WYP
News Guru
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Well scuf quality was meh.
Now it's gonna be awful. Gonna add some RGB to a stupid controller and charge an extra $50
Yup this.
Corsair feels like EA, buy everything, make it worse and charge more.
Corsair make great PSUs still. But that's also because they just put their name on it. Which is fine and they are rock solid so I won't complain.
Everything else is just meh. They charge a premium for the brand name. I bought a Corsair keyboard because it was on sale. The Strafe 2 version. Individual RGB etc. Only got it because it was like $4 more than the normal non RGB one I was going to get. I think I paid for something that wasn't on sale. Felt like the money I spent was exactly what it should have been.
My friend bought a razer mechanical keyboard. It was far superior imo. And that's razer. Who aren't known for quality. And his was like $20 more with both not on sale.
Corsair is just using sub par materials for the money. That's my biggest gripe.
My friend bought a razer mechanical keyboard. It was far superior imo. And that's razer. Who aren't known for quality. And his was like $20 more with both not on sale.
Long story short : quality is a hit or miss thing, just be lucky most of what you get it solidI know i am haha.
Corsair's PSUs aren't rebrands, at least not the high-end models. Yes, places like OEMs like Seasonic do the manufacturing, but Corsair specs out each unit and has its own PSU R&D department.
Corsair's PSU employees are experts at component selection, that's why they hired the likes of Jon Gerow (aka JonnyGuru).
It is also worth noting that Seasonic (and other OEMs) and their customers and other component makers don't have a competitor to many of Corsair's units, which wouldn't be the case if they were all just label switches.
Even look at units like the AX1600i, which used Gallium Nitride. This material isn't used by other PSU manufacturers, which also means that the unit isn't a rebrand.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that off-site manufacturing doesn't mean that a PSU is a "rebrand". It's like saying AMD's CPUs are rebrands because TSMC built them. The term rebrand is used incorrectly these days, especially for PSUs. Yes, "rebrands" or "label-swaps" exist, but that doesn't mean that all Corsair or (insert brand here) PSUs are rebrands.
I understand this. However most of their products are rebrands or at least majority sold. It's not wrong to say they are rebrands if that's what they are. I should have been more clear my apologies.
Your AMD analogy is incorrect. AMD is designing, prototyping, etc and all TSMC is doing is just working with AMD to get what AMD wants and build it. It's more of a partnership. They need each other.
Not the same as rebrand. A rebrand is taking an OEM parts and sticking your name on it. You just misused the term ironically
Now gaming chairs? Yeah pretty much all are identical. Those are definitely rebrands. I believe it was you who said none of them can even provide arm rest pads! So true!
Are you guys just fearing that Corsair will become like EA, or do you have proof that Origin PC and Elgato are now more expensive or lower quality than before?
I'll agree that their cases have gone a little downhill, lacking much innovation while reusing a lot of the same core designs again and again, but they are selling well and it is ultimately what a lot of customers and system builders want these days.
Get with the times man! It's 2019, you're supposed to hate everything especially in PC/tech stuff.
Go on a PC/tech forum and find me 5 threads where people are excited and talking up a product or brand. You'll be looking a while.
Don't get me wrong, I too am wary of big companies buying up smaller, high quality ones. Same thing happened in car audio and it literally killed the industry. All the small, quality brands were swallowed up by a few large ones.... All the quality, high end products were dumbed down to the lowest common denominator and for the most part it doesn't matter what brand of audio product you buy these days as they're all basically the same. That said, I think Corsair has built up a lot of credibility with PC and gamers. This isn't the same as some generic big business buying niche companies.... This is a former niche company that got really successful.
I'm not jumping ship (no pun) on Corsair just yet.
Pretty sure that every thread AMD related is praised with excitement and positive comments.
Have to disagree with that.
Only because they exposed Intels price gorging and made them drop their prices, no other reason.
Never heard of it tbh.
Last Corsair mice I bought were £30 each. One for me one for my ex wife. Mine lasted two weeks before the scroll wheel died and hers about a month on her laptop before the cables snapped at the USB plug which was common for her on laptops.
Sticking to Logitech or Alienware now as they're the same pretty much.
SCUF make console controllers. Surprised you havent heard of them given your switch to xbox. They made customised ones lets say like the Xbox Elite controller, with additional features.
Features were nice, but quality wasnt great.
The AMD/TSMC point goes too far to illustrate my point. Corsair makes a lot of PSUs that are unique to them, even though they use a different company for manufacturing. Corsair has been a big source of innovation in the PSU market. I believe they were the first to add capacitors to their cables to reduce voltage ripple, a design which has since been copied by most high-end PSU models.
As far as the chairs go, yeah, most of the companies basically use the same design from the same OEM. Just gets company logos in more places. I'd doubt that Corsair is spending any time or money on chair R&D. PSUs, on the other hand, are a big focus for them. Not many companies make SFX PSUs like Corsair.
TBH my biggest critique of Corsair ATM is that they tend to find a decent design and stick with it for years. Tonnes of their cases use the exact same internals, with the difference being the case's external shell, fan setup etc. Yes, a good design is a good design, but I'd like to see a bigger push to change things up. The downside of this is that all-new designs take time and money.