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Bring the arcade home with Arcade1Up‘s new compact cabinets. These new models are ideal for those who live in small spaces with the same gameplay, art, graphics and controls as the full-size counterpart, but just smaller.
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Available at Walmart, the Arcade1Up SE arcade cabinets are priced at just $299 per model. Retro games, include Mortal Kombat II, Pac-Man, Ms. Pac-Man and many others.
And since these Arcade1Up SE retro arcade cabinets are from Walmart, you’ll get it shipped to you for free if you’re a Walmart+ member. Otherwise, your cart has to be more than $35 to get free shipping.
If you’re not a member, then you’re in luck: You can sign up for a 30-day free trial to take advantage of everything the retailer’s rewards program has to offer with perks such as free, fast delivery; fuel discounts; streaming access to Paramount+ to watch hit originals; extra savings with early access deals and much more.
In addition, Walmart+ comes with access to SiriusXM for all sorts of talk radio and music — including popular channels such as The Coffee House for stripped-down songs from Noah Kahan, Kacey Musgraves, The Lumineers, Phoebe Bridgers and others. Learn more about what Walmart+ can offer you here.
Ahead, you’ll find the Arcade1Up SE cabinets available at Walmart.
Arcade1Up
Arcade1Up ‘Mortal Kombat II’ SE
The Arcade1Up ‘Mortal Kombat II’ SE arcade cabinet, with original arcade music by Dan Forden, comes with 13 games, including Mortal Kombat, Mortal Kombat II, Mortal Kombat 3, Ultimate MK 3, Rampage, Joust, Wizard of Wor, Gauntlet, Rootbeer Tapper, Defender, Bubbles, Paperboy and Klax.
Arcade1Up
Arcade1Up ‘Pac-Man’ SE
With original arcade music by Toshio Kai, the Arcade1Up ‘Pac-Man’ SE retro arcade cabinet comes with 13 games, including Pac-Man, Dig Dug, Dig Dug II, Pac-Mania, Pac & Pal, Super Pac-Man, Pac-Man Plus, King & Ballon, Galaga, Galaxian, Galaga ’88, Mappy and Rompers.
Arcade1Up
Arcade1Up ‘Ms. Pac-Man’ SE
The Arcade1Up ‘Ms. Pac-Man’ SE retro arcade cabinet comes with 13 games, including Ms. Pac-Man, Pac-Man Plus, Super Pac-Man, Pac & Pal, Pacmania, Dig Dug, Dig Dug 2, Galaga, Galaxian, Galaga 88, Mappy, Rompers and The Tower of Druaga. Original arcade music for Ms. Pac-Man by Chris Rode.
Meanwhile, all arcade cabinets are four feet tall and come with a 15.6-inch IPS color monitor, dual speakers for stereo audio and Wi-Fi connectivity for live leaderboards and online multiplayer. If you’d like these cabinets to be taller, Walmart also has arcade risers available for $59 each.
Priced at $299, the Arcade1Up SE retro arcade cabinets are only available at Walmart.
Want more? For more product recommendations, check out our roundups of the best Xbox deals, studio headphones and Nintendo Switch accessories.
Cazzu leads the Billboard Argentina Hot 100 chart for a second consecutive week as “Con Otra” holds steady at No. 1 on the chart dated May 3. The song, released on DALE Play March 19, has remained strong in the chart’s top 10 since its debut at No. 2 (April 5 dated list).
In addition to her recent leader, the Argentinian previously reached a No. 5 high through her Maria Becerra collab, “Animal,” in 2021.
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W Sound, better known as Westcol, Béele and Ovy On The Drums nearly miss the top slot as “W Sound 05: La Plena,” rises 4-2, marking the acts’ highest entry to date. Meanwhile, Emilia, TINI, and Nicki Nicole’s “Blackout” dips 2-3, after topping the ranking for two consecutive weeks in April. Emilia also places another top 10 track on the Billboard Argentina Hot 100: “Bunda,” with Luísa Sonza, which slips 7-8.
Back in the top five, La T y La M’s “Amor De Vago,” featuring Malandro de América, falls 4-3. Alleh and Yorghaki’s “Capaz” holds at No. 5 for a second week, for its eighth week in the upper region during its 13th week run so far.
Karol G’s “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido” adds a fourth week at No. 6, after the song dominated for 16 consecutive weeks between 2024-25. Plus, Bad Bunny’s “Baile Inolvidable” jumps 8-7, following two consecutive weeks in the runner-up slot in March.
Ecuadorian Jombriel closes the top 10 with two entries. “Parte & Choke,” with Ryan Castro, Jotta and Alex Krack, holds at No. 9 for the third consecutive week, after it ruled for one week in March. Plus, Jombriel’s most recent single, “Vitamina,” with DFZM, breaks into the top 10, climbing 15-10. The move gives Jombriel his second top 10, while Colombian DFZM earns his first.
