Windows Technical Preview  

1031 members have voted

  1. 1. On a scale of 1-5, 1 being worst, 5 being best. What do you think of Windows 10 from the leaks so far?

    • 5.Great, best OS ever
      156
    • 4. Pretty Good, needs a lot of minor tweaks
      409
    • 3. OK, Needs a few major improvements, some minor ones
      168
    • 2. Fine, Needs a lot of major improvements
      79
    • 1.Poor, Needs too many improvements, all hope is lost, never going to use it
      41
  2. 2. Based on the recent leaks by Neowin and Winfuture.de, my next OS upgrade will be?

    • Windows 10
      720
    • Windows 8
      20
    • Windows 7
      48
    • Sticking with XP
      3
    • OSX Yosemite
      35
    • Linux
      24
    • Sticking with OSX Mavericks
      3
  3. 3. Should Microsoft give away Windows 10 for free?

    • Yes for Windows 8.1 Users
      305
    • Yes for Windows 7 and above users
      227
    • Yes for Vista and above users
      31
    • Yes for XP and above users
      27
    • Yes for all Windows users
      192
    • No
      71


Recommended Posts

If you guys are talking about the windows phone images, that's what it could look like with transparent live tiles which are rumored to be coming to Windows 10. Remember the news about them on the Xbox One dashboard? It's be a nice option to have, would open it up to more personalization.

 

As far as IE goes, we know 12 will have a totally new UI, not just a tweaked one. The html5 spec is now finally locked down from what I remember so they can and should be adding in more support than in previous updates. Rumors of extensions have been floating around but nothing solid yet, they're doing a good job of keeping it under lock and key for now.

 

I think with windows 10 and IE12 we'll get one version of the browser this time, but with a UI that can scale/change between desktop and tablet/phone usage. It won't be the two different browsers we get in windows 8, even though they both use the same trident engine.

I think with windows 10 and IE12 we'll get one version of the browser this time, but with a UI that can scale/change between desktop and tablet/phone usage. It won't be the two different browsers we get in windows 8, even though they both use the same trident engine.

Microsoft already confirmed that that wouldn't be the case in Windows 10 anymore. We get one version, based on WinRT, and that's it. For the engine. It's actualy Edge now (in IE12), not Trident.

  • Like 2

Microsoft already confirmed that that wouldn't be the case in Windows 10 anymore. We get one version, based on WinRT, and that's it. For the engine. It's actualy Edge now (in IE12), not Trident.

I don't remember that but it works out for the best in the end.

I don't remember that but it works out for the best in the end.

 

Anyone know if they're working on extensible URL parsing, like Android has (IOS too I'll presume?)?

 

My #1 gripe with the WP/W8 experience is that it doesn't matter how good (or not) core web-replacement apps are (e.g. YouTube, Tapatalk etc.), URLs pertaining to these 'sites' always open the site in IE, not any platform-tailored app installed (Android detects these and offers a 'Chrome or x? prompt' .  The exception seems to be Wikipedia URLs, oddly, which open the native app (so the mechanics are there, somewhat).

 

Obviously we've seen no changes to Modern in W10TP - fingers-Xd they've recognised this.  Then, WP apps that can do multimedia actions on a schedule (i.e. Alarm)....

I don't remember that but it works out for the best in the end.

A quote from the IE blog:

@Dan/Yannick: As you saw in other Windows 10 announcements yesterday and today, universal apps and the unification of the mouse/keyboard and touch environments are big themes for Windows 10. We're working to move the IE experience in a consistent direction. The removal of the second browser is just the first of many steps on that path. Stay tuned!

The zSpartan app is the next IE version, and it's a WinRT based app, as there won't be a second browser, the next IE is going to be the WinRT version.
  • Like 1

A quote from the IE blog:

The zSpartan app is the next IE version, and it's a WinRT based app, as there won't be a second browser, the next IE is going to be the WinRT version.

