ADATA's XPG Summoner Cherry MX-based mechanical gaming keyboard offers a lot to like, but its clumsy customization and limited key lighting dull its elite-board luster. At first glance, the Summoner ...
Established by ADATA in 2008, XPG was born with the goal of providing high-performance products to gamers. Functional, high-quality gaming components were the goal and here they arrive with the ...
A-Data XPG Summoner reviews, pros and cons. Liked: Build Quality, Cherry MX Red Mechanical Switches (50 Million Actuations) Disliked: No Software Suite (Per Key Lighting), No Dedicated Macro Keys.
Well, there’s not exactly a lot of options on the market today for the (very) wealthy gamer. Sure, you can drop big money on graphics cards, CPUs, or the whole PC for that matter. However, the world ...
XPG, the gaming sub-brand of Taiwanese component manufacturer ADATA, impressed us last year with its spot-on XPG Summoner keyboard. Its next act, unfortunately, isn't a repeat triumph. The XPG Primer ...
At first glance, the Summoner has all the things you want from a top-flight mechanical keyboard. It's a standard, full-size board with 104 keys. The frame measures 1.7 by 17.7 by 5.3 inches and ...
The ADATA XPG Summoner is a pretty cool looking keyboard. The first thing I noticed is that it has a really good weight to it. It’s not super heavy, but it does have some bulk to it that gives it a ...
The XPG Summoner is a solid keyboard in many respects, but it falls far short in a few. Those issues shouldn't disqualify it outright, though, if you're in the market for a new keyboard, especially if ...