Keep your internet browsing encrypted with ProtonVPN for $80!
So much of what we do these days is done online. From paying bills to opening credit cards to your browsing and downloading history, there’s a constant threat of having that information stolen in different ways. From browsing on an unsecured connection to malware, you are vulnerable each time you sit down and connect to the internet — but that doesn’t have to be the case.
Save 66% on a two-year subscription! Learn More
Securing your browsing sessions doesn’t have to be crazy expensive, nor hard to do, especially with great subscriptions like this one for ProtonVPN Plus. Connecting to a VPN will prevent data mining, allow you to browse anonymously and even block ads, trackers, and malware. Sounds like something you need, right?

Some of the other things that this VPN can do include:
- Protect your data w/ AES-256 encryption, Perfect Forward Secrecy & Secure Core Servers
- Ensure you’re surfing on a secure connection w/ OpenVPN protocols
- Benefit from the strong legal protection of a Swiss-based VPN
- Get added security from DNS leak protection, kill switch & built-in Tor support
- Critical infrastructure is secured in former military bases & underground structures
Save an additional 10% when you use coupon code PROTONVPN10 at checkout! Learn More
Normally you’d pay around $240 for a two-year subscription, but not right now. This limited time deal scores you huge savings and lets you pick it up for just $79.99 — and you can save an additional 10% by using coupon code PROTONVPN10 at checkout. Keep your browsing sessions safe and secure for much less and be sure to pick up your own copy today!
Epic Games’ strategy for Fortnite on Android is stupid, greedy, and dangerous
This is the worst possible idea, for the worst possible reasons.

News of the massively popular and mostly free game Fortnite coming to Android has been causing buzz for months now. Gamers of every age group have flocked to Fortnite and continue to enjoy playing and streaming all day every day. But news that Epic Games is choosing to distribute Fortnite for Android on its own instead of using the Google Play Store is just about the worst thing the company can do for its users.
Plain and simple, distributing this game outside of the Google Play Store is dangerous. And knowing Epic Games is only doing this so it can make a few extra pennies from each user is even worse.
Google Play keeps everyone safe

Remember when Pokemon Go first came out, and because it wasn’t available to everyone all at once people started uploading modified versions of the app to third-party stores with malicious code onboard to steal your data or turn your phone into a bitcoin mining machine for someone else? That kind of thing only happens when an app is distributed outside of the Google Play Store, because Google puts tremendous resources behind making sure the apps in the store are safe for you to use. Fortnite is going to be available through the Epic Games website, but there’s very little to stop someone from putting out ads for downloading Fortnite for Android on the day this game is available and redirecting those users to a version of the game with similarly malicious code.
Epic Games has decided it’s cool to roll the dice on your behalf and hope you follow their instructions.
The Google Play Store also offers financial protection for parents who let their kid play a game with the credit card loaded. Stories of App Stores charging parents thousands of dollars because the kid wasn’t paying attention rarely end in the parent needing to pay those huge fines because the mistake is reversed and Google handles this process. Epic Games is now the only company involved in this process, because purchases made in Fortnite on Android won’t go through the Google Play Store. If Epic decides you have to pay for the things your kids did by mistake, there’s no appeal process in place anymore.
Perhaps most important is the way you install apps outside the Google Play Store. In order to side-load an app on any Android phone not running the newest version you need to turn off a safety lock that allows these installations to happen. If you don’t re-enable this feature back off after Fortnite is installed, anything can be installed in the background without your permission. But every time an update for Fortnite needs to be installed, you will need to toggle this feature again. This isn’t the case if your phone is running Android 8.0 or newer, but at last count 88% of all Android phones were running a version older than 8.0.
In the past, this exact same loophole has lead to data leaks and huge problems with data privacy. Instead of keeping their users safe, many of whom are children, Epic Games has decided it’s cool to roll the dice on your behalf and hope you follow their instructions.
There is no good reason to behave this way

