Reviews 51957 Published by

Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

1MORE Portable BT Speaker Review
Catherine: Full Body Review
Corsair iCUE 465X RGB Case Review
Nokia Beacon 3 Trio Wi-Fi System Review
Patriot P200 1TB SSD Review
Patriot Viper Steel DDR4-4400MHz 16GB (2x8GB) Memory Review
Synology DS620slim Gigabit NAS Review
The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening Review
Toshiba BG4 1TB SSD Review
Varidesk ProPlus 36 Review
Zelda: Link’s Awakening Review



1MORE Portable BT Speaker Review

Although the 1MORE Portable BT Speaker is the company's first Bluetooth speaker, nothing was left to chance. It's a product that's full of pleasant surprises, not only when it comes to build quality, mobility and extra features, but also in the way it sounds.

Read full article @ TechPowerUp

Catherine: Full Body Review

Vincent Brooks was a hapless idiot. He was innocent enough, well-meaning, but entirely socially inept and seemingly incapable of holding things together. It always felt as if the horrific things happening to Vincent were placed upon him, not his fault, and he was a victim. But not anymore.

Read full article @ Wccftech

Corsair iCUE 465X RGB Case Review

Priced at $150 (£110), Corsair's latest mid-tower chassis has just the right amount of RGB bling and great thermal performance to boot, but is it really a smart choice?

Read full article @ Tom's Hardware

Nokia Beacon 3 Trio Wi-Fi System Review

Introduction Earlier in the year, I had the chance to review the Beacon 1 from Nokia coming away quite impressed with the performance and overall low cost making it a solid entry-level solution. Beacon 3 is Nokia's first Wi-Fi system and current flagship offering.

Read full article @ TweakTown

Patriot P200 1TB SSD Review

Very good performance, excellent endurance/durability numbers and a very good price tag are all the reasons you need to put the brand new P200 1TB SSD by Patriot on top of your to buy list.

Read full article @ NikKTech

Patriot Viper Steel DDR4-4400MHz 16GB (2x8GB) Memory Review

It's new DDR4 memory from Patriot, and yep - it's fast!. The memory frequency capabilities of AMD and Intel platforms have risen significantly with successive new platform and processor releases. Speeds in excess of 4,000MHz are now not uncommon with the right motherboard, a high-end CPU and little user effort.

Read full article @ KitGuru

Synology DS620slim Gigabit NAS Review

Synology is going on a diet as they now offer a NAS series that holds 2.5" storage units only, and you know what that means. Yes, the SSD revolution is slowly progressing towards the NAS segment as well. Powered with an Intel Celeron J3355 dual-core 2.0 GHz (2.5 GHz boost) this NAS is to set to deliver on the 4K media front as the new is looking to be offering to be an excellent Plex transcoder.

Read full article @ The Guru of 3D

The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening Review

A remake of The Legend of Zelda: Links Awakening isnt the Zelda game I wanted next, despite having massive love and nostalgia for the original. I thought it was too small, too short, too outdated to fare well against other games on the Nintendo Switch, even with a gorgeous new art direction.

Read full article @ Wccftech

Toshiba BG4 1TB SSD Review

It's Toshiba latest ball grid array drive, and it's about the size of an SD card

Read full article @ KitGuru

Varidesk ProPlus 36 Review

If you want to increase the amount of time you spend standing and decrease your sedentary time, you need a Varidesk.

So many of us (myself 100% included) are guilty of sitting for way too long and standing way too little throughout the course of the day. If you have a job that requires you working at a desk, you probably spend a surprising amount of time in your chair rather than on your feet. It's easy to get super-focused on your work or, let's face it, just prefer being sat, and the hours of the day fly by. It's bad for your health and we should all do it less.

Read full article @ Windows Central

Zelda: Link’s Awakening Review

No Nintendo remake has ever combined the beautiful and the familiar like this.

Read full article @ ArsTechnica