Tech news
Best Nintendo Switch 2 Games to Play in 2026
Nintendo’s newest console has been out for a less than a year but it already boasts an impressive catalogue of excellent new games, as well as a variety of enhanced Switch greats. Here’s our selection of the 15 best titles currently on offer, ranging from family favourites to grittier, more adult challenges.
Animal Crossing: New Horizons – Switch 2 edition

Originally released in 2020, Nintendo’s lovable life simulator has you cast away on a tropical island, building a home, making friends and inviting other players around for a cup of tea. The new version for Switch 2 (available 15 January) overhauls the visuals and multiplayer connectivity, as well as adding support for the Switch 2 camera.
Why we love it: “Your days are spent chasing bugs, chopping wood, arranging furniture and watering flowers, not scrounging for food/water/weapons and fighting people.”
Donkey Kong Bananza

The beloved ape teams up with his previous kidnap victim Pauline (no hard feelings, obviously) in this literally smashing subterranean adventure. The rules of the platform genre are cast aside as walls and floors are pulverised by Kong’s massive fists.
Why we love it: “I can see Bananza having a second life as an executive stress reliever; a virtual rage room where you heave exploding boulders at cliffs to reduce them to pockmarked swiss cheese.”
Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles

Originally released in 1997, Final Fantasy Tactics was a battle-focused take on the role-playing adventure series, cutting exploration in favour of tense, contained fight scenes. The Ivalice Chronicles features updated visuals as well as fresh voice acting and difficulty levels, perfectly modernising a PlayStation classic.
Why we love it: “[It] offers a model for resistance, and also a commentary on the struggle of opposition in such turbulent times.”
Hades II

The sequel to 2020’s brilliant mythological action game brings us new lead character Melinoë, a witch who must defeat the god of time and his retinue of sexy, chaotic boss characters. As before, dying returns you to the beginning, but you always reanimate and begin again, lessons learned and experience gained.
Why we love it: “[Jen] Zee’s new character illustrations are, if anything, likely to inspire even more aggressively thirsty fan art and fanfic. And writer Greg Kasavin’s wonderful script is wittier, wiser and flirtier than ever.”
Hollow Knight: Silksong

One of the biggest hits of 2025, this platform adventure sequel drags insectoid princess Hornet into the haunted realm of Pharloom, where relentless enemies and fiendishly tough puzzles await. Nightmarishly difficult and compelling, it’s up there with the greatest Metroidvania titles of all time.
Why we love it: “I’m captivated by Silksong. I’ve spent 15 hours on it in three days, and it has made my thumbs hurt.”
Kirby and the Forgotten Land

The first 3D platforming adventure for Hal Laboratory’s long-running hero sees Kirby wake up in a magical world terrorised by a gang of animals known as the Beast Pack. The Switch 2 edition updates the visuals and adds a whole new story.
Why we love it: “From scaling overgrown tower blocks to navigating ghost-ridden haunted house rides in a creature-infested theme park, it feels endlessly inventive.”
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom – Switch 2 edition

The follow-up to 2017’s Breath of the Wild returns us to the world of Hyrule, now shattered by a cataclysmic event. Familiar locations are radically changed, fresh secrets and quests are revealed, and a new physics engine lets you build incredible contraptions.
Why we love it: “The sense of freedom here is intoxicating. The kingdom of Hyrule is vast and full of diversions, and being able to move freely between the skies and the ground down below is a thrill that never wears off.”
Mario Kart World

A new beginning for Nintendo’s beloved karting series sees a vast open world to race in, alongside gorgeous circuits, cars, characters and abilities. Implementation of the Switch 2’s GameChat system makes online play more sociable – and the music is incredible.
Why we love it: “It really is an impressively welcoming game, this, generous and detailed and unfailingly fun, different but with the same spirit.”
Metroid Prime Remastered

Arguably one of the greatest first-person sci-fi shooters ever made, Metroid Prime was a huge hit on the GameCube in 2002 before receiving a wonderful remaster on the Switch. Series hero Samus Aran finds herself on the poisoned planet of Tallon IV, exploring its haunted biomes and fighting hideous space creatures. Inspired by Ridley Scott’s Alien, it is tense, complex and often scary – things we rarely expect from a Nintendo title.
Why we love it: “Sometimes, you play a game from a decades ago and think, this might actually hit better now. Metroid Prime Remastered is one of those games.”
Pokémon Legends: Z-A