The only reasons provided for this terrible decision by Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney are financial. Sweeney says Epic wants to use its own installer like it does on the PC, and wants to bypass the 30% cut Google takes on all Play Store transactions. It’s worth pointing out this 30% tax is identical to the one Apple places in its Play Store, but Apple doesn’t let users sideload apps — an option Epic has here with Android.
Even if you do all of the right things every time you are still at a greater risk when playing Fortnite on Android than on any other platform.
It’s also likely Epic Games knows the largest audience for Fortnite users are in places with a less-friendly Google Play Services relationship. China doesn’t allow Google Mobile Services through its Great Firewall, and the EU is currently battling with Google on whether the Play Store should be a part of Android phones sold there. This combined audience is considerably larger than the people who would play in the U.S. and elsewhere, plus distributing a single version of Fortnite is easier than maintaining multiple versions to distribute in different stores.
So, basically, screw the users. This way is easier and makes us more money.
Unfortunately, there’s very little anyone can do about this. You can choose to not give Epic a credit card number when you do play. You can (and should anyway) enable Two-Factor Authentication on your Epic Games account, and try to remember to keep your phone unable to install apps from unknown sources every time an update comes in. But ultimately, even if you do all of the right things every time you are still at a greater risk when playing Fortnite on Android than on any other platform. Epic knows this, and they’re doing it anyway. And that sucks.
Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker review: Open up a can of music anywhere
This not-quite-pocket-sized speaker packs quite a lot into its rotund, rubberized housing.

Bluetooth speakers are just about everywhere these days — and good thing, too, seeing as headphone jacks and aux cables seem to be fading away with each new generation of flagships — but outside of the traditional almost always-overpriced name brands, it can be hard for good speakers to stand out from the pack. This is especially true for Bluetooth speakers that are portable and affordable, two of the many boxes the Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker checks off.
Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker

Price: $35.49
Bottom line: This pudgy speaker packs quite a few tricks up its sleeve, and its button configuration makes it the affordable friend of chronic track-skippers.
The Good
- Durable speaker gets impressively loud for its size
- Change tracks quickly and pairs effortlessly
- Sports built-in FM radio tuner, microSD slot for MP3s
The Bad
- Volume adjustments require long-press
- Speaker shuts off after 10 minutes of silence
- Still uses microUSB to charge
See at Amazon

Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker What I like
Sbode’s speaker is a 360-degree speaker that’s about the size of can of Coke or a reasonably-portioned coffee mug, and its packs a lot into its rugged, rubberized frame. The 12W speaker is the heart of the operation, powered by a microUSB-charged 2200mAh battery that will power a 6-8 hour music party. As to music sources, there are quite a few options for piping music to the Sbode:
- Bluetooth 4.2 connectivity with microphone for speakerphone function
- “True Wireless Stereo” for seamless-pairing stereo playback between two Sbode portable speakers
- 3.5mm AUX port for plugging in the old-fashioned way
- FM radio antenna and auto-scan tuner
- microSD slot for playback of MP3/WAV/FLAC songs
Ports and plugs are hidden behind a silicone flap, which is supposed to keep water out of this IPX6 water-resistant speaker as you take it to the beach or hang it up in the shower. It’s splash-resistant, so it can survive splashes or raindrops, but don’t go dunking it in the pool. The braided carry strap is short but durable, and easy to clip to the back of my backpack with a carabiner.
Rubberized plastic bumpers protect the top and bottom of the speaker, with recessed metal-topped grills at the top and bottom of the speaker. The middle is encased in a snug black mesh, where the four control buttons sit atop the mesh across the speaker from the carry strap and port flap.

Press once to skip songs is great, until the next song starts screaming at you.
The button configuration here seems fairly standard on first glance, but don’t be deceived. The Power and Play/Pause buttons are as straightforward as you’d expect, but those plus and minus buttons have the opposite configuration from what most speakers and headphones with combined controls use. To skip the current song, you push the plus button once. To turn the volume up, you press and hold the plus button until the volume rises to the level you wanted.
To some, this non-standard configuration will be a turn-off, but outside of a few overshoots when adjusting the volume, I’ve found that I much prefer this setup. Being able to quickly skip a track or five in YouTube Music when your mixtape hits a bad stretch of recommendations is wonderful, and if I need to make a major volume shift, I can reach for my phone to adjust the volume at the source.

Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker What I don’t like
Minor volume adjustments give me flashbacks to playing Storm Stopper in the Gatti’s Pizza arcade. Time it right and you feel like you won big. Hold it too long and the speaker will roar at you like thunder. Don’t hit it long enough and the music will skip to the next song.
I was never that good at Storm Stopper, but since I can adjust the volume on my phone, it’s workable. Habit has led me to restart a song when I just wanted to ease the volume down a tick more than once, but habits can be changed.
Black may go with everything, but black is still boring. Could I get this speaker in a nice blue or a bold red, at least?
Sbode has made the speaker as unassuming and neutral as possible with the black rubberized housing, but I really wish it came in some of the fun colors other Bluetooth speakers like the UE WONDERBOOM or the Sony XB20, but the Sbode is also half the price and does more, thanks to its FM tuner and microSD slot for standalone music listening.
As an affordable Bluetooth speaker, I understand that costs had to be cut somewhere, but I do wish Sbode has sprung for a USB-C charging port so it could use the same cable as my phone. I have enough microUSB cables hanging around my apartment after years and years of microUSB phones, headphones, and speakers, but it’d be nice to get back to one cable for everything.

Sbode Portable Bluetooth Speaker
For $35, Sbode is a multi-function speaker that can go all afternoon and can stand up to a jam-packed gear bag or hanging off the side of your backpack as you wait for all the annoying people to go away and let you jam out in peace. It’s not the boldest speaker, but then again, flashy speakers tend to get more unwanted attention, especially at the office or in the classroom.
4
out of 5
Whether you want a Bluetooth speaker that can handle how hard you are on your tech or you want a speaker that can keep music flowing even if your phone is dead, Sbode’s Portable Bluetooth Speaker gets the job done and they’re cheap enough that you can buy two and use them in stereo with your laptop for backyard movie night or at opposite ends of your backyard barbecue.
See at Amazon
How to disable Adaptive Brightness in Android P
Here’s how you can have full control over your phone’s display.

The brightness of your screen is perhaps one of the most important settings on your phone. If it’s too bright, you have to frantically look for the slider to crank things down. If it’s too dim, outdoor visibility can be impossible.
Android P tries to make all of these adjustments for you with Adaptive Brightness, and unlike similar features we’ve seen in previous phones/Android versions, this new iteration learns your usage habits to make more accurate predictions of how bright or dim you like your display.
That’s all fine and dandy, but if you’re someone that prefers to manually control your brightness level, Adaptive Brightness can be a pain in the butt. Thankfully, toggling it off takes no time at all.
Open Settings.
Tap Display.
Tap Adaptive Brightness.
Tap the adaptive brightness toggle to turn the feature off.



That’s it!
With those few taps out of the way, you’ve successfully disabled Adaptive Brightness. You can now rest easy knowing that you, and only you, have full control over your screen.
Android P: Everything you need to know about Android 9
Android P
- Android P: Everything you need to know
- Android P Beta hands-on: The best and worst features
- All the big Android announcements from Google I/O 2018
- Will my phone get Android P?
- How to manually update your Pixel to Android P
- Join the Discussion
List of available apps for Daydream, and upcoming releases

