WowWee’s Light Strike makes laser tag look more like Paper Jamz

WowWee, the same folks who brought you Paper Jamz, are giving yet another American leisure-time institution a makeover, and this time they’ve set their sights on laser tag. Carrying over the Paper Jamz aesthetic, Light Strike aims to “bring video game action into the real-world” with a set of laser tag guns and accessories that sport fingerprint ID, long-range LED targeting, built-in health and ammo meters, and the ability to play with up to four teams of unlimited size. The game’s stable of weapons includes Light Strike’s signature gun, the Assault Striker, a machine gun bipod with recoil action, a scope attachment with 100-foot range, and a grenade launcher that can shoot groups of enemies down in a single shot. Now, who’s going to lead the campaign to make the Assault Striker the official gun of the 2012 Olympic Pentathalon? Light Strike is set for an August 2011 launch with guns starting at about $40, but you can get a very dramatic preview after the jump.

Continue reading WowWee’s Light Strike makes laser tag look more like Paper Jamz

WowWee’s Light Strike makes laser tag look more like Paper Jamz originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Feb 2011 03:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Batman, Robin, Joker and Catwoman shrunken down to USB collectables

Do you like Batman? Robin? What about USB sticks? Well, thanks to Mimoco, you can have both in one awesome package. We spotted these newly released jump-drives at the International Toy Fair and we gotta say — they’re actually quite detailed in design. The flash drives will cost you a pretty penny if you want more storage — a 2GB dongle is $20 while the 16GB version is $60. If you’re a DC Comics junkie and think that the company has sold out, ask yourself this: why so serious?

Batman, Robin, Joker and Catwoman shrunken down to USB collectables originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Feb 2011 01:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RixRover is the cheap RC car controlled by a rather more expensive Arduino and netbook combo (video)

RixRover is the cheap RC car controlled by a rather more expensive Arduino and netbook combo (video)

Driving RC cars never gets old, but driving them over the internet is truly something magical. Welcome to the RixRover, the creation of Quebecer Pierric Gimmig. It’s a cheap RC truck fitted with big knobby tires that’s had its ABS body removed, replaced by an Arduino board and a netbook. The car itself cost about $45, the Arduino about $30, and Eee PC 1005-series netbook about $200. But the result, being able to drive the car over remotely via streaming video, why that’s quite simply priceless. Video after the break and, if you want to try your hand at this, there’s some source code on the other end of the source link.

Continue reading RixRover is the cheap RC car controlled by a rather more expensive Arduino and netbook combo (video)

RixRover is the cheap RC car controlled by a rather more expensive Arduino and netbook combo (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 23:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Desk Pets TankBot hands-on (video)

Although we’ve only gotten a glimpse of a TankBot as a render, we were more than interested to see this robot toy doing its thing in the real world. We spotted these tiny desk pals at the International Toy Fair and got to take a look at some working prototypes. As we reported earlier, the TankBots have three functioning modes — autonomous, maze solving and iOS controlled. The bots feature LED eyes and two infrared transmitters — that’s how it solves the mazes. Charging is done by plugging in the USB dongle found on the rear of the tank and you’ll get 15 minutes of battery life after a 30 minute charge. And if you’re wondering how your iOS device will play with the TankBots, a free app will be available to download and each toy will come bundled with an infrared dongle. You can grab TankBots from stores for 20 bucks come June. Head past the break to see some cute, yet impressive maze-solving in action.

Continue reading Desk Pets TankBot hands-on (video)

Desk Pets TankBot hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 14:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge

Looking for a telltale sign that tablets have shot right past mainstream and into over-saturation? Fix your focus a few pixels up, and you’ll be staring at it. VTech has just pushed out its InnoPad, a learning tablet developed specifically for kids aged 4 to 104 (or 9, if you’re concerned with “facts”). Boasting a 5-inch touchpanel, a tilt-sensor for gaming control, microphone and interfaces for USB, an SD card and a headphone jack, it’s actually more like a MID than anything else. Of course, the “kid-tough” casing makes it far bulkier than most, but at least it’s designed to take a licking (and keep on ticking). Contrary to conventional tablets, this one will rely primarily on learning cartridges, but there is support for digital downloads for those who’d rather sync it up with their Mac or PC and transfer things to a memory card. You’ve got a slew of options when it comes to software, and once your kid’s done learning for the day, the InnoPad can double as an MP3 player, video player and datebook. It’ll ship this fall for $79.99, with each title priced at $24.99. Something tells us this thing’s got “iPad killer” written all over it. In Children’s Doodle font, but hey…

