If you’ve gone all-digital with your movie purchases these days—or at least dabble a bit—then you might be stoked to hear about this week’s release of Movies Anywhere. The app leads our latest Five to Try column, it lets you compile your online movie libraries from several popular platforms into one single viewing destination. And you’ll get free movies for using it.
oking for even more new apps games to try out? Into the Dead 2 advances kk’s popular zombie-dodging runner, Microsoft’s ge browser just made the leap to Android, Be My Eyes connects blind visually impaired users with remote sighted volunteers, Thimbleweed rk is a retro adventure that looks plays like the point–click classics.
Movies Anywhere
If you use or have used a wide range of devices digital platforms over the years, then you might have purchased movies from the ay Store, Apple’s iTunes Store, Amazon, potentially elsewhere— it’s annoying to have to dig through numerous apps to find the content you paid for. Thankfully, Disney’s Movies Anywhere is trying to solve that conundrum by letting you link together multiple accounts in one central repository.
Similar to the super useful Disney Movies Anywhere, the new stalone Movies Anywhere app lets you tie up , Apple, Amazon, Vudu accounts access all of your movies in one place. You can also buy new movies within, either download or stream any of them as desired. Right now, only movies from Disney, Fox, rner Bros, Universal, Sony ctures are allowed, but hopefully more studios get onboard. And you can unlock a few free flicks—including Big Hero 6 Ghostbusters (2016)—just by linking your accounts!
Into the Dead 2
October is a prime month for creepy thrills, kk picked the right time to return with Into the Dead 2, the sequel to the excellent, atmospheric original. As before, Into the Dead 2 is a first-person runner that sends you sprinting through fields of zombie attackers as you attempt to avoid becoming another one of the undead masses.
However, the structure has changed quite a bit. ile the first game was essentially an endless survival affair, Into the Dead 2 splits its gameplay up into missions has a storyline spread throughout. On the upside, that seems to bring more types of environments into play, there’s more incentive to replay the missions try to complete secondary objectives. On the other h, the early bits I played didn’t seem quite as tense as the original game, but the trailer footage from later levels looks plenty exciting.
Microsoft ge eview
ll, that didn’t take very long. st a week after announcing that its familiar ndows web browser ge was headed to Android, here it is—albeit in an “unreleased” eview version. By large, it’s like any other popular mobile web browser today: It’s streamlined simplified to focus on getting you speedy content, has modern features such as private browsing voice search included.
at might tip the scales in its favor for certain users, however, is the ability to sync up with ndows 10. You can start browsing on mobile then kick a site over to your desktop browser, for example (via the ndows 10 Fall Creator’s Update), plus it’ll sync up your bookmarks reading list across devices. You might hit some bugs since this isn’t a proper, final release, but it’s worth a shot if you’re an avid ge fan on your .
Be My Eyes
Small acts of kindness help make the world a much better place, if you’re sighted are willing to spare a few minutes here there, you can help some people who really need it with Be My Eyes. After finding a large community of users on iOS, this app connects blind visually impaired people with sighted volunteers around the world, letting you use your eyes from afar to help them in a time of need.
Once you sign up as a volunteer, you’ll occasionally get a notification that someone needs assistance. If you take the call connect, you’ll get a video feed from their phone camera, the terms of their request. Maybe they need to read text or an expiration date, or need help finding something—it’s open-ended, really, but all you need to help is your eyesight. And if you can’t take the call, no problem: It’ll be offered up to other volunteers instead.
Thimbleweed rk
Thimbleweed rk ($10) might look like it’s 30 years old, but it’s actually a br new game—albeit one built in the mold of classic point–click adventure games. And it even comes from a couple of legends of the genre: Rob Gilbert Gary nnick, the minds behind the Monkey Isl games Maniac Mansion.
Set in the titular small town, Thimbleweed rk brings together five playable characters: two federal agents, a vulgar clown, a teenage game developer, a ghost. How are they connected, what’s up with the dead body “pixelating” beneath the bridge? You’ll learn about that more across this amusing adventure, which maintains the ‘80s throwback aesthetic but is fully playable on your phone without a mouse or keyboard needed… although it does have optional support for both, along with gamepads.