That is definitely an awesome news, and indeed the step in the right direction. It'll be interesting to see how it will work for devices of all inputs and sizes, especially that not only it's going to be one IE for tablets or laptops/desktops (the latter with or without touch), but also for the Windows phone version too. Feature parity on all devices would create a great user experience. Also, cool devname. :D

That is definitely an awesome news, and indeed the step in the right direction. It'll be interesting to see how it will work for devices of all inputs and sizes, especially that not only it's going to be one IE for tablets or laptops/desktops (the latter with or without touch), but also for the Windows phone version too. Feature parity on all devices would create a great user experience. Also, cool devname. :D

 

It should also mean that moving to WinRT that all the built in applications will finally high-DPI aware rather than the mess that current exists right now. I wouldn't be surprised if we end up seeing a lot of under the hood changes occurring with explorer given that it appears that instability probably comes down to changes occurring underneath it all.

Microsoft already confirmed that that wouldn't be the case in Windows 10 anymore. We get one version, based on WinRT, and that's it. For the engine. It's actualy Edge now (in IE12), not Trident.

Edge is not engine, its mode.

Edge is not engine, its mode.

Another Microsoft quote:

we are enabling our new interoperability focused Edge rendering engine for 10% of Windows Insiders

Also, the UAS mentions "Edge/12.0" and no longer mentions Trident. That's the only IE reference in the new UAS. Edge is an engine.

Sweet. I was assuming IE would be a modern app only because it would need to scale to tablets and phones now at this point.

Also, how many folks (even on desktops) view Web pages windowed?  Developing Web pages for a single resolution got website administrators in hot water merely with Windows 9x/NT.  Developing a separate site for mobile is NOT the same as developing a non-full-screen version of a site - ask Neowin's own administrator that question.  Needed plug-ins (such as Flash) would likely continue to be built-in - for security reasons (that is the case with ModernUI IE today), as opposed to being modular (like desktop IE today).  And even IE becoming Modern-only won't exactly roadblock the use of other browsers - the third-party browser community is thriving; how many non-Google versions of Chrome (and non-Mozilla variants of Gecko) are floating around the Internet today, just for Windows?  It's not the Windows marketplace of even five years ago.

I kinda wonder how they'd do any plugins with it as such.

They can do "extensions" using the same type of API the charms use, like the share charm and so on.  So when you start IE those will also start up in their own sandboxes with a secure API that will pass data to them etc.

You also have a larger desktop than most - true?  Exception - not the rule; which is why I asked the question.

 

Not sure...on my primary notebook (1920x1080 ... 15inch screen) I'll run the browser windowed a lot (like I'm doing now).  Desktop...no brainer(dual 23 inch).  I do not find myself running browsers windowed on my el cheapo travel notebook (1368x768 or something).  Though I will if I'm working with another program (not ideal though because of the resolution)

 

At work...same thing...I'll run the browser windowed all the time.  Usually with Word/Excel or some other program up that I'm working with.  Some websites for work I have (to save tme) to run windowed for data comparison...for example my civilian timecards where they have to enter their time into two separate websites (silly...I know) which have to exactly match (easier said than done considering the sites are not similar).

 

I do believe I missed the meaning behind your original comment.  Are you saying most do not run browsers windowed...and that they should just be full screen?  

I am happy with the way Win 10 is going so far.

I'd also say that MS is heading in the right direction with Windows 10, it's already a great improvement over Windows 8.

One thing they still really need to do though is adding a simple way to turn off this tile crap entirely, it definitely has no place on the desktop.

 

P.S. I just thought of something. OSX is the "idiot friendly" OS (no offense to anyone, I mean it's made for any kind of user), Linux is for power users, no matter how they try to make it "user friendly", they can't dumb it down to that level. And Windows is somewhere in the middle, trying to please everyone. Tough job, no wonder that there will always be unhappy people...

