playfulness as well as using tools -- desperately collecting shiny things to avoid its abandonment was a compelling conceit for Fernandez and her colleagues at Milktooth.

"There's this saying in British folklore -- it might just be general folklore, I'm not sure -- but 'One for sorrow, two for joy.' So, the idea being that if you see one magpie, it's bad luck, if you see two, it's good luck," Fernandez said. "So it's like, what if a magpie had these weird attachment issues."

Hours after Xbox's trailer showcase the weekend of Summer Game Fest 2026, I sat down to try out about 15 minutes of Bad Magpie, just enough to get a taste of its gameplay and the barest inkling of the emotional beats to come.

The game had me start out on a quiet road leading up to a schoolyard. The first thing the game had me do was walk up to a rock and peck it until it started a fire, burning the grass around it -- and setting the log I picked up aflame so that I could torch some path-blocking planks to enter a playground. 

Gameplay where a bird is causing chaos. Here, the magpie is amplifying its voice through a megaphone to get a specific in-game result.
Milktooth

The game is stylish, with a painterly look matching the playfulness of the antics my bad bird is up to. It's hard to stay mad at the varmint, as they look so cute short-hopping to and fro. 

The goal presented in the demo was to collect prismatically colorful crystals, which were hidden in trees and lodged in hard-to-reach locations that required some light environmental puzzle-solving to secure. Most often, that meant vandalism or other chicanery, from breaking bottles to screaming at mice through a megaphone. 

There were some delightful little set pieces in the demo, from digitalizing the magpie to walk through several monitors, recovering said megaphone, to unrolling a giant piano pad that required dropping books on specific keys to play a particular chord. It's lighthearted fun while the magpie is on a mission collecting crystals for a big, shiny star -- a purpose that fills the void of abandonment if you're paying attention. 

Gameplay where a bird that typically causes chaos is depositing its crystal.
Milktooth

It's a tightrope to walk, and Milktooth wanted to deliver delightful gameplay with emotional stakes to the chaos without being too heavy-handed about its serious themes. This is their differentiator from a lot of animal games. They pitched the game as Untitled Goose Game meets Shadow of the Colossus; Fernandez said, "Because yeah, menacing evil bird, but what if emotional stakes were underneath it?"

In that comparison, the star you're collecting crystals for is the colossus. You collect shiny trinkets for the star and are immediately sent out to get another one, an interaction that feels increasingly shallow and sad -- a perfect distraction because it's never satisfying.

"You're trying to fulfill some kind of relationship or antisocial activity that never has a positive endpoint, but always makes you feel distracted in an avoidant way," Fernandez said. "It's the dawning sense of what you're doing isn't going somewhere good -- there's a kind of sadness that's imbued in the menace." 

Since the game is nonlinear, the expectation is that as players collect more trinkets however they choose, the underlying themes will start settling in. It's a low-pressure way to convey a deeper humane experience that players might share with the calamity corvid they've been controlling. 

"To just see someone have some sort of catharsis when they play it, and be surprised at the depth of it, to feel they recognize themselves and their avoidance in the bird, and see some sort of resolution that leaves them feeling less alone -- that's what I think they all are looking for," Fernandez said. 

Headshot of David Lumb

David Lumb is a managing editor for the mobile team, covering mobile and gaming spaces. Over the last decade, he's reviewed phones for TechRadar as well as covered tech, gaming, and culture for Engadget, Popular Mechanics, NBC Asian America, Increment, Fast Company and others. As a true Californian, he lives for coffee, beaches and burritos.