In the sprawling, Paris-esque Lumiose City, a team of young trainers set out to climb the ranks of the biggest Pokémon tournament in town. Arriving as an eager newcomer, you must help them – and save the city from rogue mega-evolved Pokémon. A fresh, interesting take on the series, with more lively battles, an open world to explore and, of course, hundreds of Poké-friends to make along the way.
Why we love it: “It looks better than every other Pokémon game I’ve played, and if I could show this to my 11-year-old self playing on a monochrome Game Boy screen, she’d lose her mind.”
Simogo Legacy Collection

In the early days of the Apple App Store, Swedish studio Simogo made some of the most fascinating, beautifully designed touchscreen games of all time, from rhythm action platformers to folk horror adventures. This collection brings them all together with extra features, including early prototypes of the games.
Why we love it: “These games, in all their varied playfulness, are full of longing: for a lover, for meaning, for a chance to write your own ending. Play them and dream about a world where it all went differently.”
Skate Story

Imagine Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater, but set in a demonic underworld that you must escape by rolling through bizarre crystalline hellscapes while pulling off bodacious moves. A surreal and spiritual take on the skating sim.
Why we love it: “Beyond the ravishing visuals, what’s most striking is the exquisite fluidity, the delicious ‘gamefeel’ of the actual skateboarding.”
Split Fiction

Two authors – one writing sci-fi, the other fantasy – are sucked into their own stories when a virtual reality machine goes awry. From the makers of the award-winning It Takes Two, this is another cooperative adventure in which players work in tandem to solve ingenious puzzles.
Why we love it: “One level could be all-action space-blasting, the next will have you puzzling through a fantasy jungle as transforming animals, and an unexpected diversion will have you working together to wriggle sentient hotdogs into buns.”
Street Fighter 6

The warriors return for another showdown, featuring classic combatants and new fighters, such as drunken boxer Jamie and graffiti ninja Kimberly. The special moves are eye-popping and the gorgeous, hyper-colourful visuals hit you harder than Ryu’s hadouken.
Why we love it: “It’s bursting at the seams with things to do, assured in its gameplay, and wrapped in a stylish, colourful, confident swagger that the game can absolutely back up.”
Two Point Museum

