General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


Corsair Isn't For Sale, But Is Looking for Investment Partner to Fund Buying Spree

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 01:43 PM PDT

Corsair BuildingA private equity firm plans to invest $75 million into Corsair.

Everyone take a sigh of relief, Corsair isn't for sale, and therefore isn't at risk of ending up in the hands of a person or organization that doesn't share the same passion for PC peripherals as Corsair does. What about the rumor floating around that suggests Corsair may be sold to private equity firm Francisco Partners? Corsair tells Maximum PC the rumor is "inaccurate," though the company is looking to secure an investment.

Corsair sent Maximum PC an FAQ that addresses several questions, which we've posted in its entirely below. Straight and to the point, however, Corsair says it's still making a profit, and though it's run its operations for nearly two decades without any outside investment, it's seeking one now as it looks to continue acquiring companies.

"We would like to make more acquisitions and this requires outside investment. That's why we targeted the IPO market last year, but ultimately chose private investment from Francisco Partners instead because we believed the public markets did not properly understand or value our market niche," Corsair states in its FAQ.

The planned investment is for around $75 million, and we have to question why Corsair doesn't simply take out a loan instead of selling off a chunk of its company. One possible answer is that banks don't just hand out $75 million loans willy-nilly, even to profitable firms. It's also possible Corsair prefers to sell off a stake in its firm to avoid the pressure of having to repay a loan by a certain date.

In any event, Corsair insists the move won't negatively impact its customers, and if anything it will prompt the company to be more aggressive in its bid to lead the gaming and music markets.

Corsair FAQ on Francisco Partners Transaction

Is Corsair going to be sold?

No. However, we are securing an investment from Francisco Partners, which will be a new shareholder for the company.

How will this affect Corsair?

The new shareholder, Francisco Partners, is a private equity (PE) company and is planning to make a significant investment in Corsair. The current management team will stay in place and no management changes are planned. Of the three founders who started Corsair 19 years ago, one has retired. Andy Paul and John Beekley are still very much involved and will remain meaningful shareholders in the business.

Who is Francisco Partners and what is private equity all about?

Francisco Partners is a well-respected private equity (PE) firm located in the SF Bay Area that specializes in tech companies. Private equity is an alternative to public funds (i.e., going public) and PE companies typically bring industry and operating expertise to the table in addition to capital. PE is particularly attractive when the public markets are not sensibly valuing certain market segments. This is the case with any company involved around PCs today. The fact is that for companies like Corsair, the PC market is alive and well, since our focus is the gaming and enthusiast market, which is growing and shows no signs of stopping.

Why does Corsair need cash anyway, I thought they were profitable?

We are profitable and have been able to run our operations for 19 years without any outside investment. We have grown in terms of customers and product breadth, and we now ship over 10 product lines to over 60 different countries around the world. Recently, we have started to make acquisitions, since we find that small companies making just one type of component cannot be efficient in the market the way we can be. In the last year we have bought two companies, one German company specializing in gaming peripherals, called Raptor Gaming, and a Scottish company making multi-room streaming music systems, called Simple Audio. We would like to make more acquisitions and this requires outside investment. That's why we targeted the IPO market last year, but ultimately chose private investment from Francisco Partners instead because we believed the public markets did not properly understand or value our market niche.

What does this mean for Corsair customers?

It means we will continue to do more of what we do well–design exciting products for enthusiasts, whether they are enthusiasts in overclocking, building gaming PCs, gaming, or listening to high quality music. These are the things we are enthusiastic about here at Corsair. We enjoy making really cool products for our customers and ourselves. Will Corsair products continue to meet the same high standards of quality? Absolutely. Our goal is to make the best products we can for every-type of customer, regardless of the price point. Making great products is what has enabled us to become successful and we have no intent of changing that. Less well-run companies sometimes have to cut quality levels to make any profit and thus stay in business. We have all seen that happening in our industry. We continue to be profitable because we always make great products that our customers enjoy and our quality levels are very high, so we never have to cut corners. Our new financial partner has spent months talking to us and to our distributors and retailers, as well as taking stock of what our customers think about Corsair and Corsair products. The overwhelming positive things the heard is the reason that they are making a significant investment in the company.

What sort of investment are we talking about?

The planned investment is approximately $75M.

When will all this happen?

The transaction is expected to close in the next few weeks.

What should we expect to see in the future?

We may pursue more acquisitions, perhaps some larger than before. Above all you should expect to see Corsair take a more aggressive approach to becoming a leader in the gaming and music markets, taking the same important position that we hold in the PC enthusiast market.

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Windows Phone Ad Pokes Fun at Samsung and Apple Feud

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 11:20 AM PDT

Apple TattooNokia's Lumia 920 is a lover, not a fighter.

It does seem at times as though Apple and Samsung almost enjoy fighting with each other, doesn't it? A new ad promoting Nokia's Lumia 920 smartphone and the Windows Phone platform it runs on comes right out and says it, and then implores viewers, "Don't fight. Switch." The 1-minute ad spot does little to promote the Lumia 920's features or Windows Phone software, but you have to hand it to Microsoft for at least trying to get into the thick of things.

The setting for the ad is a wedding where everything seems to be going well, that is until a guy with a Galaxy phone blocks the view of someone with an iPhone who's attempting to snap a picture of the bride and groom.

"Excuse me. Would you mind moving your enormous phone?," the iPhone toting attendee asks in snarky tone. Verbal jabs are then tossed around like rice at the end of a wedding ceremony, only it never gets that far because eventually a massive scuffle breaks out between Samsung and Apple users. At one point, a guy rips open his shirt to reveal an Apple logo tattoo on his chest. While all this is going on, a pair of waitstaff record the shenanigans on their Lumia 920 phones.

