Do you love tech? Enjoy documentaries? Then, boy, are you going to love our roundup of the best tech documentaries available for your viewing pleasure. (If you hate technology and non-fiction films, on the other hand, you’ve probably come to the wrong place.)

From underdog video game stories to films that explore what the internet is doing to us, here are our picks for the tech-related documentaries you need to see right now.

The Great Hack(2019)

Released in early 2019, this documentary by Karim Amer and Jehane Noujaim covers theCambridge Analytica scandalin which data was harvested from millions of Facebook users. Because of the scope of the scandal, this also entails the Trump campaign, the U.K.’s Leave the European Union Brexit campaign, and more.

The documentary is a powerful, compelling look at how user data can be weaponized that manages to turn potentially dry, complex subject matter into a compelling, deeply unsettling narrative that grips throughout. At a time when Big Tech’s data-gathering practices are still under fire, and in the run-up to this year’s presidential election,The Great Hackstill feels very, very timely.

AlphaGo(2017)

Artificial intelligence had beaten world champions at chess and the game showJeopardy!before, in 2016, researchers from Google DeepMind built an A.I. capable ofchallenging the world’s bestGoplayers.Gois a millennia-old Chinese game played in which players compete to capture territory with black and white stones on a 19-by-19 line grid.

What makesGoso challenging is the enormous number of possible board configurations, which outnumber the total atoms in the known universe. Yet DeepMind’s AlphaGo was able to take on and defeatGomaster Lee Sedol in Seoul, South Korea.AlphaGoplays like the world’s geekiest sports movie. And that’s a big compliment.

The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters(2007)

OK,AlphaGo(above) plays likeoneof the world’s geekiest sports documentaries. This is the other one. Probably the most obviously “fun” documentary on this list,King of Kongfollows a narrative you’ll have seen in everything fromRockytoKarate Kid: An underdog hero’s journey as they battle against the odds to make it in the world.

In this case, the world our hero — a high school teacher named Steve Wiebe — wants to make it in is competitive gaming, by securing the high score for arcade classicDonkey Kong. Against him is lank-haired arcade legend Billy Mitchell, who turns out to be a deliciously underhanded movie villain.

Lincoln Ruchti’sChasing Ghosts: Beyond the Arcadeis another great exploration of the golden age of arcade gaming, but it’s hard to matchKing of Kongwhen it comes to sheer nostalgic exuberance.

General Magic(2018)

Not familiar withGeneral Magic? Then you probably weren’t following tech in the 1990s. One of the hottest startups of its era,General Magichad an all-star lineup of engineers, ranging from some of the creators of the original Apple Macintosh to future superstars like Tony “Nest” Fadell, setting out to build the next big revolutionary product in high tech history.

That product was the world’s first handheld personal communicator, more than a decade before the iPhone came along.General Magic, like the recent Chicago Bulls documentary seriesThe Last Dance, benefits from a mixture of great archive footage and current-day interviews with participants reflecting on what happened. And, in this case, where it both went right and went very wrong.

We Are Legion: The Story of Hacktivists(2012)

We Are Legionis a documentary about“hacktivist” collective Anonymous. The film puts the Guy Fawkes mask-wearing hacktivists into a historical context, by tracing their more modern 4chan incarnation back to the protest culture of the 1960s.

Director Brian Knappenberger manages to get some interesting interviews with real-life Anonymous members and poses the right moral and ethical questions. With bothlarge scale hacksand protests only having gotten bigger since 2012,We Are Legionremains incredibly timely viewing.

I Am Human: A Documentary About Real-Life Cyborgs(2019)

Cyborgs are real, and in this compelling documentary, you’ll meet a fair few of them. The documentary follows the journeys of three pioneering patients — one a paraplegic, one a Blind person, and one a Parkinson’s patient — as they get to grips with implantable brain interfaces.

Beyond this,I Am Humangrapples with questions of what humanity’s ability to technologically augment people will mean for the human race.

The Man with the Movie Camera(1929)

It’s easy to think that the world we live in now — with the arrival ofdrones, robots,A.I., and3D printing— is seeing profound change than at virtually any other point in history. This documentary, the oldest on our list by more than half a century, will challenge that belief.

A highly experimental film shot directed, written and edited by the Soviet filmmaker Dziga Vertov,The Man with the Movie Camerasets out to depict what was then the modern city, freshly transformed by mechanization and electrification.

