Playdate, the Pocketable Game Console, Prepares for Preorders

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The long-awaited tiny gaming device will be available to purchase next week, with shipments beginning before the end of the year….

More than two years after it was first introduced, Panic’s Playdate finally has a preorder date: Thursday, July 29. This charming and bright yellow handheld video game console has a unique crank on its side, and its $179 price includes 24 games developed exclusively for the device.

You won’t be able to play all 24 games right away, though. Panic will deliver two games every week to the device over Wi-Fi for three months until all 24 are in the system. This encapsulates Season 1’s games, and unfortunately, Panic doesn’t have much to share on Season 2. 

“We’re waiting to see how many people are interested in the Playdate before determining how games are distributed in the future,” a Panic spokesperson wrote in an email. “We’ll adjust as necessary. Everything is currently on the table, but nothing has been decided.” (Panic, which is primarily a software company, has published successful games for other platforms, including the popular Firewatch.) 

I’ve been playing with a preproduction version of the Playdate for a little more than a week. It’s a fun little gadget for the short moments in your day when you’re twiddling your thumbs, like when you’re waiting for the train. It’s about the size of a deck of Post-Its and easily fits most pockets. 

Playdate handheld gaming console

Crankin’s Time Travel Adventure

Photograph: Panic

The games I’ve tried so far—Crankin’s Time Travel Adventure, Lost Your Marbles, Whitewater Wipeout, and Saturday Edition—don’t necessarily have the depth or longevity of games you might be used to on handhelds like the GameBoy, but they can be surprisingly challenging. 

But unlike modern mobile games, with their in-app purchases, ads, and clunky touchscreen controls, the Playdate’s physicality is what makes it fun. Especially the crank. Pull it out and start spinning it as a control mechanism for games. Not all titles use the crank, but the ones that do stand out. You can work the crank to make a surfer perform tricks on a wave, move a marble to a certain goal, or control time. (Sadly, while it seems ripe for it, there’s no fishing game yet. Let me reel in some fish, Panic!) 

Games like Crankin’s really gave me a hard time, because you need to be quick and precise with the crank. You will fail a lot. But there was a great sense of accomplishment after I finished a level. 

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