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Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

Gaming: World of Warcraft: Shadowlands Review in Progress - A New Beginning
Graphics Cards: PowerColor RX 6800 XT Red Devil Review
Input: SteelSeries Aerox 3 and Aerox 3 Wireless Review
Memory: TeamGroup T-Force ZEUS DDR4 Memory Review
Mobile: Huawei Mate 40 Pro review: Another amazing camera, Samsung Galaxy Watch3 review: Stellar hardware, but I don't love Tizen
Networking: EnGenius ECW230 Review - Cloud Managed Wi-Fi 6 AP
Speakers: HomePod Mini vs Echo vs Nest - Smart Speaker Comparison
Storage: Synology SNV3400-400G 400GB SSD Review





Gaming:

Wccftech: World of Warcraft: Shadowlands Review in Progress - A New Beginning

World of Warcraft: Shadowlands looks to bring the long-running MMO back to the forefront, making it accessible for new and returning players.



World of Warcraft: Shadowlands Review in Progress - A New Beginning

Graphics Cards:

KitGuru: PowerColor RX 6800 XT Red Devil Review

A week on from the launch of AMD’s RDNA 2-based RX 6800 and RX 6800 XT GPUs, today we take a look at the first AIB model to come through our labs. The PowerColor RX 6800 XT Red Devil is a huge, triple-slot and triple-fan graphics card, with plenty of RGB lighting, a beefed-up VRM and dual-BIOS functionality. We put the Red Devil through its paces and see how it compares to AMD’s reference design.

PowerColor RX 6800 XT Red Devil Review | KitGuru

Input:

KitGuru: SteelSeries Aerox 3 and Aerox 3 Wireless Review

If you’re a fan of lightweight gaming mice then you will want to check out our comparison review of SteelSeries’ Aerox 3 and Aerox 3 Wireless gaming mice. These both feature a holey design to keep the weight as low as possible. The Aerox 3 comes in at £59.99, with a TrueMove Core sensor co-designed by PixArt, whereas the Aerox 3 Wireless comes in at £99.99, with a TrueMove Air sensor also co-designed by PixArt.

SteelSeries Aerox 3 and Aerox 3 Wireless Review | KitGuru

Memory:

eTeknix: TeamGroup T-Force ZEUS DDR4 Memory Review

Theres no shortage of amazing memory kits out there these days, actually, you would have to look pretty hard to find a bad one. Theres been a huge focus on gaming memory recently to cram in as much RGB as possible and add even thicker and generally more expensive heat sinks too.



TeamGroup T-Force ZEUS DDR4 Memory Review | eTeknix

Mobile:

Neowin: Huawei Mate 40 Pro review: Another amazing camera

Huawei's new Mate 40 Pro has a refined look, the first 5nm 5G chipset, a 90Hz OLED display, and of course, some of the best cameras around with its 50-megapixel RYYB lens and 5x periscope lens.



Huawei Mate 40 Pro review: Another amazing camera

Neowin: Samsung Galaxy Watch3 review: Stellar hardware, but I don't love Tizen

Samsung's latest smartwatch brings back the rotating bezel and keeps the premium aesthetic of its predecessors. It's the best smartwatch hardware, but there are some problems with Tizen.



Samsung Galaxy Watch3 review: Stellar hardware, but I don't love Tizen

Networking:

ServeTheHome: EnGenius ECW230 Review - Cloud Managed Wi-Fi 6 AP

In our EnGenius ECW230 review, we see how this Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) AP with 2.5GbE backhaul performs and the cloud-managed features of the AP



EnGenius ECW230 Review Cloud Managed Wi-Fi 6 AP | ServeTheHome

Speakers:

Max Tech: HomePod Mini vs Echo vs Nest - Smart Speaker Comparison!

We compare Sound Quality, Features, Smarts, downsides, and more!



HomePod Mini vs Echo vs Nest - Smart Speaker Comparison!

Storage:

KitGuru: Synology SNV3400-400G 400GB SSD Review

One of the leading lights in the NAS device world, Synology, now have their own NVMe M.2 SSD range – the 400GB SNV3000 series. Designed to be used as a cache drive in their NAS devices, the M.2 22110 SNV3500 SNV3400-400G comes with power loss protection, while the SNV3400-400G built on the more familiar M.2 2280 format, does not have such protection.

Synology SNV3400-400G 400GB SSD Review | KitGuru