A huge part of the draw of social online games like Fortnite is purchasing and showing off fun in-game cosmetic items, like character skins, accessories, animated emotes, and more. It’s a way for players to express themselves while spending time in the vast game world. However, it seems that Epic might’ve misread the room with its latest additions,
If you were ordered to pick a random number and guess "zero", it may be a great choice—but not if it's what you pick every time you're asked, as current AMD Zen 5 CPUs are prone to do in certain conditions. Specifically, AMD has confirmed that in very specific circumstances, the RDSEED CPU instruction is returns a value of 0 "at a rate inconsistent
Today's review takes a closer look at the G.SKILL Trident Z5 NEO CL28 high-capacity memory kit. Designed with AMD Ryzen processors and systems in mind, this kit is aimed at content creators and streamers who demand top-tier performance. Let's delve into the review to uncover what G.SKILL brings to the table!
Have you ever heard of a company called Adeia? We haven't either. Founded in 2022, Adeia was originally the IP licensing arm of Xperi, which was formerly known as Tessera. What IP, you might ask? Well, a large portfolio of patents, arguably of questionable breadth, that it uses to extract revenue from companies it accuses of infringing on
The Stop Killing Games movement, which ramped up after Ubisoft shut down The Crew, has been steadily gaining support, with its petition garnering over a million signatures from citizens throughout the European Union. There are similar efforts happening in individual countries as well, including the United Kingdom, which officially brought
Every year, there are games that are, in the minds of some, criminally underrated and not given the credit they deserve, whether by the large-scale media, awards season, or public tone. For a certain subset of narrative indie game fans, last year's underrated game was 1000xResist by a new Canadian studio, Sunset Visitor. It was released first on PC and Nintendo Switch and was nominated for several awards, including Outstanding Achievement in Game Director, Story, and Character at the DICE Awards, Best Debut and Best Narrative game at the GDC Awards, and Excellence in Narrative at the IGF Awards, but […]
AOC's potential 2026 AGON monitor lineup has been leaked, showing some promising upcoming monitors. Out of the four monitors in the roadmap, the most significant reveal is a prototype 27-inch monitor apparently capable of a 1000Hz refresh rate.
Based on VisionTang data shared by ITHome (via Guru3D), this prototype reportedly achieves this using a dual-mode function, running at 1000Hz at a 1920×1080 resolution while also offering a 500Hz mode at 2560×1440. The panel is said to use dual-frequency rendering (DFR) technology, likely with integer scaling, to manage the pixel load.
The 2026 lineup isn't just focused on raw refresh rates. The leak also points to a 27-inch AGON model featuring Nvidia G-Sync Pulsar technology. This panel will run QHD resolution at 360Hz, but the Pulsar technology, which synchronises backlight strobing, is claimed to deliver an “effective motion clarity” of 1000Hz. For the esports purist, a more traditional 24.1-inch TN panel is also mentioned, pushing a 400Hz refresh rate.
KitGuru says: Which of the four displays mentioned in the roadmap interests you the most?
Voting for the “Ultimate Game of the Year” category at the Golden Joystick Awards 2025 is now open to the public. The annual awards ceremony is scheduled for November 20th, but the public vote for its main prize is running now.
Voters can select up to three titles from a shortlist of twelve via GamesRadar. That 12-strong list includes the two critically acclaimed PS5 exclusives, Death Stranding 2 and Ghost of Yotei, both of which are among the year's best-rated games. The RPG Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, which launched back in April to high praise, is also a clear contender for the top spot. On the indie side of things, there's Hades 2 and Hollow Knight Silksong as the fan favourites.
The complete list of nominees can be found below:
Indiana Jones and The Great Circle
Ghost of Yotei
Hollow Knight: Silksong
Blue Prince
Death Stranding 2: On The Beach
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
Silent Hill f
Hades II
Split Fiction
Peak
Donkey Kong Bananza
Kingdom Come: Deliverance II
Remember that, as the Ultimate Game of the Year award is decided entirely by public vote, any of the twelve nominees could take the prize with enough support. This was seen last year, when Black Myth: Wukong secured the win, despite not having the same level of success at other industry events.
KitGuru says: What were your favourite games of 2025? Are they nominated for the Ultimate Game of the Year category at the Golden Joystick Awards 2025?
SK Hynix unveiled its latest memory roadmap at the AI Summit 2025, and for PC builders, the main takeaway is this: don't hold your breath for DDR6. According to the timeline, the new RAM standard isn't expected to be a significant factor for mainstream PCs until around 2030.
