Yes, it turns out you can make a Tesla Cybertruck even uglier

There’s a saying about putting lipstick on a pig, but what if it’s not lipstick? That’s the question the universe set out to answer when it aligned in such a way that famed (or perhaps infamous) car customizer Mansory got itself a Tesla Cybertruck. The Mansory Elongation—a name that must have taken ages to think of—offers exterior, interior, and wheel and tire upgrades for the straight-edged stainless steel-wrapped pickup.

Among those who mod cars, there are tuners, who focus on adding power and (one hopes) performance, and then there are the customizers, who concentrate more on aesthetics. Once upon a time, the entire luxury car industry worked like that—a client would buy a rolling chassis from Bugatti, Rolls-Royce, or Talbot and then have bodywork added by coachbuilders like Gurney Nutting, Touring, or Figoni et Falaschi.

The rear 3/4 view of a modified Cybertruck
At least the rear winglets don’t entirely compromise access to the bed.
Credit:
Mansory

Modern homologation requirements have mostly put an end to that level of coachbuilding, but for the ultra-wealthy prepared to spend telephone numbers on cars, brands like Rolls-Royce will still occasionally oblige. More common now are those aftermarket shops that spiff up already luxurious cars, changing normal doors for gullwing versions, adding flaring fenders and bulging wheel arches, and plastering the interior in any hue of leather one might imagine.

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Watch Two AIs Freakishly Talk In Their Own Language When Humans Aren’t Around

Watch Two AIs Freakishly Talk In Their Own Language When Humans Aren't Around
There are numerous ways humans can become extinct, like an asteroid crashing into Earth or nuclear bombs making the planet inhabitable, both of which have been featured in various Hollywood flicks. But instead of the sound of bombs exploding or a giant space rock smashing into our home planet, the last sounds we might hear as a species could

Pokémon Fans Have A Conspiracy Theory That Cyndaquil Isn’t In Legends: Z-A Because Of Smutty Folklore

During yesterday’s annual Pokémon Day Presents showcase, Game Freak finally unveiled gameplay footage of Pokémon Legends: Z-A, revealing real-time combat, the return of some old friends, and teases about new mysteries in Lumiose City. It also revealed the three starters for the game will be Chikorita, Tepig, and…

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Detective VR Review: Unraveling The Mixed Reality Mystery

Mystery. Murder. A magnifying glass. And of course, that corkboard where you pin bits of evidence and connect them with string. Does Detective VR’s alibi stand up to scrutiny? We put the clues together.

The Facts

What is it?: A mixed reality narrative game where you investigate a murder mystery.
Platforms: Quest 3/3S (played on Quest 3)
Release Date: Out now
Developer: Studio CHIPO Y JUAN & VALEM Studio
Price: $29.99

Detective Work

As Detective VR’s namesake but as a nameless detective, it’s your job to unravel the mystery of why the arrogant artist Richard Hue has gone missing. There’s an array of plausible suspects: his resentful partner, his sleazy benefactor facing financial troubles, and more.

The entire game is set up for hand tracking, which works great. Action is split between crime scenes and your back office. You play the crime scene in VR, surrounded by the suspect’s apartment which you can traverse via teleportation to search for clues. Your back office is experienced in Mixed Reality: the detective’s evidence-bearing corkboard appears floating in your actual VR play space. Successfully connecting two items produces a VHS video reel where the suspect in question appears life-size to explain themselves, occasionally divulging something incriminating or, at least, narrative-progressing.

Time Trial

The moment you’ve collected enough evidence from the crime scene or corkboard, you’re prompted to advance to the next stage. This produces a tension, but not the narrative tension the developers likely intended: It prompts my gamer instincts to kick in. I want to speedrun.

At the crime scene, my camera has infinite film; it’s faster & easier to aggressively fire shots, hoping to trigger the game’s acknowledgment that I’ve spotted a clue, than it is to slowly and deliberately canvas the venue for curiosities.

Detective VR screenshot shows you taking a photo in-game

Once I’ve collected all the evidence from a crime scene, I’m prompted to return to shop — even if I was in the middle of watching a narrative unfold.

Detective VR screenshot shows two people sat at a desk as a "new suspect unlocked" screen appears

Testimonials from suspects which advance the plot produce a highlighted lanyard string and a green check mark, regardless of my actual attentiveness. 

Detective VR screenshot shows an evidence board

Before long, I step back and wonder: I’ve certainly developed my in-game skill set – hand gestures for my camera to take photos, the rapid cycle through the blood, fingerprint, and text magnifying glass filters in my back room. But… do I have my own strong opinions about the suspect and motive? Particularly, since everyone’s a suspect, which characters do I really care about?

Technical Marvel

The essential context for considering and consuming Detective VR is that it’s a product of a minuscule team of 3-4. That’s made evident throughout their website and promo material. It’s one thing for Meta, with its overwhelming resources, vast workforce, and utter disregard for annual profits, to produce a mixed reality demo like First Encounters.

It’s something else entirely to imagine the team that brought Detective VR to life, and the various tradeoffs & challenges overcome. Studio Chipo y Juan navigated narrative design, gameplay design, technical development, casting, translation, and the infinity of other details to bring a project like this to life.

Two shows actors doing motion capture on left side, and the in-game scene it's for on the right

There’s still room for improvement: I noted occasional grammar errors, while the magnifying glass gameplay loop is skilless and boring. Of course the phone one character was touching has their fingerprints; of course the bloody shirt has blood traces. Finding the last 1–2 pieces of evidence in a room can be tricky — which, as a true detective, of course it should be! There’d be no work or gameplay fun if the scene presented the gun, still smoking, on the table in front of you.