Design the perfect museum then send out explorers to discover artefacts in the latest management game from the makers of the equally great Two Point Hospital and Two Point Campus. The simulation is complex and demanding but it’s softened by lovely comic touches.
Why we love it: “Takes all the lessons from the previous games and builds on them to make a thoughtful and hugely entertaining contribution to the management sim genre.”
The Guardian
Tech news
xAI sues Colorado over AI law
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, has filed a lawsuit against the state of Colorado over a new AI law set to take effect in June.
The suit seeks to block the state from enforcing the law, which would impose new requirements on AI systems to protect state residents from “algorithmic discrimination” in sectors such as education, employment, healthcare, housing and financial services.
Colorado was the first state to pass a comprehensive bill to regulate AI.
The company claims the law infringes on its first amendment free-speech protections and would force xAI to “promote the state’s ideological views on various matters, racial justice in particular”, according to the Financial Times, which first reported the lawsuit. “Its provisions prohibit developers of AI systems from producing speech that the state of Colorado dislikes.”
The lawsuit, filed in US district court in Colorado, comes as battles have raged at the state and federal level over how to regulate the fast-growing technology. States such as California and New York have been working to rein in AI with regulations, while the Trump administration has been trying to loosen the rules and place a moratorium on state laws.
xAI, which makes the chatbot Grok, has been plagued with accusations of discrimination. The chatbot has consistently spewed racist, sexist and antisemitic content, put forth conspiracies of “white genocide” and referred to itself as “MechaHitler”.
Katie Miller, a former spokesperson for xAI and the wife of Trump adviser Stephen Miller, heralded the lawsuit in a post on X on Thursday: “Colorado wants to force Grok to follow its views on equity and race, instead of being maximally truth-seeking. Grok answers to evidence, not woke leftist government regulations.”
Jared Polis, Colorado’s Democratic governor, signed the bill into law in 2024 but said it was “with reservations”. He has called on state legislators to amend it. The legislation was intended to go into effect in February, but was pushed until 30 June.
xAI, which merged with Musk’s rocket business SpaceX earlier this year, is seeking an injunction to block the enforcement of the Colorado law and a court declaration saying the legislation is unconstitutional.
The Colorado attorney general’s office declined to comment on the lawsuit and xAI did not return a request for comment.
The Guardian
Tech news
Abu Dhabi Unveils Low-Cost AI Model to Rival OpenAI, DeepSeek
A new challenger in the global artificial intelligence race has entered the ring.
The Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence (MBZUAI), an AI-focused research university established by the United Arab Emirates, announced on Tuesday the release of a new, low-cost reasoning model to rival OpenAI and DeepSeek.
It comes after DeepSeek, a Chinese AI lab, earlier this year shocked the world with the release of a reasoning model called R1 which it said could outperform OpenAI but with far less training costs.
At just 32 billion parameters, MBZUAI’s model, dubbed K2 Think, is much smaller than competing systems from OpenAI and DeepSeek. It was built on top of Alibaba’s open-source Qwen 2.5 model and is run and tested on hardware provided by AI chipmaker Cerebas.
For context, DeepSeek’s R1 has a total of 671 billion parameters, which is essentially another term for the variables that an AI language model learns to understand and generate language. OpenAI doesn’t disclose the parameter counts of its AI models.
K2 Think was developed in partnership with G42, the buzzy UAE-based AI firm backed by U.S. tech giant Microsoft. The researchers behind it say it delivers performance on par with the flagship reasoning models of OpenAI and DeepSeek — despite being a fraction of the size.
They cited the benchmarks AIME24, AIME25, HMMT25 and OMNI-Math-HARD, which relate to math, coding benchmark LiveCodeBenchv5 and science benchmark GPQA-Diamond.
How did they do it?
Hector Liu, director of MBZUAI’s Institute of Foundation Models, told CNBC the team behind K2 Think were able to achieve such high levels of performance by using a number of methods.
They include long chain-of-thought (CoT) supervised fine-tuning — a method of step-by-step reasoning — as well as so-called test-time scaling, which is a technique for improving performance by allocating extra computing resources during “inferencing” — or, applying learned knowledge to data it’s never seen before.
“What was special about our model is we treat it more like a system than just a model,” Liu told CNBC. “So, unlike a regular open-source model where we can just release the model, we actually deploy the model and see how we can improve the model over time.”
“If you ask me which one of the single steps is the most important, it’s very hard to say. It’s more like a system method work where all these methods combined delivered the final result,” he added.
Why does it matter?
There are two countries on the world stage that stand out as the forerunners in the AI race: the U.S. and China.
America’s tech giants and startups like OpenAI led the early momentum with so-called foundation models, which aim to fulfill a wide range of tasks by relying on vast amounts of training data. However, DeepSeek’s breakthrough with R1 earlier this year reinforced China’s position as a formidable AI player in its own right.
More recently, the UAE has sought to position itself as a global leader in AI in a bid to enhance its geopolitical influence and diversify its economy beyond crude oil dependency.
The region can point to its AI development firm G42 as an example of how it’s gaining ground in the space. However, it faces fierce competition from neighboring Saudi Arabia, which is looking to develop full-stack AI capabilities via Humain, a company launched under the Public Investment Fund in May.
Beyond that, there are also geopolitical complexities that shroud the UAE’s AI ambitions. Microsoft’s investment and partnership with G42 last year attracted a great deal of scrutiny in the U.S. related to the company’s relationship with China.
More broadly, the UAE’s AI industry still has a long way to go to reach the scale of its U.S. and Chinese counterparts. OpenAI and the Big Tech players have enjoyed a good head start with their respective foundation AI models, while Beijing has long considered AI a strategic priority.
Focus on scientific breakthroughs