SK Hynix's roadmap shared by @harukaze5719 (via Wccftech) shows that while the company plans to launch DDR6 products in 2029, it will, as always, be destined for the server market first. This suggests DDR5 has a much longer lifespan ahead of it than many anticipated. The same long-term timeline appears to apply to storage, with PCIe 6.0-based SSDs also unlikely to hit the consumer market for a long time.
On the other hand, memory for mobile devices is accelerating. The roadmap indicates that LPDDR6 will arrive much sooner, with an expected release as early as next year. This new memory will be used in the next-generation SOCAMM2 standard, replacing LPDDR5X in high-performance laptops.
Also mentioned in the roadmap is HBM (High Bandwidth Memory). Development is relentless, with HBM4 starting in 2026, followed quickly by HBM4e, and subsequently HBM5 in 2029 and HBM5e towards 2031. SK Hynix is also moving toward Custom HBM (HBM4E/5/5E), which would allow clients to add logic functions to the memory's base die.
Lastly, for graphics memory, the roadmap teases “GDDR7 Next”. This is likely a nod to the emerging GDDR8 standard, which has appeared on other roadmaps in a similar timeframe. Alternatively, it could be something like GDDR7X.
KitGuru says: The DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 generation still has plenty of time left on the clock.
NVIDIA has announced a fresh round of DLSS integrations across several PC titles this week, headlined by a major update for Final Fantasy VII Rebirth. The RPG will receive DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation on November 5, alongside upgrades to DLSS Frame Generation and the newest transformer‑based DLSS model.
At launch earlier this year, Final Fantasy VII Rebirth supported DLSS to boost frame rates on GeForce RTX GPUs. The upcoming update expands that support significantly, promising smoother performance and improved image quality for players on PC.
Other titles are also adding or launching with DLSS support. Deathground, a co‑op dinosaur survival game, is available now with DLSS 4, Frame Generation, DLSS, and DLAA. The Last Caretaker enters Early Access on November 6 with DLSS 4, Frame Generation, and DLSS enabled from day one. Paradox’s grand strategy sequel Europa Universalis V launches today with DLSS, while arcade racer Wreckreation is also out now with DLSS support. Looking ahead, Anno 117: Pax Romana will arrive on November 13 with DLSS enabled for GeForce RTX users.
To prepare for these releases, NVIDIA has rolled out a new GeForce Game Ready Driver. The update ensures systems are ready for Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, Anno 117: Pax Romana, and Europa Universalis V. As always, you can download the new driver directly through the Nvidia App, or you can download it and install it manually via the drivers download page, HERE.
KitGuru Says: Are you going to be picking up any of this week's new DLSS-supported games?
It is the first Tuesday of the month, which means it is time for another Game Pass update. November has one clear headliner already announced – Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, but there are a number of other games joining the library before then, including the likes of Sniper Elite: Resistance.
Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 is the big new day-one game for Game Pass in November, although you'll need a Game Pass Ultimate membership to play it day-one on console. That is not the case on PC, however, as the game will still be included in the cheaper PC Game Pass membership plan, despite the recent shake-up of Game Pass tiers.
Here is the full list of titles joining Game Pass, including platforms and dates:
Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 14
Dead Static Drive (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 5
Sniper Elite: Resistance (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 5
Egging On (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X/S) – November 6
Whiskerwood (PC) – November 6
Voidtrain (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X/S) – November 7
Great God Grove (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X/S) – November 11
Lara Croft and the Temple of Osiris (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 11
Pigeon Simulator (Cloud, PC, Xbox Series X/S) – November 11
Relic Hunters Legend (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 12
Winter Burrow (Cloud, Console, PC) – November 12
There will be another Game Pass wave announced in two weeks, just after the Black Ops 7 launch weekend.
KitGuru Says: Will you be installing any of this month's new Game Pass titles?
Apple iPhone Air (starts at $999, as reviewed $1,199) The iPhone Air is Apple’s new ultra thin smartphone and despite making compromises in camera versatility and battery life, this phone is a design masterpiece that’s simply greater than the sum of its parts. Ultra slick design Gorgeous display Excellent cameras Solid performance...
The United States of America is a uniquely beautiful, chaotic landscape of a country—and a setting apparently inseparable from the likes of Grand Theft Auto, according to Rockstar Games co-founder and now-independent GTA/Red Dead Redemption writer Dan Houser. Speaking in a two-hour interview on the Lex Fridman podcast, Dan Houser discusses
We're only a few days into November but it's not too early to jam out to big savings on Black Friday tier discounts. Quite literally - the annual sales frenzy has already begun at Best Buy with deals on a wide assortment items, including a monster discount on a high-end wireless soundbar system with a subwoofer and Dolby Atmos support.