Just go ahead and install all of them. You know, for fun.
With the second iteration of the Daydream View now available, Google has really pushed the Daydream ready Apps in the Play store, though it is still difficult to find them in the Play Store itself. That’s why we took it upon ourselves to make as an exhaustive list as possible of all the games you download for the Daydream View, free and paid.
To make it a little easier, we’ve tracked down all of Google Daydream apps that are available to install now, so you can load up your Pixel with VR goodness and see what this experience is all about. If you’re a regular visitor to this page, the listings that have been bolded like this are the newest entries!
Free Apps and Games
- GZ Doom VR – Free
- The Guardian VR – Free
- Zombie Party VR – Free
- Hardcore – Free
- Mars: New Home – Free
- GameTron – Free
- BZ Zombie – Free
- EMULATED: Pylons VR – Free
- VR Therapy – Free
- 3D Model Viewer – Free
- VR Browser – Free
- Exo – Free
- Plex VR – Free
- Swish – Free
- Into the Blue – Free
- Hidden Fortune – Free
- Comets! VR Space Adventure – Free
- VR Abyss: Sharks & Sea Worlds HD – Free
- Bowling Mania – Free
- The Path to Luma – VR – Free
- VR Puzzle Room – Free
- VR Dead Target: Zombie – Free
- Avem33 VR – Free
- Spacewalk VR Experience – Free
- Underwater VR – Free
- BBC Earth: Life in VR – Free
- Poker VR – Free
- Reflekt 360 – Free
- Justice League VR – Free
- Fishing Star VR – Free
- Oz Chicken Slayer – Free
- Gunship Battle2 VR – Free
- Ace Fishing VR – Free
- Inmind 2 – Free
- Merry Snowballs – Free
- WDR 360 VR – Free
- Rez Infinite – Free
- AMC VR – Free
- Frostbound – Free
- Amusement Planet VR – Free
- Fruit Slicer VR – Free
- Action Bowling 2 – Free
- Pop Styly – Free
- Vera Bradley VR – Free
- Montana VR – Free
- Gubbie Arena – Free
- Storm Shelter – Free
- Capsule Commander – Free
- Pixel Zombie Fight VR – Free
- Can You Survive – Free
- Saint Motel – Free
- ComixV VR – Free
- AurorA Videos – Free
- Cinema Variety VR Lite – Free
- Time Rider – Free
- Boom Boom Slash – Free
- Fidget Spinner VR – Free
- Skyvu Places VR – Free
- VR Flight Dash – Free
- Spheres – Free
- Economist VR – Free
- MEL Chemistry VR – Free
- Gun Hacker – Free
- The Breakpiece – Free
- Shoot the Cans VR – Free
- GrooVR – Free
- Daydream Elements – Free
- MLB.com At Bat VR – Free
- Bandit Six: Salvo – Free
- Dragon VR – Free
- VR Run! – Free
- Spotlight Stories – Free
- Audio Factory – Free
- RT360 – Free
- Voxelus – Free
- Coastiality – Free
- Ocean Rift – Free
- Vicarious – Free
- VR Music Visualizer 360 – Free
- The Lost Future – Free
- Slingshot Shenanigans – Free
- Sliver.tv – Free
- King Arthur VR – Free
- theViewer 360 – Free
- SkyVu Social World Builder – Free
- 871VR – Free
- Unimersive – Free
- Vravo! – Free
- Twilight Pioneers Chapter Two – Free
- Digital Domain VR – Free
- Vision Maker – Free
- Confucious Was a Foodie – Free
- InMind 2 – Free
- VeeR VR – Free
- VR Flight Dash – Free
- AltSpaceVR – Free
- TinyWar VR – Free
- Domino VR – Free
- Rave VR – Free
- Sky VR – Free
- The Reaction Room – Free
- Magnetique – Free
- Agelore’s Fantasy FPS – Free
- Wizard Stole My Goose – Free
- Frisbee Frolics! – Free