"Linux is for power users" is certainly right, but I'd definitely say that Windows is the "idiot friendly" OS, as they went to great lenghts in many regards to dumb things down, especially with Windows 8. Windows is totally unsuited for power users, e.g. until not too long ago it didn't even have a proper shell, which only recently came with "Power Shell" (which still isn't all that great though).

OS X is somewhere in the middle (even though some things are also pretty dumbed down), but like Linux it's based on Unix, which gives power users much more possibilities.

 

Microsoft already confirmed that that wouldn't be the case in Windows 10 anymore. We get one version, based on WinRT, and that's it. For the engine. It's actualy Edge now (in IE12), not Trident.

That's also a great improvement. Trident was just plain awful, especially in terms of standards compatibility.

Is this whole "To tile, or not to tile" debate still going on? This discussion really needs to be moved to a more appropriate thread that can be used for debate purposes, while for the time being, this thread is used to discuss the improvements and additions that are being added through the technical preview builds, including the leaked ones.

And not about whether Windows 10 should or not replicate a very basic Windows 95 desktop metaphor whatsoever. Windows doesn't get the desktop treated the same way for Windows 10, like how it was before Windows 8, and it's not going to head back either. Tiles are a signature feature that came to PCs as well as phones before that, practically it's what makes it distinctive on its own.

Time to resume with the discussion of the thread that HAS something to do with what's coming next in Windows 10!

Another Microsoft quote:

Also, the UAS mentions "Edge/12.0" and no longer mentions Trident. That's the only IE reference in the new UAS. Edge is an engine.

 

Quoting Microsoft IE Blog:

 

 

 

Introducing the ?living? Edge document mode

The cornerstone of this update to IE is the ?Edge? mode platform?a new document mode designed with interoperability at its core. 

 

 

 

Given the sheer volume of changes in Edge mode, we?re going to progressively roll out the new mode by choosing a random set of Windows Insiders to get Edge while the rest remain in 11 document mode.

 

Source: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ie/archive/2014/11/11/living-on-the-edge-our-next-step-in-interoperability.aspx

 

UA String for Windows Phone 8.1 Update (aka GDR1)

 

 

Mozilla/5.0 (Windows Phone 8.1; ARM; Trident/7.0; Touch; rv:11; IEMobile/11.0) like Android 4.1.2; compatible) like iPhone OS 7_0_3 Mac OS X WebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/32.0.1700.99 Mobile Safari /537.36

 

Source: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ie/hh869301%28v=vs.85%29.aspx

 

For desktop, they do changed UA String and removed Trident Engine but I still believe its Trident engine rather than Edge Engine, Although its confusing, I would try to reach out for other information.

I'd also say that MS is heading in the right direction with Windows 10, it's already a great improvement over Windows 8.

One thing they still really need to do though is adding a simple way to turn off this tile crap entirely, it definitely has no place on the desktop.

 

"Linux is for power users" is certainly right, but I'd definitely say that Windows is the "idiot friendly" OS, as they went to great lenghts in many regards to dumb things down, especially with Windows 8. Windows is totally unsuited for power users, e.g. until not too long ago it didn't even have a proper shell, which only recently came with "Power Shell" (which still isn't all that great though).

OS X is somewhere in the middle (even though some things are also pretty dumbed down), but like Linux it's based on Unix, which gives power users much more possibilities.

 

That's also a great improvement. Trident was just plain awful, especially in terms of standards compatibility.

I remember people calling Windows 98,2000,XP,Vista,7,8 "dumbed down". I guess you are part of the same bandwagon for Windows 10. Welcome, you will find some friends here for sure.

Powershell isn't exactly "recent". It works pretty well for those who know how to use it. ;)

PowerShell was first released back in 2006 for XP SP2, if that's recent then my sense of time must be shot to hell.

 

There's a preview of version 5.0 out tight now for those who want to try it, probably what will ship with Windows 10 next year.