That said, I wish it required more skill and would therefore feel more rewarding to find that last bit of evidence: say, a suspect seems fixated on a locked drawer, innocuous when you arrive at the scene but obvious from paying attention as it unfolds. Evidence discovery often feels more like solving a Where’s Waldo, where persistence beats deduction.

Yet: it’s monumentally inspiring to consider what small, impassioned teams can accomplish in this space, given the Chipo y Juan team’s success with Detective VR.

Immersive Theatre

One great promise of the headset medium is “immersion” — obliterating the barrier of a stage or TV screen, radically dialling up one’s sense of intimacy. It’s undeniably cool that Detective’s suspects appear life-size in my kitchen. However… I wish Richard, Agatha, and the rest of the cast made more eye contact with me, or otherwise engaged or acknowledged my “physical” presence in the “room” with them.

Detective VR screenshots shows a woman with long black hair reaching her hand out

In Detective VR, I want to embody the Detective, not just the witness. What would it mean, and how would it feel, if Agatha tried appealing to me personally? There’s no in-game currency, but if there was, how would it feel if Karl looked me in the eye and tried to pay me off?

What’s Detective’s next move?

The premise is primed for episodic format. With the upfront work developing core gameplay & technical capabilities behind them, Studio Chipo y Juan seem ready to deliver new mysteries, settings, and characters evoking the production schedule of, say, James Patterson’s books or Walkabout Mini Golf’s DLC courses. If they can manage that, the game’s (and genre’s!) future success is no real mystery.

Detective VR – Final Verdict

Detective VR is fun! It’s inspiring! Suspenseful. While there’s room for improvement with the gameplay, it’s an impressive effort from Studio Chipo y Juan that’s a delight to play, with so much room for more to come. If you want to catch a murderer in mixed reality, I’d recommend picking this one up today.


UploadVR uses a 5-Star rating system for our game reviews – you can read a breakdown of each star rating in our review guidelines.

Mozilla’s Updated ToS: We Own All Info You Put Into Firefox

New submitter SharkByte writes: Mozilla just updated its Terms of Use and Privacy Policy for Firefox with a very disturbing “You Give Mozilla Certain Rights and Permissions” clause: When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide license to use that information to help you navigate, experience, and interact with online content as you indicate with your use of Firefox. H/T to reader agristin as well, who also wrote about this.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Terms of use and privacy changes for Firefox

There is a fair amount of unhappiness on the Internet about the announcement
from Mozilla about a new “terms of
use” agreement
and an updated
privacy notice
for the Firefox browser.

Firefox will always continue to add new features, improve existing
ones, and test new ideas. We remain dedicated to making Firefox
open source, but we believe that doing so along with an official
Terms of Use will give you more transparency over your rights and
permissions as you use Firefox. And actually asking you to
acknowledge it is an important step, so we’re making it a part of
the standard product experience starting in early March for new
users and later this year for existing ones.

Specifically, the apparent
removal
of a promise to not sell users’ personal data has drawn
attention.

(See also: this
analysis
by Michael Taggart. “So, is this Mozilla ‘going evil?’
Nah, prolly not. But it is at best clumsy, and a poor showing if they want
me to believe they care about Firefox, rather than the data it can
provide
“.)

Ford Mach 4 Trademark Hints At A Bold New Direction For Mustang

Ford Mach 4 Trademark Hints At A Bold New Direction For Mustang
Earlier this week, Ford submitted a trademark application for the term “Mach 4,” which has now gotten the internet buzzing on its meaning. Some believe that Ford could be planning some kind of four-door Mustang, but in what form? A regular sedan, a fastback, or—heaven forbid—a station wagon? Might it also possible that Ford will create a new

Google Tweak Creates Crisis for Product-Review Sites

Google changed its rules around how product-review sites appear in its search engine. In the process, it devastated a once-lucrative corner [non-paywalled source] of the news media world. From a report: Sites including CNN Underscored and Forbes Vetted offer tips on everything from mattresses and knife sets to savings accounts, making money when users click on links and buy products.

They depend on Google to drive much of their traffic, and therefore revenue. But over the past year, Google created stricter rules that dinged certain sites that farm out articles to freelancers, among other things. The goal, Google has said, was to give users higher-quality search results. The outcome was a crisis for some sites. Traffic for Forbes Advisor, a personal-finance recommendation site, fell 83% in January from the same month the year before, according to data firm Similarweb.

CNN Underscored and Buy Side from WSJ, which is operated by Wall Street Journal parent Dow Jones, were both down by more than 25% in that period. Time magazine’s Time Stamped and the Associated Press’s AP Buyline, powered by Taboola Turnkey Commerce, ended their efforts in recent months. Taboola closed the commerce operation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

IDC Slashes PC Sales Forecast Amid Tariff Price Hike Fears But That’s Not All

IDC Slashes PC Sales Forecast Amid Tariff Price Hike Fears But That's Not All
As higher tariffs imposed by the Trump administration loom, the analysts at IDC have adjusted their outlook on PC shipments for 2025 and beyond, reducing the expected shipment figure to 273 million units for the current year. The silver lining is that’s still a whole heck of a lot of PCs, and it also still represents a growth rate (3.7%) versus

Burrito Factory Burrito Folding Machine In Action

This is a video from a burrito factory (that, despite the mess everywhere, is still way more hygienic than the places I like to eat) of a SIGMA Equipment Solbern BF2 SS Dual Lane Burrito Folding machine doing its thing. Based on all the loose tortillas and filling thrown about, I imagine there might be room for improving this burrito folder’s design. Me? I fold my burritos the same way I leave an all-you-can-eat buffet: way too full and ready to explode with the slightest poke.