The week’s Greatest Gainer honors goes to Pablo Chill-E, whose single “Resentía” leaps 28 positions, surging from No. 49 to No. 21.
Elsewhere, Mattei’s “Pa Las Girlas” becomes the Hot Shot Debut of the week, entering at No. 50.
Lastly, Tobal MJ and Lucky Brown’s “Tiene” opens at No. 78, while rock band Estelares add its third entry with “Ella Dijo” at No. 91. It’s the group’s first appearance in over two years, following “Encantan,” featuring Enjambre, in 2022.
T-Pain and Wyclef Jean will perform at this year’s Preakness Stakes as part of the race day’s annual entertainment. On Thursday (May 1), Preakness 150 organizers announced that Jean and T-Pain would perform trackside at Baltimore’s Pimlico Race Course. The performances will go down on May 17 and will not be part of a wider […]
Before the fame, before the crowds, a young Marwan “Nordo” would sneak into Tunisia’s legendary Carthage Festival, hiding near the venue walls just to hear his idols perform. Nearly two decades later, he returned to that same stage—not as a fan, but as a headliner, selling out his debut show days in advance.This month, as he drops his debut full-length album Cotinga, the Tunisian star lands the cover of Billboard Arabia, bringing with him a story of resilience, ambition, and pure love for music.
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For Nordo, his rise to stardom wasn’t just unexpected, it was nearly impossible. Not because he lacked talent, but because of the hardships he endured growing up. The real struggle wasn’t about breaking into music—it was surviving a childhood where even the basics weren’t guaranteed.
In an exclusive Billboard Arabia interview in Dubai, the Tunisian star opens up about it all. “I struggled just to get by. Just to survive. To eat. To sleep without feeling hungry. That’s what wore me down,” he says. “Making music didn’t wear me down. Music was love. Even when we had nothing to eat, I sang.” Over time, he learned to channel that pain into the studio, turning life’s toughest moments into songs that resonate with millions.
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His musical roots run deep: an aunt who taught him Tarab classics, school days spent reciting Qur’an, and a rap crew that gave him the name “Nordo” and shaped his early sound. Though rap launched his career, Nordo refused to be boxed in, absorbing influences from across genres.
Perhaps the most evident mark his hip-hop origins left on his music is his passion for collaboration, even after his solo career took off. Nordo is a people person, driven by emotion and deep bonds. Over the years, he’s teamed up with big names like Sanfara, Blingos, Stormy, Didine Canon 16 and others from across North Africa. His reach even expanded to Egypt, thanks to “Ya 3arraf”—his collaboration with Ahmed Saad and Zaeem, which introduced him to a whole new audience and climbed the Billboard Arabia charts.
But working with Nordo isn’t just about sharing a mic—it’s about real connection. “We’ve got to be friends first,” he explains. “When I collaborated with Didine or Stormy, it wasn’t business. It was brotherhood. We talked, we bonded. That’s how music becomes real. If it’s not honest, it doesn’t work.” He’s got one firm rule: “The thing I hate most? When people hit me up like: ‘Hey, Marwan, let’s make a hit.’ That’s not how it works. It never has.”
Nordo gets that the music industry has its own playbook, but his approach is different. “I need to see the soul behind the song,” he says. “If I don’t believe in the person, the music won’t speak.”
Nordo
Chady Kal/Billboard Arabia
His approach to music mirrors his approach to life: authenticity first. Nordo writes and composes every track himself, determined not to be just another pop act delivering other people’s words. His voice, a smoky, distinctive blend that immediately stands out among hundreds of voices, echoes Turkish vocal tones mixed with North African raï-style soul. Best exemplifying this musical amalgam that’s unmistakably Nordo is “Ya Denya,” which achieved great commercial success and garnered over 100 million views on YouTube.
Now, with Cotinga, Nordo is leveling up. The six-track EP is a kaleidoscope of sounds—flamenco riffs, R&B grooves, Afro-trap beats, Moroccan gnawa rhythms and acoustic pop—all written and composed by Nordo.
The album’s title nods to the cotinga bird: rare, vibrant and fiercely protective of its flock. “Kind of like me,” he says with a laugh. “I care about my people. I want them close, safe.”
Throughout the interview, Nordo oscillates between raw energy and quiet reflection. He shares stories from the studio grind, and how he created Cotinga on little sleep and pure adrenaline. At one point during our conversation, his eyes shifted, gazing into the distance. He told us about the days when making music wasn’t even an option; it was a luxury. The days when he had nothing… except his drive.