Nope..

 

Linux=Hobbiest.(tech\server minded)

Windows=Power user.(tons of workstation apps)

Osx=Dumb down basic use.(lack of apps)

I'd also say that MS is heading in the right direction with Windows 10, it's already a great improvement over Windows 8.
One thing they still really need to do though is adding a simple way to turn off this tile crap entirely, it definitely has no place on the desktop.
 


"Linux is for power users" is certainly right, but I'd definitely say that Windows is the "idiot friendly" OS, as they went to great lenghts in many regards to dumb things down, especially with Windows 8. Windows is totally unsuited for power users, e.g. until not too long ago it didn't even have a proper shell, which only recently came with "Power Shell" (which still isn't all that great though).
OS X is somewhere in the middle (even though some things are also pretty dumbed down), but like Linux it's based on Unix, which gives power users much more possibilities.
 


That's also a great improvement. Trident was just plain awful, especially in terms of standards compatibility.

  • Like 3

PowerShell was first released back in 2006 for XP SP2, if that's recent then my sense of time must be shot to hell.

 

There's a preview of version 5.0 out tight now for those who want to try it, probably what will ship with Windows 10 next year.

Interesting. So the preview was released for it during this April, along with Windows Management Framework 5.0. Which is also when they started adding support for OneGet and the support for the Chocolatey package repository. In this case, PowerShell 5.0 will indeed be a part of Windows 10.

Interesting. So the preview was released for it during this April, along with Windows Management Framework 5.0. Which is also when they started adding support for OneGet and the support for the Chocolatey package repository. In this case, PowerShell 5.0 will indeed be a part of Windows 10.