They also appear to be the only two out of a crowd of about 100 toting Windows Phone devices, so kudos to Microsoft for keeping things accurate, even if unintentional.

Here's the ad:

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Thermaltake Introduces Water 3.0 Liquid Cooling Systems

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 10:45 AM PDT

Thermaltake Water 3.0 ExtremeLiquid cooling made easy.

Just as you can configure and build your PC from scratch, cooling enthusiasts can also piece together a custom liquid cooling solution, provided they have the requisite cash and experience. For everyone else, self-contained liquid cooling systems are the next best thing, offering similar benefits but for less money and far less risk. Enter Thermaltake, one of the more active players in the LCS market, which just announced a trio of new cooling products.

Sitting at the top of Thermaltake's LCS totem pole is its new Water 3.0 Extreme, The Extreme uses a specially designed 240mm large surface radiator with two (or more) 120mm double curve fans to dissipate heat and keep things cool. It has a full copper plate base and comes with fan control software to monitor and customize a range of parameters, including liquid temperature, CPU temperature, fan speed, and pump speed.

Sitting one notch below is the Water 3.0 Pro. It uses a double-thick radiator (49mm) cooled by up to two 120mm fans and is aimed at users who don't have enough space to install a Water 3.0 Extreme but still want high-end cooling performance.

Finally, the Water 3.0 Performer is the same as the Pro, only smaller (the radiator measures 27mm). Thermaltake says it's a good solution for first-timers new to liquid cooling.

No word yet on price or availability.

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Newegg Daily Deals

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 10:33 AM PDT

SSDNewegg

Top Deal:

While everyone loves the portability of laptop PCs, they often have small hard drives. Today's top deal, Seagate's Solid State Hybrid 1TB laptop hard drive attempts to remedy that. Running for $110 with free shipping (normally $150 - use coupon code: EMCXSVP25), the drive offers a nice balance between the speed of an SSD and the heftsy size of a mechanical hard drive. 

Other Deals:

Crucial Ballistix Sport 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3 1333 desktop RAM for $90 with free shipping (normally $105 - use coupon code: EMCXSVP39

Fractal Design Define R4 Black mid-tower case for $80 with free shipping (normally $120 - use coupon code: EMCXSVP52

ASUS Radeon HD 7770 GHz Edition 2GB video card for $135 with free shipping (normally $150 - use coupon code:EMCXSVT49; additional $15 mail-in rebate

Corsair Enthusiast Series TX650 V2 650W power supply for $80 with free shipping (normally $120 - use coupon code: EMCXSVR23; additional $20 mail-in rebate)

First Radeon HD 7730 Graphics Card Spotted in the Wild

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 08:56 AM PDT

MSI Radeon HD 7730MSI's Radeon HD 7730 breaks cover and gets benchmarked.

A rather active user on the Chinese-language forum Coolaler posted several pictures of an MSI Radeon HD 7730 graphics card. As far as we can tell, the entry-level card's model was supposed to have been kept a secret, as identifying information on the retail box was replaced with a red censor strip, but it's tougher to hide such things from software. In addition to the model number, there are also some benchmark numbers to share.

The forum user who posted the pictures also tossed up a few benchmark comparisons between the Radeon HD 7730 and HD 6670. Here's how it shook out between the two:

  • Radeon HD 7730, 3DMark Vantage Performance: 10,764
  • Radeon HD 6670, 3DMark Vantage Performance: 5,366
  • Radeon HD 7730, 3DMark 11 Entry: 4,539
  • Radeon HD 6670, 3DMark 11 Entry: 2,477
  • Radeon HD 7730, 3DMark 11 Performance: 2,609
  • Radeon HD 6670, 3DMark 11 Performance: 1,428
  • Radeon HD 7730, 3DMark Fire Strike: 1,680
  • Radeon HD 6670, 3DMark Fire Strike: 878
  • Radeon HD 7730, Cloud Gate: 11,959
  • Radeon HD 6670, Cloud Gate: 7,042
  • Radeon HD 7730, Ice Storm: 101,701
  • Radeon HD 6670, Ice Storm: 63,660

Those are some big gains across the board, and in some cases, the Radeon HD 7730 benched almost twice as fast as the Radeon HD 6670.

The entry-level part is a 128-bit card with 1GB of memory clocked at 1,125MHz and a core clockspeed of 800MHz. Most of the other details are still a secret, including price and release date.

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Sony Xperia Tablet Z Available to Pre-order for $500

Posted: 29 Apr 2013 08:24 AM PDT

Sony Xperia Tablet ZThere's no thinner 10.1-inch tablet, according to Sony.

Sony's wedge-shaped Xperia Tablet S didn't exactly take the Android tablet market by storm, and truth be told, we don't think the Xperia Tablet Z will either, though it's an interesting slate. The Xperia Tablet Z, which is now available to pre-order for $500 on Sony's website, is supposedly the world's thinnest 10.1-inch slate measuring just 0.27 inches thick and weighing barely more than a pound (1.09 pounds, to be precise).

In addition to being thin and light, the Z model is also water and dust resistant. Sony claims it can withstand up to 3 feet of water for up to 30 minutes, so you can look up recipes by the kitchen sink or surf the web poolside without worrying about a little bit of water splashing the screen.

At $500, Sony's charging a premium price at a time when Android tablets are becoming increasingly affordable. In return, the Xperia Tablet Z offers a Full HD 1080p (1920x1200) resolution, Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro quad-core processor clocked at 1.5GHz, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of built-in storage flanked by a microSD card slot, USB 2.0 connectivity, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC support, and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean out of the box.

By all means, it's a high-end slate that will likely find some eager buyers, we just don't know if there's a significant market for $500 Android tablets right now. We'll soon find out.

Shipments for the Xperia Tablet Z are estimated to begin May 22, 2013.

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