Today, as a father of two, he says every lyric, every show, every late night is for his boys – to give them the life he never had. But there’s a catch: “They have to be kind,” he insists. “They have to care about people. Share. Give back. Be there for their friends.”
There’s no manufactured redemption arc here. Nordo’s story is real, and so is his music. It’s driven by real growth. The kind that shapes not only his lyrics and melodies, but also his friendships, his fatherhood, his vision. Above all, Nordo’s mission is simple: to make music that’s honest, tell stories that matter, and remind people they’re not alone.
Nordo
Chady Kal/Billboard Arabia
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During a recent interview on The Morning Hustle, Tameka “Tiny” Harris revealed a powerful moment that took place just minutes before the tragic death of The Notorious B.I.G.
According to Tiny, the legendary rapper took the opportunity to apologize for the controversial lyric he rapped about Xscape in his track “Just Playin’ (Dreams).” The infamous line, “I’ll f**k RuPaul before I f**k them ugly a** Xscape b**ches,” had long caused tension between Biggie and the R&B girl group.
Tiny explained that Biggie approached them at an event and expressed his regret over the insult. “He was like, ‘I didn’t mean it. I love y’all. Y’all beautiful,’” Tiny recalled. Interestingly, Kandi Burruss, also a member of Xscape, revealed that she declined the chance to hear Biggie out at that moment, saying she didn’t want to speak with him.
Though this emotional story was first shared back in 2020, according to Revolt TV, it has recently gone viral again following Tiny’s new recounting of the event during her appearance on *The Morning Hustle*. Fans have been reacting strongly online, with many expressing surprise and admiration for Biggie’s willingness to make amends before his untimely passing.
Biggie Smalls was tragically killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles in March 1997. This anecdote adds a bittersweet layer to his legacy, showing a more human side of the rapper just moments before his death.
Check out the full interview below:
More news continues to come out of Ye’s recent stream with Sneako and Drake affiliate Top5. Toward the end of the stream, around the two-hour and 14-minute mark, the Chicago rapper talked about Drake’s unique sound and how he found himself borrowing the Toronto rapper’s style. “Another thing about Drake’s music,” Ye (formerly Kanye West) […]
Rihanna holds a lot of titles. To date, the singer is a a nine-time Grammy award winning artist with eight albums under her belt, a makeup and lingerie mogul thanks to her successful Fenty Beauty and Savage x Fenty lines, once held the title as the youngest self-made female billionaire, and, of course, is also […]
While many public companies are struggling amid the backdrop of macroeconomic uncertainty and the looming threat of global tariffs, music company executives are beating the drum for music as a stable place to invest. Despite a plateauing of the growth curve, revenue from streaming subscriptions continues to drive relative stability at Spotify, Unversal Music Group […]
Beyoncé is in proud daughter mode. After Tina Knowles‘ memoir, Matriarch, earned a coveted spot on The New York Times‘ bestseller list, the superstar took to Instagram to celebrate her mom’s accomplishment.
Sharing a poster announcing that “Matriarch is officially a No. 1 New York Times bestseller,” Bey wrote, “The Mama T was that good?? Ha.” The 35-time Grammy winner added, “You deserve it, I’m so proud!”
In the comments, the new author told her daughter, “Thankyou my baby,” with a heart emoji.
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Knowles’ feat comes a little over a week after Matriarch hit shelves on April 22. This week, the memoir tops both the NYT‘s hardcover nonfiction and combined print & E-book nonfiction lists.
The businesswoman covers a lot of ground in the book, opening up about raising Bey and Solange from babies to two of the music industry’s biggest stars. At one point, she writes about navigating a particularly painful time in the “Texas Hold ‘Em” singer’s career: when rumors sparked that Bey was faking her pregnancy with Blue Ivy.
“This child was prayed for and prayed over — a wanted, cherished, real baby, and people were making a living off saying she was a lie,” Knowles wrote, noting how Bey had suffered multiple miscarriages before Blue came along. “I wanted to curse some people out and scream at these losers to set the record straight. They had no idea what she and Jay, and our whole family, had been through.”
The Cécred co-founder also opened up about the much more recent experience of receiving a breast cancer diagnosis last July. She underwent surgery in late 2024 to remove the tumor, recalling that Bey “took [the situation] well, staying positive … I could already feel her mind racing, focusing on this as a task to tackle with precision,” while Solange told Knowles, “We are going to take care of this.”
The Weeknd has signed with William Morris Endeavor (WME) in all areas, the agency announced on Thursday (May 1). He leaves Creative Arts Agency (CAA) after signing with them in 2021, having left WME. WME is also representing the superstar’s production company, Manic Phase, which produced his 2023 HBO series The Idol and his upcoming […]
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