WPS was indeed made part of Windows as of XP's rather infamous Service Pack 2; it was designed as a replacement for the DOS-style batch file and a scripting language that would be supported on all versions of Windows.  Where WPS took off is on the server/administrative side of Windows (most of the books about WPS have to do with scripting for servers) despite it not having gone away on the desktop - remember, the desktop and server flavors of Windows have been based on the same code since Vista/Server 2003R2.  The inclusion of WPS in Windows 10 addresses the two flavors of Windows where WPS is conspicuous by its absence - Windows Phone and Xbox.  Windows Phone needs it for the same reason servers and desktops do - administrative use.  (I have to wonder what XBOX will do with it, though.)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • @Sayan...I have defended you at various points as I hope you know. This headline however is utter trash...shame on you sir!
    • An actual cosmic "Eye of Sauron" had been looking straight at us all along by Sayan Sen Image by Kovin P. Vasquez via Pexels | Not representative An international team of researchers has solved a long-standing mystery surrounding a distant blazar known as PKS 1424+240, helping explain why it produces some of the brightest high-energy gamma rays and cosmic neutrinos ever observed despite appearing to have a relatively slow-moving jet. The findings were published on June 6 in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters. The study addresses a broader challenge in astrophysics: understanding how extreme cosmic objects accelerate particles to very high energies and produce very high-energy (VHE) photons and neutrinos. PKS 1424+240 is located billions of light-years from Earth. It has attracted attention for years because it is both a powerful source of VHE gamma rays and the brightest known neutrino-emitting blazar in the sky, according to observations by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. It is also associated with one of the strongest peaks in IceCube's nine-year neutrino sky map A blazar is a type of active galactic nucleus powered by a supermassive black hole that pulls in surrounding matter and launches jets of plasma moving close to the speed of light. What makes blazars unique is their orientation. One of their jets points almost directly toward Earth, making them appear exceptionally bright across the electromagnetic spectrum and allowing scientists to study some of the most extreme physical processes in the Universe. The scientists exclaimed it's like the 'Eye of Sauron' in deep space. Usually, the brightest gamma-ray-emitting blazars are expected to have jets that appear to move very quickly. However, radio observations of PKS 1424+240 suggested that its jet was moving much more slowly, creating a contradiction that became part of a long-running problem known as the "Doppler factor crisis." To investigate, researchers analyzed 15 years of observations from the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), a network of 10 radio antennas spread across the continental United States, Hawaii and St. Croix. Using a technique called Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), astronomers combine signals from widely separated radio telescopes to create a virtual Earth-sized telescope capable of revealing extremely fine details. The team combined 42 polarization-sensitive radio images collected between 2009 and 2025, creating a much deeper and more detailed view of the jet than had previously been possible. The observations were carried out as part of MOJAVE (Monitoring Of Jets in Active galactic nuclei with VLBA Experiments), a long-running program that studies the brightness, polarization and magnetic field structures of jets produced by active galaxies. The project aims to better understand how activity near supermassive black holes is linked to high-energy radiation and neutrino emission. “When we reconstructed the image, it looked absolutely stunning,” said Yuri Kovalev, lead author of the study and Principal Investigator of the European Research Council-funded MuSES project at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy. “We have never seen anything quite like it — a near-perfect toroidal magnetic field with a jet, pointing straight at us.” The image revealed an unusual geometry. The researchers found that Earth lies almost directly in line with the jet, with a viewing angle of less than 0.6 degrees. In simple terms, astronomers are looking almost straight down the jet. This turned out to be the key to the mystery. Because the jet is aimed almost directly at Earth, a relativistic effect called Doppler boosting dramatically increases its apparent brightness. The study found that this effect boosts the emission by a factor of about 30 while also making the jet appear slower than it actually is. “This alignment causes a boost in brightness by a factor of 30 or more,” said Jack Livingston, a co-author at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy. “At the same time, the jet appears to move slowly due to projection effects — a classic optical illusion.” The nearly head-on view also gave scientists a rare look at the jet's magnetic field. Using polarized radio signals, they detected a clear toroidal, or doughnut-shaped, magnetic field component. The observations suggest the jet carries an electric current and that its magnetic field helps launch, shape and stabilize the flow of plasma. Researchers believe this magnetic structure may also play a key role in accelerating particles to energies high enough to produce both gamma rays and neutrinos. “Solving this puzzle confirms that active galactic nuclei with supermassive black holes