Vue normale

Il y a de nouveaux articles disponibles, cliquez pour rafraîchir la page.
À partir d’avant-hierYanko Design

GAMEMT E5 MODX handheld’s detachable control module can be connected to Magsafe phones

Par : Gaurav Sood
6 avril 2026 à 15:20

The craze for handhelds over the last 24 months has driven a surge in portable gaming consoles. We’ve seen it all, right from retro handheld devices to modern consoles that can handle AAA titles without breaking a sweat. GAMEMT has been in the thick of things with a Android handheld released last month and a unique portable console with a dial knob.

Now the Chinese manufacturer has revealed yet another handheld, which is an eye turner for sure. This is the E5 MODX console based on the original E5 released in 2024. The console has a removable modular display that can be connected to your MagSafe-compatible smartphone. It would be safe to say that the handheld draws inspiration from the MCON controller, but we haven’t seen a detachable-display handheld yet. Now, that’s downright cool.

Designer: GAMEMT

In its native form, the handheld looks and feels just like any other 3:4 display device. However, when you detach the 5.5″ screen (1024 x 768) and connect its controller module magnetically to a mobile phone, it turns into an altogether different beast. The gaming machine comes with the MTK6771 Helio P60 chipset, which is not that highly rated in the tech circles, given its inconsistent performance. Still, it’ll be interesting to see what GAMEMT has managed to achieve with this microchip in terms of hardware and software compatibility in the E5 MODX. The chipset is paired with a 3GB RAM for optimized performance, and 32 GB internal memory is more than enough to store the suite of AA games.

You can expect to emulate PS1 games, or the option to pair with the Dreamcast/N64/PS2 and GameCube emulation. Clearly, you would better explore the retro arcade game library with this one, to be honest. The real magic happens when you connect the device to your flagship smartphone, and the fun of playing AAA games is again real. For now, it is unclear whether the magnetically detachable accessory pairs via Bluetooth or works with the physical connection, and also for low latency.

According to GAMEMT, the first 3D prototype of the E5 Modx is in the works, and there is no word yet on when the handheld will be released. For now, the idea sounds very interesting, given the landscape of handheld consoles that gamers now can choose from.

The post GAMEMT E5 MODX handheld’s detachable control module can be connected to Magsafe phones first appeared on Yanko Design.

KFC’s Pickle Puffer Is Fashion’s Weirdest Power Move

Par : Ida Torres
25 mars 2026 à 08:45

At some point, the line between fashion and performance art quietly dissolved, and I think we need to have a serious conversation about who’s holding the needle. Because KFC just debuted a puffer jacket filled with real sliced gherkins and acid-green brine, and it is fully, sincerely, unapologetically real.

The Pickle Puffer is exactly what it sounds like. A clear plastic puffer jacket, entirely see-through, packed with floating slices of pickled cucumber and brine so vividly green it almost looks radioactive. The insulation is gone, replaced with hundreds of actual pickles that shift and float with every movement.

Designer: KFC

Picture a standard puffer silhouette, the kind you’d wear on a cold commute, except every quilted chamber is sealed, transparent, and filled with floating pickle slices suspended in green liquid. The jacket moves the way a lava lamp moves. Tilt left and the gherkins drift. A hydration hose runs along the chest like something from a trail runner’s kit, except it feeds into a reservoir of pickle juice. The zipper pull is shaped like a pickle. The whole thing is lurid and weirdly beautiful in the way that only objects with absolutely no interest in being subtle can be.

I genuinely don’t know whether to call this genius or absurdist theatre, and I’m starting to think the distinction doesn’t matter anymore. What makes the Pickle Puffer particularly fascinating is its origin story. It didn’t start in a brand meeting or a creative studio. It started with an AI-generated video on TikTok of a man handing out gherkin slices from a pickle-filled puffer jacket. The video had barely a hundred likes. A hundred. And yet something about it triggered that very specific brand instinct that says: we should make this real.

The fact that KFC actually followed through says a lot about where we are right now. We’ve officially entered an era where a low-engagement AI fantasy can become a physical product, and the feedback loop between online imagination and real-world manufacturing has compressed to almost nothing. KFC UK brand manager James Channon was refreshingly candid, calling it “a bit unhinged, but that’s the point.”

And it is unhinged. But it’s also timed to perfection. The jacket dropped alongside KFC’s new Pickle Mania Menu in the UK, which includes Pickle Loaded Fries and a Pickle Pepsi, riding the wave of a full-blown cultural obsession. The #pickles hashtag on TikTok has racked up billions of views, and apparently the correct brand response is to wear that moment on your body, literally soaked in brine.