While K2 Think demonstrates performance on par with OpenAI, the system’s developers say the aim is not to build a chatbot like ChatGPT. Richard Morton, managing director for MBZUAI’s Institute of Foundation Models, explains the model is intended to serve specific uses in fields like math and science.
“The fact is that the fundamental reasoning of the human brain is the cornerstone of all the thinking process,” Morton told CNBC.
“With this particular application, instead of taking 1,000, 2,000 human beings five years to think through a particular question, or go through a particular set of clinical trials or something like that, this vastly condenses that period.”
It could also expand the reach of advanced AI technologies in regions that don’t have access to the kind of capital and infrastructure U.S. firms possess.
“What we’re discovering is that you can do a lot more with less,” Morton said.
CNBC
Tech news
Viral ChatGPT AI caricature trend
A new AI trend is flooding Instagram, LinkedIn, X, and WhatsApp. Users upload selfies and ask ChatGPT to turn them into cartoon-style versions of themselves at work — surrounded by laptops, notebooks, coffee mugs, or office backdrops.
The viral prompt is simple: “Create a caricature of me and my job based on everything you know about me.”
What’s new about these AI caricatures?
Unlike older portrait apps that just stylised photos, this trend adds contextual personalisation:
- Analyses patterns from past interactions — tone, frequently discussed topics, interests, hobbies.
- Generates a cartoon scene reflecting your professional and personal life.
- Includes tools of your trade, subtle lifestyle cues, and workplace details.
Why it works:
These images go beyond simple cartoons — they reflect identity, profession, and mood, making them ideal for social media profiles.
The trend works because anyone can join in, no design skills or editing apps needed, just a photo and the right prompt.
How ChatGPT creates your caricature
- Analyses your photo: Facial features, expressions, and proportions.
- Applies your prompt: Defines style, background, mood, and exaggeration.
- Adds context: Combines visual cues with your chat history.
- Refines output: More detailed prompts = more personalised results.
Step-by-step: How to create an AI workplace caricature
- Log in to OpenAI: Ensure image upload is enabled.
- Upload a clear photo: Good lighting, visible face, plain background.
- Enter a detailed but safe prompt:
Example: “Create a high-quality caricature of me based on this photo. Keep my features recognisable but slightly exaggerated. Show me as a [profession] in a [setting — office, studio, cafe]. Use [style — cartoon, Pixar, hand-drawn] with vibrant colours and soft lighting.”
- Optional add-ons: Playful expressions, neutral props (laptops, books, coffee mugs).
- Review and refine: Regenerate until satisfied.
- Download and store locally: Share online only if comfortable.
Experiment with styles: hand-drawn, Pixar/3D, minimalist, bold caricatures.
Why this trend is different
Older apps only changed your facial features. ChatGPT incorporates context, creating a work identity:
- Job role and responsibilities
- Past chat topics
- Hobbies and interests
- Communication style
The result: a cartoon that feels personal — but it also reveals information about your life and work. But behind the fun lies a bigger question: how much personal and professional information are you sharing?
Your digital footprint: What you’re really sharing
To improve accuracy, users often include:
- Employer name and department
- Job responsibilities and projects
- Daily routines and tools
- Travel plans and client types
- Family references
Once posted online, these images can be:
- Downloaded or screenshotted
- Shared, reposted, or indexed
- Used for impersonation or phishing attacks
The more detail in the image, the easier it is to connect to your real identity.
Could this affect your job and company data?
Even playful AI-generated images can reveal sensitive work details: your team, projects, office setup, or clients. Sharing documents or drafts on public AI platforms may breach policies, and combining your face with work info makes phishing and impersonation easier.
Key risks include:
Even fun, stylised images can reveal:
- Workplace layouts or internal systems
- Department or team structures
- Ongoing projects
- Daily routines or tools used
- Employer or client information
Combined with your name and visual likeness, this can:
- Help scammers craft realistic phishing or impersonation attempts
- Breach non-disclosure agreements or internal IT policies
- Expose confidential company data if photos include screens, whiteboards, or documents
- Trigger compliance issues in regulated sectors (finance, healthcare, government, tech)
Oversharing daily work on AI tools adds to the risk:
- Drafting emails, reports, or contracts
- Summarising sensitive PDFs or proposals
- Refining financial forecasts or internal strategy notes
Even if no breach occurs, uploading sensitive company content to public AI platforms may violate policies and put your job at risk. If you wouldn’t post the information on LinkedIn, think twice before pasting it into an AI tool.
Takeaway: Even exaggerated caricatures can reveal real-world details. In competitive or security-sensitive industries, small information leaks can have outsised consequences.
Where your data goes
AI platforms may use submitted content to:
- Provide and maintain services
- Improve products
- Conduct research
- Share with affiliates or service providers
Pro tip: Features like chat history or memory may be on by default. Deleting content may not remove it completely.
Why the trend feels harmless
Many people love how “accurate” their caricature looks. That accuracy is not magic. It reflects information already shared over time. When the output feels personal, it creates a sense of familiarity and trust. But the AI is not discovering secrets — it is combining what you have already provided. Accuracy is built on aggregation.
Safe AI caricature tips
If you want to try the trend, keep it simple:
- Use temporary/private sessions; disable history if possible.
- Avoid real workplace photos — no screens, whiteboards, badges, or logos.
- Keep prompts general — skip employer names, projects, or client info.
- Remove metadata (location, timestamps) from images.
- Never upload sensitive work content — summarise ideas instead.
- Experiment safely with neutral props and styles.
- Store locally and share only if comfortable.
- Review platform policies periodically and delete old sessions.
The bigger picture
The ChatGPT caricature trend shows how creative and powerful AI has become. It can turn scattered details into a polished digital identity in seconds. But it also shows how easily personal and professional information can merge into a single public snapshot.
The cartoon may trend for a week. Your digital footprint — and its impact on your career — can last much longer.
GN
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