are not only powerful accelerators of electrons, but also of protons — the origin of the observed high-energy neutrinos,” Kovalev said. The research was conducted under the MuSES (Multi-messenger Studies of Energetic Sources) project, which investigates how active galactic nuclei accelerate particles and generate different cosmic signals, including light and neutrinos. Scientists say understanding how protons are accelerated and linked to neutrino production remains one of the major unanswered questions in astrophysics. The findings help explain why some blazars can appear to have slow jets while still producing extremely bright high-energy emissions. More broadly, the study strengthens the link between relativistic jets, magnetic fields, gamma rays and high-energy neutrinos. Researchers say the results provide new clues about how some of the Universe's most powerful natural particle accelerators work and offer important insights for multimessenger astronomy, which combines different types of cosmic signals to study extreme events in space. Source: European Research Council, EDP Sciences This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
    • Gotenks98 is right... Outlook (new) is absolute trash. Doesn't Mozilla have an Enterprise Version of Firebird?
    • Microsoft Weekly: Surface Laptop Ultra, Windows 11 context menus, Build 2026 recap, and more by Taras Buria This week's news recap is here, with Microsoft announcing the new Surface Laptop Ultra, fresh chips from NVIDIA for Windows on ARM, a no-build week, fixes for Windows 11's context menus, gaming news, reviews, and more. Quick links: Windows 10 and 11 Windows Insider Program Updates are available Reviews are in Gaming news Great deals to check Windows 11 and Windows 10 Here, we talk about everything happening around Microsoft's latest operating system in the Stable channel and preview builds: new features, removed features, controversies, bugs, interesting findings, and more. And, of course, you may find a word or two about older versions. At Computex 2026, together with NVIDIA, Microsoft announced the Surface Laptop Ultra, its most powerful laptop to date, powered by NVIDIA's RTX Spark processor. Details about this computer are currently scarce, as Microsoft has only revealed certain parts of its specs. So far, we know that the computer has a 15-inch mini-LED display, a rich set of ports, a powerful processor, and all-day battery life. It also comes with a new wallpaper, which you can already download here in full resolution. The Surface Laptop Studio is not the only NVIDIA-powered Surface, which Microsoft unveiled this week. At Build 2026, the company also debuted the Surface RTX Spark Dev Box, an odd-shaped desktop with a 20-core NVIDIA Grace CPU and an NVIDIA Blackwell RTX GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores and fifth-generation Tensor Cores with FP4 precision, connected via the NVIDIA NVLink-C2C chip-to-chip interconnect for high performance. According to Microsoft, it can run models with up to 120 billion parameters locally without relying on cloud GPU infrastructure. These two new Surface devices are likely to cost quite a lot, and for those who need a more affordable device, Microsoft is preparing the next-gen Qualcomm-powered Surface Pro and Surface Laptop. This week, details about these two devices leaked in plenty of detail. Other announcements at Build 2026 include the following: Microsoft unveils new security tools for IT admins and developers building AI products Microsoft announces Scout, an OpenClaw-powered personal agent for enterprise customers Microsoft unveils MAI-Thinking-1 reasoning and MAI-Code-1 coding models Microsoft announced a new Windows 11 native command-line utility Microsoft unveils Majorana 2 quantum chip, accelerating commercial timeline to 2029 Microsoft believes that AI agents will eventually replace apps through Project Solara Microsoft introduces Web IQ, a Bing-powered search system built for AI agents Last week, Microsoft released a new Experimental build, which introduced a major Start menu upgrade. It now lets you toggle off specific parts of the menu without affecting other features, resize the menu, and hide additional UI elements. We published a closer look here, so if you want to know what Microsoft is cooking without enrolling in the Insider program and installing unstable builds, check it out. Speaking of new features, many users are very annoyed about the way Microsoft delivers them. Recently, a frustrated user shared their experience with gradual rollouts, and even Microsoft engineers admitted there is a flaw in the system that prevents new features from applying properly. One of those new features includes the ability to uninstall AI models in Windows 11 with a single click. Windows 11 is finally getting fixes for its slow context menus. Marcus Ash from Microsoft confirmed that the company is working on fixing Windows 11's context menus. Reworked context menus are going to be faster, simpler by default, and "configurable to what you use most." According to Marcus, Microsoft will share more details soon. Windows Insider Program Windows 11 preview builds, released last week, are now available for download as standalone ISO files. These days, Microsoft regularly pushes new images, allowing users to clean-install its recent Windows 11 preview builds faster and easier. If you want to try the latest Windows 11 features without jumping through the Windows Update hoops, get those new images here. Sadly, Microsoft did not release new Windows 11 preview builds this week. Come back next time. Updates are available This section covers software, firmware, and other notable updates (released and coming soon) delivering new features, security