Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Mobile
  4. Web
  5. Legacy Archives

Chrome Experiment’s ‘Cube Slam’ lets you smash your friends ‘Pong’-style via video

Add as a preferred source on Google
cubeslam
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Do you miss Pong? Do you have the Chrome browser? Yesterday, Google released a game called Cube Slam as its latest Chrome Experiments. The newest game Google’s Roll It Skee-Ball, Cube Slam’s built with WebRTC, which lets you conduct video chats without needing to install any plug-ins. Whether you play with a friend or against the computer, it’s a fun way to relive an old school arcade game with new school technology.

When you play with a friend, video chat is enabled so you can see your opponent as if you were on opposing sides of a ping pong table. You can chat during the game or between rounds while watching the monochromatic forest and hills around the arena. There’s even a group of friendly (?) bears watching the game. If you’re short on friends, Bob the Bear steps in as the computer opponent. 

Recommended Videos

The game works like this: use the left and right arrow keys to move the bar at the bottom of the screen. Hit the cube with the bar to try and smash your opponent’s screen three times. There are bonuses and obstacles that appear on the playing field to navigate the cube around, too, making the game more difficult than it seems at first. Hit your opponent’s screen three times and it shatters into a mess of cubes. Get hit three times and your screen flickers and melts.

The idea behind Cube Slam is to show how the WebRTC commands work in the context of game. Specifically, Cube Slam is the first game to use the RTCDataChannel command, which transfers data via a peer-to-peer network to keep the game in sync. Offline play is available against Bob the Bear as a downloadable Chrome app, which is accessible on your desktop and on your phone or tablet. Google says it’s planning on releasing a mobile version of the game later this year. 

Try it out with your friends at cubeslam.com and let us know what you think!

Meghan McDonough
Former Contributor
Meghan J. McDonough is a Chicago-based purveyor of consumer technology and music. She previously wrote for LAPTOP Magazine…
Microsoft is retiring the Together Mode in Teams in favor of something cleaner and simpler
Teams is retiring Together Mode for layouts people may actually use
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Microsoft Teams is retiring one of its more recognizable meeting features, and it might be for the best. The company announced that Together Mode is going away in Teams as Microsoft is shooting towards a simpler set of meeting layouts.

To recall, Together Mode was introduced during the pandemic-era video call boom, placing participants inside shared virtual environments such as auditoriums or classrooms. It was a cute idea at the time, but it never became the everyday meeting view for most people.

Read more
Experts are worried that smarter AI gets, the dumber we might become
Experts say chatbots can help research, but leaning on them too hard risks outsourcing the work that builds intelligence
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman during the Uncapped podcast in June 2025.

AI can now answer questions so quickly that the search itself can feel optional. That convenience worries the Royal Observatory Greenwich, which has warned that instant AI answers can weaken the curiosity, scrutiny, and source-checking behind real knowledge.

The risk hides inside the usefulness. Chatbots can help people test ideas, move faster, and find new angles, but a finished response can also cut users off from the messy trail that makes learning stick. When that happens, information arrives without the struggle that turns it into judgment.

Read more
Miss the old PC days? This website lets you experience Wikipedia like it’s Windows XP
This XP-style Wikipedia explorer turns online research into a nostalgia trip, while showing how much browsing changes when search takes a back seat
File, Webpage, Person

Wikipedia has an unofficial new front door, and it looks like a desktop from a very specific era of family PCs, school labs, and chunky blue title bars.

Developer Sami Smith has built a browser-based Windows XP Wikipedia explorer that turns categories into folders and articles into documents. It’s playful, slightly inefficient, and more interesting than another AI search box bolted onto the web.

Read more