- VR Battle Grid – Free
- Damnfields – Free
- VR Water Bottle Flip – Free
- myVR – Free
- Exo – Free
- NFL VR – Free
- NBA VR – Free
- Art Plunge Preview – Free
- 405 Road Rage – Free
- Gala360
- SKYBOX VR Player – Free
- OZ Chicken Slayer – Free
- Labster: World of Science – Free
- VR Wifi Discovery
- Inception: VR and 360-degree videos – Free
- Gravity Pull – Free
- Coloring VR – Free
- Avakin Life – Free
- vTime – Free
- Space VR Beta – Free
- New York Times VR – Free
- Asteroids! – Free
- Horizons – Free
- LittleStar VR – Free
- Moatboat – Free
- Playground – Free
- Fulldive VR – Free
- Netflix VR – Free
- LEGO Brickheadz Builder VR – Free
- HBO GO VR – Free
- HBO Now VR – Free
- Jaunt VR – Free
- NextVR – Free
- Hulu – Free
- INVASION! – Free
- BBC The Turning Forest – Free
- YouVisit VR – Free
- Within – Free
- Graveyard – Free
- PolyRunner VR – Free
- USA Today VR Stories – Free
- Wonder Glade – Free
- VR Karts: Sprint – Free
- Street View – Free
- Wall Street Journal VR – Free
- Guardian VR – Free
- Play Movies – Free
- YouTube – Free
- CNN VR – Free
- UE4 Demo – Free
- ZDF VR – Free (German language only)
- ARTE360 VR – Free
- Arts and Culture VR – Free
- Photos – Free
- Rose – Free
- Wayfair Ideaspace – Free
- realestate VR – Free
- 8ninths Enterprise Demo – Free
Paid Apps and Games
- Death Horizon – $7.99
- Blade Runner: Revelations – $8.99
- RocketCop 2045 – $0.99
- Alien Shot VR – Surrender – $11.99
- IT: Escape from Pennywise VR – $0.99
- Colossal Quest – $1.49
- Fantastic Beasts – $4.99
- Rangi – $4.99
- Dragon Flight – $3.99
- Turret Attack – $2.99
- Dinosaur Hunter – $1.99
- Magna Brave – $2.99
- Recall – $3.49
- Lithium – $1.99
- Nyoro The Snake & Seven Islands – $4.49
- Tank Commander – $3.99
- Volkan – $1.49
- VR Duck Hunting – $1.99
- 2 Star Resort – $2.99
- Overtake VR: Traffic Racing – $0.99
- The Rabbit Hole – Escape the Room – $2.99
- In the Dark – $0.99
- SBK VR – $3.99
- Disc League – $4.99
- Daedalus – $5.99
- Skylight – $9.99
- Tactera – $9.99
- Samurai Chef – $2.49
- Dreadhalls – $4.99
- Radial-G: Racing Revolved – $6.49
- Virtual Minigolf – $2.99
- Orbital Loop – $1.99
- Flutter VR – $4.99
- Hunters Gate – $5.99
- Elevator… to the Moon! – $5.99
- Narrows – $9.99
- Paint VR – $1.99
- Onyx: Quest for the Midnight Stone – $5.99
- Daylight Dojo – $1.99
- Relic Seeker: Hypogeum – $4.99
- Ultrawings – $4.99
- So Let Us Melt – $3.49
- Beartopia – $14.99
- Need for Speed No Limits VR – $14.99
- The Other Room – $4.99
- Faye & Elsa Part III – $4.99
- Cosmos Crash VR – $2.99
- Baskhead – $2.99
- Demon Grade VR – $3.99
- Untethered – $4.99
- MLB.com Home Run Derby VR – $4.99
- Virtual Rabbids: The Big Plan – $4.99
- Virtugo VR – $0.99
- Raptor Valley – $2.99
- Spark of Light – $4.99
- Relax River – $0.99
- Cyber Paint – $4.99
- SONAR – $0.99
- WE COME IN PEACE – $2.99
- VR Music Visualizer – Spectrum – $3.49
- Floor Plan – $4.99
- Belt Miners – $8.99
- Zombie Elevator – $1.99
- West Gangs – $5.49
- Relic Seeker: Hypogeum VR
- Onyx: Quest for the Midnight Stone – $5.99
- Hungry Shark VR – $4.99
- Feasible Food – $4.99
- Unimersiv – $9.99
- Cinema Variety VR Pro – $1.99
- Haunted House – $1.99
- House of Meditation – $6.99