fixes, improvements, patches, and more from Microsoft and third parties. Microsoft is preparing new features for Teams. Later this month, the messenger will receive a new download manager with auto-dismissing notifications, reducing clutter and making the overall experience less annoying when dealing with downloads. Mozilla released Firefox 151.0.3, a new bug-fixing update for the browser. It is a small release, which fixes problems with pasting into text fields and the oversized VPN button on the toolbar. The update is now available for all users in the Release channel. Here are other updates and releases you may find interesting: VS Code 1.123 introduces massive upgrades for persistent AI developer workflows Microsoft OneDrive is getting a simple yet much-needed feature Microsoft faces heat after quietly blocking promised Office features on Apple systems Microsoft resumes forced Copilot app installation on some Windows PCs Browser vendors pen an open letter to Microsoft, saying "enough is enough" Here are the latest drivers and firmware updates released this week: AMD Radeon Software 26.6.1 with optimizations for F1 25: 2026 Season, World of Tanks: HEAT, and various bug fixes. Reviews are in Here is the hardware and software we reviewed this week Steven Parker dropped more mini PC reviews this week. GEEKOM Air12 2026 Edition is a low-power, affordable computer with an Intel Tiger Lake Pentium Gold processor, up to 16GB of memory, and 512GB of storage, costing just $349. It is light, quiet, energy efficient, and has modern ports on the front. However, the front-facing USB Type-C is data-only, and there are some quirks with the computer's memory, so check out the full review. The AMD RX 9070 GRE has been released worldwide, and we published a benchmark review comparing this powerful graphics card to the RX 9070 XT, 7800 XT, the NVIDIA RTX 5070, and RTX 4070. It has solid, balanced performance, plenty of RAM, and low temperatures, but watch out for mediocre ray tracing performance and not the best efficiency. Also, we reviewed the Cuktech 10 Ultra, a compact, high-power charger with four ports and a big display full of various stats. This tiny charger can pull nearly 120W and spread that power according to each connected device's needs. It also comes with a high-quality 240W cable, three power modes, and retractable prongs. The best part? It is quite affordable, just make sure you have an outlet placed in the right spot to benefit from the built-in display. On the gaming side Learn about upcoming game releases, Xbox rumors, new hardware, software updates, freebies, deals, discounts, and more. Do you remember the ASUS ROG Xbox Ally, Microsoft's first handheld console designed in partnership with ASUS? This week, ASUS revealed a new version of the device to celebrate twenty years of its Republic of Gamers brand. The new ROG Xbox Ally X20 features an OLED display, a transforming D-Pad, TMR sticks, and other changes. However, the chip inside the console is still the same. Forza Horizon 6 launched last month to critical acclaim, but the game will soon have a new rival made by those who used to work on Forza Horizon titles. Mike Brown from Maverick Games announced Clutch, an upcoming racing game with a story-driven campaign, deep car customization, and rich multiplayer. The game is coming to PC, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5 in Spring 2027. The next update for Minecraft now has a release date. This week, Mojang announced that Chaos Cubed will be available on June 16, 2026. In addition, Mojang published a teaser of the next Minecraft movie. A Minecraft Movie Squared has now been confirmed for a release somewhere in 2027. NVIDIA GeForce Now is getting 18 new games in June. Those include Jurassic World Evolution 3, Fatekeeper, GOALS, Gothic 1 Remake, NTE: Neverness to Everness, and more. If you are a Game Pass subscriber, you can also get new games soon: Persona 5 Royal, Starseeker: Astroneer Expeditions, and more are coming to the service this month. Sumer Game Fest 2026 happened this week, where we saw plenty of new games, including Alien Isolation 2, Final Fantasy VII Remake Part 3, Gen Atlas from the Shadow of the Colossus creator, a new Cuphead game in 8-bit style, a new expansion for Mafia: The Old Country, and more. Finally, here are this week's Weekend PC Game Deals, full of discounts and the latest freebies from the Epic Games Store. Other gaming news includes the following: God of War Laufey announced, introducing Kratos' wife as the new protagonist Ori studio's No Rest for the Wicked 1.0 release and console plans announced Microsoft launches Godot Sample to streamline Xbox PC game development on the engine Great deals to check Every week, we cover many deals on different hardware and software. The following discounts are still available, so check them out. You might find something you want or need. Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB NVMe - $389.99 | 39% off Sonos Sub 4 - Wireless Subwoofer - $759 | 16% off Logitech MX Creative Console - $159.99 | 20% off This link will take you to other issues of the Microsoft Weekly series. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing for extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      X-No-file earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • One Month Later
      pestcontrol46 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      pestcontrol46 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      JKR earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      510
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      274
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      71
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!