Continue reading VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge

VTech’s InnoPad brings tablets to youngsters, floods their sponge-like brains with knowledge originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 Feb 2011 01:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Takara Tomy’s Ningen Gakki musical toy lets you smack your friends to the beat (video)

Takara Tomy's Ningen Gakki musical toy lets you smack your friends to the beat (video)

If you want to get your conductive body orchestra going, you no longer need 15 bikini models and a bunch of conductive paint. You just need a Ningen Gakki, coming this summer from Takara Tomy. It has four conductive patches on the limbs of its vaguely anthropomorphized shape. If two people each touch one of the patches and then touch each other a circuit is created and a note is played. Up to four people can play songs or drums by clapping hands or, as you can see in the video below, generally slapping each other about. The notes don’t appear to get louder the harder the hit, but perhaps that’s for the best.

Continue reading Takara Tomy’s Ningen Gakki musical toy lets you smack your friends to the beat (video)

Takara Tomy’s Ningen Gakki musical toy lets you smack your friends to the beat (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Feb 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Esper Dominoes topple without touching, we fall all over ourselves (video)

Quick, what’s wrong with this picture? Oh, that’s right — dominoes don’t topple all by themselves, do they? But these aren’t your average tiles. Constructed by Japanese interaction researchers in 2009, these “Esper Dominoes” each have ZigBee radios inside, and as each stone falls it wirelessly tells the next to follow suit, all down the line. Of course, knowing all that, why would you ever settle for a boring row of five? Hit the break to see what these bones are really capable of, and join us in praying that some entrepreneur mass produces these perfect stocking stuffers before another two years fly by.

Continue reading Esper Dominoes topple without touching, we fall all over ourselves (video)

Esper Dominoes topple without touching, we fall all over ourselves (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Feb 2011 11:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Keepon robot soon available to the masses in toy form as the $40 My Keepon

Keepon robot now available to the masses in toy form as the $40 My Keepon

We’ve been having a torrid affair with the Keepon robot since 2007, his simple yellow shape and unflappable adherence to the beat capturing our hearts. But, sadly, this has been an unrequited love, as the little guy has only been available to research institutions (and, apparently, rock bands) at the tear-inducing price of $30,000. Now there’s a version we can finally bring home to mother, the $40 My Keepon. It’s being dubbed a “toy,” so we have our doubts that it can bust the same sort of moves its Pro predecessor puts down (embedded after the break), but we’re certainly going to be first in line to find out when they hit stores. No, we don’t know when that is just yet, but we’re told all will be revealed on February 14th. Yes, Valentine’s Day.

Continue reading Keepon robot soon available to the masses in toy form as the $40 My Keepon

Keepon robot soon available to the masses in toy form as the $40 My Keepon originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Feb 2011 09:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UrRobot’s Robii hides a multitouch projector in his circus tent (video)

This cute, bearmonkey-like creature with animatronic head and arms perched atop a rotating, but otherwise fixed torso is called Robii. He’s built by Compal Communications, the ODM more often associated with handsets, and will be sold under the new UrRobot brand in Taiwan. The 16,900 NTD (about $582) toy robot features an interactive projector tucked away inside of Robii’s circus tent. When extended, it projects interactive video for gaming and infotainment — very similar to the projected multitouch display we saw demonstrated by Light Blue Optics at CES 2010. Robii can track moving objects using its built-in cameras and comes equipped with an ambient light sensor, and voice and image recognition. It’s also capable of barking commands at children with the appropriate visage (from a catalog of 100 facial expressions) to ensure dutiful compliance. Quick demo after the break.

Continue reading UrRobot’s Robii hides a multitouch projector in his circus tent (video)

UrRobot’s Robii hides a multitouch projector in his circus tent (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 10:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Audi Auto Union Type C e-tron study puts your pow-pow-Power Wheels to shame

Top speed of 18mph, and a range of 15 miles? Charges in only two hours? No, this isn’t the future of transportation we’re talking about here, it’s a toy. A toy from Audi, of all places. The company has created this electric-powered and half-scale recreation of an Auto Union Type C, grand prix racer of the late 1930s, and done it in e-tron guise, applying the moniker from its grown-up line of EVs, like the luscious e-tron Spyder. This one’s intended for kids of all ages — so long as they’re shorter than 5’11” — and it will be on display at the International Toy Fair in Nuremberg. At this point there’s no mention of a plan to produce it nor a price if Audi did, but surely it’s one of those “if you have to ask” things — that body is entirely made of carbon fiber, and that stuff doesn’t come cheap.

Continue reading Audi Auto Union Type C e-tron study puts your pow-pow-Power Wheels to shame

Audi Auto Union Type C e-tron study puts your pow-pow-Power Wheels to shame originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 22 Jan 2011 10:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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