Reviews 52161 Published by

Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

AOC C3583FQ 35-inch Curved Ultra-Wide FreeSync Monitor Review
AZIO MGK L80 RGB Backlit Mechanical Gaming Keyboard Review
Cooler Master MasterCase Pro 3 Review
Hands-on review: IFA 2016: Asus ZenBook 3
Holy Stone F181 Drone Review
Lian Li Ebonsteel PC K6 Case Review
Logitech PRO Review
New Intel and AMD chips will only support Windows 10
Tesoro Gram Spectrum Review
Titan X Pascal SLI at 5K
Toshiba OCZ RD400 512GB



AOC C3583FQ 35-inch Curved Ultra-Wide FreeSync Monitor Review

Is price still preventing you from picking up a curved ultra-wide monitor? You might want to check out AOC’s 35-inch C3583FQ selling for only $600. We’re checking out this 160Hz FreeSync screen in our lab today.

Read full article @ Toms Hardware

AZIO MGK L80 RGB Backlit Mechanical Gaming Keyboard Review

I love it when competition heats up the market. And there is no doubt the mechanical key board market is on fire. Competition drives prices down and encourages innovation. AZIO is driving this revolution with an expanded line of mechanical keyboards from their MGK line. Today we will be looking at their latest full featured mechanical keyboard the Azio MGK L80 RGB Backlit Mechanical Gaming Keyboard.

Read full article @ Hardware Asylum

Cooler Master MasterCase Pro 3 Review

Cooler Master has a long history of manufacturing high quality enthusiast level cases and CPU coolers. Last year, they introduced their MasterCase 5 line, which was a mid-tower designed to allow a wide range of customization and upgrades. After the success and recognition of the MasterCase 5 line, they introduced their MasterBox line, which was a lower cost alternative to the MasterCase, but still retained a high degree of customization options. Now, Cooler Master is further expanding the MasterCase line with the little brother to the MasterCase 5 line, the MasterCase Pro 3. The Cooler Master MasterCase Pro 3, will be available on September 6th from Amazon for $99.99 shipped.

Read full article @ Legit Reviews

Hands-on review: IFA 2016: Asus ZenBook 3

There's a saying that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery – but not for Asus. The ZenBook 3 is the Taiwanese electronics firm's latest 12.5 inch MacBook-killing Ultrabook. It doesn't just so much imitate as it does completely destroy Apple's ultrathin laptop in specs and price.

Read full article @ TechRadar

Holy Stone F181 Drone Review

Today's review of the F181 Universe Explorer will be my first introduction to newcomer Holy Stone, whom was founded in 2014. See it in action with its 720p HD onboard video camera and photos, along with videos of my experience.

Read full article @ ModSynergy.com

Lian Li Ebonsteel PC K6 Case Review

In the PC case arena, Lian Li is known as one of the premier case makers for aluminum cases. As long as I can remember they were the leader and the one I personally hoped to own some day. Their fairly simple but well thought out designs made them popular but the higher price tag was not in reach for … Read more.

Read full article @ Modders-Inc

Logitech PRO Review

Based on the relatively simple shape of the Logitech G100, the Logitech PRO in its elegance is aimed at the no frills, no compromise competitive gamer. Using their experience and know-how, Logitech have created a lightweight (83g) yet robust mouse by using hard wearing materials, mouse buttons rated for 20million clicks, and mouse feet rated for 250KM surface travel and thus are backing the PRO with a 2 year warranty.

As the focus is towards competitive gamers, high-speed preicision is a must and what better sensor is there than the PWM 3366, considered by many as the (current) worlds best optical sensor capable of tracking over 300ips (inches per second) at an acceleration of 40G. Helping retain that focus on high speed precision, Logitech have created an advanced tension system for the main mouse clicks that provides a speedy and responsive click while requiring a low actuation force. Of course, it doesn't stop there, internally it also has a 32bit ARM controller, onboard memory for saving your configurations, and as it is 2016, it is complete with RGB lighting.

Read full article @ Vortez

New Intel and AMD chips will only support Windows 10

To be fair, Microsoft has been warning people for ages that Kaby Lake will not run on anything older than Windows 10, but Vole is also warning punters that AMD's incoming Zen chip will be going the same way.
Microsoft said that as new silicon generations are introduced, they need the latest Windows platform for support. This will allow Microsoft to focus on deep integration between Windows and the silicon, while maintaining maximum reliability and compatibility with previous generations of platform and silicon.

Read full article @ Fudzilla

Tesoro Gram Spectrum Review

The low-profile mechanical keyboard for gamers seeking a competitive edge.

Read full article @ Hexus

Titan X Pascal SLI at 5K

PC Specialist Leviathan X is packed with two Nvidia Titan X graphics cards that use the latest Pascal technology. One Titan X is £1,100/US$1,200 of gaming insanity so what sort of performance can we hope to see from two of these monsters linked in SLI? And how do they crunch through a massive 5K resolution with 15 million pixels?

Read full article @ KitGuru

Toshiba OCZ RD400 512GB

Well, it wasn’t that long ago that Toshiba picked up OCZ and brought the OCZ brand into their lineup as their enthusiast oriented brand. So it may take a little while to adjust to the new Toshiba branding sitting next to the OCZ, but for those concerned with any OCZ issues in the past, having Toshiba backing the brand now should be reassuring. On top of the new branding, Toshiba has also introduced their first M.2 PCIe drive with the RD400. The RD stands for the previous Revo Drive branding from OCZ and this drive was originally shown off as a Revo Drive. The drive has a native PCIe controller and is an NVMe drive so we can expect performance to be significantly better than any of the SATA based drives. Today I’m going to check out the drive and then run it through our testing to see just how it performs.

Read full article @ LanOC Reviews