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Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

Atelier Lulua: The Scion of Arland Review
Gigabyte Aorus K9 Optical Mechanical Keyboard Review
How to Play Rage 2 on Integrated Graphics
iSCSI Gaming - NAS Storage for Your Massive Game Files
Jabra ELITE 85h ANC Headphones Review
Patriot Viper VPN100 PCIe M.2 SSD Review
Samsung 970 EVO Plus 2TB NVMe M.2. SSD Review
Tesoro Control R1 Review
WD Black SN750 NVMe Heatsink SSD Review



Atelier Lulua: The Scion of Arland Review

Gusts Atelier series has managed, over the years, to garner a respectable following in the West without the developer trying to change many of series staples to conform to the North American and European audiences tastes.

Read full article @ Wccftech

Gigabyte Aorus K9 Optical Mechanical Keyboard Review

It's a mechanical keyboard from Aorus with Flaretech optical switches - but is it any good?

Read full article @ KitGuru

How to Play Rage 2 on Integrated Graphics

With a few settings tweaks, you can get smooth performance in Rage 2, even with very a low-end or integrated GPU.

Read full article @ Tom's Hardware

iSCSI Gaming - NAS Storage for Your Massive Game Files

Last month I completed a storage network for a gaming center just outside of Indianapolis. After talking with Asustor about the deployment, they asked if I could publish an article showing how to build a smaller scale version for home users and talk about the benefits of holding your system's games on a NAS instead of on the host PC. The gaming center was not the first time I've built a storage network for holding game for several PCs. Several years ago, I went this route in my own home even though I have more access to storage media than most people do. All three of my kids are avid gamers, and you could call them spoiled. Growing up, the two oldest were born into a world where dad tested video cards, CPUs, and motherboards for a living. Early on, they literally thought dad played video games for a living. Not long after the two oldest could walk; they had a gaming mouse in their hands. The youngest didn't even wait that long!

Read full article @ TweakTown

Jabra ELITE 85h ANC Headphones Review

With the brand-new and impressive ELITE 85h ANC Headphones Jabra has once again proven to everyone in the audio industry that they have nothing to fear from the competition.

Read full article @ NikKTech

Patriot Viper VPN100 PCIe M.2 SSD Review

Before keyboards, mice and other accessories, Patriot was a flash memory based company. It originally started with RAM and then started to release USB flash drives and eventually started producing SSDs and gaming peripherals. Patriot's Viper product line is considered their top of the line products and meant for those discerning consumers that demand the best.

Read full article @ Modders-Inc

Samsung 970 EVO Plus 2TB NVMe M.2. SSD Review

Samsung recently outed a 2TB Plus edition of the M.2. 970 EVO drives, let's review it.

Read full article @ The Guru of 3D

Tesoro Control R1 Review

Tesoro is most well-known for their keyboards, but their gaming mice should not be overlooked! The Control R1 is a rather big, right-handed mouse featuring a top optical sensor, 3-zone RGB lighting, Omron switches rated for 20 million clicks, and six individually programmable buttons.

Read full article @ TechPowerUp

WD Black SN750 NVMe Heatsink SSD Review

A few weeks back, we took a look at the WD Blue SN500 SSD. That solid state drive is an affordable NVMe M.2 option, that’s targeted at mainstream systems and budget-constrained users. The WD Blue SN500 offers the benefits of NVMe, with pricing that is in-line with legacy SATA devices. The drive we’ll be looking at today, however, the WD Black SN750 SSD with Heatsink, takes things in a completely different direction. The WD Black SN750 SSD with Heatsink targets enthusiasts and gamers, and offers much higher performance in some scenarios. It is also priced higher, but not exorbitantly so. The WD Black SN750 SSD with Heatsink is by no means a mainstream drive, as you’ll see shortly, but considering some of its intelligent, differentiating features, WD isn’t imposing a huge premium either...

Read full article @ HotHardware