The XMG 14 Evo (Е25) can be described as a compact and light workstation if you configure it with more RAM and a Ryzen 9 CPU. The cooling is capable, and it allows impressively high clocks even in 3D rendering. The perfect upgradability and the surprisingly solid port selection make this compact laptop easy to recommend.
Chieftec's The Cube is the third offering of its cuboid line-up, which first saw the light of day nearly a decade ago. While the first two were aimed at gamers and professionals, The Cube mimics the design of a speaker, to fit into a living room or audiophile setups. But will a case with this kind of history still live up to the needs and requirements of the modern user?
The V2 is the first case from the brand that really feels like APNX is coming into its own in terms of design and functionality. Equipped with three glass panes and sporting four 140 mm fans and a controller, it already checks off most boxes. But the unique interior layout is the star of the show. All this at a price point that seems too good to pass up.
The Chieftec VEGA M 850 W offers plenty of performance for all your GPU needs. As expected for a ATX 3.1 PSU, it comes with native support for the 16-pin GPU power connector and all cables are modular. In our testing, the unit delivered excellent results, and ran at low noise levels up to full load.
The ALLIWAVA U58 is a compact Mini-PC that keeps costs low while offering solid performance for web browsing, office tasks, streaming, and light gaming. Powered by a Ryzen 7 5825U and 32 GB of memory, it's a viable pick for anyone who wants an efficient, quiet system without paying for extra performance they don’t need.
Colorful's iGame Shadow II is pushing DDR5 boundaries with enthusiast-level timings. Building on the success of its predecessor, the iGame Shadow II series offers increased frequencies, tighter timings, and improved overclocking capabilities. Join us as we put this memory kit to the test and compare it to its rivals!
After a massive price cut, NZXT's snazzy flagship Z890 board seems impossible to resist and will now leave you with change from $250. However, it's still not quite a complete package so is it cheap enough to finally overlook its shortcomings?