I watched Star Wars: The Last Jedi with some droids and it was beeping marvelous

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Authors: JordanA dreadnaught hovers overhead and next to me R2-D2 bleeps and shakes
The ship, controlled by the First Order, means trouble and Artoo knows it, as I know it
It starts shaking its head even more and it’s an absolute joy. It turns out watching a Star Wars movie with a gaggle of Sphero droids is
like partaking in Mystery Science Theater 3000 for the selfie generation - it adds to the occassion, splashing some childish joy onto the
movie watching experience. It’s not perfect - there were some niggles along the way to get the droids to watch a movie with you - but
when it works, it brings nothing but smiles
Well, and bleeps
Lots of bleeps. Sphero added the ‘Watch With Me’' feature when Star Wars: The Force Awakens was released in the home back in 2016
It was an update to the BB-8 app - we tried it back then and it was fun, if a little limited
While it was great to watch BB-8 cower when Kylo Ren was on the screen, it didn’t quite click for us. Since then, a lot has changed
The BB-8 app has been replaced with Droids By Sphero app
This is because the roster of droids available has expanded
You can now get a battle worn BB-8, the evil BB-9E, R2-D2 and the limited edition R2-Q5 - a sinister version of Artoo that is seen in some
deleted scenes of Return of the Jedi. The Watch With Me feature has expanded massively, too, Now you can watch the entire Original Trilogy
with your chosen droid, Star Wars: Rogue One, The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi
Episodes I-III are set to come soon, not that anyone should care about that.Now, as TechRadar’s dedicated droid reviewer (albeit a
self-titled title), I have all four of these droids in my house and to celebrate May the 4th, Star Wars Day, I decided to watch The Last
Jedi with all four of them.Now, this didn’t go exactly as planned
For a start, BB-9E didn’t want to play ball, at all
The app just didn’t recognise the droid for the Watch With Me feature
Given his screen time in The Last Jedi is minimal at best - although the stink eye it offers Finn and Rose when exposing them for what they
are is hilarious - I wasn’t too bothered
The rest booted up fine. But then, my grand plan to have all the droids bleeping and booping at the same time, while I watched the movie
and pretended they were my apprentices and I was the master, hit a bit of a snag. Droid lifeIt turns out, you can only really have one
droid at a time reacting to what is on the screen
There is the option to add as many droids as you want but you can only control one of them at a time when watching the movie; or at least
that’s all we seemed to be capable of being able to do. I didn’t let that stop me and skipped between Artoo, Q5 and BB-8 throughout the
duration of the movie, trying to tie each of them in with a part when the good guys are doing something and when the bad guys were. I also
made sure they were there to react anytime Ade Edmondson was on the screen as it still blows my mind a little that Richie from Bottom is in
a Star Wars movie.Regardless of these niggles, as a big Star Wars fan it’s so good to see toys get to a point where they wow as much as
the movies they are based on. The moment when Artoo (my Artoo, not the one in the movie) bleeped and got excited at the first look of Luke
Skywalker on screen nearly brought a tear to my eye
I had to think back to the Midi-Chlorian speech by Qui-Gon Jinn to suppress it.We live in a fantastic time for Star Wars tie-ins
Whether it’s Lego’s Super Star Destroyer that comes in 3,000 pieces, Lenovo Star Wars: Jedi Challenges that uses AR to bring you into
the franchise or Sphero’s impressive, most impressive droid collection - being a Star Wars fan has never been so much fun. These are the
best toys around right now for tech enthusiasts.ezTdbPcFhgv9dsac5P7hVJ.jpg#