This film may be high on Marxist propaganda, but there’s something exhilarating about seeing a largely cynicism-free dream of human and machine working side by side to create something bigger out of individual pieces. You know when folks say “they don’t make them like this anymore?” Well, they don’t make them like that anymore.

All Watched Over By Machines of Loving Grace(2011)

A sprawling, 180-minute documentary that was screened in three separate parts, 2011’sAll Watched Over by Machines of Loving Graceis the work of British filmmaker Adam Curtis. Far more of a personal nonfiction essay than a fly-on-the-wall documentary, its central premise is that computers have singularly failed to liberate humanity in the way their countercultural forefathers promised.

With that overarching argument,AWOBMOLG(the unwieldy title comes from a 1967 poem) veers from analyzing Ayn Rand’s influence on Silicon Valley to exploring the ecological dreams of Buckminster Fuller to cybernetics and evolution; somehow stitching them together into a cohesive whole.

You may or may not agree with everything this documentary says, but you’ll come away feeling like you’ve just read one of the most thought-provoking New Yorker articles in years.

We Live in Public(2009)

The notion that, to some degree, social media has made our private lives public isn’t really up for debate here in 2017. But the idea that this was possible — or desirable — wasn’t quite so clear in the 1990s. Step forward Josh Harris, one of the first dot-com millionaires, and a man described as “the greatest internet pioneer you’ve never heard of.”

An eccentric individual pitched somewhere between artist, entrepreneur, and troll, Harris managed to burn through his personal fortune by putting together weird social experiment projects like one in which 100 artists lived together in a webcam-filled underground bunker in New York, or a similar endeavor in which he and his girlfriend lived in a similarly surveilled apartment — with the world able to tune in to watch their every move.

Edited from more than 5,000 hours of footage, shot over 10 years,We Live in Publicis a fascinating, funny, and sometimes disturbing document of dot-com era excess, which also manages to ask some probing questions about our connected world today.

Downloaded(2013)

This documentary, directed by Alex Winter, aka “Bill” from theBill & Tedmovies, tells the story of Napster and the rise of file-sharing services in the 1990s. It’s a slick production about an important chapter in internet history, with some impressive names among the interview list.

It may not have too many surprises if you followed this story closely at the time, butDownloadedis an intriguing enough tale to warrant a place on this list. Since it’s about the challenges of copyright in the age of the internet, it would go very well with the next documentary on our list…

The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz(2014)

The Internet’s Own Boytells the story of Aaron Schwarz, a computer programmer and copyright activist who committed suicide after being charged with a maximum of $1 million in damages and 35 years in prison for downloading large numbers of academic journal articles to make them freely available.

Filmmaker Brian Knappenberger is firmly on Schwarz’s side, but it’s hard not to be when you hear about the extent to which Schwarz was hounded by the U.S. Justice Department.

Indie Game: The Movie(2012)

The second game-related documentary on our list,Indie Gamefocuses primarily on the independent game developers behindSuper Meat BoyandFezas they struggle to make their dream projects a reality.

If you’ve never dipped a toe into the world of gaming outside of the big AAACall of Duty-style franchises, being introduced to the deeply personal world of indie gaming is like discovering the world of independent movies and alternative music (back when both labels meant something) for the first time. If you are familiar with indie gaming titles — either as a player or a creator —Indie Gamepresents a compellingly relatable take on a familiar story.

For All Mankind(1989)

No, not the Apple TV+ original series, but quite possibly the best documentary ever made about the moon landings.

If you’re like a lot of folks, you hear about a documentary concerning the Apollo mission and man landing on the moon and think: What a spectacular achievement that was and secondly, I already know that story. By now, footage of the moon landings is one of those things we’ve seen so many times that it loses some of its impact. Director Al Reinert pulled no punches when, in 1990, he brutally told one interviewer that the story has, “been covered and treated as news to the point where it bores everyone to tears.”

What makesFor All Mankindso special was the discovery, by Reinert, of a massive archive of unseenNASA footageof the missions. Compiling beautiful celluloid footage from all six successful Apollo lunar landings, Reinert presents a documentary that (one imagines) captures the sheer majesty and transcendence of what space travel must feel like at its best. Oh, and there’s a wonderfully ethereal score by Brian Eno.