March 26 can’t come soon enough.
Justin Choo
Justin Choo
Justin lives for gadgets, even if there isn’t a circuit board inside. From pool cues to nerf blasters to paper card stock, there’s nothing he won’t obsess about if curiosity gets the better of him. A self-professed master of useless information (his words, not ours), he has spent the greater part of 13 years writing about technology (and grumbling about it), having worked with PC Magazine, Gadget3, T3 (not the airport terminal), Stuff and NXT (not the wrestling one) among others. He has also written all manner of topics for non-tech publications like Spirited Singapore (not the ghostly kind), Active Age, and The Robb Report, to name a few. (Be warned: he’ll sidetrack every conversation.)
- gamingnews
Resident Evil Village: release dates, new trailer, playable demo and swag
by Justin Chooby Justin ChooThe hypebuilding for the next Resident Evil instalment picks up the pace.
- techreviews
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Fold: Excellent idea, but depends on how you use it
by Justin Chooby Justin ChooThe world’s first touchscreen laptop is not without some compromises.
- technews
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G: the ultimate Galaxy experience drops early this year
by Justin Chooby Justin ChooSamsung goes full premium with their latest flagship phone.
The Potions pick of the five most promising tech reveals that we can expect in the near future.
Do you need 80GB of data a month? No. $18? Yes.
The streaming giant looks set to release a movie every week.
- techreviews
The ASUS ROG Zephyrus Duo 15 is batshit crazy, but it’s crazy good
by Justin Chooby Justin ChooThere’s no reason to spend this much, but if you do it’s great fun.
More like Sexagenarians and the City, but let’s see where this goes.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe kicks off 2021 with perhaps its most intriguing release.
The OG Demon Souls is back to p*** you off once more
- techreviews
Beyerdynamic T1 (3rd Generation) Review: Audiophile quality for the mainstream
by Justin Chooby Justin ChooBeyerdynamic’s flagship offering makes it easier for mainstream users – kind of.