Tuesday, June 5th 2018

HyperX Showcases Variety of Peripherals, DDR4 Memory at COMPUTEX

HyperX took to COMPUTEX 2018 to showcase a variety of products made to enrich gamers' experiences - with a renewed, 2018-spanning console investment, according to company representatives on site. Their headset sets were represented by the Cloud Stinger Core (a headset that's compatible with the XBOX, PS4, Switch and PC platforms); the Cloud Flight Headset, HyperX's wireless solution with RGB lighting effects; and the HyperX Cloud Alpha Pro Headset.

Also showcased was the Alloy FPS RGB keyboard, which makes use of Kailh Silver Speed Switches (which feature the LED lighting on top of the switch for higher luminosity), full per-key RGB lighting customization, and a minimalistic footprint. There are three onboard profiles, and support for HyperX's driver, Ngenuity).
Moving on to the rodent section of HyperX's booth, we sneaked some pictures of their Pulsefire FPS Pro mouse, powered by a PixArt 3389 sensor with two RGB lighting zones, Omron switches, and textured side grips for comfortable usage. Mass of this rodent is around 100g, with the cable.
Last, but not least, HyperX treated visitors to their Predator DDR4 RGB memory sticks, as well as their Fury RGB SSD, which HyperX hopes will drive player's games and lighting stimuli as well. The Predator DDR4 features dynamic RGB effects as well as XMP 2.0 support backed by a lifetime warranty. The Hyper X Fury RGB SSD falls against SATA's constraints, but should give users a thematic continuity in their choice of hardware and RGB lighting effects, should that be more important.
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3 Comments on HyperX Showcases Variety of Peripherals, DDR4 Memory at COMPUTEX

#1
Hood
SSDs are the latest victims of RGB disease, a worldwide epidemic. God help us...
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#2
Vayra86
HoodSSDs are the latest victims of RGB disease, a worldwide epidemic. God help us...
While true, it does have a certain kind of appeal. I mean this is what you saw in Sci fi back in the 90s. Except now its not a mock-up but actual working tech.
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#3
Hood
Vayra86While true, it does have a certain kind of appeal. I mean this is what you saw in Sci fi back in the 90s. Except now its not a mock-up but actual working tech.
It all started back in 1966, the year "Lost in Space" went from black & white to color - somehow we ended up with this -







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