Samsung
The AI arms race is afoot and in a bid to stay in front of the 8-ball, OpenAI is forming a multi-year partnership with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to rapidly scale agentic workloads. As part of the massive $38 billion deal, OpenAI will have access to AWS compute comprising hundreds of thousands of NVIDIA GPUs, and potentially tens of millions
Nintendo is raising its Switch 2 sales forecast by millions of units after the second-generation handheld set an historic pace in console sales with 10.36 million systems sold in the first four months. For context, the first generation Switch, which ranks as a massive success in its own right, sold less than half as many units in its first
Silicon Motion’s MonTitan SSD platform, built around the SM8366 controller, stands out in multiple areas, particularly with its consistently strong performance in specific workloads. Paired with Micron B58R NAND, this unit delivered solid and reliable results, even if it wasn’t the outright fastest in our comparison.
The Thermaltake View 390 Air Future Dusk case was shown off at CES, as is tradition, and KitGuru decided it would be interesting to build a system in to see how well…
Amongst the other unwanted features which the release of Windows 10 gave us, was a bug with Windows Update. If you asked your machine to Update and Shutdown, it would instead act…
Kingston has introduced the FURY Renegade G5 PCIe 5.0 NVMe M.2 SSD, an ultra-fast drive that offers capacities as high as 8TB and read/write speeds up to 14,800MB/s and 14,000MB/s respectively.
The Renegade G5 uses a PCIe Gen5 x4 interface and 3D TLC NAND, paired with a Silicon Motion SM2508 controller built on 6nm lithography. It also includes a low‑power DDR4 DRAM cache to help manage heat and energy consumption. A 12‑layer PCB design is intended to improve signal quality and maintain consistent performance under sustained workloads.
Performance varies slightly by capacity: the 1TB model reaches up to 14,200/11,000MB/s read/write, while the 2TB version increases write speeds to 14,000MB/s. The 4TB and 8TB models top out at 14,800/14,000MB/s. Random 4K performance is rated at up to 2.2 million IOPS, and endurance scales from 1.0PB written on the 1TB model to 8.0PB on the 8TB version.
The drive supports Microsoft DirectStorage, which allows faster game asset streaming directly from the SSD to the GPU. Power consumption ranges from 6.6W to 9.5W under maximum load depending on capacity, with average idle draw at 0.27W.
The M.2 2280 form factor ensures compatibility with modern desktops and workstations. Operating temperatures are rated between 0°C and 70°C, with a mean time between failures of 2 million hours.
Kingston backs the Renegade G5 with a limited five‑year warranty and free technical support.
KitGuru Says: It is great to see more 8TB M.2 options hitting the consumer market, especially with speeds as impressive as this.
Today we look at another power supply from Corsair, this time from the company's new RMx Shift range. Corsair have three models in this series – 750W, 850W and 1000W, with this review focused on the latter unit. The new ‘Shift' branding signifies side mounted connectors for easier access when inside a system.
These new Shift power supplies have ATX 3.1/PCIe 5.1 support for the latest graphics cards with a 12V-2×6 cable and debossed PVC cables with low profile cable combs. They also adopt a 140mm fluid dynamic bearing fan which supports Zero Fan Mode with a fan speed knob on the rear to allow for user control. More on this later.
Key Features:
Innovative Easy Access Connection Position: Modular connections on the side of the PSU mean easier access for cables and cleaner cable management.
Native 12v-2×6 Cable: Easily power modern graphics cards such as the Nvidia RTX50 series.
Fully Modular connectors: Corsair Type S PSU cables are smaller, giving you plenty of room to route your cables, while their modularity ensures you only connect what you need.
Cybenetics Gold Certified Efficiency rating.
Debossed PVC Cable Kit: Ultra flexible cable kit with new included low profile combs.
140mm Fluid Dynamic Bearing Fan: Utilises a specially calculated fan curve for high performance, low noise, and superior reliability.
Zero RPM Mode Support: At low and medium loads the cooling fan switches off entirely for near silent operation.
Fan Speed Knob: Users have freedom to adjust the fan speed to their own needs.
Intel ATX 3.1 Certified. Compliant with the ATX 3.1 power standard, supporting the PCIe Gen 5.1 platform and resisting transient power spikes.
105c Rated 100% Japanese Capacitors: Premium internal components deliver unwavering power delivery and long term reliability.
Modern Standby Compatible: Extremely fast wake from sleep times and better low load efficiency.
Resonant LLC Topology with DC-to-DC Conversion: Provides clean, consistent power and enables use of more energy-efficient sleep states.
Ten-Year Warranty: Your guarantee of reliable operation that will last across several system builds.
