Microsoft's old IllumiRoom concept has been reimagined by Razer—its Project Ariana is a 4K projector that extends your display onto your walls.
The only problem: It's like two Blade Pros stacked on top of each other and the battery life is probably terrible. Also, we're betting it'll cost more than a used car. But hey, still pretty damn cool.
For the second time this year, Facebook makes a move on Twitch's territory. We'll see if it fares any better than YouTube Gaming did.
The catch? It’s going to cost you $25 for every 20 hours you play. At that rate, you might as well save up for a few months and buy a dedicated gaming PC.
Party like it's 1997 all through January: Each of the sixteen levels in the original Diablo's Cathedral are now temporarily rebuilt in Diablo III. It's a birthday celebration where we get the gifts.
Take the G933, ditch the LEDs and the strange angles, and you've got the G533—a good-looking, no-frills wireless gaming headset for $150.
Also unveiled at CES: A handful of new Alloy keyboard models, including an RGB version, and the 7.1-enabled Cloud Revolver S headset.
Lenovo continues its excellent price-to-performance offerings with budget-friendly laptops—and this time, without the awkward "IdeaPad" designation.
It's like Gabe Newell squeezed down your chimney to bring you a bunch of the year's best games. And that's weird, because I don't even have a chimney.
Despite being as bulky as ever, the 2016 Kraken arrives packed with improvements—and is the best showing this line has had in a long time.
Logitech's G231 is a decent entry-level headset, but it doesn't do much to shake up the budget-friendly end of the market.
HyperX might have just undercut its widely acclaimed $100 Cloud headset with this $50 budget entry.
Hypothesis: The more beloved and well-known the source material, the more disappointing the Telltale adaptation. It's starting to look like a pattern with Batman - The Telltale Series.
It's kind of like Spartacus, the Black Knight, Morgan Le Fay, and Anne Bonny got together to play a pick-up game in Atlantis, or something.
For Honor's Samurai versus Knights versus Vikings premise is bizarre, but the more we play the more we find hidden depths to its combat—almost like it's borrowing the best aspects of fighting games. Interesting.