Now, this is a one-off. You can’t buy it. You have to win it through an Instagram giveaway, which is its own kind of genius because the scarcity makes it collectible and the competition makes it content. KFC isn’t really selling a jacket. They’re selling a news story, a talking point, and a social media moment that will keep circulating long after the pickles start to turn. That’s the actual product here.

It also puts the Pickle Puffer in the company of a growing category of fashion-as-marketing stunts increasingly committed to the bit. Aldi’s Jacket Potato Jacket came before it. Lidl has played in this space too. There’s a whole lane developing for grocery and fast-food brands to use absurdist outerwear as their loudest advertising medium, and it’s clearly working. I’m writing about a pickle jacket right now, so there’s your proof.

What I keep coming back to is how genuinely well it’s designed for what it’s supposed to do. The translucency is intentional. The floating pickles are the visual. The hydration hose is the punchline that also happens to be functional. Every element is deliberate and considered, even if the whole thing is engineered to make you laugh first and think second. Plenty of brands try for weird and land on confusing. KFC landed on weird and made it covetable. Fashion has always been partly spectacle. The Pickle Puffer just has better snacks.

The post KFC’s Pickle Puffer Is Fashion’s Weirdest Power Move first appeared on Yanko Design.

Track Trailer reinvents Tvan, one of the toughest off-roading trailers with roomier MK6 model

Par : Gaurav Sood
20 mars 2026 à 19:15

Track Trailer, the name behind the famous Tvan off-road camper trailers, needs little introduction. It has been powering the overlanding experience in Australia and worldwide for a good part of four decades now. Over the years, we have seen some interesting variants of the Tvan, which has now reached the MK6. The sixth iteration in the successful portfolio, Tvan MK6 Model, retains the same aluminum body, which runs in the bloodline, but is more spacious and even more comfortable.

As the appearance suggests, the new Tvan MK6 is available in four variants and is almost identical to its predecessors. What changes are the interior space and the headroom, which make the MK6 a different entrant in the same effective branding of the world’s toughest off-roading trailer.

Designer: Track Trailer

Track Trailer first tried reworking the interior space with the MK5 model. It was done staying within the confines of the Tvan styling: no pop-up roof attachment, but a slight raise in roof height. With the MK6, the company has also stayed true to its design ideology. It has only increased headroom, stretched the neck forward, and pushed the sides of the trailer outward to increase the interior space by up to 20%.

The expansion to the trailer permits more natural light inside the cabin, which is constructed using an aluminum sandwich-panel construction. Moreover, the MK6 features a durable chassis based on an advanced suspension system that enables it to roll comfortably on rugged terrains and off-road destinations. With its ruggedness assured, the camping trailer is ideal for all types of adventures, which is facilitated by its quick setup and clever storage designed throughout its exterior and also on the inside.

MK6 measures 16-foot-long and 6.3 feet wide, the trailer has an interesting storage cabinet in the extended nose up front, comprising a pantry and up to 95 liters fridge/freezer. Slightly further back is the slide-out kitchen with a three-burner gas stove, a full-size sink connected to a 108L fresh water tank, and a storage drawer topped with a prep area.

The most interesting part of the MK6 camping trailer is the rear hatch design. It features Track Trailer’s patented Skyward Lift Up Deck, which combines the hatch and the hard-floor deck. The electric lock system allows the two to lift up in unison for quick and direct access into the living space of the trailer. Just when you need it, a tent can be attached to the trailer to increase the living quarters.

Inside is a double bed surrounded by large windows and overhead and sidewall storage. LED lighting and dual roof hatches complete the design. Since the MK6 is available in four variants, each is designed differently for off-the-grid living. The entry-level Inspire features a 125Ah lithium battery that draws energy from a 200W rooftop solar panel, while a 350W inverter takes care of the power backup. Firetail accommodates a pair of 125Ah batteries, a 2000W inverter, and some premium features in the kitchen.

Tvan MK6 Murranji adds a 200W solar panel to the Firetail setup, but leaves out the inverter. The top-of-the-line, Lightning, on the other hand, comes with a 500Ah battery. It features a 2,000W inverter and a 360W solar panel to complete its all-electric setup. Each of these models can have further upgrades with add-ons like awnings and more. MK6 starts at AU$69,900 (approximately $50,000) with the mentioned amenities.

The post Track Trailer reinvents Tvan, one of the toughest off-roading trailers with roomier MK6 model first appeared on Yanko Design.