- Mysteries of China: The Great Wall – $1.99
- Solar Eclipse 2017 VR – $0.99
- Zombie Rush Coaster – $0.99
- Jing Yang Ridge 2 – $2.49
- Darknet – $9.99
- City Traffic Control VR – $0.99
- Pull Out Block – $2.49
- Sisters: Faye & Elsa Part II – $6.99
- Babel – $4.99
- Kismet – $3.99
- Ghosts in the Toybox – $3.99
- Shoot Fireworks! VR – $3.49
- Feed The Cat VR – $.99
- Boberboard VR – $3.49
- Unicorn Happy Place – $2.99
- Access Code – $4.99
- Poker VR – $4.99
- Balloon Shooter VR – $1.49
- Farmer vs Evil 2.0 – $1.49
- Hungry Shark VR – $4.99
- Lola and the Giant – $10.99
- Apnea – $2.99
- Cubed – $.99
- Last Z Killer – $5.99
- My Cube – $1.99
- Baskhead Training – $5.99
- Terror Cave HD – $.99
- Body VR for Beginners – $4.99
- Eclipse: Edge of Light – $8.99
- Along Together – $8.99
- Virtual Rabbids: The Big Plan – $5.99
- Toy Clash – $4.99
- Polaris – $4.99
- The Other Room – $4.99
- Solitaire VR – $2.99
- Flushy Fish – $3.49
- SculptrVR – $4.99
- Building Panic – $4.99
- Walk Man – $1.99
- TacoFace – $.99
- Raptor Valley – $2.99
- Tipsy Bat – $2.99
- Pirates Shooter – $1.99
- Virtual Virtual Reality – $8.99
- Air Hockey VR – $1.99
- Baseball – $2.99
- Vendetta Online – $2.99
- Vaporwave – $1.99
- Sky Fighter: Training Day – $5.49
- Battle Planet – $10.99
- Audio Arena – $2.99
- Walking in clouds – $1.99
- Bandit Six – $2.99
- Virush – $2.99
- Splash VR for Reddit – $2.99
- WE COME IN PEACE… – $2.99
- Relax VR: Rest & Meditation – $5.99
- Bait! – $7.99
- Speech Center VR – $4.99
- Baskhead – $2.99
- Cerevrum – $6.99
- Cosmic Chef – $9.99
- AFFECTED – The Manor VR – $3.49
- Floor Plan – $4.99
- Untethered – $4.99
- Hello Mars – $.99
- Sherlock VR – $1.99
- Need for Speed: No Limits VR – $14.99
- Archer E. Bowman – $3.99
- Layers of Fear: Solitude – $9.99
- Wands – $5.99
- Underworld Overlord – $7.99
- Evil Robot Traffic Jam – $9.99
- Daydream Blue – $4.99
- MLB.com Home Run Derby VR – $4.99
- Action Bowling – $3.49
- Sisters: Faye and Elsa Part I – $6.99
- Gunjack 2: End of Shift – $12.99
- Claro – $4.99
- Frostbound – $4.99
- Star Chart VR – $4.99
- Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes – $9.99
- Danger Goat – $5.99
- Hunter’s Gate – $5.99
- Mekorama – $3.99
- Earthshape – $4.99
- The Arcslinger – $7.99
- Drift – $10.99
As you can see, that list is growing fast and it’s full of great experiences. Google promised there would be 50 Daydream apps available by the end of 2016, and delivered a great deal more! At the start of 2018, we were already at well over 200 apps and games to choose from.
This train isn’t slowing down, either. There are a lot more apps coming! Here’s a complete list of the apps Google says are coming to Daydream soon, but so far most of these app developers have been a little shy about a release date for their new VR apps.
Daydream apps planned for the future
- Island Bombers
- Flocklore
- Classroom Aquatic Demo – Here
- Loco Motors
- SuperVektroids!
This post was last updated on 8/2 to add new apps. Be sure to check back regularly for more updates.
Google Daydream

- Daydream View review
- The ultimate guide to Daydream
- These phones support Daydream VR
- Every Daydream app you can download
- Catch up with Daydream in the forums!