Hyrule Warriors has grown from a spinoff to a full-fledged series in its own right relatively quickly, with the soon-to-be-released Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment being the third Zelda-themed Musou game to arrive in roughly a decade. Age of Imprisonment once again serves up a hearty helping of Dynasty-Warriors-style hack ‘n’ slash action while promising to fill in some key details of The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom’s backstory. Is Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment a smashing good time? Or can you safely pass on this particular prequel? Time to wade into the fray. The previous entry in […]
AOC is launching its very first AOC GAMING QD-OLED monitors this week. Both are 27-inch QD-OLED monitors, featuring ultra-fast response times and refresh rates, all at a surprisingly low price.
The AOC Gaming Q27G4ZDR and Q27G4SDR both offer QHD resolution (2560×1440) at 110.84 pixels per inch, with 10‑bit depth for 1.07 billion colours and wide gamut coverage of 147.6% sRGB and 99.1% DCI‑P3. HDR support is included across the range: the Q27G4ZDR offers HDR10 with 400 cd/m² brightness and a 1.5M:1 contrast ratio, while the Q27G4SDR achieves VESA DisplayHDR True Black 400 certification with 1000 cd/m² peak brightness for enhanced depth and realism.
Aside from the HDR support, the other key difference between these two models is that the Q27G4ZDR has a 240Hz refresh rate while the Q27G4SDR pushes to 360Hz for players seeking maximum speed. Both achieve an ultra‑low 0.03ms GtG response time and support both FreeSync and G-Sync.
Connectivity is future‑proof, with dual HDMI 2.1 ports, DisplayPort 1.4, and USB 3.2 hubs with fast‑charging support. Console gamers benefit from QHD at 120Hz on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S. Additional gaming features include Shadow Control, Game Color, Low Input Lag mode, and customisable presets. Like other OLED gaming monitor makers, AOC also offers a 3-year burn-in warranty.
Both monitors adopt the clean G4 design language with slim bezels, ergonomic stands offering full adjustability, and VESA mounting support. Available from mid‑November 2025, the Q27G4ZDR is priced at £399 and the Q27G4SDR at £469.
KitGuru Says: Are you thinking about making the jump to a QD-OLED gaming monitor?
This Hyte X50 case brings a number of interesting features to the table and then, right at the end, it slightly lets us down. The main thrust of the X50 is the emphasis on curves and superb metalwork, which we like a great deal. The downside is that the X50 cries out for an ARGB light show but is supplied without any fans, and the matching FA12 fans from Hyte are rather dull.
Timestamps
00:00 Start
01:03 First impressions / Pricing
02:28 Removing panels
04:53 A look inside
05:45 The rear
07:00 Fan thoughts
07:58 Installing hardware
10:12 Testing the case / Noise / Temps
11:16 Installing more fans – improvements?
12:21 FInal test configuration – more fans
12:54 Smoke Visualisation tests
13:41 Closing Thoughts
Main features
Full-Coverage Micro-Mesh serves as a low-pressure low resistance air intake for optimal temps & noise levels
Front I/O ports: 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1×1 Type-A, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 Type-C, audio.
Dimensions: 485mm H x 510mm D x 255mm W.
Testing
To put this case through its cooling paces we will be using a test system consisting of an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D, Sapphire RX 9070 and an SSD. This system allows us to produce a substantial amount of heat and effectively test the Hyte X50‘s cooling capabilities.
We chose to install our AIO cooler in the side position, with the fans set to exhaust to the side, as this removes the heat from the CPU as quickly as possible. This leaves the main compartment dedicated to the graphics card and effectively mimics the behaviour of triple-chamber Corsair Air 5400. We found this setup requires the addition of three fans in the front of the case, however adding fans in the floor and rear of the case make very little difference to the test results. Overall we found the Hyte X50 performed well.
Closing Thoughts
Hyte has got the major parts of the X50 absolutely spot-on. We love the curvy looks and the high quality metal work and admire the overall concept hugely. The curious part is that X50 looks tailor-made for RGB lighting yet Hyte does not sell any RGB fans.
In a sense Hyte is the opposite to Corsair where you sometimes feel you are paying for a case so you can then much more for the hardware you put in the case. By contrast with Hyte it feels like you are being left hanging high and dry; here's the case now sort things out for yourself.
This seems like a wasted opportunity as Hyte must surely want to supply an X50 with suitable RGB fans in the floor, front and rear of the case that maximum the visual impact while reducing building time for the customer. The Hyte X50 comes close to being a great product but instead ends up merely being good.
You can buy the Hyte X50 for £149.99 from OCUK HERE.
Pros:
Gorgeous curvy styling.
High quality metal work.
Excellent potential for really good cooling.
Cons:
No fans included so budget for three with the X50 Air and seven with the X50.
No support for rear connection motherboards.
Cable management is rather basic.
KitGuru says: The Hyte X50 looks superb and comes close to being very, very good or even great.