GameMT EX8 debuts as a budget Android handheld tailored for retro gaming

Par : Gaurav Sood
13 mars 2026 à 19:15

The gaming handheld continues to expand with new devices aimed at retro enthusiasts and mobile gamers. One of the latest additions is the GameMT EX8, a portable gaming console designed to deliver a capable Android-based gaming experience while maintaining a relatively affordable price point. With a high-resolution display, a familiar handheld layout, and hardware suited for emulation and mobile gaming, the EX8 represents GameMT’s attempt to compete with other budget-friendly handhelds in the growing retro gaming segment.

The handheld features a 4.88-inch display with a resolution of 1080 × 1620 pixels and a 3:2 aspect ratio. This format is particularly appealing for retro gaming because it better accommodates older console titles that do not match modern widescreen displays. The panel is also noticeably sharper than the screen used in some competing handhelds, such as the Ayaneo Pocket Micro, which uses a smaller 3.5-inch display with a lower resolution. The larger and sharper screen is expected to improve the visual experience when playing classic games from platforms like the PlayStation and PSP. With its combination of a high-resolution 3:2 display, capable mobile processor, and expandable storage, the GameMT EX8 aims to deliver a balanced handheld gaming experience.

Designer: GameMT

Powering the device is MediaTek’s Helio G99 processor, a chipset commonly found in mid-range smartphones. The chip is paired with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage, providing enough performance for Android gaming and a wide range of emulated titles. The Helio G99 has already proven capable of handling many retro systems and even some more demanding platforms through emulation, making it a practical choice for a handheld of this category. For users with larger game libraries, the EX8 also includes a microSD card slot that allows the storage to be expanded beyond the built-in capacity.

In terms of design, the EX8 adopts a horizontal handheld layout with symmetrical analog sticks positioned on both sides of the display. Each thumbstick is surrounded by an RGB ring light, giving the device a more modern aesthetic. A traditional D-pad and ABXY button arrangement sits alongside the sticks, while shoulder buttons are integrated along the top edge. The device also appears relatively thick compared to some competitors, likely to accommodate its internal hardware and cooling system. Thermal management is supported by an internal cooling fan, which helps maintain stable performance during extended gaming sessions. Audio is delivered through bottom-firing speakers, and the handheld is powered by a 5,000 mAh battery that charges through a USB-C port. These features are designed to ensure the device can sustain longer play sessions without overheating or running out of power too quickly.

The GameMT EX8 will be available in two color options. A black version pairs dark hardware with red D-pad and face buttons, while a white variant features purple buttons and matching accents. This contrast gives the handheld a distinctive visual identity within the crowded retro gaming market.

 

The post GameMT EX8 debuts as a budget Android handheld tailored for retro gaming first appeared on Yanko Design.

No Balcony Space? This Table Hooks On as a Planter, Bar, or Desk

Par : JC Torres
10 mars 2026 à 14:20

A small city balcony has a way of making every square meter feel personal, just barely. There’s room for a folding chair, maybe a potted plant, and the occasional optimistic thought about al fresco breakfast. What there usually isn’t, though, is any real surface. Designer Michael Hilgers noticed this particular gap, and the balKonzept is his answer: a railing-mounted table that hooks onto the balcony railing with no tools, no hardware, and no permanent commitment.

The form is immediately legible. A wedge-shaped body in recyclable polyethylene curves at the rear into a smooth hook, looping over the railing and gripping it via an adjusting screw underneath. That single mechanical gesture is the entire installation. The raised trough at the back sits above the railing line and acts as a windbreak for objects resting on the work surface below. The unit comes in at 60 cm wide and roughly 40 cm deep on the interior side.

Designer: Michael Hilgers (rephorm)

The material choice is worth pausing on. Polyethylene, produced in a Brandenburg plastics factory through rotational molding, is not a glamorous option. It won’t feel precious the way powder-coated steel does. What it does do is survive outdoor life without complaint: frost-resistant, UV-stable, and recyclable at its end of life. Rotational molding also produces hollow, seamless shells with consistent wall thickness, which matters for something exposed to seasonal temperature extremes.

The table height is a fixed function of whatever railing it’s hanging on; subtract 21 cm from the railing height, and that’s the surface level. That means the balKonzept works very differently on a low French-style balcony versus a taller contemporary glass railing, with no way to adjust it beyond moving the piece. For anyone wanting to sit and work at a comfortable height, the railing geometry will decide the experience before any other consideration does.

Where the design earns its keep is in the planter box. Filling it with soil and roots is one option, but the trough is deep enough to function as an improvised cooler, and Rephorm’s own description cheekily acknowledges this, noting it works just as well with ice cubes and sparkling wine as it does with geraniums. That kind of built-in flexibility is the whole point; the balKonzept doesn’t commit to being one thing, which is probably what a small balcony needs most.

The post No Balcony Space? This Table Hooks On as a Planter, Bar, or Desk first appeared on Yanko Design.

❌
❌